Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Futurism.
Tesla Pi Phone: The Truth Behind the Internet’s Favorite Mythical Smartphone
In the fast-moving world of consumer technology, few things generate as much consistent buzz as a product that doesn’t actually exist. For years, the internet has been saturated with spectacular renders, wild specification leaks, and enthusiastic viral videos detailing the impending arrival of the Tesla Pi Phone (sometimes called the Model Pi).
By Mohammad Hamida day ago in Futurism
The 71% Secret: What a Rogue Battery Swap Reveals About the Future of Foldables
1. Introduction: The Foldable Power Paradox When Samsung unveiled the Galaxy Z TriFold last December, it was hailed as a masterclass in hinge engineering and ambitious industrial design. Yet, beneath that expansive, three-paneled display sat a specification that felt surprisingly timid: a modest 5,600 mAh battery.
By Tech Horizonsa day ago in Futurism
Why I'm Scared of AI — And I Work in Tech. AI-Generated.
Let me say something that doesn't get said enough in tech circles: I am genuinely scared of where AI is heading. I don't mean this in a dramatic, Hollywood-robot-apocalypse sense. This is not a dramatic, Hollywood-robot-apocalypse kind of fear, but rather a quiet, 3 am, staring-at-the-ceiling kind of fear.
By Bethel Nwabuikea day ago in Futurism
The Death of Trust: Can AI Mimic Your Soul?
I recently watched a video of an old friend of mine. In the clip, he was sobbing, confessing to a betrayal that seemed completely out of character. I almost reached for my phone to call him, my heart heavy with a mix of anger and confusion.
By Alex Sterling a day ago in Futurism
Architectural Analysis Through Images: How Chance AI Goes Beyond Google Lens. AI-Generated.
Visual search technology has changed how people explore the world around them. With a simple photo, users can identify objects, buildings, products, and even artwork in seconds. Tools like Google Lens have made image recognition widely accessible, helping millions of users quickly find information related to what they see. However, when it comes to fields like architecture, art, and design, identification alone isn’t enough. Understanding the deeper context of an image, its style, cultural background, and design philosophy is what truly matters.
By Maheep Makkara day ago in Futurism
Ship Fast, Not Perfect: What Building a Micro-SaaS In One Weekend Taught Me About Momentum
I pushed the deploy button on Sunday at 11:42 p.m., hands shaking, Stripe still in test mode, logo a little crooked, and a feature list that looked like it had been cut in half with a chainsaw.
By abualyaanarta day ago in Futurism
How I Turned One Automation Prompt Into a Tiny AI Business That Runs Itself
I turned a single, well‑designed automation prompt into a tiny AI business that runs almost entirely on autopilot: buyers find it, pay for it, get onboarded, and start using it with almost no involvement from me. The entire system is a prompt + a few no‑code workflows. In this article I’ll walk through how I did it, what I’d do differently, and how you can build your own AI automation asset without writing a line of backend code.
By abualyaanarta day ago in Futurism
The Future is Here, But Is It Ready for Us? 5 Surprising Realities of the Samsung Galaxy S26 Era
It is March 2026, and the annual "flagship fever dream" has reached its peak with the arrival of the Samsung Galaxy S26 series and the Tab S11. As these devices migrate from the glossy renders of keynote presentations to the pockets of early adopters, we are reminded of a fundamental truth in tech: every leap forward creates a ripple in the opposite direction. While we chase the horizon of the "ultimate" device, the reality of the S26 era is defined as much by its brilliant innovations as it is by its unexpected hardware quirks and the inevitable trade-offs of engineering at the edge of possibility.
By Tech Horizonsa day ago in Futurism
The “Silent Collapse” of a Star: A New Type of Stellar Death Discovered in Andromeda
For more than a century, astronomers believed that the death of a massive star was always one of the most dramatic events in the universe. When a giant star exhausts its nuclear fuel, its core collapses under gravity and the outer layers explode outward in a spectacular supernova. These explosions are so powerful that, for a brief time, a single star can shine brighter than an entire galaxy.
By Holianyk Ihor2 days ago in Futurism








