Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Interview.
Ajay Hinduja on AI-Powered Domestic Assistant: Redefining Elderly Care with Compassionate technology
Artificial Intelligence is no longer confined to data centers or industrial robots—it is entering our homes, reshaping the way we care for the elderly. One of the most impactful applications of Physical AI is in AI-powered domestic assistants designed to provide physical support, companionship, and continuous health monitoring for seniors. These intelligent systems are not just machines; they are empathetic companions that help older adults live independently, safely, and with dignity.
By Geoff Lyon5 months ago in Interview
Having earned a Best Actress Award for short movie, Mental Hellth, actor Ana Roza revels in “one-shot” projects
Some of most interesting moments in acting can happen when you think there is nothing left to lose “Mental Hellth was similar to Silent, which I previously filmed, as both films are just one long sequence without any cuts. I find one-shot films fascinating, that's why I like doing them, because as an actor you can’t make any mistakes or you have to stop and start again. But if the mistake is small, I usually prefer to keep going because I know some of the most interesting moments in acting can happen when you think there is nothing left to lose because the take won't be used anyway.”—actor Ana Roza
By ashley collie5 months ago in Interview
Fumfer Physics 32: CPUs, GPUs, QPUs & the Smallest Unit
Scott Douglas Jacobsen and Rick Rosner probe the future of compute: CPUs for serial work, GPUs for parallelism, and unstable quantum processors, tied together by Jacobsen’s “contextual compute,” which routes tasks to the right engine in real time. They ask about the smallest actionable unit of calculation; Rosner argues it is the electron, with photons a plausible successor. Moore’s Law lingers as an efficiency race, while quantum offers leaps. The pair then flip to physics: photons lose energy to redshift yet experience zero time, suggesting photons are events and information couriers. A playful “reverse Pokémon” tag ends a curious exchange.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen5 months ago in Interview
Is This the Rights' Fight? Wrong Turn on Right 4: Charlie Kirk Case, Fuentes, and the Far-Right’s Legacy Struggle
Irina Tsukerman is a human rights and national security attorney based in New York and Connecticut. She earned her Bachelor of Arts in National and Intercultural Studies and Middle East Studies from Fordham University in 2006, followed by a Juris Doctor from Fordham University School of Law in 2009. She operates a boutique national security law practice. She serves as President of Scarab Rising, Inc., a media and security strategic advisory firm. Additionally, she is the Editor-in-Chief of The Washington Outsider, which focuses on foreign policy, geopolitics, security, and human rights. She is actively involved in several professional organizations, including the American Bar Association’s Energy, Environment, and Science and Technology Sections, where she serves as Program Vice Chair in the Oil and Gas Committee. She is also a member of the New York City Bar Association. She serves on the Middle East and North Africa Affairs Committee and affiliates with the Foreign and Comparative Law Committee.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen5 months ago in Interview
Andrea Clerissi and the Art of Producing Beyond Borders
Between Method and Creativity, what are the most important lessons you’ve drawn from your years of producing in France? Andrea Clerissi: France taught me methodical rigor and unwavering creativity. Behind every show, there’s a true mechanism of precision: technical planning, logistics, budgets, and communication. My role, as it’s often described, is to bring people together. Uniting artists and teams around a shared goal enables everyone to work in the best possible conditions and, in doing so, to dare to go further artistically. A Global Mindset
By Léa Carlsen5 months ago in Interview









