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Showing posts with the label AI & Society

What Aotearoa (New Zealand) Needs to Compete Digitally in 2026

The digital landscape has changed significantly in the last decade, and countries that fail to adapt risk falling behind. Aotearoa (New Zealand) stands at a crossroads. With a unique combination of innovative talent, support from the government for tech initiatives and a growing start-up ecosystem, such as Tabin , Deliveryeasy , Order Meal , Book A Bach , etc., Aotearoa (New Zealand) has a proud history of creating pioneering systems, such as Trade Me , where you can buy or sell anywhere in the country, risk-free and fully compliant with local laws and regulations. An EFTPOS system that has transformed global payments, creating world-first innovations like the RocketLab launch platform and the modular dairy tech powering smart farms, Kiwi inventions have scaled far beyond our shores Aotearoa has the potential to reach above and beyond its weight. Historically, Aotearoa has long served as a testing ground for international digital platforms. Companies like Just Eat and Zomato...

Why Data-Driven Programming is Survival for Independent Arts in 2026

The year 2026 has brought a paradox to the performing arts. While " cinema " and immersive experiences are booming, the traditional "build it and they will come" model for independent theatre and small companies has officially hit a wall. For the independent artist or the 50-seat black-box theatre, the competition isn't just the playhouse down the street, it's the personalised Netflix algorithm , the $50 million immersive VR exhibit , and the "micro-moment" content cycles of social media. To stay relevant, small arts orgs must shift from intuitive programming to data-driven programming . Here is why the data is now as important as your script:   The "Data vs Intuition" Gap: What Your Audience is Actually Telling You One of the biggest traps for independent companies in 2026 is assumed identit y. We often program shows for who we hope will come, rather than looking at the digital breadcrumbs our actual audience leaves behind. Data-dr...

AI vs Sewing Machines: Lessons From History

The resistance to new technologies is not unique to the 21st century. It has existed since humans first began inventing tools to enhance production and efficiency.  From the printing press to the telephone , transformative technologies have consistently faced scepticism, fear, and opposition. This resistance rarely came from the technology itself, but from those who felt threatened by the shift it introduced.  When the printing press emerged in the 15th century, opposition largely came from scribes and established authorities. Scribes feared job displacement, while institutions worried about losing control over information. Printed books reduced the cost of knowledge, weakened traditional gatekeepers, and allowed ideas to spread at unprecedented speed. What was perceived as a dangerous disruption was, in reality, the foundation for mass literacy , education, and intellectual progress.  The telephone faced a different but equally revealing form of...

From Needles to Machines: How Early Tech Amplified Production

Before the machines, the production of clothes was slow and expensive, weaving , dying , stitching ; every shirt, coat or dress was handmade. Tailors spun thread, wove fabric, cut patterns and stitched garments one seam at a time. Production scaled linearly. One person could only make so much. Time was the hard limit.  This was not efficiency as craftsmanship. Sewing machines changed everything. They allowed more clothes to be produced in less time. A tailor could now do the work of many, and factories could supply towns and cities with ready-made garments. Jobs shifted from making entire garments by hand to mastering sections of the process and operating machines. Production exploded while the human element remained essential, but transformed.  The invention of the sewing machine in the mid-19th century transformed the textile industry. What had previously required days or weeks could now be accomplished in hours. Factories emerged to capitalise on this technologic...