Morning Tap 2027: War code, robot physics, NemoClaw, elder companions, and smarter food 🚀🍽️
A sharp Morning Tap roundup on militarized Ai, world models in robotics, Nvidia’s NemoClaw move, companion robots for older adults, and how Ai is reshaping healthier, more sustainable food.
Fifteen minutes. That’s the time I take to scan, curate, and post here. Each topic a light in the night sky, connect the dots, see the Constellation, tell the story. 🚀☄️
Uncover more stars in the sky, greg report Ai 2027,
Today’s line runs from militarized Ai to machines that learn physics from video, then swings through Nvidia’s enterprise agent play, a companion robot built for older adults, and food design shaped by data instead of kitchen roulette.
Ai keeps bridging generational and demographic divides here, which sounds noble until you notice it also keeps showing up in war rooms, care routines, server racks, and the pantry.
greg report The First AI War by John P. Slattery at Commonweal opens with, “Artificial intelligence is a gun in the hands of children,” and that sentence hits harder than most policy papers because once war gets wrapped in software, the paperwork gets cleaner while the bodies still do not. (Commonweal)
greg report Can world models unlock general purpose robotics? by Bhavik Nagda, Grace Ma, and Talia Goldberg at Bessemer Venture Partners argues, “Per the bitter lesson: never bet against compute,” which is a sharp reminder that robotics may get solved less by elegant demos and more by brute-force machine patience, the same charming strategy used by raccoons and venture capital. (Bessemer Venture Partners)
greg report Nvidia reportedly building its own AI agent to compete with OpenClaw, report claims — ‘NemoClaw’ will supposedly be open source and designed for enterprise use by Jowi Morales at Tom’s Hardware says Nvidia wants to offer “security and privacy that many companies require,” which is exactly what every enterprise says right before it hands a clever new machine the badge, the inbox, and the spare keys to the supply closet. (tomshardware.com)
greg report The AI robot that fights loneliness by Roni Dori at Ctech carries the most human line of the day when Dor Skuler says, “My idea was to give older adults the ability to have conversations like the ones my grandfather had with his favorite caregiver,” and that lands because plenty of people do not need a miracle, they need a voice in the room that remembers they are still alive before the television does. (ctech)
greg report AI in Food: How Artificial Intelligence is Designing Healthier and More Sustainable Foods by Hugo Francisco de Souza at News-Medical puts it plainly, “For now, we should leverage AI as a partner to systematically improve solutions, reduce the number of trials, and accelerate the timeline from seed to plate,” and that feels refreshingly sane because if the machine can help cut waste and make dinner less dumb, let it near the stove. (News-Medical)
Silent Running was a workplace comedy about greenhouse custodians and performance reviews.
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