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At graduation ceremonies at multiple US universities, speakers were booed by students for praising AI, with former Google CEO Eric Schmidt receiving the most boos, reflecting rising public concerns about AI.
College students at multiple U.S. universities booed commencement speakers who praised AI, reflecting fears about job displacement. Speakers like Eric Schmidt and Scott Borchetta faced heckling, with Borchetta telling students to 'deal with it.'
A tweet thread by @eng_khairallah1 compiles resources on building agentic AI companies, including Claude Code tutorials, LangChain's recent product announcements (Interrupt, Labs, Engine, SmithDB), and educational prompts.
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt was booed during his commencement speech at the University of Arizona while discussing artificial intelligence, reflecting public fear and skepticism about AI.
University of Arizona students booed former Google CEO Eric Schmidt during his commencement speech when he promoted AI, highlighting growing public backlash against AI amid job market anxieties and past allegations against Schmidt.
TechCrunch reports that 2026 commencement speakers, including Gloria Caulfield and Eric Schmidt, were booed by students for mentioning AI, reflecting growing pessimism among young people about AI's impact on jobs and society.
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt described a future programming paradigm in an interview: programmers will command multiple AI agents (like Claude, Gemini) to generate code instead of manually coding. This tweet sparked discussion, asking if the description is accurate.
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt predicts a future with a small number of very large companies and a very large number of very small companies, as AI reduces the need for many people.
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt declares traditional programming is over, describing a future where programmers assign objectives to AI agents instead of writing code manually.
Ex-Google CEO Eric Schmidt states that the real limit to AI is financial, not energy, estimating that 10 gigawatts of compute could cost half a trillion dollars, which only a few entities like the US or China can afford.