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From city hall to classrooms: AI is helping to shape modern life in Springfield, Chicopee, Westside

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SPRINGFIELD — Massachusetts ranks fifth in the nation for artificial intelligence-related job postings, but the state faces a retention challenge, with only 40% of AI graduates staying.

Producing over 6,500 AI-related graduates in 2022, Massachusetts is home to about 25,700 workers with AI-related roles or skills, according to a 2024 state AI Strategic Task Force report.

Local initiatives, such as AI-equipped body cameras in Chicopee and AI-driven educational programs in West Springfield, are enhancing services from city hall to public safety and education, while setting a precedent for innovative and efficient governance.

In Springfield City Hall

Springfield has been testing AI in its election and clerk’s offices. City Clerk and Election Commissioner Gladys Oyola-Lopez said city staff used AI to design voter giveaways.

At the CPD

In Chicopee, the Police Department recently started using body cameras equipped with artificial intelligence. Public Information Officer Travis Odiorne explained that AI helps with routine, but often time-consuming, work.

“AI is used with our body cameras to assist with generating police reports. The body camera records and transcribes the footage into a report, which our officers then review for accuracy,” Odiorne said. It ensures accuracy and saves time, he said.

Odiorne mentioned that the department began wearing body cameras about five weeks ago. The AI technology was included in the package they signed off on.

“This technology makes it easier for officers, because they don’t have to worry about missing notes,” he explained. “The transcription captures everything said on the scene.”

The AI also can translate hundreds of languages.

“It supports 253 languages and can live-translate conversations,” Odiorne said. “This helps us communicate better with people who speak different languages.”

However, Odiorne noted that the AI transcription doesn’t capture the feelings and emotions of the people involved.

“Officers still need to modify the reports to include what they saw and felt on the scene,” he added.

Education in West Springfield

West Springfield is employing artificial intelligence in education.

Stefania Raschilla, superintendent of schools, said she was at a conference in January at which Jeffrey C. Riley, former Massachusetts commissioner of elementary and secondary education, spoke about the benefits of AI.

Today, Riley is a senior adviser at “A Day of AI,” a nonprofit group born out of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology that equips students to effectively navigate AI today and into the future.

“They explained all the amazing things AI is doing around the world,” Raschilla said. “I thought, ‘This is something we should be teaching our students.’”

Raschilla believes AI can help students and teachers by providing innovative tools for learning and teaching. “We often hear about the negative aspects of AI, but it’s important to teach students about its benefits and ethical considerations,” she said.

To introduce AI, Raschilla and Riley planned several initiatives. They aim to start with a speech to inspire staff about the transformative power of AI in education.

Teachers will receive a three-hour workshop in August on AI policy development, ethical guidelines, and using AI for data-driven decision-making and student support.

“We want our teachers to feel confident using AI as a resource,” Raschilla said. “This training will help them integrate AI into lesson planning, student engagement and personalized learning.”

The district also plans to hold a districtwide AI day, in which students, teachers, and administrators will engage in AI projects.

“Our goal is to give students a competitive edge and help teachers become comfortable with AI,” Raschilla said. “We want to ensure everyone understands both the practical applications and ethical considerations.”

Raschilla hopes that with this initial training, teachers will embrace AI and use it to enhance their teaching methods.

“We want our kids to have that advantage, but I can’t have my teachers afraid of it,” she said.

Raschilla said she would like to participate in the workshop herself.

She said this could possibly lead to additional partnerships with MIT for students who are interested in this work.

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Astronomer winks at viral notoriety with ‘temporary spokesperson’ Gwyneth Paltrow

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After spending the past week-plus in the headlines due to a seemingly inescapable social media scandal, data operations startup Astronomer is trying to shift the narrative with a tongue-in-cheek video starring actress and entrepreneur Gwyneth Paltrow.

Paltrow was, of course, previously married to Coldplay singer Chris Martin. And it was at a Coldplay concert in Massachusetts that the company’s CEO Andy Byron and Chief People Officer Kristin Cabot were apparently caught dancing together on the “kiss cam.”

When Byron and Cabot (who are reportedly married to other people) awkwardly tried to hide from the camera, Martin joked, “Either they’re having an affair or they’re just very shy.”

Footage of the exchange exploded in popularity, ultimately leading both executives to resign from Astronomer. In announcing Byron’s resignation, the company said, “Our leaders are expected to set the standard in both conduct and accountability, and recently, that standard was not met.”

Astronomer’s statement also nodded at the fact that the company had suddenly become famous for reasons having nothing to do with its product: “While awareness of our company may have changed overnight, our product and our work for our customers have not.”

Its new marketing video has a similar message, attempting to refocus the conversation on Astronomer’s technology, while winkingly acknowledging why that might be a challenge.

Paltrow kicks things off by introducing herself as someone who’s been “hired on a very temporary basis to speak on behalf of the 300-plus employers at Astronomer.” She then promises to answer the “most common” questions asked about the company — but when the briefly glimpsed, half-typed questions are all about you-know-what, Paltrow remains cheerfully, and resolutely, on-message.

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“We’ve been thrilled so many people have a newfound interest in data workflow automation,” she says. Paltrow even finds time to plug the company’s upcoming conference before concluding, “We will now be returning to what we do best — delivering game-changing results for our customers.”



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This humanoid robot can do cartwheels, handstands and roundhouse kicks at less than $6,000

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For less than the price of a fully decked-out MacBook Pro, you can buy Unitree’s latest humanoid robot called the R1. You only have to shell out $5,900 for a robot that weighs around 55 lbs, stands about four feet tall, and is built with a Large Multimodal Model to handle complex tasks.

If you’re wondering what the R1 will be used for, your guess is as good as ours. Unitree said its robot is “fully customizable” and demoed its capabilities in a video showing off cartwheels, handstands, boxing, roundhouse kicks and running downhill, but didn’t offer examples with any practical use yet. The lightweight robot has an ultra-wide view and a four-microphone array to help it recognize voices and images, but was also built with Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.2 connectivity. It’s not hard to envision a world where people program the R1 as a robot butler to handle daily chores, much like what Meta is reportedly working on. However, you might even be able to square up two R1s to fight each other, as evidenced by Unitree promoting a unique fighting tournament that felt like a less aesthetically polished version of 2011’s Real Steel.

The latest R1 is a much lower entry point than Unitree’s previous humanoid robot, the G1, which starts at $16,000 and was demoed at CES 2025 with somewhat disastrous results. Even though the R1’s sub-$6,000 price tag is arguably high, it’s still much cheaper compared to other similar options, like Tesla’s Optimus bot that’s expected to go for at least $20,000.



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One UI 8 removes bootloader unlock from Samsung Galaxy

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Samsung is apparently removing the option to unlock your bootloader from Galaxy devices with its One UI 8 update, at least in places where that was still available.

For Galaxy owners in the US, bootloader unlocking hasn’t been available for quite some time, really almost never at all. But in other parts of the world, Samsung left the option open. That’s apparently changing with the One UI 8 update.

SammyGuru gathered reports and evidence from One UI 8 that shows that, like in the US, bootloader unlock is no longer available. Specifically, the “OEM Unlocking” developer option has vanished. This has been observed both in beta builds on Galaxy S25 Ultra, as well as on Samsung’s Galaxy Z Flip 7 and Fold 7 which ship with One UI 8 pre-installed. A code snippet from Samsung’s firmware shows this, as does further user findings.

For the bulk of Samsung buyers, this change won’t really have an impact.

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The vast majority of smartphone buyers never touch half of the advanced options on their phone, with far fewer doing anything that would require an unlocked bootloader. As SammyGuru points out, though, it’s certainly a shame for enthusiasts who enjoy custom ROMs, kernels, or even just rooting their device for expanded functionality.

There will still be a way to unlock the bootloader, though, it just won’t be user-accessible. Samsung will still have a way to do it when needed, but the user won’t, which is what’s changing here.

It’s still unclear if the One UI 8 update will make this change on devices that are already on the market, but it’s entirely possible. In recent years, it’s become more common for Android manufacturers to disable this ability. In China, for example, Xiaomi disabled the ability to unlock your bootloader a while back, with users taking pretty drastic actions to get around the limitation.

More on Samsung:

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Powerball: See the winning numbers in Saturday’s $350 million drawing

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It’s time to grab your tickets and check to see if you’re a big winner! The Powerball lottery jackpot continues to rise after one lucky winner in California won $207 million in the May 31 drawing. Is this your lucky night?

Here are Saturday’s winning lottery numbers:

08-31-57-65-67, Powerball: 23, Power Play: 3X

Double Play Winning Numbers

11-16-21-29-41, Powerball: 01

The estimated Powerball jackpot is $350 million. The lump sum payment before taxes would be about $157.8 million.

The Double Play is a feature that gives players in select locations another chance to match their Powerball numbers in a separate drawing. The Double Play drawing is held following the regular drawing and has a top cash prize of $10 million.

Powerball is held in 45 states, the District of Columbia, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico. The Double Play add-on feature is available for purchase in 13 lottery jurisdictions, including Pennsylvania and Michigan.

A $2 ticket gives you a one in 292.2 million chance at joining the hall of Powerball jackpot champions.

The drawings are held at 10:59 p.m. Eastern, Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays. The deadline to purchase tickets is 9:45 p.m.

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U.K. starts enforcing online age check rules

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A U.K. law requiring that pornography websites verify the age of their users took effect Friday.

The BBC reports that around 6,000 porn sites have said they will start verifying users’ ages to comply with the Online Safety Act, although at least one major site was not requiring age checks as of Friday morning.

The law also requires that online platforms prevent children from being exposed to harmful content, which is why sites like Reddit, Bluesky, X, and Grindr have also begun asking users in the U.K. to verify their age through means including selfies or government-issued IDs.

This is just one of a number of new child protection laws that could normalize online age checks globally, according to Wired. The approach has been criticized by groups such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation as a threat to online privacy and anonymity — indeed, it’s worth noting that in a recent breach of the dating safety app Tea, many of the affected images were selfies and digital IDs uploaded for account verification.

Some internet users may try to get around age checks by using fake IDs, selfies of video game characters, or VPNs.



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DOGE is reportedly pushing an AI tool that would put half of all federal regulations on a ‘delete list’

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According to a report from The Washington Post, DOGE is using an AI tool to analyze federal regulations and determine which to get rid of. A DOGE PowerPoint presentation obtained by the publication notes that its “AI Solution” — reportedly called the DOGE AI Deregulation Decision Tool — found that 100,000 out of over 200,000 regulations “can be deleted.” The document sets a September 1 goal deadline for agencies to complete their own deregulation lists using the tool, which it says can be done in under four weeks, and then “DOGE will roll-up a delete list of 50% of all Federal Regulations (100k Regulatory Rules).”

The tool is targeting regulations that are no longer required by law, The Washington Post reports. After it makes its suggestions, staffers would review the proposed deletions before finalizing a plan. According to the PowerPoint, the tool has already been tried out by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), where it’s been used to write “100% of deregulations,” and by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for decisions on 1,083 regulatory sections. The Washington Post spoke to three HUD employees who confirmed it was recently used. One also said that the tool got things wrong on several occasions, misreading the language of the law at times.

DOGE will reportedly start training other agencies on the tool this month. Head over to The Washington Post to read the full report.



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What Gemini app features are free versus paid? [July 2025]

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As of May (I/O) 2025, Google offers the Gemini app in three tiers. Many Gemini app features are available for free, while paying $19.99 per month for Google AI Pro (which includes 2 TB of storage) unlocks a lot more. Google AI Ultra at $249.99/month gives you everything else, including cutting edge capabilities.

Update 7/26:

Gemini models

All Gemini app users get “general access” to 2.5 Flash, which is the default model. Free users get “limited access” to Gemini 2.5 Pro for “Reasoning, math & code,” with Canvas particularly benefiting from it.

Google AI Pro subscribers get “expanded access” to 2.5 Pro, which we now know translates to 100 queries per day. The company explains model limits as such:

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Gemini Apps has more prompt and chat limits for more advanced models. If you reach your capacity limit for a specific model for a given period, you can switch to a different model until that limit is reached or your capacity limit is refreshed. Gemini app users with Google AI Pro or Google AI Ultra have higher capacity limits for advanced models.

Google AI Ultra provides the “highest access” to 2.5 Pro. A 2.5 Pro Deep Think mode will be available to Ultra subscribers that we’re still waiting for, while Agent Mode is another upcoming capability.

Context window

The context window on the free tier, which applies to all models, is 32,000 tokens or “around 50 pages of text.”

Google AI Pro and AI Ultra users get a long context window of 1 million tokens, which is equivalent to 1,500 pages of text or 30,000 lines of code.

File upload and analysis

Free users can upload documents, slides, images, and videos to get summaries, insights, and ask questions. Up to 10 files (max size of 100 MB) can be uploaded per prompt. Supported file formats include:

  • Document files: DOC, DOCX, PDF, RTF, DOT, DOTX, HWP, HWPX
  • Documents created in Google Docs
  • Plain text files: TXT
  • Presentation files: PPTX
  • Presentations created with Google Slides
  • Images including PNG, JPG, JPEG, WEBP, and HEIF

Uploading spreadsheets and other data files requires Google AI Pro and AI Ultra, with the ability to analyze and visualize (with charts) that information.

  • Spreadsheet files: XLS, XLSX
  • Spreadsheets created in Google Sheets
  • Tabular data files: CSV, TSV

Similarly, the ability to upload code folders and repositories also requires a subscription. Google touts how you can get “insights from thousands of lines of code, make intelligent changes, debug errors, and optimize your code for peak performance.”

  • Code files including C, CPP, PY, JAVA, PHP, SQL, and HTML

Video upload

You can upload videos to the Gemini app for analysis. Each clip can be up to 2 GB, with free users limited to 5 minutes. If you’re a Google AI Pro or AI Ultra subscriber, the “total upload length” is 1 hour.

  • Videos: MP4, MPEG, MOV, AVI, X-FLV, MPG, WEBM, WMV, 3GPP

Reference past chats 

Free users have access to Saved info to specify chat preferences (like “I’m a vegetarian” or “Make responses concise”) for every conversation instead of having to add instructions to every prompt.

With Google AI Pro and AI Ultra, Gemini can look at past chats you’ve had to inform the current conversation. To trigger, “mention topics or timeframes of past chats” to trigger, while this capability can be used to summarize previous chats. The “Sources and related content” section will note when “Previous chats” have been used.

Deep Research

Gemini’s first agentic lets users ask a question and get a multi-point research plan that they can further customize. Once approved, Gemini will search the web, analyze what it found, and compose a report. As of I/O 2025, files and images can be uploaded to Deep Research, thus combining user and public knowledge for the final result.

  • Free users: “Limited access” to Deep Research, which is is now powered by Gemini 2.5 Flash
  • Google AI Pro: “Expanded access” using 2.5 Pro
  • Google AI Ultra: “Highest access”

Audio Overviews

  • Free users: Limited access
  • Google AI Pro: Expanded access
  • Google AI Ultra: Highest access

Image generation

All users have “general access” to image generation, which includes creating images with people. As of I/O 2025, the Gemini app is using Imagen 4 for higher quality, richer details, and better text/typography.

There’s also native image editing where you refine pictures (including generated ones and those you’ve uploaded) via text prompts.

Video generation

  • Free users: Not available
  • Google AI Pro: Three 8-second 720p clips generated using Veo 3 Fast per day. Veo 2 afterwards.
  • Google AI Ultra: Powered by Veo 3 with clips featuring sound (effects, noises, etc.)

Both videos use the same prompt: “Aerial shot of a grassy cliff onto a sandy beach where waves crash against the shore, a prominent sea stack rises from the ocean near the beach, bathed in the warm, golden light of either sunrise or sunset, capturing the dramatic elevation change and the serene beauty of the Pacific coastline.”

Scheduled actions

Google has rolled outScheduled actions,” with users able to have 10 active at any one time. You specify when (time/day/date or after an event) a predefined prompt should run. Afterwards, tap the mobile notification to see the response. You can edit, pause, and delete them from:

  • On the web: Settings & help > Scheduled actions
  • On mobile: Profile menu > Settings > Scheduled actions

Other features

  • Gems: To build custom versions of Gemini for specific tasks with pre-defined instructions
  • Gemini Live

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Mass. weather: Cluster of showers, thunderstorms expected on Sunday, July 27

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Rain showers and thunderstorms are expected to sweep across Massachusetts on Sunday, July 27, according to the National Weather Service.

The bulk of the rain is expected to occur Sunday morning until mid afternoon, primarily in the northwest and north central regions of the state.

In the Berkshires, the stormy weather is possible throughout the day, with a high temperature near 76 degrees.

Meanwhile, showers and thunderstorms will mainly occur before 2 p.m. in the Franklin County region, the National Weather Service reported Saturday afternoon. Temperatures could reach 79 degrees and patchy fog is likely before 11 a.m.

Springfield’s forecast includes rain before noon. The majority of the day will be cloudy with a high of 79 degrees.

Worcester and Boston will also likely see showers and thunderstorms before 2 p.m. The skies are expected to remain cloudy throughout the day with a high temperature near 76 degrees.

The Cape and Islands could see showers and thunderstorms between noon and 5 p.m. Sunday. The high temperature for that area on Sunday is 77 degrees.

Beyond Sunday, the National Weather Service expects heat and humidity to return Monday and Tuesday, with temperatures climbing back into the 90s.

It’s expected to be mostly dry next week, with a possible risk “for a few spot showers/thunderstorms.”

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Tesla vet says that ‘reviewing real products’ — not mockups — is the key to staying innovative

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GM’s EVs have been on a roll lately. After selling just the Chevy Bolt for years, a wave of new models — now up to 17 fully electrified vehicles — has pushed the automaker into second place in the U.S. behind Tesla. 

How did it get there? With a little help from a Tesla veteran.

GM board member Jon McNeil was president of Tesla during the development and introduction of the Model 3, a crucial period of the company’s growth. One of the things he credits for Tesla’s success is how Elon Musk ran product meetings. 

“No slides was our first rule,” McNeil told the audience earlier this month at TC All Stage in Boston. “You have to be reviewing real product.”

Every week, senior leadership would sit down with product leaders to review their progress. The practice was inspired by an encounter Musk had with Steve Jobs, McNeil said. 

“There was this belief that I think is true: Steve Jobs didn’t have a ton of time or patience for Elon in the early days. And early in the early days, Elon would try to chase Steve down at events and parties in Silicon Valley for advice. And Steve didn’t like Elon, and so would often turn his back to him when he approached him. 

“But one night, Elon got lucky and said, ‘Steve, if you had one piece of advice for me as a young entrepreneur’ — he had just just done PayPal and was joining the team at Tesla — ‘what would that be?’ Steve said, ‘Elon, you’re now in the hardware business, but the hardware business is a lot like the software business. If you want to be successful in business, you have to get one thing right, and that is, you have to have a perfect product. And if the product is beautiful, it will sell itself.”

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Musk took that to heart, McNeil said, and the concept of a perfect product became central to product development at Tesla.

“The thing we were looking for first of all was surprise and delight. Like, are we doing something that is going to just make somebody go wow or laugh or have fun? 

“Crazy example of that is the fart button,” McNeil said, referring to a software button labeled “Emissions Testing Mode” that would simulate flatulence through the car’s speakers. 

The company also prized minimalism, which on the software side meant keeping functions accessible in fewer than two taps on the screen. 

“It has to be a kind of a no brainer for the average user. Then we would double back the designer — the lead designer was always in the room — and then we would say, OK, Franz, now make it beautiful.”

Meetings like those, where the actual product was reviewed, not a mockup, helped preserve Tesla’s culture as it grew, McNeil said. “You can imagine the culture that gets communicated when people are bringing their A game to the CEO every week. Because you’re not going to bring your B game to the CEO — especially that CEO, because he’s going to fire you,” he said.

“That keeps that company on a one-week cadence of innovation. Every week they’re making progress because of the product reviews.”

McNeil left Tesla in early 2018. In 2022, he was added to the board at GM. 

“One of the things I’m most proud of is Mary Barra, CEO, and Mark Reuss, president, [who oversee] a 275,000 person, $200 billion revenue company, are running product reviews every week where there’s no slides. You’ve got to see the real product [whether it’s] hardware, software. If it’s hardware, it’s in the room. You’re touching it. You’re feeling it,” he said.

“That stuff is so powerful. And it’s led to GMs introduction of 17 EVs, now the second best selling EVs in the country. Because they’re just on product, every week.”



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