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Multi-source AI news clustered, deduplicated, and scored 0–100 across authority, cluster strength, headline signal, and time decay.

  1. Harvard admits it was too easy to get A grades, vows crackdown

    Harvard University's Faculty of Arts and Sciences has voted to implement a new policy limiting the number of A grades awarded to undergraduates, aiming to combat grade inflation. Starting in fall 2027, instructors will be capped at giving A grades to no more than 20% of students in a class, plus an additional four students. This measure seeks to restore the meaning of high grades for students, employers, and graduate schools, addressing concerns that inflated grades no longer reflect exceptional achievement. AI

    Harvard admits it was too easy to get A grades, vows crackdown

    IMPACT Minimal direct impact on AI operators; primarily an academic policy change.

  2. The Whole Kitten-Cavoodle

    This article critiques the limitations of first principles thinking, arguing that it can lead to the dismissal of valuable common sense and historical lessons. The author suggests that reasoning by analogy is a more effective method for innovation and understanding complex concepts. Examples from Descartes and Leonardo da Vinci are used to illustrate the potential pitfalls of extreme first principles thinking and the power of analogical reasoning, drawing on insights from Steven Pinker and Douglas Hofstadter. AI

    The Whole Kitten-Cavoodle

    IMPACT Critiques a core AI development methodology, suggesting alternative approaches for innovation.