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Okay, Great Lakes Science Center, let's get one thing straight: slapping some robotic arms on a display and calling it "Super Human: Power of Technology" ain't gonna cut it. I mean, come on. Are we really that easily impressed these days?
The exhibit’s open until April 2026, according to reports. Plenty of time for them to rethink this whole thing, offcourse.
So, they've got interactive stations where you can try attaching "human augmentations" to a body in 30 seconds? Big deal. I can barely find my keys in 30 seconds, let alone perform virtual surgery. And a robotic hand controlled by sensors? I saw better special effects in a low budget 80s sci-fi flick.
Don't even get me started on the virtual jetpack. I bet it feels about as realistic as those old arcade games where you pretended to be flying a plane. Nostalgia ain’t innovation, people.
Then you got LG Display riding high on OLED tech advancements. Apparently, their stock is surging because they made their screens… brighter? More energy-efficient? Give me a break. It's still just a screen, people. We’re so obsessed with marginally better picture quality that we're throwing money at companies for the privilege.
It's like we're all addicted to this constant stream of "new and improved" gadgets, but are we actually improving ourselves? Or are we just becoming more reliant on tech that’ll be obsolete in, like, five minutes?

And what about TFT-LCDs? They're still kicking around because they're "cost-effective." Translation: they're cheap. So, while LG is patting itself on the back for its fancy OLEDs, they're still churning out the budget stuff to keep the lights on. It’s a balanced strategy, they say. I say it's a cop-out.
And then there's PM Modi, bless his heart, talking about India becoming a "pioneer of technological transformation." R&D spending doubled, patent numbers up 17 times, third-largest startup ecosystem… Sounds great on paper. But what about the actual impact on people's lives? Are these innovations actually solving real problems, or are they just creating more ways for us to waste time and money? According to PM Modi Inaugurates Emerging Science & Technology Innovation Conclave 2025, the Prime Minister inaugurated the Emerging Science & Technology Innovation Conclave 2025. But are these chips going into life-saving medical devices, or just the latest overpriced smartphones? I’m betting the latter.
They’re working in areas such as clean energy and advanced materials, he says. But are they really? Or is it just more greenwashing? It's hard to tell these days. Everyone's got a press release about how they're saving the planet, but nobody's actually doing anything about it.
Look, I'm not a Luddite. I use technology every day, just like everyone else. But I'm also not blind to the fact that a lot of this "innovation" is just empty hype. We're so busy chasing the next big thing that we're not stopping to ask ourselves why. What's the point of all this? Are we actually making the world a better place, or are we just creating more distractions to keep us from thinking about the real problems?
Maybe I'm just getting old and cranky. Maybe I'm the crazy one here... But I can't shake the feeling that we're being sold a bill of goods. We're being told that technology is the answer to all our problems, but it seems like it's just creating new ones.