Poland may hit 40°C as African heatwave raises chance of national temperature record
A hot tropical air mass from Africa is set to push temperatures in Poland as high as 40°C in the coming days. Meteorologist Arleta Unton-Pyziołek of tvnmeteo.pl said there is a chance of breaking not only the June record but Poland's all-time temperature record. Poland's current absolute temperature record stands at 40.2°C, recorded in Prószków in August 1921.
Władimir Siemirunnij, a 23-year-old from Pilica Tomaszów Mazowiecki, won the silver medal in the 10,000m speed skating event at the Milan Winter Olympics — Poland's first speed skating medal in 12 years. The Polish federation president announced that Siemirunnij will be the centerpiece of a newly built long-distance group. The federation hopes for rapid development and future medals.
A Microsoft report finds that 8 in 10 workers globally say they lack enough time or energy to do their jobs, and 60% of meetings happen as unscheduled ad hoc calls. The argument is that wearable AI devices must be designed to reduce cognitive overload — the flood of information and constant context-switching — rather than add another layer of noise. The core issue is a capacity problem, not a motivation one.
Professionals end every day feeling behind or burnt out, but not because they haven’t worked hard enough or clocked off earlier that day. It’s because the volume of information, decisions, and context-switching is moving faster than the pace humans can realistically handle. A recent Microsoft report put numbers to what people are feeling. Eight in 10 of the global workforce say they lack enough time or energy to do their work, and 60% of meetings are happening as ad hoc calls or quick chats outside the pre-scheduled day-to-day. This isn’t a motivation problem, it’s a capacity one - and it's created one of the defining contradictions of modern work. Businesses have never had more ideas, expertise, or ambition at their disposal, yet the people inside them are increasingly starved of the time and clarity needed to turn that potential into progress. The smartphone makes this contradiction impossible to ignore. It is one of the most consequential inventions of the 21st century, yet also one that many people actively try to use less. Screen-time limits and digital detoxes are not anti-technology trends. They are signs that people are trying to regain control over a tool that has become indispensable, but increasingly overwhelming. The message is simple: the market isn't asking for more technology. It's asking for relief. Technological exhaustionPeople are adopting or looking at things like digital assistants, wearable AI, focus apps, and workflow automation, not because the technology is impressive. They're doing it because they're exhausted. That distinction matters because cognitive overload has become a workplace crisis. And the first wave of wearable AI missed the opportunity to solve it. Instead of building practical tools, companies chased futuristic visions. Early wearable AI products asked "what can AI do?" instead of "what problem needs solving?" The Humane Pin is the most obvious and probably the most well-known industry example. The vision was compelling, but the execution wasn't there. It positioned itself as a complete phone replacement before proving it could do even just one thing better than a phone. Ultimately, it tried to be everything and ended up being nothing. This approach didn't reduce cognitive overload - it created more. Another device to manage. Another thing running in the background of an already overwhelming life. The wrong question asked was: "How do we replace the phone entirely?" A much better question is: “Where are people losing the most time, energy, and clarity — and how can technology give some of it back without demanding more from them?” Useful technologiesThe most useful technologies rarely arrive by replacing everything at once. The calculator didn't try to replace the accountant - it eliminated one specific source of friction and became indispensable. It’s the same with wearable AI assistants. Progress is made in practice, not promises. The wearables gaining real traction share one quality: users can explain their value in a single sentence. "This device exists so I can stop worrying about X." That clarity isn't a constraint - it is the product. The future of this category will not be defined by the devices with the boldest premise. It will be defined by those who understand where people are most overloaded and remove that pressure without asking for much in return. Does the technology make someone feel more capable or more managed? Does it reduce the number of things they have to remember, check, repeat, and translate? Does it create clarity, or simply another stream of information? Those questions are less glamorous than asking whether AI can replace the smartphone. But they are also far more useful. The wearables that will actually help aren't the ones with the boldest premise; they're the ones that solve one real problem but do it well. In a world drowning in information, that may be the most ambitious thing technology can do.Simplify work with the best AI tools.This article was produced as part of TechRadar Pro Perspectives, our channel to feature the best and brightest minds in the technology industry today.The views expressed here are those of the author and are not necessarily those of TechRadarPro or Future plc. If you are interested in contributing find out more here: https://www.techradar.com/pro/perspectives-how-to-submit
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