AI Insights
Crisis? Clarity! How artificial intelligence helps with

Understanding crises – shaping the future: A quiet guide for turbulent times (© Dilok Klaisataporn @ iStock)
Crises are part of life – but how we deal with them determines our inner maturity. While many people are looking for guidance in difficult phases, it is becoming increasingly clear that artificial intelligence can be a valuable companion in self-reflection.
In his book “Crises as turning points – learning, growing, shaping”, Markus Schall describes how modern AI tools can help to remove mental blocks, gain emotional clarity and understand oneself better.
AI as a tool for sorting thoughts
The idea of talking to an artificial intelligence about personal issues sounds strange to many people at first. But if you try it out, you quickly realize that the neutral, non-judgmental “conversation partner” can help enormously in sorting thoughts, recognizing patterns and preparing decisions – without any human judgment or distraction.
Markus Schall, an experienced entrepreneur, software developer and author, takes an unusual approach in his book: he combines traditional life coaching with modern technologies. In a separate chapter, he explains how AI-based self-reflection works – and why it can be a realistic start to personal development for many people. Instead of waiting a long time for therapy or getting lost in internet forums, AI offers the opportunity to ask specific questions, observe oneself – and gain clarity step by step.
“It’s not about seeing AI as a substitute for human closeness,” says Schall. “But rather as a tool – similar to a notebook or a good guidebook – that can help us to pause and think more deeply in our everyday lives.”
The book “Crises as Turning Points” is not a crash course in crisis management, but a calm, reflective companion. It combines biographical insights with tangible impulses – from nutrition and social dynamics to practical techniques for more personal responsibility and serenity. The integration of AI is just one of many tools designed to encourage readers to find their own paths.
Finding new perspectives with artificial intelligence
But the role of artificial intelligence does not end with sorting out past thoughts. It is becoming increasingly clear that AI can also serve as a source of inspiration for new perspectives – both in terms of personal growth and professional reorientation.
Anyone who consciously engages in an interactive conversation with a well-trained AI often discovers surprising ideas, new approaches or unexpected ways out of deadlocked patterns. Whether it’s about the realignment of a project, the next career move or the desire for more inner clarity – AI is increasingly becoming the sparring partner of the future. In “Crises as turning points”, precisely this aspect is addressed in a practical way and made tangible.
More than a crisis guide – a compass for personal development
“Crises as Turning Points” is far more than a book about difficult phases in life. It is a silent companion for people who do not want to stand still. If you take the time to delve deeper, you will realize that it is not just about awareness: This is not just about coping with crises – but about recognizing deeper patterns and breaking down old ways of thinking.
Among other things, the book addresses early imprints from childhood and shows how much they influence our behavior today – often unconsciously. It sheds light on the family dynamics that shape us and helps us to see through unhealthy role models. Aspects of mental clarity and resilience are also addressed: for example, through practical tips on microdosing lithium orotate and vitamin D3 – both natural substances that can promote mental balance when used mindfully.
Anyone looking for guidance will not find any quick fixes in this book – but many clever questions, valuable perspectives and concrete impulses for a self-determined, clearer path. And sometimes it is precisely this that initiates the decisive turning point.
The book is available from bookshops, BoD, Amazon and other booksellers.
https://schall-verlag.de/buch-krisen.php
M. Schall Verlag
Hackenweg 97
26127 Oldenburg
Germany
https://schall-verlag.de
Herr Markus Schall
info@schall-verlag.de
Schall-Verlag was founded in 2025 by Markus Schall – out of a desire to publish books that create clarity, stimulate reflection and consciously avoid the hectic flow of the zeitgeist. The publishing house does not see itself as a mass marketplace, but as a curated platform for content with attitude, depth and substance.
The focus is on topics such as personal development, crisis management, social dynamics, technological transformation and critical thinking. All books are the result of genuine conviction, not market analysis – and are aimed at readers who are looking for guidance, insight and new perspectives.
The publishing house is deliberately designed to be compact, independent and with high standards in terms of language, content and design. Schall-Verlag is based in Oldenburg (Lower Saxony) and plans multilingual publications in German and English.
This release was published on openPR.
AI Insights
Microsoft Says Azure Service Affected by Damaged Red Sea Cables

Microsoft Corp. said on Saturday that clients of its Azure cloud platform may experience increased latency after multiple international cables in the Red Sea were cut.
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AI Insights
Geoffrey Hinton says AI will cause massive unemployment and send profits soaring

Pioneering computer scientist Geoffrey Hinton, whose work has earned him a Nobel Prize and the moniker “godfather of AI,” said artificial intelligence will spark a surge in unemployment and profits.
In a wide-ranging interview with the Financial Times, the former Google scientist cleared the air about why he left the tech giant, raised alarms on potential threats from AI, and revealed how he uses the technology. But he also predicted who the winners and losers will be.
“What’s actually going to happen is rich people are going to use AI to replace workers,” Hinton said. “It’s going to create massive unemployment and a huge rise in profits. It will make a few people much richer and most people poorer. That’s not AI’s fault, that is the capitalist system.”
That echos comments he gave to Fortune last month, when he said AI companies are more concerned with short-term profits than the long-term consequences of the technology.
For now, layoffs haven’t spiked, but evidence is mounting that AI is shrinking opportunities, especially at the entry level where recent college graduates start their careers.
A survey from the New York Fed found that companies using AI are much more likely to retrain their employees than fire them, though layoffs are expected to rise in the coming months.
Hinton said earlier that healthcare is the one industry that will be safe from the potential jobs armageddon.
“If you could make doctors five times as efficient, we could all have five times as much health care for the same price,” he explained on the Diary of a CEO YouTube series in June. “There’s almost no limit to how much health care people can absorb—[patients] always want more health care if there’s no cost to it.”
Still, Hinton believes that jobs that perform mundane tasks will be taken over by AI, while sparing some jobs that require a high level of skill.
In his interview with the FT, he also dismissed OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s idea to pay a universal basic income as AI disrupts the economy and reduce demand for workers, saying it “won’t deal with human dignity” and the value people derive from having jobs.
Hinton has long warned about the dangers of AI without guardrails, estimating a 10% to 20% chance of the technology wiping out humans after the development of superintelligence.
In his view, the dangers of AI fall into two categories: the risk the technology itself poses to the future of humanity, and the consequences of AI being manipulated by people with bad intent.
In his FT interview, he warned AI could help someone build a bioweapon and lamented the Trump administration’s unwillingness to regulate AI more closely, while China is taking the threat more seriously. But he also acknowledged potential upside from AI amid its immense possibilities and uncertainties.
“We don’t know what is going to happen, we have no idea, and people who tell you what is going to happen are just being silly,” Hinton said. “We are at a point in history where something amazing is happening, and it may be amazingly good, and it may be amazingly bad. We can make guesses, but things aren’t going to stay like they are.”
Meanwhile, he told the FT how he uses AI in his own life, saying OpenAI’s ChatGPT is his product of choice. While he mostly uses the chatbot for research, Hinton revealed that a former girlfriend used ChatGPT “to tell me what a rat I was” during their breakup.
“She got the chatbot to explain how awful my behavior was and gave it to me. I didn’t think I had been a rat, so it didn’t make me feel too bad . . . I met somebody I liked more, you know how it goes,” he quipped.
Hinton also explained why he left Google in 2023. While media reports have said he quit so he could speak more freely about the dangers of AI, the 77-year-old Nobel laureate denied that was the reason.
“I left because I was 75, I could no longer program as well as I used to, and there’s a lot of stuff on Netflix I haven’t had a chance to watch,” he said. “I had worked very hard for 55 years, and I felt it was time to retire . . . And I thought, since I am leaving anyway, I could talk about the risks.”
AI Insights
NFL player props, odds, bets: Week 1, 2025 NFL picks, SportsLine Machine Learning Model AI predictions, SGP

The arrival of the 2025 NFL season means more than just making spread or total picks, as it also gives bettors the opportunity to make NFL prop bets on the league’s biggest stars. From the 13 games on Sunday to Monday Night Football, you’ll have no shortage of player props to wager on. There are several players returning from injury-plagued seasons a year ago who want to start 2025 off on the right note, including Trevor Lawrence, Alvin Kamara and Stefon Diggs. Their Week 1 NFL prop odds could be a bit off considering how last year ended, and this could be an opportunity to cash in.
Kamara has a rushing + receiving yards NFL prop total of 93.5 (-112/-114) versus Arizona on Sunday after the running back averaged 106.6 scrimmage yards in 2024. The Cardinals allowed the eighth-most rushing yards per game to running backs last year, in addition to giving up the eighth-most receiving yards per game to the position.
Before making any Week 1 NFL prop bets on Kamara’s Overs, you also have to remember he’s now 30, playing under a first-year head coach and has a young quarterback who’s winless in six career starts. If you are looking for NFL prop bets or NFL parlays for Week 1, SportsLine has you covered with the top Week 1 player props from its Machine Learning Model AI.
Built using cutting-edge artificial intelligence and machine learning techniques by SportsLine’s Data Science team, AI Predictions and AI Ratings are generated for each player prop.
Now, with the Week 1 NFL schedule quickly approaching, SportsLine’s Machine Learning Model AI has identified the top NFL props from the biggest Week 1 games.
Week 1 NFL props for Sunday’s main slate
After analyzing the NFL props from Sunday’s main slate and examining the dozens of NFL player prop markets, the SportsLine’s Machine Learning Model AI says Bengals WR Tee Higgins goes Under 63.5 receiving yards (-114) versus the Browns in a 1 p.m. ET kickoff. Excluding a 2022 game in which he played just one snap, Higgins has been held under 60 receiving yards in three of his last four meetings with Cleveland.
Entering his sixth NFL season, Higgins has never had more than 58 yards in any Week 1 game, including going catchless on eight targets versus the Browns in Week 1 of 2023. The SportsLine Machine Learning Model projects 44.4 yards for Higgins in a 5-star pick. See more Week 1 NFL props here.
Week 1 NFL props for Bills vs. Ravens on Sunday Night Football
After analyzing Ravens vs. Bills props and examining the dozens of NFL player prop markets, the SportsLine’s Machine Learning Model AI says Ravens QB Lamar Jackson goes Over 233.5 passing yards (-114). The last time Jackson took the field was against Buffalo in last season’s playoffs, and the two-time MVP had 254 passing yards and a pair of touchdowns through the air. The SportsLine Machine Learning Model projects Jackson to blow past his total with 280.2 yards on average in a 4.5-star prop pick. See more NFL props for Ravens vs. Bills here.
You can make NFL prop bets on Jackson and others with the Underdog Fantasy promo code CBSSPORTS2. Bet at Underdog Fantasy and get $50 in bonus bets after making a $5 bet:
Week 1 NFL props for Bears vs. Vikings on Monday Night Football
After analyzing Vikings vs. Bears props and examining the dozens of NFL player prop markets, the SportsLine’s Machine Learning Model AI says Bears QB Caleb Williams goes Under 218.5 passing yards (-114). Primetime games like what he’ll see on Sunday night weren’t too favorable to Williams as a rookie. He lost all three he played in, had one total passing score across them, was sacked an average of 5.3 times and, most relevant to this NFL prop, Williams failed to reach even 200 passing yards in any of the three. The SportsLine Machine Learning Model forecasts him to finish with just 174.8 passing yards, making Under 218.5 a 4.5-star NFL prop. See more NFL props for Vikings vs. Bears here.
You can also use the latest FanDuel promo code to get $300 in bonus bets instantly:
How to make Week 1 NFL prop picks
SportsLine’s Machine Learning Model has identified another star who sails past his total and has dozens of NFL props rated 4 stars or better. You need to see the Machine Learning Model analysis before making any Week 1 NFL prop bets.
Which NFL prop picks should you target for Week 1, and which star player has multiple 5-star rated picks? Visit SportsLine to see the latest NFL player props from SportsLine’s Machine Learning Model that uses cutting-edge artificial intelligence to make its projections.
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