Nath Connell
I started Future Technology as a Facebook page in 2017 because I was tired of tech news that was either drowning in jargon or buried in clickbait. The idea was simple: take the biggest tech story of the day and explain it so anyone could follow it, no computer science degree required.
That page grew into a community of 39,000+ people, and in 2026 it became a daily publication. Today Future Technology covers AI, computing, EVs and consumer tech with the same rule I started with: if you cannot explain it clearly, you do not understand it well enough to publish it.
What I cover
I track emerging technology trends across artificial intelligence, consumer hardware, electric vehicles and the software tools shaping how we work. My focus is on the stories that affect real people, not just the tech industry. When a new AI model launches, I explain what it actually does. When a company makes a move, I explain why it matters to you.
I am especially interested in the intersection of AI and everyday life: how these tools are changing work, creativity, and the products we use. I also cover the policy and business side of tech when it has real-world consequences.
Editorial approach
Every article on this site follows the same process. I monitor breaking news, trusted publications and trending conversations across the web, then pick the stories that genuinely matter. The filter is always: would a curious, non-technical person benefit from understanding this?
I do not assume readers know what an LLM is or why a chip architecture matters. If a technical term is needed, it gets explained the first time it appears. No jargon for the sake of jargon, no filler, no waffle.
How AI is used
AI-assisted publishing
- Research and initial drafting use AI tools to speed up the process
- Every article is human-reviewed and edited before publication
- Sources are always linked so you can check the working yourself
- AI never decides what gets published or how a story is framed
I believe in being upfront about this. AI helps me research faster and draft more efficiently, but the editorial judgement, the fact-checking and the final call on what gets published is always mine. You can read more about this in the editorial policy.
Get in touch
Got a tip, a correction, or just want to say hello? I read everything.