Monday/Lundi April/Avril 20, 2026

ZACK TECHNOLOGY LLC
Monday · April 20, 2026 · Major Content Day
Monday Dispatch — World Affairs · Tech · Science · Culture

The World Doesn't Stop
on MondaysNeither Do I

It's Major Content Curation Day. From AI governance to Iran, Gaza to quantum physics breakthroughs, a nuclear treaty reminder, and the surprise of the week: Major Dad is back on Tubi. Let's go.

Mondays are for content, caffeine, and confronting the chaos of the world with clear eyes. It's April 20, 2026 — and the feed today is extraordinary: AI oligarchs, a seized Iranian ship, Gaza's $71 billion price tag, a quantum physics prize, and Tim Cook stepping down from Apple. Plus: Major Dad. On Tubi. For free. Let's get into it.

My Recent Major Term Papers — All Live on the Website

As you may have noticed, Coffee with Zack and Coffee with Zaki have been on a two-week hiatus. The reason? I've been heads-down producing over a dozen longform editorial pieces. They're all live on the website now — go read them at your leisure. Here are the two flagships:

Tim Cook Steps Down at Apple — John Ternus Takes the Helm

The biggest tech story in years: Apple CEO Tim Cook is stepping down. He will be replaced by John Ternus, Apple's Senior Vice President of Hardware Engineering. Cook's tenure reshaped Apple from a computer company into the world's most valuable enterprise — iPhone, Apple Watch, AirPods, services, and the silicon transition to Apple-designed chips. Ternus is a hardware man through and through, which says something about where Apple sees its future: in devices, chips, and physical computing. A seismic transition for the most important consumer technology company on Earth.

Zack Technology LLC Take Tim Cook's Apple was defined by discipline, supply chain mastery, and product polish. Ternus brings deep hardware credibility at a moment when Apple's silicon strategy and Vision Pro spatial computing bet need an engineering champion at the top. This is Apple betting on atoms over bits — at least for now. Watch this space closely.

Five Men Control AI — Who Should Control Them?

The Economist's Insider asks the most important question in technology right now: five individuals — Altman, Musk, Zuckerberg, Pichai, Bezos, take your pick — control the AI systems that are reshaping civilisation. There are no democratic mandates, no international treaties, no meaningful accountability mechanisms. As a Superintelligence SME who has read Nick Bostrom's foundational work on this subject, I cannot overstate how urgently the world needs to confront this question. The AI governance vacuum is not theoretical. It is happening now, at scale, in products billions of people use every day.

5
Men who effectively control frontier AI development globally
44%
Of songs uploaded to Deezer daily are now AI-generated (TechCrunch)
0
Binding international AI governance frameworks currently in force
$1T
US military budget — and Washington is still scrapping key defense programs (Bloomberg: GPS satellite control cancelled)

Separately: Deezer reports that 44% of songs uploaded to its platform daily are now AI-generated. As someone who focuses on electronic music and music therapy — and who cares deeply about the emotional and therapeutic power of authentic human creativity — this number is both fascinating and alarming. AI-generated music is not inherently bad. But if nearly half the music uploaded to a major platform is machine-made, the question of what music means becomes urgent. Music therapy works because of human intention, vulnerability, and emotional truth. Machines do not grieve. They do not heal. Not yet.

The Iran War and America's Fracturing World Position

Politico's headline says it plainly: the Iran war is accelerating America's breakup with the world. The US seizure of an Iranian ship (covered on The Economist's Intelligence podcast) is the latest in a sequence of escalations that have left traditional allies confused, adversaries emboldened, and the rules-based international order looking increasingly like a selective convenience rather than a genuine framework. Pakistan, meanwhile, is seeking to raise its global standing as a mediator in US-Iran talks — a remarkable repositioning for a country usually defined by its own regional anxieties.

Nuclear Non-Proliferation — A Reminder The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists makes a point that should not need making: Washington needs to be reminded of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. In a moment of maximum geopolitical tension with Iran — a country whose nuclear program is the ostensible casus belli — the United States' own compliance with its NPT obligations deserves scrutiny. International law is not a menu from which powerful states may order selectively.

On Gaza: a new report finds that Gaza will need more than $71 billion in reconstruction funding over the next decade. Six months into the ceasefire, phase two of Trump's "peace plan" remains, per Le Monde, entirely in limbo. Saudi Arabia is recalculating its position as the Iran war reshapes the Gulf's balance of power. And an Israeli soldier's desecration of a crucifix in South Lebanon drew international condemnation — a small symbol, but symbols matter, particularly in a region where religious identity and political legitimacy are inseparable.

23 Million Afghans Need Humanitarian Aid — UNICEF

UNICEF reports that 23 million people in Afghanistan require humanitarian assistance. This number appeared in Afghanistan International this week. It will not appear on most front pages. As someone of Afghan heritage who has written extensively on this crisis — including a full longform piece available on this website and a book available on Amazon Kindle — I ask you to hold this number alongside Gaza's $71 billion headline. Both crises are real. Both deserve attention. The world's attention is not a zero-sum resource, even when the media treats it as one.

The Muon Wins the Breakthrough Prize — A Moment for Physics

Congratulations to the Muon g-2 Collaboration — CERN, Brookhaven Lab, and Fermilab — winners of the 2026 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics. Their decades-long, groundbreaking measurement of the muon's anomalous magnetic moment has pushed the boundaries of experimental precision and ignited a new era in the quest for physics beyond the Standard Model. This is the kind of science that makes you remember why humans are extraordinary. We build machines to measure the magnetic wobble of a subatomic particle to 15 decimal places, and that wobble doesn't match our best theory of the universe. Something is out there that we don't understand yet. Science is how we find it.

Also in science this week: Quanta Magazine asks what physical "life force" turns biology's wheels — a fascinating deep dive into the biophysics of how living systems maintain their improbable order. And a startup claims it can stop lightning and prevent catastrophic wildfires, via MIT Technology Review. Given what California has experienced in recent years, I'm paying close attention.

Chinese Go Master Nie Passes Away & Board Game Affiliate Picks

Chinese Go master Nie Weiping has passed away at 73. Go is one of the oldest and most profound strategic games in human history — more complex than chess in its combinatorics, and a game that has served as a benchmark for AI development (DeepMind's AlphaGo being the landmark moment). Nie was a giant of the game. His legacy belongs to Asia's cultural heritage and to the global community of strategic game players. Rest in peace.

On that note, two affiliate picks for the board game enthusiasts in the audience:

🛒 Amazon Affiliate Pick — Chess
Millennium ChessGenius Pro M815
Electronic chess computer with 2200 ELO adaptive AI, colour display, built-in trainer, and magnetic travel design. Serious chess in a portable package.
View on Amazon
🛒 Amazon Affiliate Pick — Go
WE Games Go Set 12″ with Storage Drawers
Traditional Go set with pull-out storage drawers, portable wood veneer Goban. A beautiful strategy board game for adults — honour the tradition.
View on Amazon

Jackson, the Senate, and the Republic's Fragile Institutions

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson continues to be a voice of judicial conscience on the Supreme Court, calling out what she sees as needless interventions by the Court's majority. The Atlantic argues that Trump failed what it calls "the 3 A.M. test" — the moment of crisis that reveals character. The New York Times reports that a Democratic Senate, once unthinkable, is now a real possibility heading into the midterms. And in a story that encapsulates the contradictions of American immigration policy: the wife of an active US Army sergeant faces deportation to a third country. These stories belong together. They tell you something about the republic's values — or its failure to live up to them.

The America at 250 feature in The Economist is worth your time this week. Two and a half centuries in, the republic is neither as broken as its critics fear nor as resilient as its champions claim. It is exactly as complicated as it has always been — which is, in its own exhausting way, a kind of continuity.

On Ambition, Unemployment, and Sitting with Your Own Thoughts

"Ambition is wonderful until it becomes the voice that tells you you're never doing enough. The goal is not to silence it — it's to make it your collaborator, not your critic." — Zaki, Founder & CEO, Zack Technology LLC

Three pieces this week for the mental health and emotional support corner of the dispatch. Harvard Business Review asks: when does your ambition start to exhaust you? It's a question I sit with daily — building something from nothing since 2014, including eight years without a salary, requires a relationship with ambition that is sustainable, not self-destructive. Vox offers a guide on how to make unemployment suck a little less, which is genuinely useful and kind. And the Washington Post explores why we can't sit alone with our thoughts anymore — excessive audio use, addictive screen time, and the modern flight from silence. As someone who advocates for music therapy, I think about this constantly. Sometimes the most therapeutic thing you can do is turn everything off.

Personal — The Jaw Chronicles Still recovering from the walnut situation. Still on smoothies. Still cannot have a Chipotle Burrito. The jaw is improving but slowly. I can talk, I can stream, I can write. And I just found out Major Dad is on Tubi for free — the CBS sitcom I grew up watching. If you've never seen it, now is a perfect time. Gerald McRaney. A Marine general. Three teenage stepdaughters. It's perfect television. Go watch it at tubitv.com while I eat soup and celebrate this unexpected gift.

BookCon Returns, a New Comet, and Electronic Music Under Siege

BookCon is back for the first time in six years — Mashable has the preview. For anyone who reads (and you should), this is a wonderful cultural moment. A newly spotted comet has stargazers excited, per National Geographic. And from VICE: ravers describe what actually happened when EggTek was violently shut down by police — a reminder that electronic music culture and its communities continue to face disproportionate policing and cultural hostility. The rave is not a crime. It is a community. It is therapy. It matters.

Coffee with Zack & Coffee with Zaki: Coming Back

The vlogs have been on pause while I wrote. They're coming back. Subscribe now so you don't miss the return. In the meantime, the PS5 livestreams continue — jaw or no jaw, the stream goes on.

🇺🇸

Coffee with Zack

English. Tech, world affairs, culture, gaming. Returning soon on YouTube. Subscribe at @iamzaki.

🇫🇷

Coffee with Zaki

Français. Technologie, affaires mondiales, musique électronique. Bientôt de retour. Abonnez-vous!

Everything Worth Reading Today

Zack Technology LLC
1,500 Days of Fire: Ukraine's War Without End
zack.coffee/ukraine
Zack Technology LLC
Requiem for Beirut: The Architects of Lebanon's Collapse
zack.coffee/lebanon
AI Governance
Five Men Control AI. Who Should Control Them?
The Economist — Insider
World Affairs — Iran
America Seizes an Iranian Ship
The Economist — The Intelligence
Middle East — Gaza
Gaza Needs $71bn+ in Next Decade for Recovery
Al Jazeera
Afghanistan
23 Million Need Humanitarian Aid in Afghanistan — UNICEF
Afghanistan International
Nuclear Policy
Washington Needs to Be Reminded of the NPT
Bulletin of Atomic Scientists
US Politics
A Democratic Senate Is Now a Real Possibility
The New York Times
US Politics
The Republican Congressman Taking on Trump
1843 Magazine — The Economist
Immigration
Wife of Active US Army Sergeant Faces Deportation
FiveThirtyEight / ABC News
Science — Physics
Muon g-2 Collaboration Wins 2026 Breakthrough Prize in Physics
Breakthrough Prize / CERN
Science — Astronomy
Why This Newly Spotted Comet Has Stargazers Excited
National Geographic
Science — Biology
What Physical 'Life Force' Turns Biology's Wheels?
Quanta Magazine
Mental Health
When Your Ambition Starts to Exhaust You
Harvard Business Review
Mental Health
Why We Can't Sit Alone With Our Thoughts Anymore
Washington Post
Military & NATO
NATO's Shadow Warriors: Inside Elite Special Forces
NATO / LinkedIn
America at 250
America at 250 — Interactive Feature
The Economist
Open to Opportunities — Remote & Hybrid
Seeking a Salary Career Position — Senior Project Manager & Versatile Tech Leader
I am actively seeking a remote or hybrid salary career position in project management, technology strategy, content leadership, or AI/intelligence advisory. I did not graduate from Ohio State and work over a decade in corporate for nothing. Eight years of unpaid independent work building Zack Technology LLC from the ground up is also experience — arguably the hardest kind. If you're hiring at any of the following companies, or you know someone who is: let's talk. Investors, VCs, and Angel Investors interested in Zack Technology LLC are equally welcome.
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Personal — A Note for the Ladies I'm on Tinder now. I'd prefer a long-term relationship but I'm open. Don't fall for fake accounts — if we're texting, my number includes 444 and it's a San Francisco area code. I still live in Sacramento but I'm hoping to get closer to the Bay Area's VC and Angel Investor ecosystem. Sacramento is wonderful. The Bay is where the capital flows. And yes, I can have a dinner date just as soon as my jaw finishes recovering from that walnut.
Technology World Affairs AI Governance Tim Cook Apple CEO Iran Gaza Afghanistan Lebanon Nuclear NPT Muon g-2 Physics Electronic Music Mental Health Music Therapy Chess Go Major Dad Tubi #RazerCreator Zack Technology LLC 🎾 Go Bucks!