
At the AI Summit, learning to love and fear the era of agents Premium
The Hindu
AI is already helping with some subtle shortcuts in journalism. What if that changes?
How does a reporter cover a massive international summit with simultaneous programming? That was my challenge when I entered the India AI Impact Summit at Bharat Mandapam in New Delhi last week.
I first thought I had an infallible tech-enabled plan: I would use a snippet of code to fetch audio clips of YouTube livestreams of several panel discussions, transcribe them with a cloud-based voice recognition tool, review those transcripts later, and then file stories.
But that is not what happened. The organisers seem to have found it difficult to get an adequate number of video and livestream personnel to reliably take care of a dozen simultaneous livestreams. My technique ran into trouble at several discussions, where the stream started only after the panel was introduced. This made it challenging for me to “diarize” transcripts (add speaker names to each text) by cross-referencing the panellists listed on the summit website. The website itself kept changing without notice. And sometimes, much to my annoyance, someone would leave a live mic on a production counter, severely compromising my automated transcription.
Thankfully, other reporting assignments kept me busy — daily briefings, interviews with different players in the AI ecosystem, and high-profile controversies, including the haphazard security arrangements that caused speakers to miss their own sessions and Galgotias University’s Chinese robodog.
As I ran around taking notes, I kept thinking, ‘there has got to be an easier way to do this’. And there indeed was, for many tasks. I felt guilty whenever I was not trying to find those easier ways. That feeling came from having just downloaded Claude, a coding-focused AI app that could help make my work much simpler.
With no coding experience, I built three tools likely to save me time on grunt work. The first is an Android app to continuously fetch notifications from the Gazette of India, which has a tendency to drop, with little warning, major policy updates through the week. The second is a process to update my personal website. While it earlier took me half an hour every three months to do this, it now takes just a minute. The third was a small browser extension to automate the many steps required to submit a drafted story.

The draft policy for “Responsible Digital Use Among Students”, released on Monday by the Department of Health and Family Welfare, has recommended that parents set structured routines with clear screen-time rules and prioritise privacy, safety, and open conversation with children on digital well-being.












