News
Dubai Gives Go Ahead For $35 Billion Al Maktoum Airport Expansion
The project will include a new passenger terminal, helping the emirate achieve its goal of operating the world’s largest airport by 2050.
On Sunday, April 28th, Dubai’s HH Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum gave the go-ahead to a major expansion project for Al Maktoum Airport (DWC).
The development will add a new passenger terminal to DWC, marking a major step in the emirate’s goal to transform the global transport hub into the world’s largest airport by 2050.
The construction project is valued at a massive $34.8 billion (AED128 billion), and is necessary to accommodate the projected surge in air travel over the coming years.
The DWC expansion plans were reportedly shelved in 2019. However, the project regained traction under the airport operating company Dubai Airports, who manage both Dubai International Airport (DXB) and DWC.

“HH Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum reviewed the strategic plan of the #Dubai Aviation Engineering Projects and approved designs for the new passenger terminal at Al Maktoum International Airport, which will be the largest in the world when fully operational,” announced the Dubai government on X, noting that the new terminal will increase annual capacity to over 260 million passengers.
Under the comprehensive development plans, Al Maktoum Airport will surpass the scale of Dubai International Airport by fivefold. Eventually, all of Dubai International’s operations will be moved to the new site.
Also Read: Abu Dhabi Developer To Build World’s First Healthy Living Island
Dubai Airport CEO Paul Griffiths has emphasized the need for a new facility as DXB airport approaches its maximum annual capacity of 120 million passengers, explaining that the new development will transform airport operations.
“We are not planning an airport that has terminals. We’re going to completely change the business model for airports, make them far more intimate, and get rid of all the legacy processes that we’ve had to subject our customers to for far too long,” Griffiths stated.
News
Can AI Save Your Relationship? This New “Wingman” App Thinks It Can
Built by wives and designed for husbands, Good Husband is a new Claude-powered AI communication coach aiming to help men navigate difficult relationship conversations, one text at a time.
We’ve officially crossed the rubicon where artificial intelligence is no longer just optimizing our spreadsheets, fixing our code, or generating corporate slide decks. It’s moving into the most fragile, inherently messy sandbox of all: human relationships.
According to research from the Centre for the Governance of AI’s Global Dialogues study, a staggering 42.8% of people globally already lean on AI for emotional support or personal issues at least once a week. Now, a new consumer tech platform wants to institutionalize that habit for men who find themselves staring blankly at a text thread, totally at a loss for words.
Enter Good Husband, an AI-powered relationship communication wingman that has officially launched to help men navigate high-stakes, emotionally charged conversations with their partners.
Built by entrepreneurs and long-time business partners Zainab Imichi Alhassan and Sarah Curtis, the platform wasn’t designed to replace couples therapy. Instead, it acts as a real-time translator for the digitally tongue-tied. The premise is simple: many men care deeply about their partners but lock up when it comes to emotional articulation or resolving conflicts.
“Good Husband is for the man who already cares. He just needs the words,” co-founder Zainab Imichi Alhassan explained. “Often the issue is not a lack of care, it’s a lack of confidence in how to express what you’re trying to say in the moment”.
How It Works: Warm, Direct, Or “Your Voice”

Operating entirely in a web browser without the need for partner participation or lengthy onboarding, the platform allows users to paste a text message, describe a tense situation, or explain an ongoing argument. The AI then spits back three distinct text response options: Warm, Direct, and Your Voice.
For those who actually want to learn from their communication missteps rather than just copying and pasting a quick fix, the platform features a coaching mode. This tool deconstructs the underlying emotional dynamics of the conversation, explaining why a partner might be upset and how to address the root issue.
While the baseline platform runs on Anthropic’s Claude AI to handle multilingual, global conversations, subscribers can unlock a hyper-personalized layer called Better Husband. By feeding the AI a localized relationship profile — including love languages, key dates, communication preferences, and recurring areas of tension — the tool moves away from generic advice and moves toward bespoke conflict resolution.
This pivot toward emotional utility marks a fascinating shift in consumer tech. As we see more platforms leverage advanced language models to solve hyper-specific human pain points, the intersection of tech and regional innovation continues to prove that AI’s most valuable feature might not be productivity, but empathy amplification.
“The opportunity is not to replace human connection but to strengthen it,” says co-founder Sarah Curtis. “Technology has changed how we work, learn and communicate. We believe it can also help people become more thoughtful partners”.
Pricing And Future Roadmap
Good Husband is launching with a tiered subscription model:
- Free Plan: Includes 5 baseline conversations per month.
- Good Husband ($9/month): Unlocks unlimited conversations, Coaching Mode, tone selection, and the Better Husband profile.
- Great Husband ($19/month): Adds automated date reminders (birthdays, anniversaries), situation playbooks, and love language coaching.
The web-based launch is only phase one. The company is already building a WhatsApp-native experience — allowing men to pull their AI wingman directly into their daily chat flows — alongside a future mobile app featuring coaching streaks and proactive communication prompts.
Whether outsourcing your relationship articulation to a large language model sounds like the future of emotional intelligence or a dystopian shortcut, one thing is clear: the AI wingman era has arrived.
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