No Credible Sources on This Topic Were Available: A Note on What We Won't Publish
The sources provided for this article were about portable power station discounts on Amazon. That is not a robotics or AI story, and publishing it as one would be a disservice to readers.
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What happened here
The two sources provided for this piece returned a combined zero pieces of information relevant to robotics, AI models, or any topic within this publication's remit. To be precise, both URLs resolve to Amazon Prime Day deals coverage from ZDNet covering portable power stations from brands like Jackery, EcoFlow, and Anker, discounted by up to 50% during Prime Day 2026.
That is a consumer electronics deals story. It is not a research story. It is not an AI story. It is, in a way, not even adjacent to the beat this column covers.
Why this matters for readers
It's worth noting that the integrity of science and technology journalism depends, in part, on a very simple principle: the sources should actually support the claims being made. When they do not, the responsible move is to say so rather than construct a narrative around material that does not exist.
I am not going to fabricate a robotics angle from portable battery pack pricing data. The sample size of relevant sources here is zero, which is not a methodology concern so much as a category error.
What I'd want to see next
If there is a genuine story here, perhaps around the role of portable energy storage in field robotics deployments, or the supply chain implications of battery technology for mobile robot platforms, that story would require actual sources: published research, company disclosures, or on-record expert commentary. None of those were provided.
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The sources provided for this article are about consumer power banks, not robotics or AI research. Here is a transparent account of why this piece cannot be written as commissioned.
