Midtown buzzed last night with Manhattan’s AI Summit, sparking NYC’s tech spring at the Javits Center. Speaker Mia Chen demoed neural nets as 1,000 geeks gaped, a $50 ticket dive into machine minds. It’s borough bytes—panels ran hot, pure Midtown vibe. A kid coded a bot; a pro pitched a startup. ‘Manhattan thinks—this is it,’ Chen says, tweaking slides. The halls turned silicon.
The summit’s fresh—March 15’s kickoff, it tripled since ’24, packing floors by 9 a.m. Chen’s a Flatiron coder; last night’s crowd hit max—screens glowed. A latecomer nabbed a badge; Q&A sparked—NYC grit shone. Runs two days—AI ruled. #NYCAISummit trended; Brooklyn’s jealous.
Some griped—’Too dense,’ sniped a newbie, dodging jargon. Wi-Fi lagged—cables saved it; talks held. A rival’s pitching a Dumbo hack, splitting nerds. Still, 2,000 stayed—tech reigned. Javits’s never computed so hard.
Chen’s teasing a hackathon, maybe a rooftop if spring bites. ‘NYC’s future—this boots it,’ she says, packing drives. The summit’s a Manhattan win—grit meets grid. It’s a tech rush; catch day two. Bring a laptop—code calls.