A plain-English record of the public BC + AI website improvements. We keep the internal deployment log separately; this page is the readable version for members, staff, partners, and anyone wondering what has been changing.

Last updated: June 6, 2026. This was not just cleanup. This was a big public-surface week: community pages, program pages, event pages, Luma updates, recaps, galleries, and trust-building infrastructure all landed together.

Week of June 1, 2026

Start here: the big wins

Vancouver AI got a real web surface

  • The new Vancouver AI community page makes the monthly flagship room legible as an ongoing community, not just a repeating event.
  • The June meetup is now shareable three ways: the BC + AI event page, the story-style News article, and the Luma page where people can register.
  • The broader BC + AI Luma calendar is now easier to use as the live source for upcoming rooms, while the website gives each program and community a durable public home.

Programs, learning, and Responsible AI

Events, Luma, and community proof

  • AI Ethical Futures Lab now reads like a serious civic-lab community, with a clearer bridge from policy, public trust, and real rooms.
  • Life Sciences & AI was restored with the approved community artwork and better positioning for biotech, health data, commercialization, and patient impact.
  • The Comox Valley work now has both a public event page and a recap with room photos and deck screenshots, which makes the regional story much easier to share.
  • The Past Events archive got cleaner as older event pages were repaired: fewer duplicate Luma CTAs, better captions, fewer invisible text artifacts, and stronger archive links.

News, galleries, and public trust

  • The Canada AI strategy article gives BC + AI a timely public argument for trusted local adoption, SME literacy, and community-scale implementation.
  • The youth robotics story and support page make the student-robotics lane visible as part of the ecosystem, not a side note.
  • The News, Videos, Communities, and Events surfaces all got quieter and more trustworthy through caption repair, content-shape cleanup, better QA checks, cleaner metadata, and snapshot-backed rollback trails.

Some of this is public and easy to see. Some of it is infrastructure. Together, it means the BC + AI website is becoming a real operating surface for the community, not just a brochure.