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Daniel Philip hopes to help the millions of people who are deaf like him communicate with the wider world. Daniel Kim is motivated by his grandmother, a black belt in taekwondo who was sidelined after ...
AI is changing the world in remarkable ways, from improving health care and education to making life easier for people with disabilities. It’s transforming how people live and work, and its ability to ...
Over the past year, people and organizations in every part of the world have applied technology to help address their own challenges and opportunities, as well as those of their communities and ...
Read this story in Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Portuguese, Spanish or Tamil. KHARADI, Maharashtra, India – At 10:30 p.m., after a long day of work, Baby Rajaram Bokale has one more task to complete ...
Åsa Bredin, who became studio head of Mojang Studios in 2023, came into gaming through engineering more than 15 years ago, but her sons introduced her to Minecraft, the multi-billion-dollar franchise ...
The threat landscape is the most complex in history. The speed, scale and sophistication of bad actors is alarming. In just one year the number of threat actors tracked by Microsoft jumped from 300 to ...
SAINT-PAUL-LEZ-DURANCE, France – Set in a scrubby forest of pine, oak and aromatic brush in Provence, the world’s largest nuclear fusion plant is under construction. Here, 2,000 scientists, physicists ...
Employees trying to answer questions as part of their jobs, researchers wading through medical records, developers analyzing client needs – everybody wants information at their fingertips. AI has made ...
TOKYO, Japan – On a small percentage of flights, despite everyone’s best intentions, something unplanned happens. A passenger gets sick or a flight has a long delay. After the cabin attendant attends ...
New data shows most employees are experimenting with AI and growing their skills — now, the job of every leader is to channel this experimentation into business impact The data is in: 2024 is the year ...
People have always looked for patterns to explain the universe and to predict the future. “Red sky at night, sailor’s delight. Red sky in morning, sailor’s warning” is an adage predicting the weather.
David Balleza, a third-year computer systems engineering student at the Tecnológico de Monterrey, has never been a fan of knocking on professors’ doors each time he hits a snag in his studies. His ...