If timing is everything, the annual CERAWeek energy conference organized by S&P Global Inc. late last month couldn’t have been better for Canada. Against the backdrop of the unfolding conflict in the ...
AI Quick Read A video is doing the rounds on social media showing Anthropic's Claude give logical answer to a real-life problem. Testing analytical skills of Large Language Models (LLM), neither Open ...
The United States Navy takes 18-year-olds fresh out of high school and trains them to operate nuclear reactors in 18 months. These aren’t college graduates. They’re not experienced professionals. They ...
SystemsSpec Group, organisers of the children’s Day Essay Competition as part of its corporate social responsibility (CSR), has said the initiative had exposed the nation’s youths to solution-oriented ...
Entrepreneur Matt Shumer's essay, "Something Big Is Happening," is going mega-viral on X, where it's been viewed 42 million times and counting. The piece warns that rapid advancements in the AI ...
Voyager Technologies CEO Dylan Taylor said data centers in space will become a reality, but cooling issues still need to be resolved. Tesla CEO Elon Musk highlighted space-based data centers as a ...
The best way to fix Americans’ cost-of-living problem is to give workers bigger raises, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said last week. The problem: That solution looks broken, too. The US job ...
A key aspect of the suddenly trendy "affordability" problem is that young adults are said to be priced out of the housing market. The statistics appear to be compelling. Per the National Association ...
AI is a particularly powerful tool in the hands of fraudsters. Fraud powered by generative AI is only limited by the criminal's imagination. When it comes to preventing financial fraud, many experts ...
Review & Outlook: Was Jack Smith looking for evidence to indict a few GOP lawmakers? Photo: J. Scott Applewhite/Jose Luis Magana/AP/Andrew Harnik/Getty Images There’s so much happening, it’s ...
In the world of fat activism, the “O-words”—overweight and obesity—are expressly verboten. That’s because advocates and “fat studies” scholars want to destigmatize and accommodate fatness—their ...