Artificial intelligence (AI) has been celebrated as a game-changer, promising unprecedented speed and precision. Yet, while AI excels at processing data and identifying patterns, it lacks the uniquely human traits of imagination, empathy and context—skills that are the foundation of true innovation.
This 90-minute, three-part generative AI series helped me learn how to use artificial intelligence for work and everyday life. Here's what I learned.
A Coming Disruption The global labor market is on the brink of a seismic shift, driven by the forces of artificial intelligence (AI), automation, and offshoring.
From AI-driven defense to evolving ransomware tactics, here's what cybersecurity industry leaders and experts are preparing for this year.
Spotify, a digital music streaming service, has developed an AI-powered robot DJ aimed to help listeners find their musical sweet spots without the hassle of wading through unknown, and possibly crappy,
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives remains bullish and expects Tesla's market cap to hit $2 trillion in 2025, saying the coming four years will be a "total game changer" for Tesla. He expects the Trump administration to fast-track full self-driving (FSD), paving the way for the company's robotaxi agenda.
A 'binary big bang' occurred when AI foundation models cracked the natural language barrier, kickstarting a shift in our technology systems: how we design them, use them, and how they operate.
Indeed, Musk suggested that synthetic data — data generated by AI models themselves — is the path forward. “The only way to supplement [real-world data] is with synthetic data, where the AI creates [training data],” he said. “With synthetic data … [AI] will sort of grade itself and go through this process of self-learning.”
A study published today in the journal Nature by researchers at Columbia University described a new medical AI model that they say can accurately predict the activity of genes at the cellular level. In theory,
It was almost a year before a handful of Chinese AI chatbots received government approval for public release. Some questioned whether China’s stance on censorship might hobble the country’s AI ambitions.
An AI expert argues AI progress hasn’t stalled, it’s become invisible, which could leave us unprepared for the future.
Generative AI projects will move from pilot phase to production for many companies this year, which means the workforce will be affected in ways never before imagined, says Sarah Hoffman, director of AI research at AlphaSense.