Here’s how AI is subtly powering your life
AI is more than just a machine with human-level intelligence. It is a set of algorithms and technologies that is already powering many tasks in everyday life.
AI is more than just a machine with human-level intelligence. It is a set of algorithms and technologies that is already powering many tasks in everyday life.
Not only are there different levels of automation for vehicles but artificial intelligence is also working inside the car to make a ride safer for the driver and passengers.
Just as electricity transformed the way industries functioned in the past century, artificial intelligence has the power to substantially change society in the next 100 years.
Harvard Business School historian Nancy Koehn turned to figures from the past who overcame adversity to leave a lasting mark on civilization.
Counterintelligence expert Robin Dreeke, who spent decades as a senior FBI agent, knows how to make strangers trust him enough to be recruited as spies.
Annie McKee, director of the Penn CLO and Medical Education programs at the University of Pennsylvania, outlines three requirements that workers need to feel more fulfilled on the job.
The results of the German election could have a wider impact on Europe as a whole.
The US tax system needs to be overhauled and lessons can be learned from other countries.
Mario Livio, author of Why? What Makes Us Curious, explores curiosity.
America is facing a critical shortage of people trained in cybersecurity. The Cybersecurity Workforce Alliance is aiming to bridge that skills gap.
Morton Schapiro and Gary Saul Morson of Northwestern University disucss why economists should embrace other disciplines.
Some experts stress that huge investments will be required for a less visible – but equally pressing – facet of infrastructure: technology.
Sam Walker, deputy editor for enterprise at The Wall Street Journal, looks at the greatest teams of all time and the influence of their captains.
NASA Chief Astronaut Chris Cassidy shared what he learnt from a near disaster in space.
Are the best days for U.S. economic growth long gone? Or do they still lie ahead?