The AI revolution involves a massive transfer of labour – not from worker to machine, but from worker to you. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.
New opportunities for economic development have arrived in southern West Virginia. One Raleigh County organization hopes to ...
The 2026 Design Atelier freshman class brings new ideas on craftsmanship and modern luxury to Las Vegas.
That reflects a new reality of modern automaking: Software is tricky stuff, and bugs will almost invariably lurk among the millions of lines of code that define a software architecture as complex as ...
The dust will finally settle Sunday afternoon when the New Mexico Activities Association airs its annual seeding and selection show for this year’s high school baseball and softball state tournaments.
Credit: Photographed by Joseph Maldonado / Mashable Composite by Rene Ramos AI companions are quietly becoming a staple across the industry, and OpenAI is now joining the trend. The company has ...
When a politician is new on the scene, their first gaffe usually gets a pass. A first political gaffe is like the first time you forgot to do your homework. It leaves a pit in the stomach, and maybe ...
All’s well that ends well in App Store review controversies. Back in March, a major agentic coding company made news when Apple reportedly pushed back on new versions of its iPhone app. Two months ...
Companies like Lovable, Base44, Replit, and Netlify use AI to let anyone build a web app in seconds—and in thousands of cases, spill highly sensitive data onto the public internet. Security researcher ...
As of January 1, 2026, the medical coding landscape has undergone its most significant transformation in years, with the AMA releasing 418 CPT changes and CMS finalizing updated ICD-10-CM guidelines ...
Currently, the United States Navy has four nuclear submarine classes in service, the Ohio, Los Angeles, Virginia, and Seawolf. When you picture a submarine capable of launching a nuclear missile, you ...
David Bamman studies culture at a scale few humans ever could. An associate professor in the UC Berkeley School of Information, Bamman uses computational methods to analyze books, films and music, ...