This is the sixth of 12 columns on AI and work, which will appear the second Sunday of each month, from September through August. Last month’s column provided ...
International: Kaseya wrote to African leaders over the weekend warning that without urgent intervention to plug the ...
ChatGPT’s o3-mini can assist your job search with cover letter writing, resume building, personalized job recommendations, ...
For the third time in 10 years, Indiana basketball is looking for a head coach. Who puts IU back onto that elite top shelf of ...
Pam Bondi is the first attorney in history to have been a lobbyist for foreign governments. She also just disbanded the FBI’s ...
AI Tutor is a must-try AI tool 2025 offering efficient and compact lessons to help you acquire new skills. The app assesses ...
“Resuming atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons would be disastrous,” says Joseph Mangano, executive director of the Radiation and Public Health Project. He cited the “lessons learned from ...
Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin approved a new state compensation policy (fair and equitable pay) for state agencies, barring ...
The U.S. Agency for International Development was a key player in renewable energy and disaster protection around the world — until Elon Musk showed up.
Rather than stay frozen in DEI purgatory, corporate leaders need to find a way to keep moving forward, Bloomberg Opinion columnist Sarah Green Carmichael writes.
The agency was a key player in renewable energy and disaster protection around the world—until Elon Musk showed up.
Wednesday night saw the team officialize a deal to send Butler to the Golden State Warriors, who will send Andrew Wiggins to ...
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