The fear of becoming obsolete drives leaders to work harder at tasks that are becoming commoditized while neglecting the ...
Balkrishan “BK” Kalra argues the Jevons paradox will reshape the workforce as AI shifts humans from doing work to owning ...
Most managers are using AI the same way they use any productivity tool: to move faster. It summarizes meetings, drafts responses, and clears small tasks off the plate. That helps, but it misses the ...
New MIT jobs report: Why AI's work impact will roll in like a rising tide, not a crashing wave ...
For most of modern history, human worth was measured by output — how much you produced, how fast you moved, how efficiently you performed. The modern economy was built on this premise. Factories ...
Across industries today, companies are pouring millions of dollars into AI initiatives to “up their acceleration game.” It has become a race to see who can announce the boldest strategy, the biggest ...
A company in eastern China is using an artificial intelligence-powered machine to sort clothes and boost recycling.
The tech industry has created an AI monster it can't stop and doesn't understand, writes contributing columnist Rob Curran. Michael Hogue The next task for AI firms is figuring out how their chatbots ...
Just a few years ago, a junior employee in finance was expected to master Excel, learn about the company and analyze data in response to specific requests. Today, artificial intelligence can handle ...
Most people think of AI as a productivity tool—something to help them work faster, automate tasks, and be more efficient. At the Artist and the Machine Summit in Los Angeles this past November (a ...