Will ChatGPT Make Fraud Easier?
Less than 24 hours after posting my previous Data Science Central article (here), dozens of illegitimate copies started to pop up on various websites. Below… Read More »Will ChatGPT Make Fraud Easier?
Articles in this rubric examine the implications of how evolving technologies and issues such as climate change, pandemics and unreliable power can be managed by companies.
Less than 24 hours after posting my previous Data Science Central article (here), dozens of illegitimate copies started to pop up on various websites. Below… Read More »Will ChatGPT Make Fraud Easier?
In the context of digital transformation and innovation, there is no lack of “hot topics” to discuss. Emerging technologies are truly emerging everywhere. What is… Read More »Innovation at the Convergence of Emerging Technologies: Business at the Edge
Time to catch the ChatGPT craze! Yes, everyone is flocking to the ChatGPT AI-driven chatbot and asking all sorts of life altering questions such as… Read More »It’s No Big Deal, but ChatGPT Changes Everything – Part I
This week saw the news that two major automotive companies, Ford and VW, were walking away from a multi-billion dollar investment into Argo AI, a venture intended to build self-driving vehicles. Instead, the companies hope to roll at least some of that effort back into augmenting drivers’ abilities to drive safely and efficiently.
This week saw the news that two major automotive companies, Ford and VW, were walking away from a multi-billion dollar investment into Argo AI, a venture intended to build self-driving vehicles. Instead, the companies hope to roll at least some of that effort back into augmenting drivers’ abilities to drive safely and efficiently.
Therefore, the golden principle to be at peace with these irritants in your life is simple: Simplify it.
n many respects, we are facing not the need for a new form of money but rather a new form of economics – a discipline about the world where scarcity still holds in physical materials but where overabundance is the rule in virtual ones. To me, this is one of the key tenets that need to be hammered out in the metaverse: How do the actual creators of the virtual worlds, and not just the hosts, get paid for their work?
n many respects, we are facing not the need for a new form of money but rather a new form of economics – a discipline about the world where scarcity still holds in physical materials but where overabundance is the rule in virtual ones. To me, this is one of the key tenets that need to be hammered out in the metaverse: How do the actual creators of the virtual worlds, and not just the hosts, get paid for their work?
The world is becoming increasingly complex – as highlighted in my first article here – but the concern isn’t only about being complex. Considering the ever-increasing speed of the state of complexity, we have entered the age of polycrisis.
n many respects, we are facing not the need for a new form of money but rather a new form of economics – a discipline about the world where scarcity still holds in physical materials but where overabundance is the rule in virtual ones. To me, this is one of the key tenets that need to be hammered out in the metaverse: How do the actual creators of the virtual worlds, and not just the hosts, get paid for their work?