Temporary teams can build new systems, but permanent ones can both develop them and manage them after launch. by Ryan Nelson and Thomas H. Davenport In 2011, The New York Times was facing declines in ...
David Pogue is a six-time Emmy winner for his stories on "CBS Sunday Morning," where he's been a correspondent since 2002. Pogue hosts the CBS News podcast "Unsung Science." He's also a New York Times ...
AI developer Anthropic says its newest Claude artificial intelligence model is so good at finding cybersecurity vulnerabilities that it's not releasable to the public. The company is instead providing ...
A proposed development in Texas has quickly become the center of a much larger debate about law, governance, and community boundaries. What began as a local project soon attracted statewide attention, ...
During his 2025 campaign, New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani said that “Rikers Island is a stain on the history of this city.” He said he would do everything in his power to meet the deadline to close ...
Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin is the latest to hop on the space-based data-center craze, which proponents say could solve the artificial-intelligence industry’s huge demand for energy — and that skeptics ...
WASHINGTON, March 19 (Reuters) - The United States and Japan announced expanded cooperation at a summit on Thursday, including Japanese investment of up to $73 billion in U.S. energy projects and an ...
One of the world’s largest clean energy investors is targeting Michigan’s industrial nerve center with a more than $1 billion statewide investment in battery energy storage systems aimed at bolstering ...
“What’s fun about the movie is that there is no green screen in the movie whatsoever. Not a single green or blue screen was used,” Miller told ComicBook on the film’s press tour. “The whole ship was ...
Amazon-MGM's entire 156-minute, big-budget sci-fi gamble was shot without any green (or blue) screen, Christopher Miller says. By James Hibberd Writer-at-Large The highly anticipated, big-budget Ryan ...
GLEN CARBON, Ill. — A Metro East community has taken the first step to gaining approval for state incentives for a new $2 billion retail and entertainment development designed to keep Illinois ...