Some AI startups are itching to finally go public; other tech startups that are just 'AI-adjacent' are hoping the tech can boost their share prices.
AI is redefining clinical care by enhancing human expertise across diagnostics, care coordination and patient monitoring.
The Chinese startup’s model stuns Big Tech—and Wall Street—with its capability and cost.
U.S. officials are looking at the national security implications of the Chinese artificial intelligence app DeepSeek, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Tuesday, while President Donald Trump's crypto czar said it was possible that intellectual property theft could have been at play.
Today’s student are America’s future workers, but new data show their reading skills have fallen, and math skills aren’t improving. This data should concern employers.
LinkedIn co-founder and AI investor Reid Hoffman argues we shouldn't be afraid of AI or its disruptive capabilities in his new book "Superagency: What Could Possibly Go Right with Our AI Future."
JumpCloud research has revealed that IT admins feel embattled as they face a rising tide of security problems from unauthorised apps to AI. The details
"We have learned that if you can throw a robot at certain tasks, you can dramatically improve quality, speed and other things like that.”
Trump's promises to limit migration and impose mass deportations could lead to a shortage in manual labor jobs that commercial real estate companies depend on. "We're going to see a massive crunch in labor," Smithies said.
Despite the AI hype, the systems require consistent monitoring and staffing to put in place and maintain. The process can be complicated — and expensive.
The Federal Reserve will probably keep its distance from the DeepSeek saga during its policy meeting this week, but the U.S. central bank has good reason to keep very close tabs on any artificial intelligence wobble on Wall Street.
Founded in 2023, PHTI is an offshoot of the nonprofit Peterson Center on Healthcare, which aims to lower health care costs. It was founded by Peter G. Peterson, the late billionaire and former secretary of commerce for President Richard Nixon. PHTI helps health systems evaluate their technology to reduce health care spending.