Schools are adapting educational materials developed by manufacturers and building special labs to give students a foundation in how industrial technology works.
Mined Minds came into Appalachia espousing a dogma, fostered in the world of start-ups and TED Talks, and carried into places in dire need of economic salvation.
There is no question that automation will change the way people work, nowhere is this truer than the future of architecture, engineering, and construction.
PepsiCo realized that using AI and machine learning is a business need, not just a competitive advantage; and they're using both throughout their org in many ways.
Maybe the robots really will come for all of our jobs in the future, but automation and technology aren't the big problem - it's politics and power.
A study by the University of Oxford predicted that 47 percent of U.S. jobs are at risk of being replaced by robots and AI over the next fifteen to twenty years.
Deploying AI is slower and more expensive than it might seem. The biggest, richest companies are the ones spending heavily on talent and tech infrastructure.
As reporters and editors find themselves the victims of layoffs at digital publishers and traditional newspapers, journalism generated by machine is on the rise.