by Lee Rickwood
Robots with pizzas. Grocery trucks without drivers. Autonomous vehicles are changing the way we get our food delivered.
What is “Career Cushioning?”
By Christine Persaud
If the buzzwords in the business space a few months ago were quiet quitting and quiet firing, the latest term to take the business world by storm is “career cushioning.” You might have heard the term in passing, but what does it really mean?
2023 is Going to Be An Exciting Year for Laptops
Christine Persaud
If what was shown at CES 2023 earlier this month is any indication, 2023 is going to be a huge year for laptops. From the ultra slim to the high-performance, gaming-specific and totally twistable, there are exciting laptop innovations coming down the pike for the new year and beyond.
Remarkable ChatGPT Text Bot is Incredibly Limited, Very Costly and Often Overbooked
by Lee Rickwood
The developer of one of the hottest – and potentially most valuable – apps right now says his software tool is “incredibly limited, but good enough … to create a misleading impression of greatness.”
New Tech Applications and Market Opportunities as Senior Population Doubles
by Lee Rickwood
Up to 100 health care technology projects for senior citizens are being developed by small and medium-sized enterprises (SME) in Canada.
2.8-magnitude earthquake was ‘lightly felt’ in Sudbury, Earthquakes Canada says
A 2.8-magnitude earthquake was “lightly felt” in the Greater Sudbury area Sunday afternoon, Earthquakes Canada says.
The wrong news about North Atlantic right whales: How human noise affects the animals
Scientists are studying how the sounds created by ship traffic, navy sonar and seismic explosions affect different whale species.
How this city deals with obnoxiously loud cars
Traffic cameras equipped with sound meters capable of identifying souped-up cars and motorbikes emitting an illegal amount of street noise have been installed in New York City. And violators are being ticketed.
Remote Labrador location potential training ground for astronauts
The conditions at the Mistastin crater are kind of like those on the moon.
8 facts you may not know about eugenics
Eugenics is seen as a 19th-century idea put into horrific 20th-century practice. But the attraction to breeding “better” humans has a long and persistent history, says Adam Rutherford. The geneticist and science podcaster explains, in conversation with host Nahlah Ayed.