EditorialEXCLUSIVE: Researchers reveal what offices will look like in 2050 ? including holographic calls, sensor-controlled desks and AI personal assistants
EditorialFILE PHOTO: The Slack Technologies Inc. logo is seen on a banner outside the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) during thew company's IPO in New York
EditorialFILE PHOTO: Italian oil major Eni's CEO Descalzi gestures during a news conference to present an agreement on research in alternative fuels and carbon-cutting technologies in Rome
EditorialFILE PHOTO: Italian oil major Eni's CEO Descalzi gestures during a news conference to present an agreement on research in alternative fuels and carbon-cutting technologies in Rome
EditorialThe entire project of pitting AI against people is beginning to look pretty silly, because the likeliest outcome is what has pretty much always happened when humans acquire new technologies — the technology augments our capabilities rather than replaces us, Farhad Manjoo writes. (John Provencher/The New York Times)
EditorialThe march of technology has come with this puzzling reality: Hardly any technologies of the iPhone era have been an unqualified success. (Konrad Adam Modrzejewski/The New York Times)
Editorial“Surveillance made possible by minimally-regulated digital technologies could help law enforcement track down women who might seek abortions and medical providers who perform them in places where it would become criminalized,” writes New York Times columnist Zeynep Tufekci. (Ard Su/The New York Times)