The top AI models are awesome. They can tackle much more complex coding tasks than people were predicting a year ago. The ...
An HBR Executive Masterclass with Harvard professor Arthur C. Brooks on how leadership is changing in the age of AI. For senior leaders, the question isn’t whether AI will change work—it already has.
AI in the workplace isn’t so black-and-white, experts say. Companies are using AI to automate certain parts of jobs rather ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Host of the Retire Sooner podcast and CFP™ practitioner. Is AI eliminating jobs? Such doomsday scenarios have prompted plenty of ...
That is a deep cut, even for the tech industry, which bulked up during the pandemic and has been shedding thousands of jobs in recent months. And unlike most of other industry cuts, executives at ...
The tech companies have ideas. In early April, OpenAI — whose most cheery prediction says 18 percent of jobs will soon be automated — rolled out a plan for a “New Deal” for workers: a 32-hour workweek ...
The February jobs report revealed a loss of 92,000 jobs, but according to RedBalloon CEO Andrew Crapuchettes, the real economic rot isn't just in the numbers — it's in the technology. Crapuchettes ...
Blue collar workers may be enjoying a certain degree of schadenfreude at seeing the panic over tech, finance, and other white collar workers potentially losing their jobs to AI. But mass job ...
The job market has slowed, especially for recent college graduates and entry-level workers, and while people have suspicions about why, no one really knows if it’s because of AI. For Virginia Sen.
Any serious discussion of the challenges confronting the modern workforce must include an evaluation of the impact of artificial intelligence (AI). Like every transformative technology that has come ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Rachel Wells is a writer who covers leadership, AI, and upskilling. This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. This ...
Nikesh Arora, chairman and CEO of Palo Alto Networks, believes fears that artificial intelligence could upend enterprise software and wipe out large swathes of jobs are overstated, at least for now.