"If you can threaten to shoot 7 teachers, you can take a perp walk. Parents, discipline your kids and I won't have to," Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood said.
The pandemic might have been the biggest impetus for people taking to remote work in droves, but many people have since realized the numerous benefits of this kind of work. A shorter commute, less ...
Middle school students from Sacramento County are learning about trade careers at Capital College and Career Academy's annual ...
For Sporting Kansas City, last week’s 2-2 draw surely felt more akin to victory than defeat. And that’s saying something, considering Sporting KC had held a late 2-1 lead. The opponent gets arguably ...
The maker of the Claude chatbot says its research could help identify economic disruptions by measuring how AI is currently reshaping work.
Spring practice is set to begin for the Tennessee Vols on March 16, which means UT's starting quarterback battle will officially be getting underway. The Vols are set to feature a three-man ...
All five members back war powers limits on Trump’s Iran campaign, citing constitutional concerns.
There’s a difference between driving a car, knowing how it works, and managing a whole fleet. In the same way, people may use technology proficiently without understanding how it works or making ...
One of the main pillars propping up the US economy — consumer spending — may be starting to crack. For years, a resilient job market has kept Americans from pulling back on their spending, despite ...
Worried that AI might replace you? Check out this graph from Anthropic showing the jobs most at risk
Anthropic economists say there's not yet evidence to suggest AI is fueling a spike in job losses in highly exposed fields like computer programming.
The future of AI and work will be a long negotiation between what the technology can do and what people believe it should.
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