China unveils its five-year plan for tech dominance — including flying cars, brain-chip implants and humanoid robots.
Ghana News Agency on MSN
AMOSA 2001 hands over ultra-modern ICT centre to Aggrey Memorial SHS
By Hannah Awadzi, GNA Cape-Coast, March 14, GNA – The 2001 Year Group of the Aggrey Memorial Old Students Association (AMOSA) has officially handed over an ultra-modern Information and Communication ...
Fast Lane Only on MSN
Renault Calvin humanoid robot is already transforming car production
You are watching a new kind of factory worker arrive on the line. Renault Calvin, a headless humanoid robot built in just 40 days, is already taking on physically punishing tasks inside car plants and ...
Advancements in Material Design and Synthesis It feels like every week there’s some new material that’s supposed ...
What jobs will survive AI in 2026? The honest answer is not one magic title. It is a set of career traits that stay valuable when work gets automated.
Tesla's UK electricity supply license unlocks a significant European growth catalyst for its energy generation business. Read why TSLA stock is upgraded to hold.
Elon Musk has revealed that Tesla is preparing to launch a massive AI semiconductor manufacturing initiative within the next ...
The volunteer fire department serving Sand Springs, Okla., declined a $250,000 donation from the tech giant. Now some ...
Apple's new family of laptops might have a cringeworthy name, but don't let it fool you. Despite the MacBook Neo running on a built-for-iPhone A-series processor and being limited to 8GB of RAM, it ...
The international honour is given to 20 women students with an aim to empower next-generation leaders in optics and photonics. Chapman — the sole Canadian to receive this year’s award — plans to put ...
TikTok's Chinese parent, ByteDance, has put on hold the global launch of its latest video-generation model, Seedance 2.0, after a series of copyright disputes with major Hollywood studios and ...
The region has enough water to supply data centers, but officials acknowledged the possibility of power shortages and said electric infrastructure could be built at ratepayers’ expense.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results