Inquirer Opinion on MSN
Control the Flood of Greed: Lessons for Future Generations
It has been said that monkeys do what monkeys see. Impressionable minors will readily ape and mimic what they see their elders are doing, no matter how wanton or shameless. They are “inspired,” ...
By Greg Schaller Colorado Public Radio recently ran a story celebrating the state’s “free lunch” program for schoolchildren.
Kids were watching “screens within screens within screens,” Engelhardt wrote, and they were doing it a lot: Even ...
As people increasingly turn to AI for companionship, therapeutic advice, or spiritual guidance, the seductive impersonation ...
Autonomous systems are often judged by how decisively they act. A car that accelerates smoothly into a merge or a robot that navigates a living room with confid ...
The Walrus on MSN
How Tamagotchi Trained Millennials for the Era of Needy Devices
The psychological conditioning produced by 1990s devices such as Tamagotchi is relevant, and even uncanny, when facing the trends of the 2020s and potentially beyond. Indeed, the Tamagotchi-clutching ...
When you start a household task, it often seems like just a quick job. But somehow, these chores can spiral into epic quests that make you question your entire existence. Suddenly, you're not just ...
Physical AI tends to narrowly focus on advanced technological innovations, such as improved robots, rockets, renewable energy ...
The Print on MSNOpinion
If fundamental right to property can be taken away, so can all the others: AG Mulgaokar
If this step even partially achieves its desired results, there will be so much dislocation in the country’s economic ...
The Enquirer submitted questions to all of the candidates running for Forest Hills school board. Here are their responses.
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