The organizations most likely to shape the enterprise AI era are those that can embed intelligence directly into operational ...
Released today, the latest Zorin OS manages to improve upon previous versions - and that's quite an achievement.
The new limits on graduate student borrowing enacted in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBB) mark a decisive shift away from the era of effectively unlimited federal lending. To understand why, it ...
As health systems face persistent margin pressure, CEOs are taking a more deliberate approach to capital deployment — not pulling back altogether, but scrutinizing more than ever how and when ...
Researchers have announced the creation of the first operating system designed for quantum networks: QNodeOS. The research marks a major step forward in transforming quantum networking from a ...
Laura Geller is a multi-award-winning investigative journalist. She joined the CBS News Innovation Lab as a national investigative producer in September 2023. The Merabi Professional Medical Plaza, a ...
Anyone searching for information on the risks of chemical substances is familiar with how fragmented the available information can be. Despite the availability of several publicly accessible databases ...
At a time when many are losing faith in the viability of their democratic institutions, here is an example of the process working as it should. As we navigate through unprecedented times, our ...
A highly restrictive new law coming out of California and going into effect in 2027 could force age verification into any device with an operating system in the state. The recently passed Assembly ...
Kymberlee Montgomery is a professor and executive director of nursing at Drexel University College of Nursing and Health Professions and a women’s health nurse practitioner. Mary Ellen Glasgow is a ...
For decades, companies have treated mental health as a benefit. It lives alongside healthcare plans, retirement accounts and wellness perks. It’s something employees are told to “use if they need it.” ...
The University of Texas System’s Board of Regents on Thursday approved a rule requiring its universities to allow students to graduate without studying "unnecessarily controversial subjects." The rule ...