Machines will make our food tastier and healthierAI algorithms can reduce food waste, add more nutrition and solve some of our restaurant-staffing woes
Personalized, preventive medicine is on its wayWe’ll use machine learning to predict illness before it starts, reducing pressure on the health-care system
Hackers will use AI to orchestrate worldwide cyberattacksThe new AI might help criminals take down power grids or infiltrate electric vehicle networks
The future of AI—and Canada’s place in it"The human dimension to the problem of the future of AI—how people will react to the new tools—is at least as unknowable as the technology itself"
Studios will steal artists’ faces and voicesAI-generated actors, singers and visual artists stand to replace the real thing
We’ll develop new drugs in months, not decadesOur research team used machine learning to discover a new antibiotic. And that’s just the beginning.
AI: The Future Is NowWe asked 14 leading thinkers to investigate the promises and pitfalls of the fast-accelerating AI revolution. Here’s what they found.
The EV battery gold rush is here. Here’s how Canada can access its untapped resources."If Canada can find a way to sustainably mine and supply metals to EV manufacturing hubs in North America, the country will be spinning green gold"
My students are using ChatGPT to write papers and exams—and I support it“It made no sense to ban ChatGPT within the university. It was already being used by 100 million people.”
Tech leader Martin Kon wants you to give AI chatbots a chance“Technology will never replace human interaction. It’s about how to make mundane tasks more efficient, so we can focus on higher-value ones.”