Microsoft to Train 3M Australians in AI, California Studies AI Job Impact
Microsoft has pledged to train three million Australians in artificial intelligence skills by 2028, backed by a $25 billion investment in infrastructure and workforce development, covering schools, workplaces, and community groups (according to Microsoft's announcement).
Amidst fears that AI is displacing workers, a new bill in California aims to determine the impacts of artificial intelligence on the labor force in the coming years, reports The Center Square.
Wright State University has been awarded a $2.5 million federal grant to expand AI education in rural Ohio and Kansas, targeting schools where students have had little access to AI training, according to Wright State University.
The Manchester school board committee has backed an AI use policy, naming three approved platforms and requiring students and staff to disclose AI use, with undisclosed AI-generated work considered an academic integrity violation, according to school board documents.
TechAnnouncer reports on the need to look "Beyond the Buzzwords" delivering practical AI solutions for businesses that go beyond theoretical ideas.
Some of the most memorable sci-fi movie endings weren't the original plan, with five films having alternate send-offs that never made it on screen, as noted by Gizmodo.
Sources: