Thursday 4 February 2016

How AI and automation could hollow out the US job market

Top tech stories now available. See what’s trending today.
Supscription | Read Online Twitter Facebook Google+

How AI and automation could hollow out the US job market

Economists on how the spoils generated by near-future technologies could be enjoyed by the wealthy and highly-educated, rather than the average worker.

Additional TechRepublic Resources

6 ways the robot revolution will transform the future of work

How business outcomes are transforming IT spending

Nonprofits: Use the new donation cards on YouTube to drive fundraising

Tackle cybercrime with data science using this five-point framework

New from Tech Pro Research

Today's recommended downloads

Whitepaper: Seven Ways to Reduce Waste and Accelerate Software Delivery

(IBM Corp.)

IBM X-Force Threat Intelligence Quarterly, 3Q 2015 - IBM

(IBM Security Intelligence)

Forrester: The Total Economic Impact™ of Application Performance

(CA Technologies)

Always Be Closing: The ABC's of Sales in the Modern Era

(Microsoft)

3 Signs Your Virtualization Strategy is Stuck in Neutral

(CommVault)

A special feature from TechRepublic and ZDNet

VR and AR: The Business Reality

Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality are going to be useful for far more than just gaming. We explore the ways the technology will be used for training, marketing, product design, and much more.

TechRepublic newsletters

Get product reviews, tech news analysis, tips, and more in the following TechRepublic newsletters. Click the newsletter title below to subscribe.

Download

10 Things

Download

The Cloud Revolution

Connect with TechRepublic

Visit the Subscripton Center to get other free newsletters, manage your account settings or to be removed from TechRepublic communications.

The e-mail address for your subscription is habib2best@gmail.com.

Unsubscribe | Send Feedback | FAQ | Advertise | Privacy Policy

© 2016 CBS Interactive, Inc. All rights reserved.

TechRepublic is a registered service mark of CBS Interactive, Inc.

TechRepublic

235 Second Street

San Francisco, CA 94105

U.S.A.

No comments:

Post a Comment