Reading Time: 4 minutes We need to embrace intangible assets. And the lending world and investors need to free up funds to support intangible creators
Tag: Artificial Intelligence
Canada needs new data for a new economy
Reading Time: 3 minutes It’s time to focus on assessing skills in workforce development as we prepare for the inevitable job shift
Jobs and careers in the ‘fourth industrial revolution’
Reading Time: 4 minutes The fourth industrial revolution will have the greatest impact on routine tasks. A flexible, well-educated and suitably trained workforce will be critical
We need to start putting a value on intangible assets
Reading Time: 4 minutes The new economy relies on outputs like software, social media networks and apps. But very few of these new intangible value drivers fit into the existing accounting framework
Putting artificial intelligence to work for Alberta’s future
Reading Time: 3 minutes The increased use of AI changes the job market. Some jobs disappear. New jobs are created. AI applies to more existing jobs
Has trust in journalists started to rebound from rock bottom?
Reading Time: 5 minutes A new survey says people are looking at journalism with new respect in these troubled times
Start preparing for the economic impact of Artificial Intelligence
Reading Time: 8 minutes With the hype reaching fever pitch, the key question comes down to how to fund tax revenue shortfalls and higher unemployment costs
The pipeline to the future doesn’t carry the jobs of the past
Reading Time: 3 minutes The ruckus over the Kinder Morgan project is a good reminder that the economic conditions we once enjoyed are on the way out
Just another disruptive technology? The future of Artificial Intelligence
Reading Time: 7 minutes Almost every new and disruptive technology arrives with a fanbase claiming it will revolutionize life on Earth. Artificial intelligence is no different
20 robotics and connected devices that could impact our lives
Reading Time: 7 minutes How the next wave of disruptive technologies will change our notions of ‘normal’