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Computerworld First Look

February 14, 2024

Tech spending shifts to meet AI demand, forces a 'reshuffling of skills' for workers

With AI 'sucking the air out of almost non-AI investments in the whole tech world,' companies are cutting what they believe are unnecessary jobs — and replacing them with AI-skilled workers. Read more ▶

Image: Sponsored by Lenovo: What you need to know about sustainability costs, deployment, and metrics

Sponsored by Lenovo: What you need to know about sustainability costs, deployment, and metrics

As CIOs accelerate efforts to meet sustainability objectives, they are learning valuable lessons about the inherent costs, deployment considerations, and what goes into measuring progress. Learn about how to optimize efforts in these three key areas.

The real problem with Google's new Gemini Android assistant

Hey, Google: We've gotta talk.

Nvidia unveils ‘Chat with RTX,’ a personal AI chatbot for Windows

Users can add custom context for queries while the data remains local, bolstering security and privacy.

Image: Otter.ai adds transcription archiving and recall across the enterprise

Otter.ai adds transcription archiving and recall across the enterprise

Using generative AI, Otter.ai is making it easier to learn what happened at meetings you missed.

Australia’s new ‘right to disconnect’ law includes jail time — for now

Employee rights to disconnect from work are coming to Australia, though jail time for violators is unlikely to happen.

AI chips don’t need trillion-dollar investments: Nvidia CEO

Jensen Huang remarked on OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s plan to raise up to $7 trillion for an AI chip initiative, saying the amount assumes that computers won’t get faster.

Will employees bow down to stricter RTO policies?

Or is the trend to remote work here to stay — and perhaps even expand over time?

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