Well File:
- Well Planning ( results)
- Shallow Hazard Analysis ( results)
- Well Plat ( results)
- Wellbore Schematic ( results)
- Directional Survey ( results)
- Fluid Sample ( results)
- Log ( results)
- Density ( results)
- Gamma Ray ( results)
- Mud ( results)
- Resistivity ( results)
- Report ( results)
- Daily Report ( results)
- End of Well Report ( results)
- Well Completion Report ( results)
- Rock Sample ( results)
6 ways to continuously improve your products, according to business leaders
Getting a new product out the door is just the beginning. Companies that want long-term success must refine their services in response to new business and customer requirements. So, how can your organization ensure it delivers continuous improvements to its products and services? Six business leaders share their top tips. Tomer Cohen, chief product officer at LinkedIn, said two elements are key to delivering continuous improvements in products and services.
US seeks to thwart smuggling of Nvidia GPUs with location tracking
The United States has reportedly been investigating reports that Nvidia GPUs have landed illegally in China to be used by Chinese LLMs like DeepSeek, and one US lawmaker will be introducing a new bill that aims to track the locations of AI chips--like the ones made by Nvidia--after they're sold, reports Reuters and Neowin. The smuggling of CPUs and GPUs is nothing new. PC components have often been smuggled across the ocean to countries like China and other East Asian countries for years. But with the rising power of AI and the implications of AI on technological prowess, it's not unusual that the US government wouldn't want that tech falling into rival hands. The proposed legislation would oblige US authorities to develop regulations for location verification of AI chips.
Apple adds accessibility labels to App Store, braille options to hardware
This year marks four decades since Apple founded its first accessibility office, an initiative to build more adaptable computers that would launch decades of device and operating system tools, including Assistive Access and Personal Voice. As Global Accessibility Awareness Day (May 15) approaches, Apple is leaning into this legacy. Previewing a slew of new features set to be released throughout this year, the company explained it was ushering in a "new level of accessibility across the Apple ecosystem," utilizing on-device machine learning and artificial intelligence. This includes brand new App Store, Mac, and Apple Vision Pro updates, accessible device modes, and inter-device compatibility. "At Apple, accessibility is part of our DNA," said Apple CEO Tim Cook.
Kelp noodle stir fry, soybean spaghetti and dandelion salad: Climate scientists reveal what we'll be eating for dinner in the future - so, would you try it?
The likes of shepherd's pie and fish & chips soon be off Britain's dinner menu in favour of more eco-friendly options, according to a new report. Scientists have teamed up with HelloFresh to predict what Brits will be eating in just 10 years time as we fight to halt climate change. And the menu of the near future reveals five very bizarre options โ with no meat in sight. There's a stir fry with noodles made out of kelp (a type of brown algae) as well as'meatballs' made with mushrooms on a bed of sorghum. There's also teff galette โ a French-style tart made out of teff, a highly-nutritious ancient grain โ served with dandelion salad.
AI could save your life! A 400 15-minute full-body scan to detect the earliest signs of cancer is on the horizon thanks to artificial intelligence
Most people spend their lunch breaks grabbing a sandwich or going for a walk. But soon it could be possible to get a full-body MRI scan which detects the earliest stages of cancer during your lunch hour, thanks to AI. Health tech pioneer Ezra has launched its screening service in the UK, marking a major expansion beyond the US. Their AI-powered scans currently last an hour and cover 13 organs, with the added option of an extra lung CT scan and heart disease screening. As cancer rates are rising โ especially among young people โ the company say they are the best defence against the disease. With early detection, treatment can start earlier and prognosis improves dramatically.
Trump strikes a blow for AI โ by firing the US copyright supremo
Sometimes it helps me to write by thinking about how a radio broadcaster or television presenter would deliver the information, so I'm your host, Blake Montgomery. Today in tech news: questions hover over the automation of labor in the worker-strapped US healthcare system; and drones proliferate in a new conflict: India v Pakistan, both armed with nuclear weapons. Meanwhile, in contrast to a thoughtful and robust conversation, the US is taking the opposite tack. Legend has it that Alexander the Great was presented with a knot in a rope tying a cart to a stake. So complex were its twistings that no man had been able to untie it of the hundreds who had tried. Alexander silently drew his sword and sliced the knot in two.
World's first touch-sensing bionic hand with lightning-fast response
Tech expert Kurt Knutsson says the Ability Hand brings real touch, natural movement and unmatched durability. Losing a hand or limb is a life-changing event, and finding a prosthetic that can truly feel has long been a challenge. For many, traditional prosthetics offer limited movement and no sense of touch, making everyday tasks difficult and frustrating. But what if a prosthetic hand could do more than just move? What if it could actually feel the objects you touch, giving you real-time feedback and control?
California labor leaders grill Democrats running for governor on AI, benefits for strikers
In the largest gathering of 2026 gubernatorial candidates to date, seven Democrats vying to lead California courted labor leaders on Monday, vowing to support pro-union agreements on housing and infrastructure projects, regulation of artificial intelligence, and government funding for university research. Throughout most of the hourlong event, the hundreds of union members inside the Sacramento hotel ballroom embraced the pro-labor pledges and speeches that dominated the candidates' remarks, though some boos rose from the crowd when former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa strayed from the other Democrats on stage. Villaraigosa was the only candidate to raise objections when asked if he would support providing state unemployment benefits to striking workers, saying it would depend on the nature and length of the labor action. Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2023 vetoed a bill that would have provided that coverage, saying it would make the state's unemployment trust fund "vulnerable to insolvency." The Monday night event was part of a legislative conference held by the California Federation of Labor Unions and the State Building and Construction Trades Council of California, two of the most influential labor organizations in the state capital.
How to use ChatGPT freely without giving up your privacy - with one simple trick
ChatGPT can go far beyond writing an email or coding a complex project. Some of the most useful applications are assistance with practical tasks in your everyday life, such as explaining that really complex x-ray diagnosis that is pure jargon or why your electric bill was sky-high (both based on real scenarios that happened to me). However, this requires you to give your personal information. If you are hesitant about giving ChatGPT your private information, you have good reason to be. The companies behind these popular generative AI tools, such as OpenAI, often use user inputs to further train the models and make them smarter.
Interview with Ananya Joshi: Real-time monitoring for healthcare data
In this interview series, we're meeting some of the AAAI/SIGAI Doctoral Consortium participants to find out more about their research. Ananya Joshi recently completed her PhD, where she developed a system that experts have used for the past two years to identify respiratory outbreaks (like COVID-19) in large-scale healthcare streams across the United States using her novel algorithms for ranking real-time events from large-scale time series data. In this interview, she tells us more about this project, how healthcare applications inspire basic AI research, and her future plans. When I started my PhD during the COVID-19 pandemic, there was an explosion in continuously-updated human health data. Still, it was difficult for people to figure out which data was important so that they could make decisions like increasing the number of hospital beds at the start of an outbreak or patching a serious data problem that would impact disease forecasting.