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Planning to Buy Stocks? Check out These Top 5 Tech Stocks Today
Tech stocks are gaining the attention of the stock market this week. The recent technological developments have made it possible for tech stocks to continue their momentum of growth and profits. The technology sector is composed of businesses that sell goods and services in electronics, software, computer, artificial intelligence, and others. Today, Analytics Insight brings the top 5 tech stocks for November 29, 2021. Cloudflare Inc. is an American web infrastructure and website security company that provides content delivery networks and DDoS mitigation services. Its services occur between a website's visitor and the company's customers' hosting provider, acting as a reverse proxy for websites.
What jobs will flourish in the future Michio Kaku
Michio Kaku: People often ask me the question, "In the era of AI what jobs and what skills will I need?" Well, first of all let's take a look at the first era of space exploration the 1960s. There was a crash program back then to miniaturize the transistor. The Russian astronauts, they're also very tiny because they have to fit inside the nose cone of a missile, and we scientists were given the mission to miniaturize transistors as far as possible. Now, as a consequence of that, we have what is called the Internet age today.
'40 to 60 per cent of all jobs will be completed by machines in 2030' The National
DUBAI // Despite rapid transformations in the way humans live, the future should be embraced and not feared, said Gerd Leonhard, author and self-described futurist. Through emerging technologies such as cloud computing and "the Internet of Things", in the next five years Mr Leonhard said 75 per cent of "the whole world" will be connected. "There's many great things about this, and there's many challenges about this," he said. "There are predictions saying that 80 per cent of the military budget in 10 years will be spent on data cloud, cyber issues. "Our world is going to change more in the next 20 years than the previous 300 years." This week, he addressed attendees at the SubOptic 2016 conference -- an event for the submarine fibre-optic cable industry -- and touched upon issues that will affect the entire internet's infrastructure, such as bandwidth and access. Mr Leonhard, a Swiss national and native German speaker, recounted an experience in Japan earlier this month where he used a mobile app to talk about fish with a Japanese-speaking sushi chef for 30 minutes. What made his conversation possible, and what will be central to the continuing change he describes, is connectivity and the role of the internet in nearly every aspect of our daily lives, he said. Language translation, as he illustrated through his sushi restaurant anecdote, as well as things such as artificial intelligence and self-driving cars, are all emerging technologies being built around connectivity. Due to interconnectivity and associated technologies, by 2030, he said roughly 40 to 60 per cent of all jobs will be completed by machines. Areas such as finance, real estate, medicine, energy and food are still to be "disrupted" in the way other industries, such as media, telecommunications and transportation, have in recent years, he said. Associated challenges that will continue to emerge will revolve around ethics, establishing limits on how humans approach issues such as artificial intelligence and human genome editing, capabilities and control over the internet's infrastructure and cyber security. "Watching the media or watching movies about the future, there's always one thing that comes up - that we're all going to die because the robots will take over the world.