lacey
As the US and China lock horns, Malaysia hopes to harness an AI revolution
Kulim, Malaysia – When tech giant AT&S decided a few years ago that it needed to ramp up production to keep pace with the artificial intelligence (AI) boom, it did not look to its largest manufacturing facilities in China. The Austrian firm's plants in Chongqing and Shanghai – opened in 2022 and 2016, respectively – employ some 9,000 workers between them, churning out high-end components used in everything from consumer electronics to cars. But AT&S was at the same time coming to grips with the risks of concentrating production in one country. Like many tech firms grappling with the disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic and the trade war salvoes between the United States and China, AT&S decided it needed to diversify its supply chains. Malaysia quickly emerged at the top of the company's list of potential locations for its next plant.
- Information Technology (1.00)
- Banking & Finance (0.95)
- Government > Foreign Policy (0.34)
- Government > Commerce (0.34)
Catherine Lacey's Provocative Novel in Disguise
The first thing that you notice about Catherine Lacey's new novel is the lack of a determiner. Nouns float, unhooked from any article. I found myself habitually inserting "The" in the title when the book came up in conversation, that brief sound of specificity, the most common word in the English language and the most wishful. Darkness lifts to reveal a second, nested title page, for a slightly different book: "Biography of X," by C. M. Lucca. Both title pages mention the same publisher, Farrar, Straus & Giroux.
- North America > United States > New York (0.05)
- North America > United States > Montana > Missoula County > Missoula (0.05)
- North America > United States > Mississippi (0.05)
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Remote working powers the future of work
Remote working has been an idea that has been around for decades, but now the time has come to act on it. The benefits of remote working are clear, but what about its challenges? This paper explores this topic in depth and more! A common misconception among remote workers is that remote working is a replacement for in-person meetings. The truth is that it's not: the only thing you can do remotely that you can't do in person is video call.
- Information Technology > Communications > Networks (1.00)
- Information Technology > Communications > Collaboration (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Issues > Social & Ethical Issues (0.40)
When the rubber meets the road, how will autonomous trucks handle blowouts?
Tire blowouts lead to dozens of highway deaths every year. For autonomous trucks, they pose a prickly problem: how to regain control without a human driver at the wheel. "We can talk about redundancy in our sensors, machine-learning algorithms and all this fancy stuff until we're blue in the face," said Don Burnette, co-founder and CEO of Kodiak Robotics. "But at the end of the day, if you press the brake pedal and your tires don't respond, it's not useful." Kodiak is working with Bridgestone Americas to share information that could lead to more robust tire safety.
- Transportation > Passenger (1.00)
- Transportation > Ground > Road (1.00)
- Automobiles & Trucks > Parts Supplier (0.99)
Texas girl gets 3-D prosthetic limb from public library
After spending more than a year on a waiting list for a functional prosthetic hand, a Texas girl's needs were met by her local public library-- which happens to have a 3-D printing lab. Katelyn Vincik, 5, was born with a left hand that wasn't fully formed, but hasn't let that difference slow her down, Click 2 Houston reported. "She's very determined, she does everything," her mother, Kimberly Vincik, told the news channel. "It's never held her back." But during her nightly prayers, Katelyn always asks when the doctors will fix her hand.