This month’s blog, from @MrKileyTan and Sophie Freeman looks at how AI works, how to protect against Text & Data Mining and explains some of the risks and opportunities of AI. https://t.co/rmTCQXMZzV
Einstein's works revolved around three rules which apply to all science, problems, and times:
• Out of clutter, find simplicity;
• From discord make harmony; and
• In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity.
Happy Birthday to Albert Einstein!
These are eight slightly different versions of The Great Wave Off Kanagawa from eight different museums.
So which is the real one? That's the thing — they're all the real one.
Here's a brief history of art's most famous wave...
"Brexit hasn't benefited British agriculture one iota"
Jacob Rees-Mogg interviews farmer David Catt hoping to show that Brexit has benefited farming. Instead, Mr Catt explains how Brexit has been a disaster for British farming
@ED_LeveyKC @RhysTaylor32 @seanwilkenkc@gifford_head@GregW_Barrister@Familoo@luketharrison @_Hill_J @JasonBraier@SCynic1 You’ll get used to the lack of delete button. If you get a Mac keyboard, it comes with a delete button. And there is a right click on the Mac mouse. I moved to Apple in 2017 and never looked back. I don’t miss the PC and never will. On the other hand, I would miss my mac.
This is Sir Frederick Banting. He discovered insulin in 1923.
But he refused to put his name on the patent. Why?
Because Banting felt it was unethical to profit from a discovery that would save lives.
But pharmaceutical companies made huge financial offers to Banting for the patent, knowing they could make billions.
They even sweetened the deal, offering an insulin clinic, with Sir Banting in charge... a temping offer to almost doctor in his position.
Banting, however, said his discovery of isolated insulin was a gift to mankind. He felt this critical medicine should be available to everyone who needed it.
In 1923, Banting was just 31 years old when he was awarded the Nobel Prize.
Tragically, in 1941 while flying on a plane to personally protect scientific secrets from the Nazis, his plane crashed. He was killed.
Banting's co-inventors, in his honor, sold the patent for insulin to the University of Toronto for the appropriate sum they thought appropriate – one dollar.
Today, 30 million Americans with diabetes rely on his gift to mankind.
To honor Sir Frederick Banting, it should remain a gift to mankind.
Today's #IndustryNews: UK businesses lag in net zero readiness. 🗞️ Only 35% of small enterprises understand net zero, while larger counterparts reach 56%, per BCC and Lloyds Bank study. Details: https://t.co/pAs0Wg3VqQ If you're anSME, Mosaic Int. can guide your #NetZero journey