AllAfrica on MSN
Experts Warn Digital Divide Is Crushing a Generation's Dreams and Locking the Country in Poverty
Summary: Nearly two decades after Liberia's Ministry of Education pledged to bring computer literacy to public schools, thousands of students still graduate without ever touching a keyboard. Experts ...
Students of St Anthony’s Roman Catholic School, located at Nii Boi Town, have elected new leaders to assist the teaching and ...
Business Insider Africa on MSN
Ibrahim Traore's govt begins computer recycling to boost digital inclusion in Burkina Faso
Burkina Faso has launched a computer recycling initiative to expand digital access and support vulnerable communities, as part of a broader push to accelerate the country’s digital transformation.
She Code Africa, a pan-African non-profit focused on increasing women’s participation in technology, has partnered with global tech giant HP ...
A recent study published in Perception suggests that playing outdoor sports improves peripheral color detection. The findings ...
Making chips for training AI models made it the world’s biggest company, but demand for inference is growing far faster.
NewsNation on MSN
Is a computer science degree still worth it?
A computer science degree used to be seen as a clear path to a well-paying career. Is it still worth it in an age of AI?
Running a small business is hard. Most entrepreneurs started a business to pursue a passion. Instead, they find themselves mired in myriad challenges, including acquiring customers, finding and paying ...
LRA Recruitment 2026 notification released for 552 Land Records Assistant posts in Assam. Check eligibility, age limit, important dates, selection process, salary, and apply online before 30 April ...
Learn how to protect Model Context Protocol (MCP) from quantum-enabled adversarial attacks using automated threat detection and post-quantum security.
This release is good for developers building long-context applications, real-time reasoning agents, or those seeking to reduce GPU costs in high-volume production environments.
Before his disease took his voice, he could type a message as fast as anyone. Now, with electrodes no larger than a grain of rice embedded near the surface of his brain, he can do it again, at 110 ...
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