News

After months of layoffs, it looks like Microsoft isn't done. The company let go of dozens in Redmond on Monday.
Companies are preparing for a time where there might be less work for their employees, says Anjli Raval for Financial Times.
Accenture CEO Julie Sweet attributes her success to a childhood lesson from her father: strive for excellence to be ...
After Microsoft recently reported stronger-than-expected earnings and guidance and its market capitalization past the $4 ...
Vinod Khosla has warned that India’s BPO and IT sectors could disappear if they fail to adapt to the rapid growth of AI. Here ...
Mumbai-born Shailesh Jejurikar, 58, is all set to lead the 188-year-old Procter & Gamble (P&G). Jejurikar studied at ...
A new report warns that AI is wiping out entry-level jobs, leaving millions of college grads underemployed in what it calls a ...
Microsoft, by chief executive Satya Nadella’s own description, is “thriving”. Its quarterly profits soared by almost 25 per ...
If you read the typical 2025 mass layoff notice from a tech industry CEO, you might think that artificial intelligence cost ...
Elon Musk was awarded a new $29 billion pay package by Tesla’s board on Monday as his original deal remains tied up in ...
Meta, Amazon, Apple, and Microsoft are each leveraging AI differently. But they share a common goal: integrating AI deeply ...
Tesla has awarded its chief executive a “first step payment worth roughly $29 billion to replace a plan blocked by a Delaware ...