
Articles
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3 weeks ago |
timesofindia.indiatimes.com | Akhil George |Sujit John
Kyle Daigle has spent a dozen years helping shape GitHub from a scrappy code-sharing startup into the default home of modern software development. Now, as chief operating officer, he is on a mission to persuade developers that artificial intelligence is no longer a parlour trick but the next logical step in how they write and ship code. “I’m a developer by trade and moved into this role over those many years,” explains Daigle.
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4 weeks ago |
timesofindia.indiatimes.com | Veena Mani |Akhil George
TrendingWipro CEO Srini Pallia showcased their cloud car ecosystem powered automotive prototype in Bengaluru, highlighting the company's advancements in software-defined vehicles (SDV). The AI-driven solutions aim to set new benchmarks in the automotive sector, emphasizing durability, performance, and sustainability. This platform offers automakers an integrated, cloud-native software solution with robust cybersecurity, enabling faster innovation at reduced costs.
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1 month ago |
timesofindia.indiatimes.com | Akhil George
There have been many questions over the past few months over whether India’s IT sector will survive the AI wave, whether the 1.5 million engineering graduates we produce every year will be made redundant by AI-driven automation. The reality is, humanity is where it is today because of our ability to adapt, and that will likely continue. Except this time, with AI, we may have to adapt quicker than ever before.
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1 month ago |
timesofindia.indiatimes.com | Sujit John |Akhil George
TrendingFor all the human tragedy that Covid-19 was, it also changed human behaviour in ways that made it ₹advantage India’ in several areas. One of these is global online sales. It became much easier to have sales folk sitting in India and generating leads from here and concluding sales from here. Today, lots of companies – both Indian SaaS (software-as-a service) ventures and MNCs – are building big salesforces in India to sell their products to clients globally.
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1 month ago |
timesofindia.indiatimes.com | Akhil George
TrendingIt is easy to appreciate unique data that is painstakingly collated over many years, because in the modern world such data has immense value that can be extracted from it. Amazon, Google, Apple and their ilk have mountains of such proprietary data of all sorts that they can tap into anytime they want. But how do you capture the knowledge that resides within the minds of a firm’s senior employees?
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