Articles

  • 1 month ago | forbes.com.au | Antonio Pequeño IV |Mark Whittaker |Shivaune Field |Cathy Foley

    Skip to content Innovation Published on March 1, 2025 OpenAI called GPT-4.5 its “largest and most knowledgeable model yet” in a document summarizing the new chatbot, saying user interaction with it feels more natural. OpenAI said the new model features a broader knowledge base, better emotional intelligence and improved contextual understanding, noting the improvements make it well-suited for problem-solving, writing and programming tasks. The new model supposedly has fewer hallucinations— a...

  • 1 month ago | forbes.com.au | Mark Whittaker |Shivaune Field |Cathy Foley |Rebecca Isaacs

    Published on February 26, 2025 69% of Australian and New Zealand C-suite executives who prioritise AI are focusing on agentic AI over the next 12 months, with 38% already implementing the technology. 79% of the 480 executives want to use it to innovate customer experience, give customers a more personalised experience and beat their peers.

  • 1 month ago | forbes.com.au | Cathy Foley |Harrison Monarth |Jon Stojan |Shivaune Field

    Published on February 25, 2025 A recent social media feed of a black and white photo from 1973 showed Afghan women in Kabul wearing miniskirts and walking independently. Five years after that image was taken, all the small hard-won gains by women in Afghanistan had disappeared – just as the rights of women in the country have been rolled back today.

  • Nov 7, 2024 | timeshighereducation.com | Cathy Foley

    Even as tsunami of misinformation swamp digital information channels, much of the world’s trustable information is inaccessible to most people behind journal paywalls. Most academic research is funded by the public purse, yet access is controlled by publishers. Researchers and universities are incentivised to optimise their positions in bibliometrics-driven rankings by publishing in prestigious journals.

  • Sep 20, 2024 | innovationaus.com | Cathy Foley

    Ecosystems – networks of interconnected public and private organisations, researchers, investors, policymakers, and other stakeholders – are critical to the growth of new technologies and the creation of new industries. And while ecosystem might be one of the most overused words of the 2020s, the idea it represents is still useful for thinking about how new technologies move from the lab to the market, to the homes and lives of everyday Australians. Fundamentally, ecosystems are about connection.

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