Tom Brown's profile photo

Tom Brown

London

Europe Deputy Editor at ICIS News

Featured in: Favicon icis.com Favicon bbc.co.uk Favicon msn.com Favicon theguardian.com Favicon nature.com Favicon telegraph.co.uk Favicon ft.com Favicon yahoo.com (+7) Favicon aljazeera.com Favicon weforum.org

Articles

  • 2 weeks ago | technewstube.com | Tom Brown

    Tech News Tube is a real time news feed of the latest technology news headlines.Follow all of the top tech sites in one place, on the web or your mobile device.

  • 2 weeks ago | yahoo.com | Tom Brown

    When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. The International Space Station is set to be retired in 2030. Before that happens, researchers are rushing to take advantage of the low-gravity environment to work on potential cancer tests and treatments. | Credit: NASA/RoscosmosThere's a good reason why astronauts tend not to stay on the International Space Station longer than six months: Microgravity is not kind to human bodies.

  • 3 weeks ago | medium.com | Tom Brown |Thomas Brown

    An (Ex)Investor’s Perspective on what Circle’s IPO Means for StablecoinsNow that I’ve moved back to the law, people ask what I picked up in my three years as a card-carrying member of the investor set. I learned many things, but if I had to identify one lesson learned in my time away, the answer is simple — an appreciation for the art of listening to the market. The term “market” means different things to different people.

  • 1 month ago | hotel.report | Tom Brown

    The roles on the way outLet’s start with the obvious: automation is coming for all the repetitive stuff. Manual data entry? Gone. Night audit? Already obsolete in forward-thinking properties. Reservation agents? Their function is shifting – not disappearing but evolving into roles where tech does the heavy lifting and humans focus on creating value. It’s not just hospitality, either. Lawyers, accountants, marketers – we’re all being reshaped by AI.

  • 1 month ago | yahoo.com | Tom Brown

    When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Credit: Lorena Sopena/Europa Press via Getty ImagesThe powerful geomagnetic storm that sparked beautiful auroras across the world in May of 2024 was the first to receive a name — and its namesake is a space weather scientist who NASA scientists say was a champion in the field, and who passed away suddenly that same year.

Contact details

Socials & Sites

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →