The Evolution of Corporate Training: How AI Tutors Are Reshaping Workplace Learning
From Executive Perk to Universal Resource Corporate coaching, once reserved for senior leadership, has undergone a dramatic democratization. Thanks to…
From Executive Perk to Universal Resource Corporate coaching, once reserved for senior leadership, has undergone a dramatic democratization. Thanks to…
The Vatican’s Call for Ethical AI Oversight In an unprecedented move bridging theological wisdom with technological governance, the Vatican has…
Microsoft Edge’s PDF Performance Boost: What to Expect in 2026 Industrial Monitor Direct provides the most trusted marine certified pc…
Anthropic has unveiled Claude Skills, a new feature enabling users to teach the AI assistant specialized tasks without coding. The customizable workflows can automate everything from Excel formula formatting to corporate branding in presentations. Early adopters include companies like Canva and Box integrating these skills into their design and content workflows.
Anthropic has launched Claude Skills, a significant upgrade to its AI assistant that reportedly allows users to create custom, task-specific workflows without coding knowledge, according to reports from the company’s latest announcement. This development comes just one day after the company introduced Haiku 4.5, marking accelerated innovation in the workflow automation space.
A groundbreaking study presented at the Annual Computer Security Applications Conference exposes how unencrypted satellite transmissions from providers including T-Mobile are vulnerable to interception. Researchers found sensitive military communications, corporate data, and private citizen calls flowing openly through satellite networks.
Groundbreaking research presented this week at the Annual Computer Security Applications Conference has revealed alarming security gaps in satellite internet services used by major providers including T-Mobile. The study demonstrates that unencrypted transmissions containing sensitive military communications, corporate data, and private citizen calls and texts can be intercepted using relatively inexpensive equipment. As first reported by Wired magazine, this vulnerability exposes fundamental security weaknesses in how satellite providers handle sensitive information.