Innovation
How India is Reimagining ‘Tech for Good’
Across industries, Indian companies are seeking to demonstrate that the true power of technology lies not in disruption but in enabling human potential
Across industries, Indian companies are seeking to demonstrate that the true power of technology lies not in disruption but in enabling human potential
Without traditional credentials, established networks, or experts’ stamp of approval, the outsider’s journey is often uphill: Along the path to the Nobel, Karikó was demoted and kicked out of her lab space at the University of Pennsylvania, and she was actively discouraged from pursuing work on mRNA.
Pointing to the earlier waves of disruption such as the rise of the internet and cloud computing, Krish said concerns over job losses have surfaced with every major technological breakthrough, adding that “it’s wrong to look at it through the lens of job loss and it is more an opportunity to transform skill.”
AI is central to every opportunity, big or small, driving productivity and efficiency, Wipro CEO Srinivas Pallia said in an earnings call
Colgate-Palmolive, the consumer products giant whose origins date back to 1806, has long been a data- and insights-oriented company. It has gathered consumer market research for decades and has employed innovative analytics to make sense of that data.