Author: Georgia Bedggood

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Georgia Bedggood

Georgia Bedggood

Georgia is a culture and design enthusiast with a background in media production. She explores how innovation intersects with creativity, writing about everything from digital art to the evolution of online storytelling.

Artificial intelligence is driving massive energy demand, with data centers now consuming as much electricity as small cities and usage expected to double this decade. Rapid AI growth is straining power grids, prompting urgent infrastructure upgrades and raising risks of blackouts if energy solutions don’t keep pace. Nuclear and liquefied natural gas are emerging as …

Palo Alto Networks is a leader in cybersecurity, renowned for its innovative integration of artificial intelligence (AI) across cloud, endpoint, and operational security networks. The company’s AI-powered Cortex XSIAM platform enables rapid threat detection and incident response, reducing threat neutralization times from days to under ten minutes for large enterprises. The new Prisma AIRS platform …

AI tokens are revolutionizing India’s tech scene by combining artificial intelligence and blockchain, creating autonomous digital economies and programmable value. Major projects like Near Protocol, ICP, The Graph, Render, and SingularityNET drive surging trading volumes and real-world utility beyond speculation. Unlike meme coins, AI tokens power automation, predictive analytics, fraud detection, and monetize unused computing …

SoftBank Group plans a transformative $1 trillion investment in AI-driven factories across the United States to address labor shortages and redefine industrial landscapes. The investment marks a significant shift from SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son’s initial $500 billion plan, demonstrating a deeper commitment to the U.S. economy. This ambitious move aligns with Son’s strategic history of …

Walk into the Louvre Museum in Paris, and you’ll find a perpetual crowd surrounding a single, modestly-sized portrait behind bulletproof glass: Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa. At just 30 x 21 inches, the painting is smaller than a TV screen. But its cultural weight is immeasurable — and if it were ever sold (which it …

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