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11 articles from Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories

Low-code no-code applications will herald a revolution in app creativity and usability

Thank you for joining us on “The cloud hub: From cloud chaos to clarity.” Watch Himanshu Arora, global business head, low code/no code, automation, and integration practice at Infosys, speak with Avrohom Gottheil, founder of AsktheCEO Media, about how low code/no code is set to change the innovation agenda for most organizations. Click here to...

Estimating impact of data breaches on brands across industries and defining a future-ready strategy

Thank you for joining us on “The cloud hub: From cloud chaos to clarity.” Vishal Salvi, CISO and head of cybersecurity at Infosys, and Ameya Kapnadak, chief growth officer and head of consulting at Interbrand, discuss with Bill Mew, digital ethics campaigner and CEO of CrisisTeam.co.uk, the steps that brands must take to safeguard themselves and how to consider security...

How aspiring influencers are forced to fight the algorithm

Last summer, a TikTok creator named Ziggi Tyler posted a video calling out a disturbing problem he found in the app’s Creator Marketplace, a tool that matches creators with brands looking to pay for sponsored content. Tyler said he was unable to enter phrases like “Black Lives Matter” and “supporting Black excellence” into his Marketplace profile. However, phrases like “white...

The US military wants to understand the most important software on Earth

It’s not much of an exaggeration to say that the whole world is built on top of the Linux kernel—although most people have never heard of it. It is one of the very first programs that load when most computers power up. It enables the hardware running the machine to interact with the software, governs its use of resources, and acts as the foundation of the operating system.  It is...

Heat is bad for plant health. Here’s how gene editing could help.

Some of the world’s most productive agricultural regions from India to the US Midwest have already broken temperature records this year, with potentially worrying implications for food supplies. Hot days and nights can make drought conditions worse, and that’s not the only way rising temperatures can hurt crops. In extreme conditions, the molecular machinery inside plants can even shut...