The thing

2023 - 4 - 2

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Image courtesy of "CNBC"

The next big thing in Big Tech career path is an AI-based 'bilingual ... (CNBC)

The biotech industry is adopting AI quickly, but without workers conversant across computational and core sciences like biology and chemistry, it will fail.

As Breyer goes out to speak with the next generation of professionals, students at schools including UT Austin, Harvard, Stanford, and Columbia, his message is clear: "This is the single biggest opportunity I've seen. "And rarely have I seen the 10-year alums of these mega caps saying this." As a doctor, Agarwala says the amount of medical information she needs to stay on top of is already at "fever pitch," from medical literature to clinical trials and learnings from large sets of patient data. "The availability of bilingual scientists is going to be a rate limitation for us," Patel said, defining this as scientists well versed in computation research and one of the core sciences important to medicine — physics, biology or chemistry. "That's how we look at it, the companies and the researchers and the entrepreneurs," Agarwala said. "There is lots of exciting big talent opportunities coming from big tech and big cap pharma," she said. and have them all working together," Breyer said. "It's not can AI do what a human expert is doing but relentless focus on where AI can give me insight no human could have had," she said. "There is a lot of hype. Breyer says he is not alone among tech leaders holding this view, citing a fireside chat he recently conducted with Michael Dell, during which the PC pioneer agreed, and private conversations he has had with tech CEOs. "It's no longer science fiction, we have three in clinical trials," Patel said. As a venture capitalist, Jim Breyer has invested in many breakthrough technology ideas in recent decades, names we all know and interact with on a daily basis like Meta and Spotify.

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Image courtesy of "Digital Trends"

Samsung's $450 phone does one thing way better than the iPhone 14 (Digital Trends)

How is that iPhone 14 even considered purple? Samsung gets colors right, especially the purple Galaxy A54; We need more fun colors for phones. Even though Apple ...

I grabbed a Deep Purple [iPhone 14 Pro](https://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/apple-iphone-14-pro-review/) because I like having the newest color, but honestly, I was hoping that it would be more purple (again, I like royal purple). In my opinion, that purple [iPhone 12](https://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/apple-iphone-12-review/) was gorgeous, and is what comes to mind when I think of a “purple” iPhone (though I would have preferred something more like royal purple myself). I wish it came in the pink/gold or violet colors that its predecessor came in, at least. To be frank, the purple A54 is what I was hoping that the purple iPhone 14 would look like. Maybe it’s just me, but I’m getting tired of seeing Apple, and other smartphone manufacturers, go with the “safe” phone colors — like black, white, gold, etc. Samsung calls its purple and green shades “Awesome Violet” and “Awesome Lime Green,” and I have to agree. It stopped with the colors for a few years until the [iPhone XR](https://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/apple-iphone-xs-xr-2021/) came around, which brought back fun shades for the iPhone. For years, people like myself have been clamoring for more “fun” colors to be introduced for the iPhone Pro devices because it seems that Apple believes pros don’t like color. [iPhone 5C](https://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/iphone-5c-cases/), it was the first time that the company added fun colors to the iPhone lineup — despite the [iPhone 5C being mostly a flop](https://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/5-worst-iphones-all-time-apple/). If I say, “Hey, remember that Space Gray color on the iPhone?” you would have to specify which one because they were all so different. I mean, have you ever seen the “purple” iPhone 14 in person? And the purple iPhone 14 is proof of it.

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