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A new Microsoft study reveals which jobs are most exposed to generative AI disruption—historians, translators, and sales reps top the list, while hands-on labor remains relatively safe.
As you can see, most of the jobs here are so-called “knowledge economy” jobs—careers that involve learning about, analyzing, ...
A new report from Microsoft researchers studying the occupational implications of generative AI offers some clarity.
A new Microsoft report ranks 80 professions by their risk of being replaced by AI tools. Microsoft study identified jobs most ...
Within a month of building their internal AI system (DS-GAI), over 80 percent of employees reported improved productivity and ...
Microsoft Corp. said it will spend more than $30 billion in the current quarter to build out the data centers powering its ...
Explore Microsoft 365 July updates with AI tools, Teams upgrades, and enhanced security features for smarter, safer workflows ...
When Copilot Mode is turned on, Edge changes its interface to display a single input field in new tabs. This all-in-one field ...
It’s been like this across many IT sectors for as long as anyone can remember. Arguably, then, AI won’t reduce demand so much ...
Microsoft declined to comment on the GPT-5 references in Copilot, and the company isn’t commenting on its new smart mode, ...
The growing use of AI agents isn’t limited to technical teams. While developers were an early audience, Cyata quickly ...
IT leaders need to assess lock-in risk, data silos, a lack of openness, removal of discounts and product bundling in AI ...