Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Education.
When the Numbers Lie
Numbers are supposed to bring clarity. They’re supposed to anchor decisions, reveal truth, and cut through noise. But in the real world — in boardrooms, investor decks, nonprofit reports, and quarterly business reviews — numbers often do the opposite. They distort. They distract. They mislead.
By Thomas McCorry17 days ago in Education
The Role of AI in Detecting and Dismantling Large-Scale Online Influence Operations
The digital age has transformed how information spreads, empowering individuals and organizations to communicate instantly across borders. However, this same interconnected environment has also enabled large-scale online influence operations designed to manipulate public opinion, distort democratic processes, and amplify social divisions. These operations, often coordinated, well-funded, and adaptive, pose a serious challenge to governments, platforms, and civil society. Artificial intelligence has emerged as one of the most critical tools in identifying, analyzing, and dismantling such campaigns. While AI is not a silver bullet, its role has become central in the ongoing struggle to protect the integrity of online information ecosystems.
By Ehab Al Kuttub17 days ago in Education
Domestic reasons suspected in Lahore university student’s suicide attempt: police
Sources say action would be taken against the university administration if negligence is established LAHORE: Police are investigating a suspected suicide attempt by a 21-year-old female student who was critically injured after falling from the fourth floor of a building at the University of Lahore on Monday, officials said.
By Dena Falken Esq17 days ago in Education
Fuel for the Soul: How to Unlock Motivation and Purpose in Life and Work
Motivation and purpose are not just words. They are the invisible forces that push us to get out of bed, face challenges, and keep going even when life feels hard. Without them, days can feel empty, and tasks can seem meaningless. With them, everything changes. We feel alive, driven, and ready to grow.
By Philip Raymond Baquie17 days ago in Education
Helpful Guide for People Who Are Learning Online for the First Time
It's not always easy to start something new, and a lot of people find online learning to be especially scary at first. If you've spent most of your life learning in real classrooms with books, chalkboards, and teachers, login into a digital platform can feel like going to a new place. It might be easy to feel overwhelmed before you even start learning when you see buttons, dashboards, discussion forums, uploads, and deadlines all at once.
By Novelty Diploma17 days ago in Education
Why Great Developers Think Like Scientists. AI-Generated.
To inexperienced developers, debugging often feels like a frustrating phase that interrupts “real” work. To great developers, it is the work. Debugging is less about fixing errors and more about understanding systems. It requires curiosity, discipline, and patience—the same traits that define good scientific thinking. The best developers do not guess; they investigate.
By Gustavo Woltmann17 days ago in Education
The Deficiency That Destroys You Silently.
Diciency that enters your body silently o pain, no warning, no dramatic symptoms at first. It doesn’t announce its arrival. It doesn’t scream for attention. Instead, it quietly settles inside you and begins attacking the most precious system you have: your nervous system. This is the hidden danger of Vitamin B12 deficiency slow, invible destroyer that often goes unnoticed until serious damage has already been done.
By Muhammad Khurshaid Ahmad18 days ago in Education
The Overlooked Power of Safety Culture in Building High-Impact Teams
In many workplaces, safety is often viewed through the lens of compliance—meeting legal standards, following procedures, and minimizing risk. While these are important, this narrow view misses a much more powerful concept: safety culture as a strategic driver of team performance. Authentic safety culture goes beyond physical protection to encompass emotional well-being, open communication, and psychological trust.
By Michael Gastinel18 days ago in Education
Slope-Ready Strategies: How to Plan a Stress-Free Ski Vacation
A ski vacation promises adventure, breathtaking views, and unforgettable memories—but only if you plan it well. Without the proper preparation, your dream winter escape can turn into a logistical nightmare. From lift tickets to lodging, ski gear to safety, planning a seamless trip to the slopes requires attention to detail and a clear strategy.
By Neil Druker18 days ago in Education
Concurrency, State Management, and Fault Tolerance in Stock Trading Bots
Modern stock trading bots are smart software programs that work in very fast financial markets. These bots study market data, make decisions, and place trades instantly. To work properly, they must do many tasks at the same time, remember important details, and keep running even if problems happen. Three main ideas make this possible: concurrency, state management, and fault tolerance. Understanding these ideas helps traders and developers know how trading bots stay fast, accurate, and reliable. This blog explains each idea and shows how they work together to keep stock trading bots stable and efficient.
By james hall18 days ago in Education
The Responsibility of Scientists in Artificial Intelligence and the Protection of Human Society
Artificial intelligence now plays a central role in modern life. It supports medical care, influences financial decisions, manages traffic systems, and shapes online information. As this technology grows, the responsibility of scientists in artificial intelligence becomes more serious and more visible. Scientists are not only creating tools. They are shaping how people live, work, and relate to one another.
By Jason Pruet18 days ago in Education







