Header Ads

The future of tech is looking bright

Humans have an incredible capacity to build things — things that make our lives better, our bodies healthier, our interactions with each other more efficient. But while the human mind is pretty amazing, we also have a tendency to hold ourselves back — whether due to fear, stubbornness or, well, funding problems. As the world emerges (slowly and unevenly) from the horrors of a pandemic, the time has rarely been better to invest our mind power and our money in the technologies of the future. What's ahead of us is looking pretty amazing — if we're willing to do it right.

Why Congress Should Care About the Laws of Physics — Michael R. Bloomberg 

Biden's Agenda Is Ambitious But Risky — Bloomberg's editorial board

Why Most AI Writing Can't Get Its Facts Straight — Leonid Bershidsky

Could the Next Space Station Be a Hotel? — Adam Minter

Unseen Digital Cash Will Stretch Your Money — Andy Mukherjee

How Many Airbuses Can the EU Invent? Too Many — Lionel Laurent

Elon Musk's Golden Age of Tech Innovation Is Coming — Tae Kim

Four Stories to Watch for (the Rest of) 2021 — Tyler Cowen

This is the Theme of the Week edition of Bloomberg Opinion Today, a digest of our top commentary published every Sunday.

 

Like Bloomberg Opinion Today? Subscribe to Bloomberg All Access and get much, much more. You'll receive our unmatched global news coverage and two in-depth daily newsletters, The Bloomberg Open and The Bloomberg Close.

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal. Find out more about how the Terminal delivers information and analysis that financial professionals can't find anywhere else. Learn more.

 

No comments