
You can go a long way toward untangling the mystery around why some apps click with an audience, while others fail with the training from the Complete UI/UX Fundamentals course bundle. The full package is available now at the limited time price of only $29 from TNW Deals.

Anouk Vleugels, who heads up our creative division that works with clients to make cool stuff like trading tips we can learn from raccoons and background stories on how the Dutch police catches cyberbaddies, made a short film called Maya and it’s fantastic. At TNW, we have the distinct pleasure of working with a bunch of talented people, who not only shine on the job, but also in extracurricular activities like MAKING A MOVIE for the Dutch public broadcaster VPRO. This makes me happy. And watching this short film about a future in which our home assistants might assist us a…
This story continues at The Next Web

Anouk Vleugels, who heads up our creative division that works with clients to make cool stuff like trading tips we can learn from raccoons and background stories on how the Dutch police catches cyberbaddies, made a short film called Maya and it’s fantastic. At TNW, we have the distinct pleasure of working with a bunch of talented people, who not only shine on the job, but also in extracurricular activities like MAKING A MOVIE for the Dutch public broadcaster VPRO. This makes me happy. And watching this short film about a future in which our home assistants might assist us a…
This story continues at The Next Web

Fake news is as old as the written word, and probably older, but it’s technology that’s created the insidious version of fake news we know today. Now, the question is whether technology, and artificial intelligence in particular, can also be the foil that will prevent the eventual fakenewspocolypse. Making Rome great again We’ve had fake news for a long time. We just used to call it propaganda and lies. In the first century BC Julius Caesar, the OG populist, was already using his letters, Commentāriī dē Bellō Gallicō (Commentaries on the Gallic War), to directly communicate ‘news’ from the Gallic Wars, or…
This story continues at The Next Web

Fake news is as old as the written word, and probably older, but it’s technology that’s created the insidious version of fake news we know today. Now, the question is whether technology, and artificial intelligence in particular, can also be the foil that will prevent the eventual fakenewspocolypse. Making Rome great again We’ve had fake news for a long time. We just used to call it propaganda and lies. In the first century BC Julius Caesar, the OG populist, was already using his letters, Commentāriī dē Bellō Gallicō (Commentaries on the Gallic War), to directly communicate ‘news’ from the Gallic Wars, or…
This story continues at The Next Web




