GovTech Polska: speed up the changes
For us, it’s not only the matter of technical but also mental innovations. It’s about a new approach. This is our motto. Justyna Orłowska and Anotni Rytel, GovTech Polska, in conversation with Maciej Chojnowski
For us, it’s not only the matter of technical but also mental innovations. It’s about a new approach. This is our motto. Justyna Orłowska and Anotni Rytel, GovTech Polska, in conversation with Maciej Chojnowski
He wasn’t even 20. He was self-taught in robotics, he didn’t speak Polish and he didn’t know our country or anyone living here… But he had an idea for a cheap prosthesis and its prototype. And he knew how to pass on his passion to others. He left India and came to Poznan.
New technologies are going to further polarize the labor market. We are going to have extremely well-paid, highly skilled people and “replaceable employees” working for peanuts. Professor Katarzyna Śledziewska and professor Renata Włoch in conversation with Maciej Chojnowski.
The question about the future of artificial intelligence should be looked at in a broader context: Where is this all going? Why do we need it? Do we do that only to make money or to improve the quality of life? Conversation with Jarosław Protasiewicz, PhD, director of the National Information Processing Institute.
According to the 2019 Global AI Talent Report, there is the same number of talents in Poland and in the Czech Republic. Only that the Czech Republic is several times smaller than our country, says professor Piotr Sankowski, Institute of Informatics, University of Warsaw, in conversation with Maciej Chojnowski.
Today, knowledge becomes stale as fast as fish does. The key to success is not the amount of information but the speed at which it can be absorbed and used, says Ralf Knegtmans, a recruitment specialist and author of “Agile Talent” in an interview conducted by Monika Redzisz.
Professor Krzysztof Krawiec: Many AI applications that seemed hypothetical just a few years ago are now within our reach.