• Opinion: Tech can’t cure the loneliness that it’s creates

    Opinion: Tech can’t cure the loneliness that it’s creates
    Technology is often accused of causing loneliness. The US Surgeon General recently warned that tech can deepen isolation, increase fear of missing out, and reduce social interaction. Surveys frequently show that isolation among young people surges when their social media use grows. But what could possibly solve these problems caused by tech? Why, more tech of course! It’s a common response from (who else?) technologists, who have a remarkable variety of marketable solutions. From interact
  • Opinion: Tech can’t cure the loneliness it causes

    Opinion: Tech can’t cure the loneliness it causes
    Technology is often accused of causing loneliness. The US Surgeon General recently warned that tech can deepen isolation, increase fear of missing out, and reduce social interaction. Surveys frequently show that isolation among young people surges when their social media use grows. But what could possibly solve these problems caused by tech? Why, more tech of course! It’s a common response from (who else?) technologists, who have a remarkable variety of marketable solutions. From interact
  • Startup secures €7.6M for sand battery that can heat a small town

    Startup secures €7.6M for sand battery that can heat a small town
    Last month, Finnish startup Polar Night Energy announced that it is building a giant sand battery capable of heating a town of 5,000 people for up to a month. That’s on a single charge.  Polar Night is constructing the sand battery for the town of Pornainen in southern Finland. The system is expected to enable the town cut all oil use in its district heating network — slashing greenhouse gas emissions by 70%. Now, Polar Night Energy has secured a sizable €7.6mn to scale it
  • Why workers are leaving fossil fuel jobs — and what to do if you feel like ‘climate quitting’

    Why workers are leaving fossil fuel jobs — and what to do if you feel like ‘climate quitting’
    Are you frustrated with your employer’s lack of commitment to sustainability? Maybe “climate quitting” is for you. Climate quitting means leaving your job due to concerns about your employer’s impact on the climate or because you want to work directly on addressing climate issues. If you’re contemplating leaving your job over climate concerns, you’re not alone. Half of Gen Z employees (people born between the late 1990s and early 2010s) in the UK have already
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  • Silo AI launches Nordic LLM family to protect Europe’s linguistic diversity

    Silo AI launches Nordic LLM family to protect Europe’s linguistic diversity
    Europe’s linguistic diversity has received a boost into the AI era with the launch of new LLMs for Nordic languages. Fittingly named Viking, the model family is the brainchild of Finnish startup Silo AI. The company claims to host Europe’s largest private AI lab and has pledged to protect the continent’s digital sovereignty. Viking is the latest step of that mission. By integrating Danish, Finnish, Icelandic, Norwegian, and Swedish into its open-source models, Silo AI plans to
  • TNW Podcast: Flying cars and invisibility shields; Svilen Rangelov on drones and Dronamics

    TNW Podcast: Flying cars and invisibility shields; Svilen Rangelov on drones and Dronamics
     Welcome to the new episode of the TNW Podcast — the show where we discuss the latest developments in the European technology ecosystem and feature interviews with some of the most interesting people in the industry. In today’s episode, Linnea and Andrii talk about flying cars, unexpected effects of climate change, espresso origins, and real-life invisibility shields. The guest of the show is Svilen Rangelov, co-founder and CEO of Dronamics, a Bulgarian scale-up that’s
  • This startup detects heart disease using motion sensors in your phone

    This startup detects heart disease using motion sensors in your phone
    Health tech has a rocky history. For every story of the Apple Watch saving someone’s life, there’s a Theranos out there ruining it for everyone. Yet the sector marches on. We all want to be healthy and know more about our bodies — and this is an opportunity for profit that tech companies can’t ignore. The problem is that, as consumers, we struggle to separate the wheat from the chaff, the hard science from the cosmetic. Take, for example, the heart monitoring features on

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