Every year the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks promotes Americanism in our local community. The essay contest begins ...
Stephen Huebner said he hopes readers are enlightened by his pithy yet informative reflections on ancient writings.
Artificial Intelligence (ryne.ai) has revolutionized the manner we interact with the era. From chatbots to content cloth introduction devices, AI performs a huge function in several industries.
That way they won’t feel like they’re sneaking behind their teacher’s back. However, students also use AI to do other assignments — like writing full essays — and claim that work as their own. Some ...
The rise of AI co-pilots is exposing a critical security gap: sensitive data sprawl and excessive access permissions. Until now, lackluster enterprise search capabilities kept many security risks in ...
The NSDAR American History Essay Contest topic was “Enjoying a new kind of Tea Party.” In the 1770s there was a movement of protest from the Colonists against the British due to taxes and laws ...
Commissions do not affect our editors' opinions or evaluations. I know starting a blog seems like an easy side hustle, but there’s a lot of work to it, and people often get in over their heads ...
Mr. Setser is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and the author of the Follow the Money blog. President Trump’s readiness to use coercive tariffs presents a profound threat to ...
MatForce, the Yavapai County coalition to combat substance abuse and other life challenges in area youth, is inviting Yavapai County students to participate in its annual “Stay Healthy” essay ...
TRINITY College wants its students to use AI and Gen AI to write their essays for them - as long as they don’t try to pass it off as their own. University chiefs keen to mould the workforce of ...
For the past couple of months, I’ve been scouring thrift stores and flea markets for DVDs. I bought a used portable media player back in September after not being able to find “When Harry Met ...
A brief announcement: After 20 years of writing “Intellectual Affairs” for Inside Higher Ed, I am retiring at the end of the month—from the gig, that is, not from writing itself. The final column will ...