
Jonathan Miller
Jonathan Miller's sports articles in Reporter capture the exhilaration and drama of athletic competitions. Whether it's the Olympics, football championships, or niche sports, Miller's dynamic narratives bring the excitement to life.
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- Markets
3 reasons we use graphic novels to teach math and physics
- root
- 23, Aug, 2023
Post-pandemic, some educators are trying to reengage students with technology – like videos, computer gaming or artificial intelligence, just to name a few. But integrating these approaches in the classroom can be an uphill battle.
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- Life & Arts
3 ways AI is transforming music
- root
- 23, Aug, 2023
Each fall, I begin my course on the intersection of music and artificial intelligence by asking my students if they’re concerned about AI’s role in composing or producing music.
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- Business
A carbon tax on investment income could be more fair
- root
- 23, Aug, 2023
A year after the US Department of Justice blocked the merger of two of the world’s biggest publishers, a New York-based private equity investment firm, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., has agreed to buy Simon & Schuster.
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- Business
ADB trims developing Asia growth outlook on China risk
- root
- 20, Sep, 2023
MANILA -- The Asian Development Bank lowered its growth forecast for developing Asia this year as high interest rates and the property crisis in China pose growing risks.
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- Tech
AI and new standards promise to make scientific data more useful by making it reusable and accessible
- root
- 23, Aug, 2023
Every time a scientist runs an experiment, or a social scientist does a survey, or a humanities scholar analyzes a text, they generate data. Science runs on data – without it, we wouldn’t have the James Webb Space Telescope’s stunning images, disease-preventing vaccines or an evolutionary tree...
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- Economics
As BRICS cooperation accelerates, is it time for the US to develop a BRICS policy?
- root
- 23, Aug, 2023
When leaders of the BRICS group of large emerging economies – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – meet in Johannesburg for two days beginning on Aug. 22, 2023, foreign policymakers in Washington will no doubt be listening carefully.