AI, Person of the Year and Time
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Sean Gregory continues his streak of writing or co-writing all of TIME’s Athlete of the Year profiles since we created the category in 2019. He traveled to Las Vegas to witness A’ja Wilson at the Aces’ raucous victory parade and interviewed the MVP in New York City. Her cover portrait was taken by Kanya Iwana.
Time has announced that the “architects of AI” are its Person of the Year. Certainly, AI is wrapping up an extraordinary year, and many AI business executives have become household names.
Time is all around us: in the language we use, in the memories we revisit and in our predictions of the future. But what exactly is it? The physicist and Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek joins Steve Strogatz to discuss the fundamental hallmarks of time.
As 2024's daylight saving time ends and clocks fall back, most of the U.S. will change the time on clocks — but there are two states and several territories that do not observe daylight saving time. Come Sunday, people across the country will move clocks ...
Time's 2025 person of the year are the architects of AI, depicted in this painting by Jason Seiler. The painting, with nods to the iconic 1932 “Lunch atop a Skyscraper” photograph, depicts tech leaders Mark Zuckerberg, Lisa Su, Elon Musk, Jensen Huang, Sam Altman, Demis Hassabis, Dario Amodei, and Fei-Fei Li.
This is what time The Game Awards air tonight across the world, and how long you'll have to commit to the show to see it through.
TIME and OpenAI announced a partnership to increase people’s understanding of how to use AI effectively and responsibly in daily life.
Summary: Time doesn’t flow uniformly across the solar system, and new research reveals just how differently it unfolds on Mars compared with Earth. By tracing subtle gravitational and orbital influences,