convention in asia dedicated to the humble trainer. hello and welcome to bbc news. we start in the united states, where authorities in several us states have been assessing the damage caused by severe storms and tornadoes. at least 21 people are now known to have died, as the storms ripped through the south and the midwest, leaving a trail devastation. hardest hit, were tennessee, arkansas and indiana. in illinois, one person was killed, when a theatre roof collapsed. these pictures have just come into us in the last few hours of the storm passing this car in arkansas, and as you can see, the pictures speak for themselves. with all the latest, the bbc s sancha berg reports. dozens of storms and tornadoes left a trail of destruction, two of the fiercest touched down in the southern state of arkansas. tearing off roofs, bringing down power lines, sweeping through homes with incredible force. the rate of pace and the volume of itjust seemed rather intense and it was extremely da
ukraine s foreign minister urged council members to thwart any russian attempts to abuse the position. the presidency is largely ceremonial, although it oversees the agenda. now on bbc news, talking business, and what the rise of ai chatbots could mean for the future of work. hello everybody, welcome to talking business with me, aaron hazelhurst. let s go and have a look at what is on the show. the rise of the ai chat pot, the great global artificial intelligence race is under way as chatgpt takes the world by storm. this humanlike tech is wowing people across the globe with its ability to hold a coherent conversation, concoct poetry and even create computer code. but as we hand over the keys to technology should we be more worried about the consequences and just what could all of this mean for the future of work? i m going to be discussing all of this with these two, a director of technology from that un and a recruitment expert who specialises in what it means to be a human
The rise and rise of the AI chatbots - this human-like tech is taking the world by storm, but what could it mean for the future of work? Plus we sit down with.