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Applitools Announces Future of Testing: Mobile Live Virtual Event

Share this article Share this article Top QA professionals and test engineers present interactive sessions and live panels to discuss innovations and cutting-edge practices in mobile test automation SAN MATEO, Calif., April 1, 2021 /PRNewswire/  Applitools, provider of a next generation test automation through Visual AI and Ultrafast Test Cloud, today announced Future of Testing: Mobile, a free, live-streamed virtual event dedicated to the current trends and innovations shaping mobile test automation. Throughout the last year, thousands of live participants have joined host Joe Colantonio and thought leaders from around the world to discuss and share technology, trends and success stories focused around software quality. This iteration of the popular event features presentations that aim to upskill developers, test engineers and QA professionals responsible for ensuring the delivery of quality mobile apps and experiences.

Nothing artificial here: 30 AI experts to follow on Twitter

In graduate school, Gebru used Google image data to infer political positions from populations based on simple items for example, the breakdown of types of vehicles people owned. After completing her PhD at the Stanford AI Lab, Gebru worked at Microsoft in its Fairness, Accountability, Transparency and Ethics in AI (FATE) lab and later at Google, where she researched items such as bias in facial-recognition software. Most recently, Gebru left Google; she claims she was fired for a critical email. Google counters that she made demands to stay employed that it chose not to meet. Because all this happened in December 2020, her Twitter feed is currently consumed by it. 

Despite COVID-19 adjustments, Broncs ballers just happy to be back

The jump ball was done away with this season by the Wyoming High School Activities Association, but that isn’t the most notable change to high school basketball in a year tainted by COVID-19. For the coaches of Jackson’s boys and girls basketball team, it’s the benches. Six feet separates each seat, which makes taking mental inventory of reserves a bit more difficult. The days of covering lineup with a few steps while mulling substitutions are gone. “You’re looking down there for kids to put in, and they might be way down there,” girls coach Jason Huggins said. “Some of that stuff is a little different, but it’s not too bad. It keeps me from yelling, I guess.”

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