Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos Reclaims Title of World s Richest After Elon Musk Slips
It may not be long though before Musk leapfrogs Bezos once again. By Devon Pendleton and Simon Hunt, Bloomberg | Updated: 18 February 2021 13:34 IST
Jeff Bezos reclaimed his No. 1 position with a net worth of $191.2 billion (roughly Rs. 13,90,900 crores)
Highlights
Recently he’s roiled the price of Bitcoin and even Dogecoin
It may not be long though before Musk leapfrogs Bezos once again
Elon Musk s reign as the the world s richest person was brief.
Tesla shares slid 2.4 percent on Tuesday, erasing $4.6 billion (roughly Rs. 33,460 crores) from its chief executive officer s fortune and knocking him from the top spot on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index ranking.
Bezos reclaims title of world s richest after Musk slips moneyweb.co.za - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from moneyweb.co.za Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
By Lauren C. Williams
Feb 10, 2021
The U.S. Space Force has begun transferring more than a thousand cyber professionals into its ranks as of Feb. 1 and plans to start recruiting talent from across the military branches this year. There is a spectrum of threats that are out there everything from reversible jamming of satellites.and there s cyber threats, Gen. John Raymond, the Chief of Space Operations told reporters Feb. 3, which is why it s so important for us to have those cyber professionals on the Space Force team, organic to our team. They will be part of our crew force, they will understand the cyber terrain of space and help us protect this critical domain from that threat.
By
Theresa Hitchens on December 18, 2020 at 3:31 PM
Will Roper
WASHINGTON: The Air Force’s sixth-generation fighter jet that emerges from the Next-Generation Air Dominance (NGAD) program is almost certain to come with an AI copilot, says service acquisition czar Will Roper. The bigger question is what tasks the human pilot can, and most importantly should, cede to that artificial intelligence algorithm in what circumstances.
Whereas low-cost aircraft, such as the Skyborg drone, could very easily be flown by solo AI pilots in the near future, Roper told reporters during a Defense Writers Group briefing, the stakes are much higher for crewed aircraft.
By
Theresa Hitchens on December 10, 2020 at 4:41 PM
Will Roper
WASHINGTON: The Air Force hopes to persuade skeptical lawmakers to accept its space acquisition reform plans, promising increased transparency in exchange for more budgetary freedom.
Senior officials are engaging with defense appropriators as they near the end game on the 2021 defense spending bill, Shawn Barnes, deputy assistant secretary for space acquisitions and integration, said today. Both sides of Capitol Hill have stomped on Air Force plans that would, among other reforms, allow broad authority to move money between specific space programs.
“We haven’t yet seen final appropriations. But we certainly have heard from the appropriators that they are concerned about a potential lack of transparency,” he told Via Satellite’s MilSatCom Digital Week conference. “As we think about how to streamline, I’m absolutely committed to ensuring that we provide that transparency to the Hill to both the author