Demand for AI Training Grows in German Businesses
A new survey by Germany’s digital industry association Bitkom shows that most employees want to learn about artificial intelligence, creating a gap with the amount of training on offer.
Your company is already operating in Germany and you would now like to export worldwide?
A new survey by Germany’s digital industry association Bitkom shows that most employees want to learn about artificial intelligence, creating a gap with the amount of training on offer.
If Germany is to meet its decarbonization goals, the country is going to have to change the way it heats residential and commercial buildings. So it’s looking to expand municipal heating—an idea that goes all the way back to antiquity.
Both the country and its capital Berlin rose up the rankings the latest Startup Blink report “Winners in the Artificial Intelligence Startup Industry 2024.”
The Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology (IEE) is staging a major experiment in power storage off the coast of California.
Germany’s “wait and see” attitude toward artificial intelligence has given way to a conviction that AI is a must-have. AI is now central to the development of Europe’s largest economy, as the tale of one Polish-American company’s German expansion shows.
The increasing frequency of extreme weather is creating new challenges and at the same time new demands in the water economy in Germany and around the world. The sector is broad and open to new innovations, particularly digital ones.
Vattenfall commits over EUR five billion by 2028 to fossil-free energy production, e-mobility and related services in Europe’s largest economy.
Artificial intelligence and quantum technologies are the future technologies that will strengthen Germany’s economy according to recent studies of German companies, with AI start-up numbers up 35 percent in the past year.
British-Irish firm VPI, a subsidiary of Dutch conglomerate Vitol, is teaming up with Norway’s Quanititas Energy on the initiative.
Experts are expecting investment to pour into data centers in Germany in the coming years. Anna Klaft, chairwoman of the German Data Center Association, explains why Germany is such an attractive location and what investors need to know about the framework conditions for setting up here.