Google Docs is adding Spanish-language grammar suggestions

Over the past few years, Google has been using its expertise in machine learning and artificial intelligence to help English speakers write better. It's now doing the same for those who write in Spanish. Starting today, Google Docs will make grammar...

Microsoft Word uses AI to improve your writing

Microsoft is about to challenge Grammarly (not to mention Google) on its home turf. The company is developing an Ideas feature for Word's online version that uses AI to suggest grammar changes, among other assists. In addition to catching basic err...

Google Docs’ AI grammar checker rolls out to G Suite users

Google Docs' AI grammar suggestions are no longer limited to early adopters. The company is rolling out the machine learning tool for G Suite users, giving them an easier way to polish their reports. As Google outlined last year, this isn't a spell...

6 Ways Think-friendly Questions Help You Work Smarter


Egyptian novelist Naguib Mahfouz said it best: “You can tell whether a man is clever by his answers. You can tell whether a man is wise by his questions.” Decades of business consulting and coaching...

Bad Grammar Makes Good Passwords

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Pets? Out. Dates of yours and your family? Out. Favorite Sports team? Shouldn’t do it. Name of you pet, children, favorite milkman? Nope. Grammatical errors? Now you’re talking.

It’s getting harder and harder to make a password that is both easy to remember yet hard to crack. An algorithm developed by Ashwini Rao and colleagues at ...
Continue Reading on Walyou

Bad Grammar Makes Good Passwords

attachment

Pets? Out. Dates of yours and your family? Out. Favorite Sports team? Shouldn’t do it. Name of you pet, children, favorite milkman? Nope. Grammatical errors? Now you’re talking.

It’s getting harder and harder to make a password that is both easy to remember yet hard to crack. An algorithm developed by Ashwini Rao and colleagues at ...
Continue Reading on Walyou

Bad Grammar Makes Good Passwords

attachment

Pets? Out. Dates of yours and your family? Out. Favorite Sports team? Shouldn’t do it. Name of you pet, children, favorite milkman? Nope. Grammatical errors? Now you’re talking.

It’s getting harder and harder to make a password that is both easy to remember yet hard to crack. An algorithm developed by Ashwini Rao and colleagues at ...
Continue Reading on Walyou