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**COMMERCIAL IMAGE** In this photo taken by Feature Photo Service for IBM: Nine young women and men earned their associate degrees in technology from Daley College at the commencement held by the City Colleges of Chicago at the UIC Pavilion in Chicago, IL on May 13, 2017. These young trailblazers are Chicago’s first early graduates of Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy, an innovative education model that launched in 2012 in partnership with Chicago Public Schools, Daley College, and IBM. The program gives students the option to complete a six-year program with both a high school diploma and an associate degree in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM). Some of the graduates, such as Anissa Del Rio and Marcos Montero (second and fourth from left), will finish the program in as little as four years, getting their college degrees four and a half weeks before receiving their high school diplomas. The IBM-inspired P-TECH schools are designed to open new pathways to better prepare young people for college and for “new collar” careers in some of the nation’s fast-growing fields that require sought-after skills that can be learned through innovative public education models like P-TECH, which IBM pioneered. There are currently nearly 60 P-TECH schools in six states across the US. IBM is committed to work with educators and businesses to create an additional 20 schools in the U.S. by this year’s end. (Feature Photo Service)
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President Barack Obama and Education Secretary Arne Duncan visit a classroom at the Pathways in Technology Early College High School (P-TECH) in Brooklyn, New York, Oct. 25, 2013. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)
This photograph is provided by THE WHITE HOUSE as a courtesy and may be printed by the subject(s) in the photograph for personal use only. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not otherwise be reproduced, disseminated or broadcast, without the written permission of the White House Photo Office. This photograph may not be used in any commercial or political materials, advertisements, emails, products, promotions that in any way suggests approval or endorsement of the President, the First Family, or the White House.
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In the next five years, we will be able to capture CO2 from the air and transform it from the scourge of the environment into something useful. The goal is to make CO2 capture and reuse efficient enough to scale globally so we can significantly reduce the level of the harmful CO2 in the atmosphere and, ultimately, slow climate change.
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With Watson Assistant for Citizens, IBM is helping government agencies, healthcare organizations and academic institutions use AI to put trusted data and information into the hands of their citizens. Citizens can quickly obtain reliable information about COVID-19, including guidance from the CDC and local sources such as links to school closings, news and documents on a state website -- online or by phone. (Credit: IBM)
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Watson Assistant for Citizens automates responses to frequently asked questions about COVID-19 on topics such as symptoms, testing and protective measures. (Credit: IBM)
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(left) Firefighter Joan Herrera, and (left) nurse Vicenç Ferrés Padró of Prometeo.
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Amy Wright has been named Managing Partner, IBM Talent & Transformation. (Credit: Eric van den Brulle)
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Date added: 2017-07-26
Labrador puppy T.J. at home in Ridgefield, Conn., where he is being raised by IBM employee Lorraine Trapani for Guiding Eyes for the Blind. The organization is using Watson on the IBM Cloud to analyze data to improve the breeding, raising and training of dogs. (Credit: IBM) Contact: Laurie Friedman, IBM, 914-499-4608 laurie1@us.ibm.com
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Date added: 2017-07-26
Labrador puppy T.J. with IBM employee Lorraine Trapani, who is raising T.J. for Guiding Eyes for the Blind. The organization is using Watson on the IBM Cloud to analyze data to improve the breeding, raising and training of dogs. (Credit: IBM) Contact: Laurie Friedman, IBM, 914-499-4608 laurie1@us.ibm.com
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Date added: 2017-09-13
Elementary school teachers across the nation are beginning to use Teacher Advisor With Watson, a free online tool powered by IBM Watson artificial intelligence technology to help them confidentially access targeted lesson plans and video for math instruction. About 1,000 curated lesson plans and teaching strategies have been vetted for quality and are available so far. The software developed by the IBM Foundation, in collaboration with the American Federation of Teachers, renowned educators, education non-profits, funders, and content providers, provides educators with targeted guidance to help strengthen their teaching skills and improve student achievement. Shown from left to right in this photo is Ulana Ainsworth, a special education teacher for fourth and fifth grade in the Boston Public Schools; Cliff Archey, a former teacher who now manages education programs for IBM Citizenship; and Sheena Lee, an elementary school teacher in the Boston Public Schools. (Credit: John Mottern/Feature Photo Service for IBM)
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Date added: 2017-09-19
Welgevonden Game Reserve in South Africa is tracking the behavior patterns of animals such as zebra, impala, eland and wildbeest to detect poaching activity. The new IoT powered solution developed by IBM, MTN and Wageningen University collects animal location information, movement, direction and average speed of travel along with other data. (Credit: IBM)
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Date added: 2017-09-19
IBM, MTN and Wageningen University use an IoT powered solution that gives Welgevonden Game Reserve in South Africa, a powerful tool in the fight to save endangered Rhinos. The solution uses the threat response patterns of other animals such as zebra, wildbeest, impala and eland, as an early warning signal, without divulging the precise location of the rhino. (Credit: IBM)
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Date added: 2017-09-19
IBM, MTN and Wageningen University's IoT powered solution fits animals such as zebra, wildebeest, eland and impala with custom made sensors which will transmit data on their behavior to the IoT platform. As a result, plains game such as the zebra, act as sentinels and their response patterns provide an early warning in the battle to save endangered rhinos. (Credit: IBM)