Megan Crouse has a decade of experience in business-to-business news and feature writing, including as first a writer and then the editor of Manufacturing.net. Her news and feature stories have appeared in Military & Aerospace Electronics, Fierce Wireless, TechRepublic, and eWeek. She copyedited cybersecurity news and features at Security Intelligence. She holds a degree in English Literature and minored in Creative Writing at Fairleigh Dickinson University.
Expertise
Artificial Intelligence
Enterprise Software
Cybersecurity
Aerospace
Defense Technology
Manufacturing
Automotive
Education
Bachelor of Arts degree in English Literature from Fairleigh Dickinson University
Featured In
TechRepublic https://www.techrepublic.com/
Fierce Wireless https://www.fiercewireless.com/
Manufacturing.Net https://www.manufacturing.net/
Security Intelligence (as a copyeditor) https://securityintelligence.com/
Military & Aerospace Electronics https://www.militaryaerospace.com/
Highlights
The ChatGPT cheat sheet was included in Washington State’s Department of Enterprise Services list of technical resources: https://lnkd.in/e4jv3Wbd
Favorite Technology
My LG NanoCell 85 TV makes relaxing with a video game after work feel like going to a movie theater in the best way.
AI like ChatGPT are trained on the internet, while proprietary datasets use a business’ own data. Former Siri engineer Aaron Kalb tells how to choose between public and proprietary AI.
The NVIDIA DGX supercomputer using GH200 Grace Hopper Superchips could be the top of its class. Learn what this and the company’s other announcements mean for enterprise AI and high-performance computing.
Experts including ChatGPT head Sam Altman suggest AI may pose a risk of “extinction.” Altman’s OpenAI is among the U.S. tech companies keeping an eye on possible European Union regulation.
On-premises artificial intelligence and specifically trained generative AI are now enterprise trends. Leaders from Dell and NVIDIA and analysts from Forrester Research weigh in.