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Search Result for “trains”

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OPINION

AI and the future of education

Oped, Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg, Published on 27/01/2026

» The rapid progress of large language models over the past two years has led some to argue that AI will soon make college education, especially in the liberal arts, obsolete. According to this view, young people would be better off skipping college and learning directly on the job.

OPINION

Who runs Red Line?

Oped, Postbag, Published on 16/01/2026

» Re: "Red Line B40 daily fare cap starts", (BP, Dec 2, 2025). I'm just curious whether the Red Line commuter trains are under the jurisdiction of the Mass Rapid Transit Authority (MRTA) or the State Railway of Thailand (SRT).

OPINION

The right simple questions fuel true growth

Oped, Mariano Carrera, Published on 17/10/2025

» We need to be asking, "Is there a better way?" or "What else is there?" and "How can we improve?" These three simple questions direct growth, innovation and ambition, which are the qualities required in personal, business and social life.

OPINION

Protect the judges

Oped, Postbag, Published on 25/08/2025

» Re: "Thaksin beats lese majeste rap," (BP, Aug 23).

OPINION

Tech-free zones are required to save humanity

Oped, Mariano Miguel Carrera, Published on 24/07/2025

» Several recent interactions and observations have led me to believe that humanity needs technology-free zones where people can interact and be themselves. Ironically, better human contact leads to better technology. The purpose of technology is to serve humans, whereas the reverse appears to be happening now!

OPINION

Flat fare a good start

Oped, Editorial, Published on 17/07/2025

» The 20-baht flat fare for electric trains that will run from Oct 1 this year to Sept 30 next year is a welcome move to ease the cost of living for city commuters.

OPINION

When disasters create unlikely alliances

Oped, Zoltán Grossman, Published on 15/03/2025

» Disasters are tragic and frightening events, whether emerging from the climate crisis, armed conflict, or health catastrophe. They reveal deep social inequalities and compel fear and insecurity. But times of catastrophe can also serve as opportunities to turn toward collective resilience and mutual aid and build unlikely alliances between communities.

OPINION

Danish media's stand on Big Tech

Oped, Karen Rønde, Published on 06/02/2025

» As AI slop spreads across the internet, concerns about the future of high-quality information are growing. Without accurate and relevant human-generated data, model collapse -- whereby generative artificial intelligence trains on its own output and gradually degrades -- seems inevitable. The tech giants, well aware of this risk, have cut corners and skirted copyright law in their pursuit of training data for their large language models.

OPINION

How China and Japan's values 'differ'

Oped, Philip J Cunningham, Published on 05/12/2024

» Malaysia's former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad famously saluted "Asian values" citing "diffidence" as one of the characteristics that ostensibly made Asians different, though he did so in an arrogant, attention-grabbing kind of way. More successful was his "Look East Policy", (which, from the geographic confines of Malaysia is actually the Philippines) and there was no mistaking that it was Japan that Mr Mahathir had in mind, with China hovering somewhere out of focus in the background.

OPINION

Bracing for trade war

Oped, Editorial, Published on 08/11/2024

» With the return of US president-elect Donald Trump of the Republican Party to the White House, countries around the world including Thailand are waiting to see and deal with the impact of the potential trade war between the US and China, higher tariffs imposed on exporters to the US, and the return of American unilateralism.