The constraints and regulations around AI are the starting point for innovation for Kiwi companies.
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Raw Politics: Haere Ra to all that
This week on the Raw Politics podcast: How good a PM might Christopher Luxon be, why Chris Hipkins shouldn't think of quitting, the Greens and Te Pāti Māori the big winners, and silence from Winston
Hurricane Tim: Beating the odds
Watch: Newsroom's Melanie Reid followed Sir Tim Wallis over the course of six years in the 1990s to make a documentary
Employers' new challenge: AI's use through the employment life cycle
Artificial intelligence may take your job – but it may wind up being your boss, too.
Raw Politics: Best and worst of the campaign
This week on Raw Politics: The final polls and what to expect on Saturday, and our nominations for best and worst political plays of the campaign
Playing regulatory chess with AI
Experts say New Zealand should be paying attention to how big players like the EU and the US legislate on AI.
Raw Politics: Winston's late insurance policy?
This week on the Raw Politics podcast: Has isolation sucked the life out of Labour and Chris Hipkins' campaign, and will fringe parties do a late deal with NZ First?
Raw Politics: Act and NZ First grab at the steering wheel
This week on the Raw Politics podcast: We look at what common wins might await NZ First and Act if National needs them both post-election
Raw Politics: Hipkins' strange failure to fire
This week on the Raw Politics podcast: We ask why Labour leader Chris Hipkins has failed to fire in this campaign
Raw Politics: What pricked Act's bubble?
This week on the Raw Politics podcast: Who to believe over the state of the nation's books, and what's eating the Act Party?
Raw Politics: Things get personal
This week on the Raw Politics podcast: Lame attack ads, how the infiltration the Labour campaign launch backfired, who's got all the money and how are they spending it – and why did Christopher Luxon discard his ceremonial Pasifika necklace?
Changing South: Dogs help free Banks Peninsula from pests
A plan to eradicate pests from Banks Peninsula by 2050 is showing signs of success. Key weapons in the project are specially trained dogs that hunt down the most evasive predators.