Freshworks CEO, Dennis Woodside, breaks down the real impact of AI on software companies, jobs, and innovation. Woodside shares lessons on building and scaling companies, navigating disruption, and ...
Lots of things go viral these days, but few of them have ever become more popular than the simple “6-7” meme. It really doesn’t mean anything, but kids (and some adults) love it, sometimes to the ...
In the final weeks of 2025, as Sri Lankan households prepared for the dawn of a new year, a website URL ignited a firestorm that threatens to derail the NPP Government’s efforts at Educational Reforms ...
Sri Lanka’s Telecommunications Regulatory Commission (TRCSL) has blocked access to a website that was referenced in a Grade 6 English language module, following mounting public concern over its ...
Netflix users are on edge as the finale of Stranger Things approaches. Episodes 5, 6, 7, and 8 of Stranger Things 5 will conclude the fifth and final season, and considering how long each episode is, ...
Nearly half of Alberta’s Grade 6 students failed the provincewide math test in 2024, three years after the province started rolling out its new elementary school curriculum. Only 53 per cent of ...
CLAREMONT, Calif. (KABC) -- If you're a parent, or especially if you're a teacher, you've probably heard kids shouting 6-7 for no apparent reason. It's an internet thing that has become a bit of a ...
As any parent of today’s teenagers knows, listening to your progeny often feels like you’re eavesdropping on some secret society that has its own language. The words and phrases — “no cap,” “skibidi,” ...
UC San Diego is trying to solve a math problem. The university said a growing number of students are starting their freshman year lacking high school math proficiency. KPBS reporter Jacob Aere says ...
Prime Minister Keir Starmer egged on first graders doing the viral gesture, then apologized when told the school prohibited it. “I didn’t start it, Miss,” he said. By Jonathan Wolfe Jonathan Wolfe ...
TIPPECANOE COUNTY, Ind. (WXIN/WTTV) — You may have heard enough of your kids saying “6-7,” but is it enough to warrant a ticket? School resource officers at one Indiana elementary school decided so.