Italian innovation growing apace
The European and Regional Innovation Scoreboards assess 21 parameters. While our country now ranks among the 'moderate innovators', it has made enormous progress.
The European and Regional Innovation Scoreboards assess 21 parameters. While our country now ranks among the 'moderate innovators', it has made enormous progress.
For Italy's national health service, the coronavirus crisis was not only a stress test but also an incentive to innovate and fast-track a Connected Care model. Here are all the data from the Digital Innovation Observatory on Healthcare of the School of Management at Milan Polytechnic.
Daniele Chieffi, Communication and PR Director for the Department for Innovation and Digitization of the Presidency of the Italian Council of Ministers, talks about the way that coronavirus has accelerated digital developments
The continent is experiencing a period of investment growth in its tech industries, with the development of over 300 innovative hubs in the main cities, especially in Kenya, South Africa, Nigeria, Egypt and Morocco
An interview with Roberta Cocco, Councilor for Digital Transformation and Civic Services of the Municipality of Milan: we are focusing on digital transformation, from urban planning to mobility, from security to innovation.
The Italian market of this sector is worth 400 million and it's increasing exponentially (+ 270%) compared to one year ago
Automated check-outs are already a reality, but robot assistants and applications to minimise food wastage are on their way: the digital revolution is coming to the shelves
Digital innovation and valued teachers: Estonian students grow up in an ideal context stemming from foresight and major investments. A role model that more and more countries are turning to
Digital disruption is rewriting business strategies, as demonstrated by the constant growth of budgets allocated to Information and Communication Technologies. The figures of the revolution in progress
Not just the manufacturing industry: artificial intelligence is now entering the world of liberal professions. We already have software packages that can perform better legal assessments than humans: But they lack the sensitivity of a lawyer