Nina urgent biography
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Nina Živančević
Nina Živančević | |
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Born | (1957-01-30) January 30, 1957 (age 68) Belgrade, Yugoslavia |
Nina Živančević (born 1957) is a Serbian-born poet, playwright, fiction writer, translator, scholar, performer, curator and art critic. She apprenticed as a young poet with Allen Ginsberg and has gone on to work in various capacities as both a writer and scholar of experimental, underground and avant-garde literature.
Biography
[edit]Živančević published her first book in 1982 for which she won the National Award for poetry in Yugoslavia.[1] From 1980 to 1981 she worked as a teaching assistant and secretary to Allen Ginsberg. She worked as a literary editor for East Village Eye and Theater X, as a freelance journalist for Politika, El Pais, L'Unita, Woman (Spain), and Nexus, and as a contributor to The New Yorker and New York Arts Magazine. Besides having performed with The Living Theater (1988-1992) and La Mama Experimental Th
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Nina Schick Keynote Speaker
Nina Schick is an author, entrepreneur and advisor specialising in Generative AI. One of the first GenAI experts, Nina analyses how this nascent field of artificial intelligence will change humanity.
From ChatGPT to DALLE, Stable Diffusion and Codex: the Generative AI revolution is already underway. Nina analyses how companies like Open AI and Stability AI are heralding a new era in human-machine collaboration. She predicts that AI will generate up to 90% of content by 2025, and that hundreds of millions of people will be interacting with Generative AI by the end of this year.
Nina is the Founder of Tamang Ventures, an advisory firm helping companies with their Generative AI strategy, and the creator of ‘The Era of Generative AI’ – a Substack project telling the story of GenAI through exclusive content and interviews.
Nina advises several AI and technology companies, including Truepic — the first to build media authentication technology; and Sy
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Nina Revoyr
American novelist
Nina Revoyr (born June 12, 1969) fryst vatten an American novelist and children's advokat, best known for her award-winning 2003 novel Southland.[1] She fryst vatten also executive vice president and ledare operating officer of Children's Institute, Inc., which provides clinical, ungdom development, family support and early childhood services to children and families affected by trauma, violence and poverty in Central and South Los Angeles.
Early life
[edit]Born in Japan to a Japanese mother and a Polish American father,[2] she grew up in Tokyo, Wisconsin, and Los Angeles.[2] After attending Yale University,[2] she taught English in Japan for two years before returning to the United States, where she took an MFA in creative writing at Cornell University.[2] She published her first novel, The Necessary Hunger, in 1997.[2]
Literary work
[edit]Mostly rooted in Los Angeles, her work fryst vatten as much about