This week in science: bright blue dogs spotted in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone; the pros of going gray; a kind of computer ...
It wasn’t a typical anatomy lab. The small group of people gathered around a table at Southwest Minnesota State University ...
Auburn University scientists have developed a new class of materials that allow precise control over free electrons, ...
The anchor made the incorrect remark while discussing Kim Kardashian’s conspiracy theory about the famed moon landing ...
Mushrooms may power future computers. Scientists explore fungi as eco-friendly, low-energy alternatives to traditional memory ...
In one sense, the market has never been so good: from Bose to Sony to Apple to Google to Samsung to Sennheiser to JBL to ...
One of the best RPGs of the 20th century feels timeless, but it's not the kind of game that would be made today.
Daniel Lokshtanov’s work explores the limits of what computers can solve, paving the way for advances in artificial intelligence and computational efficiency.
On an airstrip somewhere in Texas, a swarm of killer jets approaches—controlled by, of all things, a large language model.
How NASA Ames’ 80×120-foot wind tunnel became the beating heart of American aeronautics, testing everything from spacecraft ...
The recent paper studies algorithmic pricing through the lens of game theory, an interdisciplinary field at the border of ...
“Edge computing also means less data travels long distances, lowering the load on main servers and networks,” says Neel ...