ZME Science on MSN
The World’s Strangest Computer Is Alive and It Blurs the Line Between Brains and Machines
Scientists are building experimental computers from living human brain cells and testing how they learn and adapt.
A Stanford study finds the ARTEMIS AI agent beat most human pen testers in vulnerability discovery—at a fraction of the cost.
UK’s leading network provider reflects on the country’s quantum progress to date, and proposes what needs to happen next as funding and focus shift towards delivery.
Data from Axial, the most-monitored underwater volcano, are helping geophysicists hone eruption predictions. For Axial, 2026 ...
A new technique breaks Dijkstra's 70-year-old record: it finds routes faster in huge networks, changing graph theory forever.
Per Scholas has helped over 30,000 people, about half of whom never graduated from a four-year college, break into careers in ...
James Cameron knows folks equate Eywa in Avatar to a benevolent version of Skynet in The Terminator, and here's what the ...
Siddiqui’s comments come amid a broader shift in US H-1B policy that has created uncertainty for applicants and holders.
Robust.AI co-founder Rodney Brooks, a pioneering roboticist and co-creator of the widely selling Roomba robot vacuum, ...
3don MSN
A godfather of AI shares the career advice he'd give to his 4-year-old grandson as AI displaces jobs
Yoshua Bengio, known as one of the "AI godfathers," said that while more jobs will be automated by AI, human qualities like ...
Multiple legal experts have clarified that claims saying "sending obscene photos or videos to friends is illegal" are a ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists found a new way to decode the brain’s hidden language
The idea of “reading minds” has shifted from science fiction to a concrete engineering challenge, and the latest ...
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