NPR's Steve Inskeep asks Princeton computer scientist Sayash Kapoor about his assertions that AI won't lead to mass layoffs.
The number of people with electrodes in their brains is believed to have more than doubled in the last couple of years.
Working with circuits and LED lights guides students to test ideas, troubleshoot problems, revise plans, notice patterns, and ...
Meta ended a program tracking employees' computer movements to train AI models over security concerns, according to a new ...
Kathmandu, June 29 -- The National Examination Board (NEB) published this year's grade 12 results within 40 days of the ...
For her interdisciplinary thesis, Nora Graves compared two automated approaches for adding accent marks to text in the Yorùbá ...
Anish Gawande calls for the Education Minister's resignation, citing mismanagement and a crisis in India's education ...
In a Penn State lab, a small cylinder of soil sits wired with sensors, slowly cooling as it mimics conditions thousands of miles away. At first, it looks unremarkable, like dirt from an average ...
Peter Thiel views perfect competition not as an ideal economic state, but as a destructive force that annihilates profits.
In his decades-long career in tech journalism, Dennis has written about nearly every type of hardware and software. He was a founding editor of Ziff Davis’ Computer Select in the 1990s, senior ...
There was much interest in the move by King Charles to reveal for the first time how much income tax he pays, but in ways, ...