Port St. Lucie's new eye in the sky proved its worth on day one of testing, locating a missing autistic person before she could enter a body of water.
A public-private partnership in the Mountain West announced new results today that mark steady progress toward the Department ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
World’s most powerful nuclear test reactor removes first Lightbridge fuel samples
US-based advanced nuclear fuel developer Lightbridge has successfully removed its first irradiated fuel samples ...
Six alumni from Jefferson County Joint Vocational School’s welding program have received additional training for the ...
Researchers at the University of Toronto showed how hackers could use artificial intelligence to create a program that could target any known flaw in the world’s computers. By Cade Metz Cade Metz has ...
5don MSN
In 1966, Joseph Weizenbaum developed ELIZA at MIT, an early program that inspired today's chatbots
In 1966, a simple program named ELIZA surprised scientists by eliciting human-like emotional responses. Despite its basic ...
For her interdisciplinary thesis, Nora Graves compared two automated approaches for adding accent marks to text in the Yorùbá ...
Literacy Roundup, a partnership between Fort Worth and the Sid W. Richardson Foundation, is holding dyslexia screenings ...
Companies are still experimenting with automated AI systems to find security weaknesses, but fewer are relying on the ...
Overture Games, an after-school program used in several Chicago schools and youth centers, relies on old-school paper and ...
Anthropics advanced artificial intelligence model identified vulnerabilities in classified U.S. government computer systems ...
Savvy Gamer on MSN
What was the first computer actually able to do?
The first computer didn’t show up looking like anything we’d call a computer now. There was no screen, no keyboard, no mouse, ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results