IEEE Spectrum on MSN
Will We Know Artificial General Intelligence When We See It?
AI experts acknowledge ARC’s value, and also its flaws. Jiaxuan You, a computer scientist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, says ARC is “a very good theoretical benchmark” that can ...
A very rare Apple-1 computer sold for a significant amount more money than auctioneer estimates, in Boston this weekend.
Recently, Shanghai Tiandan Network Technology Development Co., Ltd. submitted a widely watched patent application to the National Intellectual Property Administration, titled "Low-Sample Chain NL2SQL ...
Dubbed Ocelot, it’s designed to correct errors with less hardware overhead. Amazon Web Services today announced Ocelot, its first-generation quantum computing chip. While the chip has only rudimentary ...
Two experiments with different quantum computers showcase their growing ability to simulate materials and quantum matter that ...
This week, Anthropic rolled out updates to its AI models and introduced a very interesting Computer Use API that allows AI to control your computer. Imagine a world where your computer anticipates ...
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Graz University of Technology opens up new avenues in lung cancer research with digital cell twin
An enhanced computer model is now helping to provide fresh insights into cancer-cell growth and how it can be stopped. The ...
Rapid advances in applying artificial intelligence to simulations in physics and chemistry have some people questioning whether we will even need quantum computers at all. Tech companies have been ...
Researchers claim to have broken RSA encryption using a quantum computer, but what really happened? When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it ...
While you may have been distracted by Apple’s new product releases and interesting operating system enhancements, the company ...
We recently published 13 Stocks That Jim Cramer Discussed. Seagate Technology Holdings plc (NASDAQ:STX) is one of the stocks ...
A Microsoft veteran has shared an interesting nugget of info explaining why Windows 3.0's WinHelp software was considered "online" despite not being connected to the internet.
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