Live Science on MSN
Quantum computing will make cryptography obsolete. But computer scientists are working to make them unhackable.
When quantum computers become commonplace, current cryptographic systems will become obsolete. Scientists are racing to get ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
When AI draws our words: Study finds image generators fail basic instructions despite aesthetic success
Can we really trust artificial intelligence to illustrate our ideas? A team of scientists has examined the capabilities of ...
Using the Patterson Foundation grant, the College of Education and the Rural Education Center of Kansas State are integrating ...
For years, a French mathematician searched for a proof that a gigantic number is prime. His method is still used 150 years ...
Of all the technology that Computer Information Science (CIS) majors at Gwynedd Mercy University get to use and learn from, ...
The dream of creating game-changing quantum computers—supermachines that encode information in single atoms rather than ...
One of the worst things people in education can do around AI is nothing,” said Naomi Hughes, a media specialist in Rochester, Minnesota. “Because kids are already using it.” ...
ZDNET sat down with Andrew Ng at AI Dev 25 in New York to talk about developer futures, responsible AI, and why AGI is overhyped.
Teacher Calla Bartschi works with Carter Redd, 14, left, and Chandler Wiley, 14, in her Introduction to AI class. CTE ...
We trust external observation over introspection, but we have it backward. When the brain observes itself, we access physical ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Harvard’s 448-qubit breakthrough brings fault-tolerant quantum supercomputing closer
A new fault-tolerant architecture using 448 atomic qubits suppresses errors past the critical point needed for scaling.
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