When the Artemis II four-person crew left Earth’s orbit, they were protected by a computing system designed to move beyond simple redundancy (a la the Apollo missions) to a fail-silent architecture.
The electronics inside your phone, your car, and every satellite currently orbiting Earth share one critical weakness: heat. Push them past about 200 degrees Celsius and they start to fail. For ...
New research suggests quantum computers capable of breaking internet encryption may arrive sooner than expected—with AI ...
The National Science Foundation's new FINDERS Foundry initiative will fund up to $8.5 million in research by higher education ...
However, it is not necessary to use fancy quantum cryptography technology such as entanglement to avoid the looming quantum ...
The potential to create personalised digital “twins” of your brain and body is a hot topic in neuroscience and medicine today ...
New infrastructure integration with 1Password gives computer use agents self-healing authentication - solving the ...
Four decades into her crusade against Texas petrochemical plants, a retired shrimper remains determined to fight Dow, the ...
The Hechinger Report on MSN

The quest to build a better AI tutor

It’s easy to get swept up in the hype about artificial intelligence tutors. But the evidence so far suggests caution. Some studies have found that chatbot tutors can backfire because students lean on ...
European quantum computing firms hurry to get US stock exchange listings so they can be predator not prey in a coming wave of ...
NASA's Artemis II mission was a success. Here is what NASA plans to do on Artemis III and IV - and how America plans to beat ...
Anthropic has given Claude the ability to control a Mac, marking a major step in the AI agent race and raising new questions ...