Research Development & Programs Undergraduate Programs Transfer to STEM Student Success (TS3) Velay Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (VSURF) Transfer to STEM Student Success (TS3) CUNY ...
Long before killer cyborgs stalked Sarah Connor or sentinels patrolled dystopian skies, the low-budget 1962 film The Creation of the Humanoids (which can be found on YouTube) asked a worrying question ...
Taback, the Isaac Henry Wing Professor of Mathematics, was announcing the visit of John Urschel to campus. Formerly an offensive lineman with the Baltimore Ravens, Urschel played three seasons in the ...
Abigail Dejenie, Alessia Sofianos, and Xiang Feng participated in the MIT Mathematics and Science Seminar. Photo: Supplied St Andrew’s School for Girls congratulated three learners who attended the ...
The saying “round pegs do not fit square holes” persists because it captures a deep engineering reality: inefficiency most often arises not from flawed components, but from misalignment between a ...
First look: Light, not silicon, may define the next leap in computing power. That's the bet Austin-based startup Neurophos is making as it challenges the idea that Moore's Law still governs the pace ...
What’s the difference between a GPU and a TPU? It’s a wonkish question, to be sure, but one that has a lot of interesting applications to the AI arms race, where companies are trying to be the go-to ...
For more than three decades, modern CPUs have relied on speculative execution to keep pipelines full. When it emerged in the 1990s, speculation was hailed as a breakthrough — just as pipelining and ...
Apple's decision to design its own chips has helped it exert more control over the capabilities of the iPhone 17 lineup. It will also help further its AI ambitions. Apple may be one of the leading ...
At what point does the jackpot become so big that the math actually starts working in your favor? Buying dreams for $2. Pay $2, pick six numbers, and you could win $1.8 billion on Saturday night. So ...
Last year, onlookers observed a startling site on China’s Qiantang River: waves forming a grid-like pattern. Dubbed the “matrix tide,” this complex wave pattern was caused by the river’s famed tidal ...
James is a published author with multiple pop-history and science books to his name. He specializes in history, space, strange science, and anything out of the ordinary.View full profile James is a ...