ZME Science on MSN
The World’s Strangest Computer Is Alive and It Blurs the Line Between Brains and Machines
Scientists are building experimental computers from living human brain cells and testing how they learn and adapt.
American science is facing a looming collaboration crisis. Researchers around the world are deciding not to present at ...
The Punch on MSN
I studied from 3am to 6am daily — FUTO First-Class graduate
Read the inspiring story of Christopher Asor, a FUTO First-Class graduate, who shares his study habits, challenges, and ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Ti Hua Ji: World’s earliest computer is a silk loom built in China 2000 years ago
The world's earliest computer was a silk loom built in China over two millennia ago, according to a claim made by China's ...
A new research paper reframes the simulation hypothesis, asking whether reality could be simulated and what science can test.
Researchers identified a major decline in neural activity and retention when students used AI for writing. We need to empower ...
Tech companies are claiming machines more intelligent than us and capable of having their own agendas are just around the ...
That unease about working on lethal technology is just one of many factors contributing to an ongoing skills gap in the ...
Spending time offline during a digital or social media detox can help you foster better relationships IRL and improve mental ...
Step aside, LLMs. The next big step for AI is learning, reconstructing and simulating the dynamics of the real world.
The magnetic compass is the last unknown sense in migrating animals. For some scientists, the monarch butterfly is leading ...
In a rapidly evolving technology landscape, only a few careers illustrate the full arc of transformation—from foundational ...
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