Studying the epic journey of the iconic jumping plumber can lead to new insights in theoretical computer science—and may help researchers understand the tractability of problems in other areas.
Tucked into an office about 20 minutes west of Boston, sits a lean MIT spin-out that has quietly out-benchmarked some of the biggest names in storage. I visited this week as part of the 68th IT Press ...
ITU AI for Good Global Summit 2026 opens Day Zero on July 7 at Palexpo Geneva, featuring agentic AI security workshops and ...
8don MSN
In 2000, Luis von Ahn and his team introduced CAPTCHA to help websites distinguish humans from bots
Carnegie Mellon University researchers pioneered CAPTCHA, a system to differentiate humans from bots, revolutionizing web ...
Explore the potential of quantum computing and the challenges ahead as researchers strive to overcome noise and errors.
21don MSN
Alan Turing Was World War II’s Greatest Codebreaker. His Private Papers Reveal A Secret Project.
Newly revealed documents show that, while breaking Nazi codes, Turing was also building a device that almost changed military communication forever.
Popular Mechanics] has an interesting article about Alan Turing’s nearly-forgotten speech encryption device. Codenamed ...
Joseph Weizenbaum set out to prove that computers could imitate conversation. Instead, his experiment convinced him that ...
12don MSN
In 1950, Alan Turing introduced a test that still influences how people judge chatbots today
Over 70 years ago, Alan Turing's "imitation game" revolutionized how we assess machine intelligence, shifting focus from ...
Integrating humanities into AI development is vital because societal impact is shaped by those who understand meaning, not just builders.
That’s what the new Engineering issue of MIT Technology Review is all about. Sometimes the challenges we face are giant, like tunneling beneath the seafloor. Some exist at the nanoscale, as with a ...
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