Spread the love“`html When it comes to tackling high school math, having the right tools can make a world of difference. Graphing calculators have become an essential part of the academic toolkit, ...
An analysis of Lotto entries shows many players gravitate to the same number combinations, increasing prize sharing and ...
AI systems are increasingly helping out with math research, and this is now appearing in relevant data. A chart shared by Jasper ...
Dylan Kane likes his math curriculum. But there’s one important piece missing, he says. The 7th grade math teacher in Leadville, Colo., uses a program that teaches math skills through real-world ...
Tetris is finally trading its silent gray Game Boy screen for a loud, colorful cartoon cacophony. But wait, didn’t we all secretly think the blocks were already having a dramatic soap opera in there?
Some animals carry patterns so precise and mathematically exact that scientists struggle to explain how nature produced them ...
Over the past decade, Professor L. Mahadevan's Soft Math Lab at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) has helped establish how the ancient Japanese paper arts ...
The result is correct but challenges core norms of mathematics: checking proofs, crediting ideas and keeping research open to everyone.
Dan D’Agostino Progression Neo brings JFET circuitry, HDMI eARC, diagnostics, and big power to Vienna 2026. Pricing may sting. Dan D’Agostino Master Audio Systems is using High End Vienna 2026 to ...
Mathematician Will Sawin discusses his experience reviewing and refining a mathematical proof devised by OpenAI's internal model—and what that could mean for mathematics.
In mid-May, OpenAI announced that an internal AI model had disproved the Erdős unit distance conjecture, a famous problem in discrete geometry that had stumped human mathematicians for the last 80 ...
OpenAI claims its new reasoning model has produced an original mathematical proof disproving a famous unsolved conjecture in geometry, which was first posed by Paul Erdős in 1946. If this sounds ...