The U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has sanctioned Russian firm Operation Zero and its founder, ...
The convergence of AI and smart contracts isn't a future vision—it's an incremental process already underway. It propels blockchain automation into the next phase: one where contracts don't only ...
A recent blog post from Anthropic, a large AI company in the U.S., signals that the tech can help governments "modernize" ...
Learn how APT has evolved over seven decades to now a fully-automated AI-assisted manufacturing process, without learning coding.
Ticket prices for the Robotics Summit (May 27-28 in Boston) increase after March 2. Register today for the world's leading ...
New bills, new enforcement actions, and a September deadline that turns every stalled bill into a live round. The post The ...
Nearly 90 percent of university students globally report using generative AI tools for assignments and research. However, as ...
Scientists may have new answers to why pop-ups or notifications grab our attention. Turns out our attention is on a cycle, shifting seven to ten times per second.
Researchers find that human attention shifts 7–10 times per second due to innate brain rhythms, making us naturally susceptible to distractions.
And that’s just what her company Flox Intelligence is doing in Syracuse. It’s developed a way to tell animals in their own “language” when they’re near something dangerous, like a highway, railroad or ...