University of Missouri scientists build rewritable DNA hard drive using nanopore sensor for storing and editing digital data.
Researchers have made DNA storage rewritable, overcoming one of its biggest limitations. The breakthrough could turn DNA into a practical alternative to today’s energy-hungry data centers.
Mark Karpelès submitted a pull request to Bitcoin Core that would redirect coins that have remained untouched since 2011 to a recovery address controlled by the MtGox trustee, reigniting the oldest ...
Google on Friday unveiled its plan for its Chrome browser to secure HTTPS certificates against quantum computer attacks without breaking the Internet.
Every engineering leader watching the agentic coding wave is eventually going to face the same question: if AI can generate production-quality code faster than any team, what does governance look like ...
Abstract: Data Structures and Algorithms (DSA) is fundamental to computer science education, yet novice learners face significant challenges in grasping abstract concepts and their system-level ...
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Code Louisville, a free tech training program that has prepared an estimated 5,000 Kentuckians for careers in software development over the past 13 years, will teach its final class ...
Cortex Code, Snowflake’s AI coding agent, helps customers like Braze, Decile, dentsu, FYUL, LendingTree, Shelter Mutual Insurance, TextNow, United Rentals, and WHOOP perform complex data engineering, ...
You may avoid ChatGPT and Google's Gemini because artificial intelligence, or AI, makes you nervous, but you probably use AI every day without even knowing it. Gallup reported in 2025 that 50% of ...
Shorebirds hunker down recently on a jetty at the Cape Lookout National Seashore visitor center at Shell Point on Harkers Island. Jetties are a type of hard structure on coastlines. Photo: Dylan Ray ...
The National Institutes of Health failed to protect brain scans that an international group of fringe researchers used to argue for the intellectual superiority of white people. Credit...Ben Denzer ...