Most companies can tell you where they rank on Google. Almost none can tell ...
Many engineering challenges come down to the same headache—too many knobs to turn and too few chances to test them. Whether tuning a power grid or designing a safer vehicle, each evaluation can be ...
Every enterprise leader has seen the pattern: a proof-of-concept AI tool that impresses in the demo and then three months later, it's hemorrhaging accuracy, choking on edge cases, and nobody can ...
Discover how men 45–55 can preserve strength, energy, and vitality. Learn the science behind testosterone decline and how to ...
Learn about agentic design automation, which Mark Ren, CEO of Agentrys and DesignCon keynote speaker, says will lead us into ...
Steven Bouma-Prediger seldom sees students walking between classes without their faces buried in their smartphones. This distraction transfers into the classroom, where Bouma-Prediger takes matters ...
Mathematics, like many other scientific endeavors, is increasingly using artificial intelligence. Of course, math is the backbone of AI, but mathematicians are also turning to these tools for tasks ...
When a crowd gets something right, like guessing how many beans are in a jar, forecasting an election, or solving a difficult scientific problem, it's tempting to credit the sharpest individual in the ...
The world keeps turning, and America keeps burning. And Dave Bautista knows just what manatees need his help. If you are in comics and have a birthday coming up – or you know someone who has – get in ...
Imagine Jo: Everyone in Jo's life recognizes her as an outstanding problem solver. She's the type of person who seems capable of almost anything. Jo excels at intuitive problem-solving. Over her life, ...
Stop us if you've heard this before: the NBA is apparently unhappy with its league-wide tanking epidemic. After several attempts at lottery reform and the adoption of the Play-In Tournament, the ...
The original version of this story appeared in Quanta Magazine. In 1939, upon arriving late to his statistics course at UC Berkeley, George Dantzig—a first-year graduate student—copied two problems ...