Bees navigate their surroundings with astonishing precision. Their brains are now inspiring the design of tiny, low-power chips that could one day guide miniature robots and sensors.
Semiconductor chips that process light rather than electricity could boost processing speeds and reduce energy use.
Bees navigate long distances without satellites, digital maps, or external guidance. By reading patterns ...
Imagine a shirt that feels like any other, but could feed you real-time information about your health and surroundings, heat ...
SAN FRANCISCO, Jan 26 (Reuters) - Microsoft on Monday unveiled the second generation of its in-house artificial intelligence ...
A week into testing Intel’s new Core Ultra X9, the numbers are in. The CPU performance is steady, and the Arc integrated ...
A new transceiver invented by electrical engineers at the University of California, Irvine boosts radio frequencies into 140-gigahertz territory, unlocking data speeds that rival those of physical ...
Farmers can now access data on an unprecedented scale, enabled by robotic milkers, soil sensors, GPS-guided tractors, ...
Traditional chips depend on flat, inflexible wafers; the Fudan team replaced these with elastic substrates capable of hosting resistors, capacitors, diodes, and transistors. Once patterned, each ...
Something extraordinary has happened, even if we haven’t fully realized it yet: algorithms are now capable of solving ...
Robin Rowe talks about coding, programming education, and China in the age of AI feature TrapC, a memory-safe version of the ...