Anthropic has released Claude Science, which is essentially a workbench for AI researchers that tackles one of the least glamorous aspects of scientific research – the sheer burden of administration.
An Oxford professor who developed free software which can analyse and visualise huge amounts of data has been recognised for ...
Python’s lead narrows again, C holds the runner-up spot, C++ returns to third, and SQL climbs back above R in June’s top 10 ...
A new study of bilingual speakers suggests that a single “grammatical engine” in the brain can power multiple languages at once. By K. R. Callaway Speak a language your whole life and its grammatical ...
Sonos doesn’t make computer speakers. And despite how closely some of its speakers look the part (specifically the Era 100, as well as the older Play:1, One and One SL), that’s not how they were ...
Perplexity Personal Computer is an AI-powered computer concept designed around an always-on desktop experience instead of a traditional chatbot setup. The Perplexity PC gives a Perplexity AI device ...
This first episode of a three-part Double Take video miniseries on heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) from the New England Journal of Medicine discusses how HFpEF differs from ...
The security industry has spent the last year talking about models, copilots, and agents, but a quieter shift is happening one layer below all of that: Vendors are lining up around a shared way to ...
Steve Hartman is a CBS News correspondent. He brings viewers moving stories from the unique people he meets in his weekly award-winning feature segment "On the Road." Campton, New Hampshire — ...
A computer language created to spot errors in mathematical theorems has uncovered a fundamental error in a widely cited physics paper for the first time. The ...
The term “narcissist” is so loosely thrown around these days that it’s hard to determine who in your life actually is one. Thankfully, human behavior expert Liz Rose shared with The Post a handful of ...
Early in the Covid-19 pandemic, the governor of New Jersey made an unusual admission: He’d run out of COBOL developers. The state’s unemployment insurance systems were written in the 60-year-old ...