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Mathematicians solve decades-old mystery about the hidden order in high-dimensional randomness
Three mathematicians have laid out proof that solves a long-standing problem in mathematics. Even the mathematician—an Abel ...
News that large language models (LLM) have made major advances in solving Erdős problems – a set of problems formulated by the renowned 20 th-century mathematician Paul Erdős – has created an ...
Academics Eliezer Yudkowsky and Nate Soares argue in their new book that the technology could lead to our extinction. Is ...
India spends about $150 billion per year on social protection — yet most benefits never reach the people they are designed to support. Tarun Cherukuri founded Indus Action to change that.
Artificial intelligence (AI) was not a formal or informal part of my graduate school training, yet AI is increasingly ...
The first class of students who have been at Seckinger High School since they were freshmen graduated this month. By now, districts from Boston to Miami have caught the same A.I. fever, vowing to ...
Apollo reports on crafting effective sales copy that connects with the audience, emphasizing benefits over features, clarity, ...
The United States is producing nurse practitioner graduates faster than the clinical training infrastructure can absorb them. NP programs have seen enrollment c ...
The rise in AI applications and investments are leading more and more companies to make the shift from AI-enabled to ...
Wisconsin Rapids residents are asking a lot of questions after a proposal for a data center. The Daily Tribune looks at what ...
What do the Tower of Babel, the biblical figure Nehemiah, algorithms and realpolitik have in common? They're all discussed in Pope Leo XIV's first encyclical, "Magnifica Humanitas".
Perfect randomness sounds simple, until you try to make it. A die can be polished, balanced and rolled thousands of times.
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