This groundbreaking initiative will use an orbital platform in Low Earth Orbit to deliver secure, low-latency AI intelligence and bridge the global AI access gap ...
Telit Cinterion’s Dr. Linir Zamir discusses how Artificial Intelligence is moving closer to the factory floor through edge-based systems that keep data on site and enable faster decision-making.
Opinion Columnist Zak Kheder ’26 contends that in a world with such nuanced problems, our brightest minds cannot be ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Are we in a simulation? New AI and physics clues raise fresh doubt
A physicist has mounted one of the most detailed technical challenges yet against the idea that our universe is a computer ...
Did you know? The official average colour of the universe is known as “Cosmic latte”, a warm, creamy beige born from light billions of years in the making ...
The Weather Network on MSN
CRASH Clock: A satellite collision in low-Earth orbit could be just days away
Extreme solar activity or even a software glitch could put us just days away from a satellite collision in low-Earth orbit.
Super-intelligent, general-purpose humanoid robots are within our grasp, says the hype. Not so fast, says reality. Allow meus to explain.
Astronaut Shubhanshu Shukla has used a water blob to explain Earth's shape. Discover the physics of surface tension, rotation, and inertia in this space and physics explainer.
Sony Interactive Entertainment on the PlayStation Blog following a leak has revealed the PlayStation Plus Game Catalog games for February 2026.The PlayStation Plus [...] ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Wild new study backs 'fuzzy' dark matter as the universe's hidden backbone
Earlier this week, science writer Paul Sutter covered a bold new study that leans toward so‑called “fuzzy” dark matter as the ...
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) are taking a fresh look at neptunium, a rare radioactive metal that plays a crucial role in producing plutonium-238, ...
“For the last 20 years, people believed that the cosmological constant is positive, and the universe will expand forever,” says Tye, a professor emeritus at Cornell. A positive constant acts like a ...
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