Alarm bells are ringing in the open source community, but commercial licensing is also at risk Earlier this week, Dan Blanchard, maintainer of a Python character encoding detection library called ...
It has also become a sort of second home for Diane von Furstenberg and a fitting inspiration for the label’s fall collection. “To me, Venice is like a cultural crossroads,” said DVF’s creative ...
A couple of years ago, a company called Cortical Labs released a video that showed a simplified version of Pong being played by a culture of human neurons in a Petri dish. The idea that a bunch of ...
Discover the best Nano Banana 2 prompts to test Gemini 3.1 Flash Image, from 4K mockups to multilingual text and character consistency.
Researchers at Australian start-up Cortical Labs have taught human neurons grown on a chip to play the classic Doom game. In 2021, they had already used 800,000 neurons to play Pong. Now, with four ...
Explores our fatal attraction to AI, examining emotional dependence, manipulation, authority, and agency in work and life.
Geckos are one of the most popular types of pet lizards on the market, and you can find Tokays, crested geckos, leopard geckos, and much more in any pet store across the country. These gecko names are ...
See how we created a form of invisible surveillance, who gets left out at the gate, and how we’re inadvertently teaching the ...
Andre Bianchi and Sophia Perez’s dashboard reveals historical trends and recurring themes in fight songs, which earned them a spot at the Big Ten Academic Alliance Data Viz Championship.
A dish of living human neurons has been taught to play Doom. No, it isn’t conscious or watching the screen the way players do. But it is learning to respond to signals in a way that produces ...
Researchers at a Melbourne start-up have taught their “biological computer” made from living human brain cells to play Doom.
AI safety tests found to rely on 'obvious' trigger words; with easy rephrasing, models labeled 'reasonably safe' suddenly fail, with attacks succeeding up to 98% of the time. New corporate research ...