Programming will change. There will be fewer professional programmers who make their living coding line-by-line. But programmers will still be needed in order to code line-by-line, either to fill in ...
Shantanu Kumar ’26, the first student to enroll in SOM’s joint-degree program with the Yale School of Engineering & Applied ...
The silent unsung hero My series on unsung heroes of the Central Bank is not complete if I do not write on N.M. Jayasekera, the unknown computer programmer even within the Bank. That is understandable ...
After making CNC machines, San Francisco-based startup Orangewood Labs pivoted to making affordable robotic arms that ...
As young conservatives discuss cost of living as a top concern, the H-1B issue has become a purity test of one’s nationalist ...
An engineer for New York Times Games has been trying to teach artificial intelligence to understand wordplay more like a human.
Tech Xplore on MSN
Enabling small language models to solve complex reasoning tasks
As language models (LMs) improve at tasks like image generation, trivia questions, and simple math, you might think that ...
You can prompt an AI model with a line of text, and it will generate most of the code needed to build an app, tool or website ...
The National Interest on MSN
How the Soviet Union Accidentally Helped America Build the F-117 Nighthawk
The groundbreaking “Have Blue” design, which ultimately became the F-117 Nighthawk, relied heavily on research conducted by Soviet physicist Pyotr Ufimtsev.
The Nation on MSN
The Best Albums of 2025
My picks for the 11 best albums of 2025, in alphabetical order by artist: ...
There are still good teachers doing good work. But they can only do so much when district directives and resources push them online.
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania and University of Michigan have created the world’s smallest fully programmable ...
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