Scientists are exploring how DNA’s physical structure can store vast amounts of data and encode secure information.
Print Join the Discussion View in the ACM Digital Library The mathematical reasoning performed by LLMs is fundamentally different from the rule-based symbolic methods in traditional formal reasoning.
New pre-print describes codes that “move” logical ancilla qubits up and down to significantly reduce the error rate ...
By combining surface codes with lattice surgery, researchers have shown how logical qubits can be manipulated and entangled ...
A ‘stealth’ model has emerged, while advancements by Alibaba’s Qwen-3.5 and Zhipu’s GLM-5 aim to spur domestic competition ...
OpenClaw’s plugin marketplace, ClawHub, has come under security scrutiny after researchers uncovered a large number of ...
Thumbwheel switches offer a straightforward, tactile method for setting numerical values in electronic instruments and ...
A security device made from gold nanoparticles uses light alone to create, verify, and reset uncopyable identities, enabling ...
Quantum computers hold great promise for exciting applications in the future, but for now they keep presenting physicists and ...
GenAI is finally fixing payments by cutting false declines, easing checkout friction and outsmarting fraud without annoying ...
Since the dawn of the computer age, researchers have wrestled with two persistent challenges: how to store ever-increasing ...
Just a few years ago, many researchers in quantum computing thought it would take several decades to develop machines that ...