Researchers at a Melbourne start-up have taught their “biological computer” made from living human brain cells to play Doom.
Researchers have demonstrated that human brain cells can play DOOM, showcasing a major breakthrough in the advancements of wetware technology.
Whether they are designing robots, solving problems or teaching others, Kirtland students are learning a range of skills in the school district’s FIRST programs. Students on the district’s FIRST Lego ...
Claude Sonnet 4.6 beats Opus in agentic tasks, adds 1 million context, and excels in finance and automation, all at one-fifth ...
There's more to the story than the alphabet.
Massive compute capabilities enable a whole new way of manipulating and using data, and a potential bonanza for AI data centers.
Anthropic's Claude Sonnet 4.6 matches Opus 4.6 performance at 1/5th the cost. Released while the India AI Impact Summit is on, it is the important AI model ...
Coming face-to-face with a large snake is enough to make most people freeze. In this short video circulating online, however, two boys do the opposite — stepping in when they see a large python ...
A cluster of human brain cells, integrated into a chip, learned to play the computer game _Doom_ in just a week, advancing ...
Jensen Huang says English may become the most powerful programming language. AI lets users create apps and automate tasks using natural language prompts. This shift could make software creation ...