“We need a Manhattan Project for this,” one economist says. This story originally appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter on AI. To get stories like this in your inbox first, sign up here.
The dream of recursive self-improvement in AI—where a system doesn’t just get better at a task, but gets better at learning—has long been the ‘holy grail’ of the field. While theoretical models like ...
Social media addiction (SMA) negatively affects individuals’ physical wellbeing and mental health. The attentional bias (AB) toward stimuli associated with social media may significantly contribute to ...
In this video we explore five car modifications that many drivers don’t realize are illegal, using real examples to explain how certain changes can break road regulations. Former Fox News analyst ...
AI agents speed up tasks while allowing people to focus on other complicated tasks. Perplexity, for instance, has caught up in this game by unveiling its newest AI agent named "Computer." The ...
Health Care Worker Perspectives After New Electronic Health Record Implementation in an Oncology Ambulatory Clinic: Qualitative and Quality-Improvement Insights We developed self-report and ...
Abia State Governor, Alex Otti, has warned Aba residents against shunning voters’ registration, stating that such a mistake could return the state to Egypt. Naija News reports that Otti, while ...
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang noted a key difference between tasks and your job's broader purpose. AI automates tasks but preserves the purpose of many jobs in key industries, he said. AI was meant to wipe ...