The following is a story that originally appeared on the Trinity College of Arts and Sciences website.
What is quantum computing, really? We explain qubits, superposition, and the quantum threat to encryption — in plain English, with no PhD required.
At 9, Aahana checks her mother's phone before brushing her teeth. By the time she leaves for school in Gurugram, she has ...
Students must be equipped not with skills that algorithms will inevitably master, but with the capacity to think, question, ...
Indian IT firms are not uniform entities. Specialised companies, such as Persistent or KPIT, have constructed moats based on ...
Human beings have always trusted tools and often depended on it too much. Errors in such crucial areas do not permit any ...
To be sure, AI can simulate empathy. It can generate phrases that sound reassuring. It can be trained on millions of examples of “supportive language.” But simulation is not the same as soul. A ...
I’m retired now, but for 30 years I debugged problems in bleeding-edge IBM processors, horizontal microcode, firmware, ...
An examination of the emerging antitrust risks associated with the rise of AI, including the state of US regulation and key antitrust enforcement concerns.
We have all been hearing those whispers about robots taking over our desks for years, right? But it always felt like a problem for "future us." Well, it looks like "future us" just showed up to work.
This story is authored by Anil Agrawal, former Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha, and Kaviraj Singh, CEO, Earthood.
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