On a whim, you packed your bags and headed to a new city for a weekend getaway. No map, no plan; just a car, an open road and a vague desire to see the sights. You turn left, then right, then straight ...
What we know so far: Inside a tightly guarded research complex in Shenzhen, Chinese scientists have quietly built and begun testing a prototype of what could become the world's most complex chipmaking ...
The U.S. has increasingly adopted reverse-engineering strategies to accelerate the development of low-cost, high-impact drones—reshaping modern warfare. By studying foreign drone designs, including ...
When users search for answers using ChatGPT, they aren’t just getting generic answers from a random knowledge base. They’re getting responses that—under the hood—are stitched together from live web ...
Having faced continuous drone attacks by Iran and its proxies over the last two years, the US military is responding by standing up its first one-way attack drone squadron in the Middle East — and ...
What if you could reclaim over 15 hours of your week without sacrificing quality or creativity? Imagine transforming tedious tasks into streamlined, high-impact workflows with just a few tweaks to how ...
Using simulations, robots, and live fish, scientists have replicated the neural circuitry that allows zebrafish to react to visual stimuli and maintain their position in flowing water. (Nanowerk News) ...
Reverse-engineering lithography machines—the equipment on which advanced computer chips are manufactured—is not as straightforward as copying most industrial designs. In the race between innovators ...
Adversaries from cybercrime gangs to nation-state cyberattack squads are fine-tuning weaponized AI with the goal of defeating new patches in 3 days or less. The quicker the attack, the more time to ...
In cellular automata, simple rules create elaborate structures. Now researchers can start with the structures and reverse-engineer the rules. Alexander Mordvintsev showed me two clumps of pixels on ...
It makes an Arduino look like a 555. A 364 Mhz, 32 bit processor. 8 MB RAM. GSM. Bluetooth. LCD controller. PWM. USB and dozens more. Smaller than a Zippo and thinner than corrugated cardboard. And ...