Microsoft, OpenAI, ChatGPT, yada yada yada
So anyway, Microsoft, OpenAI, ChatGPT, yada yada yada, even Open AI CEO Sam Altman has a vomit emoji face right now.Read More
So anyway, Microsoft, OpenAI, ChatGPT, yada yada yada, even Open AI CEO Sam Altman has a vomit emoji face right now.Read More
It may be a tough market, but author and computer scientist Chip Huyen says there are several ways AI and ML job hunters can stand out.Read More
Seeking to target enterprise customers with AI language translation, DeepL announced a funding raise estimated at well over $100 million.Read More
Data from Sweden and the US suggests cash incentives increase uptake without denting people’s trust in vaccines or future willingness to get them.
Now that the holiday craze is over, here are some discounts on a variety of gadgets to help ease you into the new year.
A glitch in the so-called NOTAM system caused the agency to ground flights across the US. But its problems go back years.
SweepWizard, an app that law enforcement used to coordinate raids, left sensitive information about hundreds of police operations publicly accessible.
Lab animals have long borne the brunt of drug safety trials. A new law allows drugmakers to use miniature tissue models, or organs-on-chips, instead.
While artificial intelligence (AI) models are becoming increasingly advanced, training and running these models on conventional computer hardware is very energy consuming. Engineers worldwide have thus been trying to create alternative, brain-inspired hardware that could better support the high computational load of AI systems.
A team of researchers at Microsoft has demonstrated a new AI system that is capable of mimicking a person’s voice after training with a recording just three seconds long. The team explains developing the new app in a paper published on the arXiv preprint server. They have also posted a webpage demonstrating the app’s capabilities.