On a warm evening in 2014, Attila Szantner, a Hungarian Web entrepreneur, and his friend Bernard Revaz, a Swiss physics researcher, sat on a balcony in Geneva and discussed the perils of video games.
Janet Rafner has spent four years looking for a way to marry art and science. Her research focuses on turbulence, or the physical phenomenon of chaotic changes in pressure and velocity, such as ...
Think about this. You may want to play a computer game, learn about physics and simultaneously help researchers build a quantum computer. Sounds like a tall order but this is exactly what researchers ...
In DenmarkAarhus UniversityIs developing a quantum computer, the project which started to solve the problems concerning quantum mechanics faced by the university physicists was "Quantum Moves"is. In ...
We humans may still be licking our wounds following AI’s victory at the ancient game of Go, but it turns out we still have something to be proud of: We’re doing a lot better than machines are at ...