- Научные статьи программирование на английском
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- This robotic leg could give machines krill-like swimming abilities
- Latest AI Stories
- ChatGPT’s accuracy has gotten worse, study shows
- Chipotle is testing an avocado-pitting, -cutting, and -scooping robot
- Google’s AI contractors say they are underpaid, overworked, and ‘scared’
- Google stole data from millions of people to train AI, lawsuit says
- AI plagiarism detectors falsely flag non-native English speakers
- How Framer and other AI tools can help you build your own website
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- Computer Science
- An Overview of Essential Security Measures for Competitive Organizations
- Cracking the Digital Vault: A Study of Cyber Espionage
- A Brief History of Cryptography
- All Computer Science Articles (by date)
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Научные статьи программирование на английском
A look into how computer science is building and coding machines that solve problems the way human brains do.
Featured In AI
This tiny AI-powered robot is learning to explore the ocean on its own
Birders behold: Cornell’s Merlin app is now a one-stop shop for bird identification
Photoshop’s new Super Resolution feature makes images bigger, not blurrier
Why Spotify’s music recommendations always seem so spot on
The newest Roomba is finally smart enough to avoid pet poop
Scientists are putting the X factor back in X-rays
Let this AI bot turn your words into vaguely-recognizable pictures
This new AI tool from Google could change the way we search online
Artificial intelligence is everywhere now. This report shows how we got here.
Singapore’s new robot cops will focus on small-time crime
One of Facebook’s first moves as Meta: Teaching robots to touch and feel
The government is going to use facial recognition more. That’s bad.
More from PopSci
These tiny electric fans are powerful enough to propel drones and jets
Raytheon asks retirees for help making new Stinger anti-air missiles
US military aircraft could get jamming-resistant navigation systems
Joby’s latest electric air taxi will head to an Air Force base for tests in 2024
What we know about Area 51
Improved 5G coverage could ground some flights starting July 1
NASA kills its electric plane’s flight plan, citing safety concerns
AAROK is France’s bigger, newer take on the US’s Reaper drone
In photos: Soldiers jam drones with blocky Dronebuster guns
The first container ship fully fueled by food scraps is ready to set sail
The most sustainable phone on the market is the one in your pocket
An American start-up claims it just set a geothermal energy record
Memory vs. storage: What to know when buying a new smartphone
Fungi spores and knitting combine to make a durable and sustainable building material
Why US intelligence wants a new way to make virtual, 3D models
These tiny electric fans are powerful enough to propel drones and jets
A look at the weird intersection of taxidermy and car design
NASA’s quirky new lunar rover will be the first to cruise the moon’s south pole
ChatGPT’s accuracy has gotten worse, study shows
How ActivityPub is setting the stage to weave all your social media feeds together
The 👍 emoji counts as a contract agreement, Canadian court rules
You can now join Meta’s Twitter rival, Threads
Facebook could be tracking your online Plan B or HIV test purchases
How to turn on dark mode for all your gadgets and apps
What’s the difference between VR, AR, and mixed reality?
How bits, bytes, ones, and zeros help a computer think
The best WiFi extenders for 2023
An electric cow, a robot mailman, and other automatons we overestimated
Chipotle is testing an avocado-pitting, -cutting, and -scooping robot
Four-legged dog robots could one day explore the moon
The best robot vacuums of 2023
A look at the weird intersection of taxidermy and car design
Bee brains could teach robots to make split-second decisions
This magnetic robot could worm its way into human blood vessels
NASA’s quirky new lunar rover will be the first to cruise the moon’s south pole
This robotic leg could give machines krill-like swimming abilities
Latest AI Stories
ChatGPT’s accuracy has gotten worse, study shows
Chipotle is testing an avocado-pitting, -cutting, and -scooping robot
Google’s AI contractors say they are underpaid, overworked, and ‘scared’
Google stole data from millions of people to train AI, lawsuit says
AI plagiarism detectors falsely flag non-native English speakers
How Framer and other AI tools can help you build your own website
Sarah Silverman and other authors sue OpenAI and Meta for copyright infringement
What’s life like for a fruit fly? AI offers a peek.
AI’s climate consequences are often overlooked
AI forecasts could help us plan for a world with more extreme weather
NYC will require audits of AI hiring tools for bias
The Opt Out: 4 privacy concerns in the age of AI
What’s the difference between VR, AR, and mixed reality?
This AI-powered glove could help stroke patients play the piano again
The Army’s next armored troop transport will have AI target recognition
What’s going on with self-driving car companies, from Aurora to Zoox
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Computer Science
An Overview of Essential Security Measures for Competitive Organizations
Teodor Topalov et. al. — Considering information is the most valuable asset of any organization, information security is one of the most important areas for every business and individual. Looking at the big picture, approximately 86% of all websites had a serious vulnerability in 2015.[1]. Keep Reading »
Cracking the Digital Vault: A Study of Cyber Espionage
Constantine J. Petallides — Today, we live in the aftermath of the Internet revolution. Humanity has never before been more interconnected or had as much access to the same tools and information. As a driving force behind globalization and modern progress, the Internet enables instant communication. Keep Reading »
A Brief History of Cryptography
Tony M. Damico — Early cryptography was solely concerned with converting messages into unreadable groups of figures to protect the message’s content during the time the message was being carried from one place to another. In the modern era, cryptography has grown from basic message. Keep Reading »
All Computer Science Articles (by date)
Cyber security is a compelling problem for scholars of International Politics. Internet technology is so thoroughly integrated into civil society, commerce, governance, critical infrastructures, intelligence collection and law enforcement that the. Read Article »
In June 2012, two years after the initial discovery of the Stuxnet worm,1 an excerpt from David Sanger’s then soon to be released book entitled Confront and Conceal was published in the New York Times.2 This piece, purportedly based on the testimony. Read Article »
Cybersecurity is presented in the growing literature on the subject as an essentially «slippery» object for state security.1 The Internet puts a lot of stress on the conventional conception of state security as the insurance of the state’s survival. Read Article »
In the last few years the Internet has borne witness to and facilitated a great deal of social and societal change. From Hilary Clinton’s positive 2010 address; ‘Remarks on Internet Freedom’, to the Tunisian and Egyptian revolutions that showcased. Read Article »
Considering information is the most valuable asset of any organization, information security is one of the most important areas for every business and individual. Looking at the big picture, approximately 86% of all websites had a serious vulnerability. Read Article »
There is a widespread belief that as societies and governments become increasingly reliant upon information technology, they in turn are becoming more vulnerable to a whole range of cyber-threats.1 Whether these dangers are capable of generating. Read Article »
Today, we live in the aftermath of the Internet revolution. Humanity has never before been more interconnected or had as much access to the same tools and information. As a driving force behind globalization and modern progress, the Internet enables. Read Article »
With the explosion of the use of the Internet for nearly all forms of negotiable instrument exchange, the constant transmission of time sensitive and vital corporate communications, and the ubiquitous presence of malicious software writers, verifying. Read Article »
As the sophistication of cyber criminals continues to increase, their methods and targets have also evolved. Instead of building the large Internet worms that have become so familiar, these criminals are now spending more time concentrating on wealth. Read Article »
Multiple undersea internet cables were mysteriously severed and subsequently gained significant attention in the beginning of 2008. The attacks on those cables highlighted the enormous amount of internet traffic that uses the undersea cable system. Read Article »
The earliest form of cryptography was the simple writing of a message, as most people could not read (New World, 2007). In fact, the very word cryptography comes from the Greek words kryptos and graphein, which mean hidden and writing, respectively. Read Article »
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