Encryption systems rely on “random” numbers, but conventional computers can’t generate them perfectly. New research shows that quantum physics can.
Researchers have developed a quantum method to amplify less random numbers to certifiably random ones, enhancing digital ...
Watching hours of “sheepdog YouTube”—competitions where trained dogs shepherd a small number of unpredictable sheep—gave ...
In his 1927 paper, "A law of comparative judgment," the American psychologist L. L. Thurstone proposed that when people ...
In May, Adeniyi Adewale almost committed suicide in Akure, Ondo state, after losing around $30,000 belonging to his boss to a ...
In times past, when we wanted to know which team would win the World Cup, we had to turn to seers with crystal balls, use ...
What we have today is a technology in transition. It is past the stage of simple proof of concept but not yet at the stage ...
Let’s be honest: the modern job hunt is brutal right now. Even if you have a great degree and a decade of solid experience, ...
Many of the insights hitting soccer pitches today trace back to Jesse Davis and a team of computer scientists open-sourcing ...
With automated proof-checkers, a problem can be broken up into small chunks, solved bit-by-bit, then reassembled with ...
We have started to see what may be the largest disturbance in the role of a verification engineer since the founding of the ...
Every winter storm drops billions of ice crystals, each one shaped by a unique path through shifting temperatures and ...