A random Instagram video changed Colin Driffill's mindset. Months later, the Millard North ace captains the Super-State ...
Vroman’s Bookstore in Pasadena offers an experience that no algorithm can replicate, no matter how sophisticated the ...
Awareness of the interplay between friction, flow and flourishing matters as the intense quest for AI optimization leads to ...
Oxygen depletion in the western Baltic Sea is not uncommon. Oxygen-poor conditions regularly occur in deeper waters, placing ...
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Watching hours of “sheepdog YouTube”—competitions where trained dogs shepherd a small number of unpredictable sheep—gave ...
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 ...
By Achim Zeileis, University of Innsbruck In times past, when we wanted to know which team would win the World Cup, we had to turn to seers with crystal ball ...
Encryption systems rely on “random” numbers, but conventional computers can’t generate them perfectly. New research shows that quantum physics can.
Random number generators have been around for ages, but they often have subtle imperfections that cause patterns to emerge. And even powerful computers are saddled with this liability purely because ...
Lottery tickets purchased repeatedly in the same small Texas town led to four separate wins and nearly $21 million in total payouts. State officials verified each claim, but the streak stood out ...