Admissions to Texas computer science programs are down roughly 20%, professors said, but they still see a future for their ...
How do we design assignments AI can’t complete? These are real questions. But they start in the wrong place. The deeper ...
We look at the political and government responses to risks around data sovereignty and massive dependence on the three US hyperscalers, AWS, Azure and GCP in the UK and Europe ...
Choosing between Computer Science (CS) and Information Technology (IT) can be confusing because both fields deal with computers. However, the work involved in each is very different. One focuses on ...
What is the role of government in modern economies? Is it possible to create a more equal society without sacrificing economic freedom or wealth? Should we emphasize equal opportunities or equal ...
On the podcast, [Tom] and I were talking about the new generation of smartphones which are, at least in terms of RAM and CPU speed, on par with a decent laptop computer. If so, why not just add on a ...
At its inaugural Ask 2026 developer conference — held inside a former church in San Francisco’s North Beach — Perplexity unveiled Personal Computer, a cloud-based AI agent designed to function as a ...
The following is a story that originally appeared on the Trinity College of Arts and Sciences website. Spend enough time on a college campus and you will hear the usual stereotypes about computer ...
Ask a new mom when was the last time her baby ate, and how many ounces, and she'll tell you without a moment's hesitation. The same goes for the last time her baby slept, cried, burped or smiled. Ask ...
PCWorld reports that Perplexity Computer is a new agentic AI tool that functions as a digital coworker, utilizing multiple AI models like Claude Opus and Gemini simultaneously. The cloud-based system ...
Gordon Gauchat is a sociologist at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA. Science’s big problem is a loss of influence, not a loss of trust Scientists and researchers who ...
Something strange happened at University of California campuses this fall. For the first time since the dot-com crash, computer science enrollment dropped. System-wide, it fell 6% last year after ...