Apple's latest tech report from WWDC25 reveals fascinating insights into its new AI models, including an innovative architecture and significant improvements in multilingual capabilities. Dive into the details of their game-changing advancements!
A groundbreaking citizen science project is validating new eclipsing binary stars, aiding in the quest for exoplanets. Discover how volunteers and machine learning are revolutionizing astronomy!
Isomorphic Labs, leveraging AI breakthroughs from DeepMind, is on the brink of human clinical trials for cancer drugs. With major pharma partnerships, the future of drug design looks promising!
Discover the groundbreaking features of Google Imagen 4, the latest text-to-image model! Get it for free on AI Studio for a limited time and explore its enhanced capabilities that outperform previous versions.
Google has officially launched its Gemini 2.5 Pro AI model, now available for developers. The company also introduced the cost-effective Gemini 2.5 Flash-Lite. Discover what these new models can do for your AI projects!
Discover how PCI Express 7.0, with its groundbreaking 128 GT/s speeds and new Optical Interconnect Solution, is set to transform the landscape of data transfer for AI, cloud, and beyond!
Apple has launched groundbreaking updates to its developer tools, including Xcode 26 and the Foundation Models framework, designed to enhance app creativity and user experience. Discover how these innovations empower developers to create modern, intelligent applications with ease.
OpenAI's internal strategy reveals plans for ChatGPT to evolve into a super assistant that will revolutionize how users interact with the internet, providing personalized support for daily tasks and more.
Google has launched AI Edge Gallery, an experimental app allowing users to run AI models on their devices without Wi-Fi. Available for Android, it supports various models, including Gemma 3n, ensuring faster responses and greater privacy.
A groundbreaking study using machine learning on over 86,000 Mars images concludes that the dark streaks on Martian slopes are likely due to dry dust slides, not flowing water as previously thought. This discovery alters our understanding of potential habitability on Mars.