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+18 +3
Emotion recognition technology should be banned, says AI research institute
There’s little scientific basis to emotion recognition technology, so it should be banned from use in decisions that affect people’s lives, says research institute AI Now in its annual report.
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+24 +5
Getting Drivers for Old Hardware Is Harder Than Ever
At least one major provider of hardware-level BIOS drivers is actively deleting old stuff it no longer supports, while old FTP sites where vintage drivers are often found are soon going to be harder to reach.
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+27 +4
The PC was supposed to die a decade ago. Instead, this happened
Back on January 27, 2010, a very Big Thinker declared the PC dead. A decade later, the PC is very much alive, although a time traveler from 2010 might not recognize it. Here's how this endangered species evolved and survived.
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+16 +1
Researchers find a platform for stable quantum computing
Harvard researchers have demonstrated the first material that can have both strongly correlated electron interactions and topological properties. The discovery both paves the way for more stable quantum computing and creates an entirely new platform to explore exotic physics.
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+27 +7
The rise and fall of the PlayStation supercomputers
For one short moment, some of the most powerful computers in the world could be hacked together with code, wire, and PS3s.
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+27 +4
New crypto-cracking record reached, with less help than usual from Moore’s Law
795-bit factoring and discrete logarithms achieved using more efficient algorithms.
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+19 +3
Apple's Acquisition of Intel's Smartphone Modem Business Completed, Intel Admits 'Multi-Billion Dollar Loss'
Intel today announced it has completed the sale of the majority of its smartphone modem business to Apple for $1 billion following regulatory approval. The transaction was first announced in July and includes intellectual property, equipment, and approximately 2,200 Intel employees joining Apple.
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+24 +9
Most Europeans now prefer AMD CPUs as sentiment turns against Intel
AMD’s CPUs are again winning big against Intel, not just in current sales, as we’ve previously seen, but also sentiment in terms of future processor purchases that consumers might make, at least according to a new report.
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+22 +5
Researchers reach milestone in quantum standardization
Researchers at the University of Waterloo have developed a method that could pave the way to establishing universal standards for measuring the performance of quantum computers. The new method, called cycle benchmarking, allows researchers to assess the potential of scalability and to compare one quantum platform against another.
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+13 +1
AMD Threadripper 3970X and 3960X Review: Taking Over The High End
In an incredible alignment of the stars silicon stars, AMD's third-gen Threadripper 3970X and 3960X launch today alongside Intel's new Cascade Lake-X Core i9-10980XE, giving us a look at the future of the high end desktop all in one go.
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+24 +4
How to get an old macOS installer from Apple
Your collection of old macOS installer disk images is now worthless, and Apple has changed where it hides downloadable copies. Yet there are still good reasons to get old OSes, and here's how to do it.
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+7 +1
Amazon Lightning Deal - Upto 80% Off on Computer, Mobile, Clothing, Kitchen, Footwear, Home Essentials, Groceries - Getfreedeals.co.in
How to get Amazon Lightning Deal on Computer, Mobile, Clothing, Kitchen, Footwear, Home Essentials, Groceries & Gourmet: Click Here to visit the Offer Page Add the …
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+20 +3
Massive simulation of the universe shows how galaxies form and die
A massive simulation of the universe is digitally recreating the lives of stars, black holes and galaxies. Richard Bower at Durham University in the UK and his colleagues have created a computer simulation approximately 1 billion light years across, which models tens of thousands of galaxies.
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+20 +3
16-inch MacBook Pro shows the advantages of a post-Jony Ive Apple
The new 16-inch MacBook Pro is a sign of a fundamental shift at Apple: It includes a keyboard that makes this laptop slightly less stylish but more useful. It’s hard to believe this would have happened in the days when chief designer Jony Ive’s habit of putting form ahead of function still reigned supreme over all Apple’s products.
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+22 +2
Apple finally admits iPad Pro won't replace your PC
Apple kept insisting. For quite some time, indeed, Cupertino plagued people with the message that the iPad Pro wasn't just a computer, but the only computer you need.
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+14 +1
Intel's AI brains will give future laptops a new speed boost
It may not be obvious, but you're almost certainly using AI every day. Artificial intelligence-boosting hardware in your phone enables voice recognition and spots your friends in photos. In the cloud, it delivers search results and weeds out spam email. Next up for dedicated AI hardware will be your laptop, Intel expects.
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+20 +1
AMD unveils world's most powerful desktop CPUs
Need CPU power? AMD has you covered with new 24-core and 32-core AMD Ryzen Threadripper processors.
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+20 +3
Microsoft president Brad Smith predicts AI will be as transformative to society as the combustion engine over the next 3 decades
Microsoft president Brad Smith has predicted that artificial intelligence will transform society in the next three decades, just as the internal combustion engine did during the first half of the 20th century. Smith was speaking at the Web Summit technology conference in Lisbon, Portugal on Wednesday, where he discussed the intersection between tech and society.
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+14 +1
Latest Software Patent Lawsuit Against GNU/Linux (GNOME) is Connected to Microsoft
Armed by the biggest patent troll of Microsoft, Rothschild Patent Imaging LLC not only threatens but also sues Free software that's part of standard GNU/Linux desktops
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+19 +3
Samsung is shutting down its custom CPU core department, will use standard ARM cores
Ever since 2016 with the Galaxy S7 duo and its Exynos 8890, Samsung has been using its in-house developed Mongoose CPU cores. It seems this will no longer be the case as Samsung is looking to shut its custom CPU department in Austin, Texas. The decision will result in the layover of around 300 employees and is expected to come in effect starting December 31.
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