Looking for a sky event this week? Check out our full Sky This Week column. June 25: Iapetus passes north of Saturn Let's ...
Both models trade word-by-word generation for parallel denoising. Only one of them does it without losing intelligence in the ...
The June evening sky this year is exceptionally interesting. A spectacular gathering of three planets, two bright stars, plus, later this month, a slender crescent moon, will be the chief celestial ...
After a centuries-long struggle, scholars managed to read five feet of text, using machine-learning methods they hope can ...
Despite the government of Zimbabwe’s on-paper commitment to reduce and regulate the use of mercury in mining, the toxic metal remains pervasive and unfettered in the country’s artisanal gold mining ...
A rare celestial event will feature Venus, Jupiter, and Mercury appearing close together in the June sky. Venus and Jupiter will first appear together in a conjunction starting Tuesday, June 9.
Mercury retrograde—everyone’s favorite excuse to arrive fashionably late to, well, everything—begins on June 29, 2026. Mercury retrograde is famously a period of miscommunication, delays, and ...
Friday, June 26Even with a bright waxing Moon up most of the night, there are still plenty of targets for your telescope. One ...
It’s been three-and-a-half years since generative AI exploded onto the scene. In this past year, progress has continued its relentless pace: Vibe coding took off, companies embraced agentic workflows, ...
Intel Corp. shares rose the most in a month after the Information reported that Alphabet Inc.’s Google will rely on it for more than 3 million specialized AI chips in 2028. Google decided to tap Intel ...
Authorities have spent days combing through suspected contamination sites in a remote Queensland town after students found mercury at the tip. A researcher says it was irresponsible to dump the vials ...
Alice Cooper has issued a stark warning about the future of rock music, claiming artificial intelligence is now capable of creating fully‑formed rock stars who don't actually exist - and could even ...