Tech Xplore on MSN
What the US$55 billion Electronic Arts takeover means for video game workers and the industry
Electronic Arts (EA) is one of the world's largest gaming companies. It has agreed to be acquired for US$55 billion in the second largest buyout in the industry's history.
Tech Xplore on MSN
Flying taxis are nearly here—what's still grounding them
A new wave of aviation innovation is taking shape above our cities, where short flights in electric air taxis could ...
The portrait shows a determined child with a steely gaze, holding a weaving shuttle in one hand and red thread in the other. This stern expression has long been interpreted as evidence of Marie ...
Researchers at the University of Cambridge say they have produced human blood cells in the laboratory by using embryo-like ...
13 小时on MSN
Electron Spins Propel Magnetic Wall Movement
A research team has taken a major step forward in the field of spintronics, a technology that uses not only the charge but ...
The lawsuit seeks clarity around whether companies can exploit the earliest depiction of Mickey Mouse from a 1928 animated short. By Winston Cho Disney is continuing to enforce its intellectual ...
8 小时on MSN
How many more AWS outages until the internet builds a real backup plan? Experts answer the ...
The AWS outage that crippled Snapchat also exposed the shocking fragility of critical infrastructure and took out governments ...
The future of “security AI” lies beyond the mere enhancement of physical force. It depends on how precisely and swiftly a nation can detect and manage unseen threats across networks.
Bogus images of the boy seemingly generated by artificial intelligence technology have begun circulating online.
ZME Science on MSN
Wildfire Smoke Could Kill 71,000 Americans Every Year by 2050 and Most of Them Won’t Live ...
A study published this week in Nature projects that wildfire smoke will cause approximately 71,000 excess deaths each year by ...
The cities created in the Deccan by Muslim leaders introduced the concept of public space to the Indian world.
Gov. Gavin Newsom of California vetoed bills that would have provided tangible benefits to those descendants, though he ...
一些您可能无法访问的结果已被隐去。
显示无法访问的结果