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University of Cambridge researchers are building emotionally intelligent computers. Is this the future of man and machine communication?
The computer age has been characterized as both the greatest wonder of technology and our worst nightmare. In only a few decades, these often mystifying machines have transformed our existence, easing ...
Scientist Thomas Hartung wants to create computers that run on brain-like collections of cells called organoids — which could prove faster and more efficient than today's machines.
Life's crowning achievement, the human brain, seeks to mold for itself the power and directness of the computing machine, while endowing the machine with its own economy of thought and movement ...
The Future Of Computers Published Jun 17, 2001 at 8:00 PM EDT Updated Mar 13, 2010 at 5:19 PM EST By Newsweek Staff Newsweek Is A Trust Project Member ...
Computers were once considered high-end technology, only accessible to scientists and trained professionals. Today, almost everyone has one. Will quantum computing follow the same path?
A future in which conversational computers predominate has been a staple of computer science chit-chat since the 1940s, when Alan Turing set out to build a machine that would respond like a human ...
Examining the future of personal computers in an increasingly mobile world.
For years, we've heard predictions about the cars of the future and seen them depicted in pop culture from the writings of Jules Verne to TV's The Jetsons. But advances in wireless communications ...
In 2010, Ken started Chandler-based Future Kiddie, which specializes in providing computer classes for academia’s youngest students.
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