There’s no doubt that AI can deliver a plethora of benefits, but if you quickly and broadly deploy any technology regardless of context, it’ll likely result in slop.
The New Times on MSN
Featured: Why international accreditation of UR’s 12 postgraduate programmes matters
For the University of Rwanda (UR), the accreditation of 12 Master’s and PhD programmes—in January—by the Agency for Quality Assurance through Accreditation of Study Programs (AQAS) implies that its ...
Retired Supreme Court Justice Andres Reyes, chair of the Independent Commission for Infrastructure (ICI), is the guest of honor and speaker of the Manila Overseas Press Club (MOPC), Asia’s oldest ...
12hon MSN
A 35-year odyssey with AI
This article is authored by Laxmidhar Behera, director, IIT Mandi and professor, IIT Kanpur.
Bored Panda on MSN
69 seemingly dumb ideas that turned out to be brilliant
People can sometimes come up with an idea that may seem absurd when you hear them bring it up. Yet, through some twist of ...
We need to better understand how LLMs address moral questions if we're to trust them with more important tasks.
More than 900 students at UC San Diego needed catch-up math classes in the fall of 2025 compared to 32 five years earlier.
Identifying vulnerabilities is good for public safety, industry, and the scientists making these models.
AI optimists envision a future where artificial general intelligence (AGI) surpasses human intelligence, but the path remains riddled with scientific and logistical hurdles.
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