How one silly syllable ignited a bitter dispute over the nature of reality on Polymarket. Credit...Carl Godfrey Supported by ...
Mistral AI's OCR 4 delivers structured document intelligence with bounding boxes, confidence scores, and self-hosted ...
Solar geoengineering is often portrayed as a relatively cheap and easy fix for climate change. But as researchers take a ...
AI is raising the bar for freshers as routine entry-level tasks get automated. Here’s how India’s first-job market is ...
Three Opinion writers share their views on “Communion,” the vice president’s new book.
Most legal technology shifts do not announce themselves with trumpets. They slip into ordinary practice first. Email was once ...
Step back and the seven AI models fight less about their predictions than it looks. Every single model put Spain, Argentina, and France in its top tier, named almost identical group winners—Brazil, ...
From Fireball to Ol' Crimson: How Washington State Is Using Alcohol to Fund Its NIL Revolution Somewhere between Pullman's ...
The deal is simple, beautiful, and almost absurdly generous: fill a shopping cart with whatever you want, and the total cost ...
The result is correct but challenges core norms of mathematics: checking proofs, crediting ideas and keeping research open to everyone.
Mathematician Will Sawin discusses his experience reviewing and refining a mathematical proof devised by OpenAI's internal model—and what that could mean for mathematics.
The second batch of “First Proof” problems is meant to evaluate AI’s usefulness for research-level math. The best model got six or seven of the ten questions right.