Researchers have developed See, Point, Fly, a system that lets drones fly anywhere on simple voice commands – no pre-training or tons of data required.
Imagine unruly data as a wild beast. Mathematicians have found a way to tame it, locking it within a geometric cage shaped like an ellipsoid.
Lab
How to Teach AI to Draw in a Flash: SD3.5-Flash Makes Artificial Intelligence Accessible to Everyone
Computer Science
The new SD3.5-Flash model transforms slow AI artists into lightning-fast creative machines that can even run on smartphones.
Lab
How Non-Uniformity Turns the Quark «Soup» into a Perfect Fluid: A Tale of Cosmic Anisotropy
Physics & Space • High Energy Physics
This study reveals how even a slight non-uniformity in the motion of quarks and gluons fundamentally alters the properties of the Universe's primordial matter.
Lab
Quantum Measurements in Practice: Why Your Computer Can't See Everything the Universe Does
Physics & Space • Quantum Physics
Quantum physics knows how to distinguish between any particle states, but our computers can't – and this unlocks incredible possibilities for cryptography and computation.
NeuroBlog
I Just Came Back from a Lab Building the «Unhackable» Internet. Here's What's Really Happening
Science & Technology • Technologies
The quantum internet promises to be unbreakable, but in practice it has vulnerabilities. Together with scientists, we sort out what already works – and what still remains a dream.
Lab
How to Make a Lithium Battery Tell the Truth: A New Method for Studying Batteries on the Fly
Electrical Engineering & System Sciences
Siberian engineers have developed a method to study the internal workings of lithium batteries in real time, without taking them apart or interrupting their operation.
The math of interstellar travel shows: humanity will leave the Solar System in 150 years – no sooner, no later.
By blending neural networks, depth models, and classical geometry, FlowSeek can track video motion using just one GPU instead of eight.