Computing
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Math
Fruit flies teach computers a lesson
Insect's nerve cell development is a model of efficiency for sensing networks.
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Tech
Trading places
As the pace of financial transactions accelerates, researchers look forward to a time when the only limiting factor is the speed of light.
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Computing
Most influential media Twitter feeds
Computer scientists find surprises when they rank top 100.
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Computing
Going viral takes a posse, not an army
Quality of followers, not quantity, determines which tweets will fly
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Computing
Machine versus manhole
Computer scientists take on one of New York’s weirder quality-of-life issues: which will be the next to explode?
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Computing
Circling the square
The scientist who scanned the first digital image aims to smooth the pixel.
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Computing
Leaf veins loopy for a reason
A computer simulation finds that leaves' circular networks are efficient at getting around damaged spots and varying distribution load.
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Computing
First programmable quantum computer created
System uses ultracold beryllium ions to tackle 160 randomly chosen programs.
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Computing
Quantum computers could tackle enormous linear equations
New work suggests that the envisioned systems would be powerful enough to quickly process even trillions of variables.
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Computing
Minifridge makes quantum computers last
A new study shows that if ions are kept cool, then the information they hold can be repeatedly manipulated.
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Computing
Random numbers faster
Researchers have devised a way to use a laser to create strings of orderless bits for encryption.
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Computing
Asia: One reason America can’t afford to jettison good teachers
Asia appears to prize science and tech education far more than America does, and the result may be a waning of the West's economic and entrepreneurial dominance.
By Janet Raloff