Advertisement The Japanese government has requested to invest money in quantum cryptography so that it can be made functional by 2027. The Japanese government is planning to invest in a space-based security system so that its secrets can be kept …
Tag: science
Advertisement Our smartphones are our most prized possessions. Maybe not in term of monetary value, but in terms of information, nothing comes close to beating. Well, you might be wrong on that account. Smartphone sensors are more powerful than you …
Advertisement We all have heard about artificial intelligence. It is the AI that powers a lot of things around you already, whether it is facial recognition or your car identifying pedestrians close to it. Nonetheless, the problem or rather the …
Advertisement A team of students from the COMSATS University Islamabad has managed to create artificial skin that is highly cost-effective as opposed to the imported artificial skin. ’ He further explained that the skin that is being imported from the …
Advertisement Bioengineers from the University of California, San Fransisco have discovered a way to make 3D shapes from living tissue. They manipulated active cells from both humans and mice and made them fold themselves in ways that occur during the …
Advertisement This was found in an equally strange section in the Sahara desert that is littered with unique yellow glass. The stone is nicknamed the Hypatia stone. The scientists did not know it at the time but it was later …
Advertisement Iran is moving forward in the ever-developing market of global information technology. Mohammad-Javad Azari Jahromi is the minister of Information and Computer Technology in Iran. He tweeted last weekend where he made an announcement of an existing supercomputer project …
Advertisement YouTube has become a force to reckon with ever since it was created back in 2005. That is why it comes as quite a shock when you find out that researchers have come up with a theoretical possibility that …
Advertisement On 2nd November 1988, a 23-year-old student, Robert Morris, at MIT screwed up a lot and ended up changing up the internet forever. He wrote 99 lines of the program and launched it on the ARPANET. It was the …