
Articles
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1 week ago |
esquire.com | Caroline Delbert
Unos matemáticos logran resolver un antiguo enigma del álgebra abstracta, marcando un hito en esta rama de las cienciasLos matemáticos se están replanteando el signo igual Unos matemáticos han descubierto la geometría secreta de la vidaDos matemáticos han afirmado haber hecho progresos en un antiguo problema matemático sin resolver.
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1 week ago |
flipboard.com | Caroline Delbert
4 hours agoIs your phone secretly listening to you? Here's an easy way to find outYour phone might be listening to you, but it probably doesn't need to anyway. If you’re a smartphone owner—and chances are that’s everyone reading …NowHere’s how much a ‘Made in the USA’ iPhone would costWhen President Barack Obama asked the late Apple CEO Steve Jobs about making an iPhone in the U.S., Jobs didn't mince words.
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1 week ago |
popularmechanics.com | Caroline Delbert
A new network paradigm can generate meaningfully random numbers—and fast. In network encryption, randomness has huge value because it’s not “solvable” by hackers. Classical computers can’t be random—they simply imitate randomness by measuring things. A large team of scientists says they’ve achieved “certified randomness” using a quantum computer. In a classical computer, you can never make a truly random number, which is one big reason computer scientists have had high hopes for quantum computers.
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1 week ago |
yahoo.com | Caroline Delbert
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links."A new network paradigm can generate meaningfully random numbers—and fast. In network encryption, randomness has huge value because it’s not “solvable” by hackers. Classical computers can’t be random—they simply imitate randomness by measuring things. A large team of scientists says they’ve achieved “certified randomness” using a quantum computer.
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2 weeks ago |
prevention.com | Caroline Delbert
A 125-page proof posted to arXiv may represent a huge breakthrough in geometric measure theory. This problem has implications in fields like encryption, computer science, and number theory. How much area does it take up when you rotate a line segment 360 degrees? Two mathematicians now say they’ve made progress on a very old unsolved math problem.
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