Robotics development hinges on critical physical components like actuators, sensors, and AI compute, which are concentrated in specific countries, creating chokepoints that influence global dominance.
The problem of "Out-of-Distribution" (OOD) is central here. Think of AI as a driver who knows only known roads. So, faced with an unknown path, it forces entry into its existing maps rather than ...
When accelerated testing reveals failures, what do they really mean? Understanding stress-induced artefacts in semiconductor ...
Discover the importance of homoskedasticity in regression models, where error variance is constant, and explore examples that illustrate this key concept.
They’re tenacious, which is very good for a milk jug or a car bumper. But they don’t easily break down, which is bad for the environment. From the 1950s, when plastics were first produced in ...
India’s edtech enters its third act, this time powered by AI, shaped by hard lessons, and tested by tougher economics.
Driverless cars have the potential to substantially reduce the death toll from likely the most dangerous everyday activity in ...
The National Interest on MSN
‘Fast Power’ vs. ‘Slow Power’: The New Energy Contest
Energy politics has become a rivalry between hydrocarbon and electrification systems, where states weaponize interdependence to shape markets, infrastructure, and industrial trajectories. For much of ...
Alphatec Holdings, Inc. ( ATEC) Barclays 28th Annual Global Healthcare Conference March 11, 2026 9:00 AM EDT ...
Monitor on MSN
You win by seeing what everyone else has ignored
The post-pandemic world has been described as brittle, anxious, non-linear and incomprehensible. Everything we knew about business, the organisation does not seem to hold anymore. Coupled with these ...
Discover how circular strategies drive business value by reducing risk, securing resources and boosting resilience in a volatile economy.
AZ Animals on MSN
Can You Tell the Temperature by Listening to Crickets? The Science Behind Dolbear’s Law
In the late 1800s, more than a hundred years before smartphones and weather apps, a physicist discovered you could step ...
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