Tired of boring weekends, a Bengaluru techie built a device that sends him on random Uber trips across the city. Combining AI ...
Bengaluru techie Pankaj builds a viral “kidnap button” that books random Uber rides to fight weekend boredom. Known for quirky AI projects like traffic helmets and scream‑to‑unlock extensions, his ...
A Bengaluru techie built an AI-powered “kidnap button” that books an Uber to a random location whenever he feels bored. The ...
Researchers at Australian start-up Cortical Labs have taught human neurons grown on a chip to play the classic Doom game. In 2021, they had already used 800,000 neurons to play Pong. Now, with four ...
Kamal Mann is a Software Architect with over 22 years of experience in Industry 4.0 systems. He currently advises on edge ...
Nithin Kamath highlights how LLMs evolved from hallucinations to Linus Torvalds-approved code, democratizing tech and transforming software development.
Tired of indecision and empty weekends, this techie from Bengaluru allowed himself to get "kidnapped" - no excuses, no overthinking, no cancellations.
UTSA: ~20% of AI-suggested packages don't exist. Slopsquatting could let attackers slip malicious libs into projects.
See how we created a form of invisible surveillance, who gets left out at the gate, and how we’re inadvertently teaching the ...
Its use results in faster development, cleaner testbenches, and a modern software-oriented approach to validating FPGA and ASIC designs without replacing your existing simulator.
Earlier, Kamath highlighted a massive shift in the tech landscape: Large Language Models (LLMs) have evolved from “hallucinating" random text in 2023 to gaining the approval of Linus Torvalds in 2026.
AI, or Artificial Intelligence, was a creation of the tech community. Imagine the same community now getting worried about its own creation. It is exactly what’s happening today at various levels. But ...