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We are reduced to relying on what amounts to informed scientific guesswork based on computer simulations.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: The terror next time
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Her review lauds the cleverness of its rhymes, then goes on to test scientific chronologies and critique computer-driven scratchboard techniques used for the book's art.
FORBES: Media
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The company is working with the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois, the National Science Foundation and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) on a scientific version of the computer called PERCS (Productive, Easy-to-use, Reliable Computing System).
FORBES: IBM To Launch Commercial Petaflop Supercomputer
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So Dr Tallal and Dr Merzenich have founded a company, Scientific Learning, to sell a computer game intended to improve the hearing of children with language problems.
ECONOMIST: The cat sat on the tam | The
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Khatib decided to share a longstanding problem in AIDS research in the form of Foldit, a program that reframes scientific challenges as a competitive multiplayer computer game.
FORBES: How Cloud Computing Can Boost Developing Nations
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Among the eclectic choices: a computer game that solves scientific problems, a nonprofit co-founded by actor Matt Damon that leverages donor funds to provide microloans to clean water projects and a venture by Japanese technology giant Mitsubishi that makes ships move more efficiently through the ocean, cutting down on CO2 emissions.
FORBES: The World's Best Sustainability Ideas
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This story is one of four parts examining the scientific output of different nations in biology, clean energy, and computer science.
FORBES: Connect
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This story is the first of four parts examining the scientific output of different nations in biology, clean energy, and computer science.
FORBES: China Passed The U.S. In Information Technology. What's Next?
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This week, a group of computer scientists claimed that developments in their subject will trigger a scientific revolution of similar proportions in the next 15 years.
ECONOMIST: The scientific method
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Eventually, he was hired as chief scientific officer for Eyematic, a Los Angeles company that was developing algorithms that would allow a computer camera to recognize and track human faces.
NEWYORKER: The Visionary