Month: April 2025
Robot see, robot do: System learns after watching how-to videos
Cornell University researchers have developed a new robotic framework powered by artificial intelligence — called RHyME (Retrieval for Hybrid Imitation under Mismatched Execution) — ...
A new hybrid platform for quantum simulation of magnetism
Simulating a quantum magnet in the hybrid approach Having demonstrated accurate analog evolution, we then combined it with our more traditional specialty, high-precision digital ...
InstructPipe: Generating Visual Blocks pipelines with human instructions and LLMs
Human-Computer Interaction and Visualization
Start building with Gemini 2.5 Flash
Today we are rolling out an early version of Gemini 2.5 Flash in preview through the Gemini API via Google AI Studio and Vertex ...
New hybrid materials as efficient thermoelectrics
Thermoelectric materials enable the direct conversion of heat into electrical energy. This makes them particularly attractive for the emerging “Internet of Things,” for example ...
Researchers demonstrate new class of quantum materials that are both metallic and one-dimensional
The compound — Ti₄MnBi₂ — becomes only the second known metallic system with confirmed one-dimensional magnetism. A study by researchers from the University of ...
A cool fix for hot chips: Advanced thermal management technology for electronic devices
The exponential miniaturization of electronic chips over time, described by Moore’s law, has played a key role in our digital age. However, the operating ...
Scaling large language models for next-generation single-cell analysis
Every human is made up of trillions of cells, each with its own function, whether it’s carrying oxygen, fighting infections, or building organs. Even ...
Generate videos in Gemini and Whisk with Veo 2
Transform text-based prompts into high-resolution eight-second videos in Gemini Advanced and use Whisk Animate to turn images into eight-second animated clips.
DolphinGemma: How Google AI is helping decode dolphin communication
DolphinGemma, a large language model developed by Google, is helping scientists study how dolphins communicate — and hopefully find out what they’re saying, too.