Month: May 2025

Fine-tuning LLMs with user-level differential privacy

Making these algorithms work for LLMs If we run these algorithms “out-of-the-box” for LLMs, things go badly. So, we came up with optimizations to ...

New biosensor solves old quantum riddle

Putting hypersensitive quantum sensors in a living cell is a promising path for tracking cell growth and diagnosing diseases — even cancers — in ...

Quantum eyes on energy loss: Diamond quantum imaging for next-gen power electronics

Diamond quantum sensors can be used to analyze the magnetization response of soft magnetic materials used in power electronics; report scientists based on collaborative ...

Efficiency upgrade for OLED screens: A route to blue PHOLED longevity

Blue phosphorescent OLEDs can now last as long as the green phosphorescent OLEDs already in devices, University of Michigan researchers have demonstrated, paving the ...

Can a dev environment spark joy? The Android team thinks so.

May 23, 2025 Matthew McCullough, VP of Product for Android Developer Experience, sits down with Ryan to talk advancements in Android development, enhancing developer ...

Researchers make breakthrough in semiconductor technology set to supercharge 6G delivery

Self-driving cars which eliminate traffic jams, getting a healthcare diagnosis instantly without leaving your home, or feeling the touch of loved ones based across ...

A rule-breaking, colorful silicone that could conduct electricity

A newly discovered silicone variant is a semiconductor, University of Michigan researchers have discovered — upending assumptions that the material class is exclusively insulating. ...

Google Research at Google I/O 2025

Efficient and grounded models: Contributing to AI Mode in Search As LLMs grow larger and demand increases, our ability to improve model efficiency while ...

Developing a pressure-induced water producing material

Copper-chromium Prussian blue analogs are crystalline compounds containing voids (pores). The researchers found that the water retained in these pores can be expelled by ...

Engineers discover a new class of materials that passively harvest water from air

A serendipitous observation in a Chemical Engineering lab at Penn Engineering has led to a surprising discovery: a new class of nanostructured materials that ...