Eldercare robot helps people sit and stand, and catches them if they fall
Technology

Robotic hand moves objects with human-like grasp

When you reach out your hand to grasp an object like a bottle, you generally don’t need to know the bottle’s exact position in space to pick it up successfully. But as EPFL researcher Kai Junge explains, if you want to make a robot that can pick up a bottle, you must know everything about

Is the enterprise (actually) ready for AI?
Technology

Is the enterprise (actually) ready for AI?

May 13, 2025 Maryam Ashoori, Head of Product for watsonx.ai at IBM, joins Ryan and Eira to talk about the complexity of enterprise AI, the role of governance, the AI skill gap among developers, how AI coding tools impact developer productivity, what chain-of-thought reasoning entails, and what observability and monitoring look like for AI. Credit:

Is the enterprise (actually) ready for AI?
Technology

Next-level observability: live breakpoint debugging

May 13, 2025 On this episode, Ryan chats with Henrik Rexed, Cloud Native Advocate at Dynatrace, about debugging cloud-based applications like you would a local app. On this episode, Ryan chats with Henrik Rexed, Cloud Native Advocate at Dynatrace, about debugging cloud-based applications like you would a local app. They discuss the importance of instrumentation,

Beyond speed: Measuring engineering success by impact, not velocity
Technology

Beyond speed: Measuring engineering success by impact, not velocity

For many engineering teams, velocity—a measurement of effort expended by developers, usually as story points completed in a sprint—feels like the best way to measure output across stacks of projects and initiatives. But from the perspective of a leader who is tasked with bridging the gap between tech execution and business objectives, it doesn’t tell

Eldercare robot helps people sit and stand, and catches them if they fall
Technology

Scientists innovate mid-infrared photodetectors for exoplanet detection, expanding applications to environmental and medical fields

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) utilizes mid-infrared spectroscopy to precisely analyze molecular components such as water vapor and sulfur dioxide in exoplanet atmospheres. The key to this analysis, where each molecule exhibits a unique spectral “fingerprint,” lies in highly sensitive photodetector technology capable of measuring extremely weak light intensities. Recently, KAIST researchers have developed

Eldercare robot helps people sit and stand, and catches them if they fall
Technology

Amuse, a songwriting AI-collaborator to help create music

Wouldn’t it be great if music creators had someone to brainstorm with, help them when they’re stuck, and explore different musical directions together? Researchers of KAIST and Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) have developed AI technology similar to a fellow songwriter who helps create music. KAIST (President Kwang-Hyung Lee) has developed an AI-based music creation support

Eldercare robot helps people sit and stand, and catches them if they fall
Technology

Machine learning powers new approach to detecting soil contaminants

A team of researchers at Rice University and Baylor College of Medicine has developed a new strategy for identifying hazardous pollutants in soil, even ones that have never been isolated or studied in a lab. The new approach, described in a study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, uses light-based imaging, theoretical

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