Computing is part of everything we do. Computing drives innovation in engineering, business, entertainment, education, and the sciences—and it provides solutions to complex, challenging problems of ...
The Math & Computer Science Society plans social, academic, and professional events for Math and Computer Science majors and minors at Santa Clara University. The goal of the club is to bolster the ...
Getting a computer science degree from a top university is no longer a guarantee of a high-paying tech job. According to Xiaoyin Qu, a former manager at Meta, even graduates from Stanford University ...
We offer a flexible option that provides both the foundations of computer science with space for a second major or minor, like mathematics, business management, data analytics or physics. In the field ...
Hyesang Chang and colleagues, from Stanford University, explored why some children struggle to learn math compared to their peers in a new JNeurosci paper. Children selected which numbers were bigger ...
Proof of concept uses passive components to redirect heat across a chip, allowing temperature patterns to be used for data processing. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an ...
Richard A. Scott, SCU class of 1988, received his PhD in mathematics from MIT and returned to join the faculty of Santa Clara in 1997. In 2014, Rick received a prestigious Simons Faculty Collaboration ...
Taback, the Isaac Henry Wing Professor of Mathematics, was announcing the visit of John Urschel to campus. Formerly an offensive lineman with the Baltimore Ravens, Urschel played three seasons in the ...
Fifty-four seconds. That’s how long it took Raphael Wimmer to write up an experiment that he did not actually perform, using a new artificial-intelligence tool called Prism, released by OpenAI last ...
Researchers used algebra and geometry together to solve an old random walk problem. Random walk ideas have informed everything from biology to video games. This team identified a key geometry idea ...
If you managed to keep your eyes open — and your tear ducts closed — during the Super Bowl Sunday night, you would have seen an ad for Anthropic’s artificial intelligence “assistant” named Claude.
Google on Friday unveiled its plan for its Chrome browser to secure HTTPS certificates against quantum computer attacks without breaking the Internet. The objective is a tall order. The ...