For centuries, nature has quietly outperformed human engineering. Octopuses and cuttlefish can vanish against coral, ripple their skin into spines, or flash patterns to communicate—sometimes all at ...
Inspired by the shape-shifting skin of octopuses, Penn State researchers developed a smart hydrogel that can change appearance, texture, and shape on command. The material is programmed using a ...
The project titled "Medical Image Classification for Disease Diagnosis Using Convolutional Neural Networks" aims to develop a robust and accurate machine learning model for the automatic ...
I have always been a fan of prop hunt games, and I couldn’t control my excitement when I stumbled upon Hide or Die. This Roblox experience adds a ton of fun new elements to the prop hunt genre. In ...
You’ve held it, spent it, and probably never looked twice — but your money is hiding secrets. From tiny symbols to hidden faces and overlooked artwork, U.S. and Canadian currency is full of hidden ...
A new campaign dubbed 'GhostPoster' is hiding JavaScript code in the image logo of malicious Firefox extensions with more than 50,000 downloads, to monitor browser activity and plant a backdoor. The ...
Whether it's stress from financial issues, handling a loss, or even dealing with the change in seasons, when people are experiencing sadness, it's like their entire lives are upended. While it may be ...
Tides have changed with the Gemini 3 update, bringing Nano Banana Pro image generation to a wider range of users. The images are so realistic that Google provides an extension that detects images with ...
According to the Yomiuri Shimbun and spotted by Dexerto, the case relates to an AI-generated image created using Stable Diffusion back in 2024 by a man in his 20s from Japan’s Chiba prefecture. This ...
The Google app is adding a new Pinterest-like “Images” tab that’s now rolling out to all users in the US on Android and iOS. The tab offers a personalized image feed based on your interests, letting ...
Threat actors supporting Russia's geopolitical interests are using Linux-based virtual machines (VMs) to obfuscate their activities from Windows endpoint security tools. The group is tracked as "Curly ...