As a part of Rediff's CAT 2026-prep series, MBA expert Patrick D'souza explains how you can maximise your preparation and ...
Overture Games, an after-school program used in several Chicago schools and youth centers, relies on old-school paper and pencil to teach students AI skills. But as AI education lags in elementary ...
More than 11.64 lakh students appeared for the Common University Entrance Test (CUET UG) 2026, making it one of India's ...
With automated proof-checkers, a problem can be broken up into small chunks, solved bit-by-bit, then reassembled with confidence that every piece is correct. For some, this heralds a new area in ...
How do magicians turn a room full of skeptics into a fully immersed audience, willingly caught up in the performance?
From video call QR scans to separate PINs, this Coldcard Q review shows how the $249 device brings Snowden-level security to ...
A few months ago, a third-grade student in Brooklyn was assigned — like the rest of his classmates — an AI-powered reading ...
Alice Rhee, a remote tech employee based in Fairbanks, Alaska, and her husband, a long-term public school teacher, agreed on ...
Touchscreens made life frictionless. They also flattened our relationship with the physical world.
Parents are right to ask whether classroom screens are helping students learn or simply helping tech companies grow.
The more machines can do, the clearer it becomes what only human beings can provide. The following was excerpted and adapted from a commencement speech given at Bard College on May 23.
Unless you're coding or stress-testing benchmarks, the "latest and greatest" usually won't change how you use AI.