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Showing posts from November, 2025

Computer Scientists Awards - Research Excellence Award

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The Research Excellence Award —an accolade that recognizes and honors the individuals who push the boundaries of knowledge and pave the way for groundbreaking advancements. Join us in celebrating the champions of innovation and inquiry.  For Enquiries: info@computerscientist.net  Website: computerscientists.net  Nominate Now: https://computerscientists.net/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awardee #sciencefather #researchawards #scientists #professor #researchers #datascientists #technician #lecturer #ResearchExcellenceAward #InnovationAwards #AcademicAchievement #ResearchInnovation #ScholarlyExcellence #AcademicRecognition #TopResearchers #InnovationLeadership #ResearchCommunity #KnowledgeAdvancement #AcademicImpact #ExcellenceInResearch #ScientificAchievement #AwardCeremony #ResearchHonors

Celebrating Innovation:Research Excellence Award #sciencefather #researc...

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AI Agents: Building Digital Twins! #sciencefather #researchawards #resea...

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Cloud-first safety: EB corbos Linux for Safety Applications on AWS

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If you build safety-critical software for vehicles, you know the feeling. A design review clears on Tuesday, but the hardware bench is booked for weeks. The team slices features into spreadsheets while the calendar eats your runway.At IAA Mobility 2025, Elektrobit announced at the AWS theater that EB corbos Linux for Safety Applications is now available as an Amazon Machine Image on AWS. In practical terms, it means your next safety-ready Linux environment starts in minutes inside your own cloud account, without downloads, installation, or dedicated hardware. It is scalable and available 24/7, around the world leveraging AWS leading cloud infrastructure. Your first experiment does not wait for a bench, a shipment, or a slot on a rack. It starts the moment you decide to build. AWS availability: built for speed and flexibility The AMI brings EB corbos Linux for Safety Applications to where your teams already work. You launch it in your AWS environment, you control access, and you plug it...

QuantWare, Q-CTRL, And Qblox Have Launch Modular Quantum Computing Systems

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QuantWare, Q-CTRL, and Qblox have jointly launched a breakthrough in modular quantum computing systems, marking a major milestone in the global quantum technology ecosystem. This collaboration brings together QuantWare’s high-performance quantum processors, Q-CTRL’s advanced quantum control software, and Qblox’s state-of-the-art cryogenic control hardware to create a scalable, flexible, and cost-efficient quantum computing architecture. The new modular systems are designed to accelerate quantum research, development, and deployment by enabling laboratories, startups, and enterprises to build custom quantum setups with plug-and-play components.  This approach aims to reduce barriers to entry, enhance system stability, and significantly improve qubit performance through precision control and optimized hardware-software integration. By combining trusted solutions from three leading quantum technology companies, the launch sets a foundation for next-generation quantum computers that ca...

NASA, Industry Weave Data Fabric with Artificial Intelligence

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NASA’s research into the field of Advanced Air Mobility looks to enable autonomous aircraft with complex capabilities such as carrying cargo or providing medical aid, as seen in this artist’s concept. The Data and Reasoning Fabric project out of Ames Research Center tested delivery of programs and information to these kinds of vehicles. One of the biggest goals for companies in the field of artificial intelligence is developing “agentic” or autonomous systems. These metaphorical agents can perform tasks without a guiding human hand. This parallels the goals of the emerging urban air mobility industry, which hopes to bring autonomous flying vehicles to cities around the world. One company got a head start on doing both with some help from NASA. Autonomy Association International Inc. (AAI) is a public benefit corporation based in Mountain View, California, near NASA’s Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley. In 2022, AAI signed a Space Act Agreement with Ames to support the agency’s Data...

Revolutionizing Simulations: The New Algorithm! #sciencefather #researchawards #researchers #algorithm

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Discover how the new algorithm is revolutionizing simulations across science and technology. Learn how it enhances speed, accuracy, and scalability, transforming complex models into efficient, real-world predictive solutions. For Enquiries: info@computerscientist.net  Website: computerscientists.net  Nominate Now: https://computerscientists.net/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awardee  #sciencefather #researchawards #scientists #professor #researchers #datascientists #technician #lecturer #SimulationTechnology #NewAlgorithm #ComputationalScience #AIInnovation #MachineLearning #DataModeling #TechRevolution #ScientificComputing #AlgorithmDesign #FutureTech #DigitalTransformation #AdvancedSimulations #ComputationalModeling #TechInnovation #NextGenComputing

Computer model mimics human audiovisual perception

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A new computer model developed at the University of Liverpool can combine sight and sound in a way that closely resembles how humans do it. This model is inspired by biology and could be useful for artificial intelligence and machine perception.The model is based on a brain function first found in insects, which helps them detect movement. Dr. Cesare Parise, Senior Psychology Lecturer, has adapted this idea to create a system that can process real-life audiovisual signals—like videos and sounds—rather than relying on abstract parameters used in older models. His paper is published in the journal eLife. When we watch someone speak, our brains automatically match what we see with what we hear. This can lead to illusions, such as the McGurk effect, where mismatched sounds and lip movements create a new perception, or the ventriloquist illusion, where a voice seems to come from a puppet instead of the performer. This latest work asks how does the brain know when sound and vision match?Prev...