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We Are Losing the Ability to Discover What We Didn’t Know to Ask
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Lost in Curiosity reveals the messy reality of doing science
Lost in CuriosityRoberta KwokSourcebooks, $27.99 Earning my Ph.D. was probably the hardest thing I’ve ever done, and I distinctly remember the first time I wanted to quit. I was a first-year grad student at the University of Chicago, and while taking images of my nanomaterial with a fancy microscope, I accidentally rammed the material into…
Discovering the disease you thought you knew — how clustering rewrote breast cancer
I keep coming back to a sentence a breast oncologist said to me last year. Breast cancer isn’t one disease. It’s at least four, and we… Continue reading on Medium »
AI OK in Linux development, says Torvalds
“It can also be a somewhat painful tool, both for maintainer workloads and just from a ‘it keeps finding embarrassing bugs’ standpoint,” he said of the use of AI in security scanning. “The solution is to make sure those LLM tools help maintainers instead of just causing them pain.” Developers should be free to choose…
How Data Analytics Helps Companies Improve User Engagement
e have written a lot about data-driven online business models on Smart Data Collective since Ryan took over the site ten years ago. It is clear that companies need better ways to understand what keeps visitors reading, clicking, sharing, buying, and returning. Sam Ransbotham and David Kiron of MIT Sloan Management Review write that more…
Book Publishers Sue Google For Copyright Infringement Over Gemini AI Training
Major publishers Hachette, Cengage, Elsevier, and author Scott Turow have sued Google, accusing it of using millions of copyrighted books to train Gemini without permission or payment, in “one of the most prolific infringements of copyrighted materials in history.” The Guardian reports: The publishers argue that Google repurposed books that had been supplied for limited…