Tech Xplore on MSN
Flexible position encoding helps LLMs follow complex instructions and shifting states
Most languages use word position and sentence structure to extract meaning. For example, "The cat sat on the box," is not the ...
Learn With Jay on MSN
Transformer decoders explained step-by-step from scratch
Transformers have revolutionized deep learning, but have you ever wondered how the decoder in a transformer actually works?
AI video generators often give results that are close, but no cigar, in terms of delivering what your text-prompt wanted. But ...
To prevent jitter between frames, Kuta explains that D-ID uses cross-frame attention and motion-latent smoothing, techniques that maintain expression continuity across time. Developers can even ...
Live Science on MSN
New 'DNA cassette tape' can store up to 1.5 million times more data than a smartphone — and the data can last 20,000 years if frozen
DNA is known to keep its form for centuries, and the researchers found that their tape could store data for more than 345 years at room temperature, or about 20,000 years at 32 degrees Fahrenheit (0 ...
2don MSNOpinion
The History That Suggests an AI Bubble
The history of AI shows how setting evaluation standards fueled progress. But today's LLMs are asked to do tasks without ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
AI reveals clues to how the human brain understands speech
Large language models, often called LLMs, usually help write emails, answer questions, and summarize documents. A new neuroscience study suggests they may also hint at how your own brain understands ...
The golden-yellow tickets reshaped how New Yorkers accessed the subway and became civic icons in the process.
QR codes must be eliminated from Georgia’s ballots by July 2026, but less than a year away from midterms, the state is still trying to figure out how to comply.
Schizophrenia and severe mental illness have long been linked to paranoia over surveillance - modern tech is adding to the ...
Morning Overview on MSN
2,000-year-old code cracked, a Dead Sea Scrolls secret revealed
A 2,000-year-old code that once looked like random scratches on parchment has finally given up its secret, turning a handful of obscure Dead Sea fragments into a new window on one of antiquity’s most ...
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