
Google's says its new AI agent can find new solutions in computing and math.
The agent, called AlphaEvolve, is powered by Gemini and is designed to discover and optimize algorithms, while building 'upon the most promising ideas.'
Google says AlphaEvolve has helped the company make its data centers, chip design, and AI training processes more efficient. The AI agent could also 'be transformative' across other industries, such as material sciences, drug discoveries, and 'wider technological and business applications,' according to Google.

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14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
We Tested Dozens of Phones and These Have the Best Cameras
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We thoroughly tested and compared dozens of phones and found that one with more lenses or megapixels isn't necessarily any better at taking great shots. Top phones, like the iPhone 16 Pro and Pixel 9 Pro" target="_blank, tend to have a variety of lenses, including an ultrawide and a telephoto with 5x optical zoom, and use larger image sensors and camera features for AI-powered computational photography. Then there's the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra's camera, which has 3x and 5x optical zoom lenses and can take some of the best zoom photos that you can possibly get from a phone. The $999 iPhone 16 Pro and $1,199 iPhone 16 Pro Max have the same trio of lenses: wide, ultrawide and 5x telephoto. The new 48-megapixel ultrawide camera is a big step up from previous iPhone models. It not only takes outstanding photos but doubles as a high-res macro lens to get the perfect focus on your food snaps. Both phones also support 4K 120fps slow-motion video that looks outstanding. 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Shock tariffs land on steel, aluminium as US deadline for 'best' offers arrives
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32 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
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Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up The study's finding is consistent with Advertisement AI tailors its arguments differently when it knows something about a user than when it does not. With background info, AI can identify common ground before making its case. If AI knows, for example, that it's dealing with someone with a liberal political affiliation, it will use arguments popular among liberals, such as the importance of immigrants to the national culture and economy. If a user leans conservative, the AI highlights ideals such as lack of government intervention or regulation. That means an AI with even fairly basic information about users can make them more receptive by tapping into their confirmation bias — in other words, by affirming their existing beliefs. Advertisement This might seem manipulative, but the AI is assessing the rhetorical situation, which involves figuring out what will and won't appeal to a specific audience and adjusting arguments accordingly. I teach this concept to my rhetoric students at Boston University. When presented with evidence that runs counter to their views, many people cling even more firmly to their positions — a phenomenon known as the ' Of course, humans should be better than AI is at understanding and bonding with fellow humans. Why aren't we? For one, our ability to 'read the room' AI doesn't shout, curse, judge, threaten, or doxx users. That's one reason AI can more easily change someone's mind: Freedom from judgment and retaliation liberates the mind enough to allow people to consider other viewpoints. AI also deploys an age-old human bonding technique: mirroring. Experiments have demonstrated that if an interactive robot smiles at you, you'll probably smile back, and vice versa. We all do this beginning in infancy as a way of expressing and emulating other people's behavior and emotional states. If an AI discerns that you're smiling, it might tell you a joke so it can capitalize on and match your positive mood. Mirroring can also involve language choice and tone, which is another reason AI excels at it. Establishing even a fleeting bond via mirroring makes humans more likely to cooperate with an AI or robot. Advertisement Perhaps AI succeeds in part because humans so often fail at effective communication. The bar has become frighteningly low for interactions, both online and off. If displaying a modicum of respect and not spewing vitriol gives AI a communication advantage, that's on us. If a noncorporeal, nonhuman entity can read the room and connect with people better than most humans can, something is seriously off. Research into AI reveals what's too often missing in human interactions: common ground, curiosity, and compassion. Perhaps two of the ways AI will serve us best are by reflecting the failures of human societies in its black mirror and reminding us that we can do better. In turn, that perspective can help us choose what or who we want to become — and how.