Supermicro's stock surged due to AI-driven demand for its high-density servers. Super Micro is publicly traded, enabling easy stock purchase via brokerages. Despite recent pullbacks, competition and ...
For business leaders, if your security strategy for 2026 still revolves around keeping attackers out, you might already be behind. Businesses must be prepared for every eventuality in the new year.
Information technology, or IT, is pretty much everywhere these days. It’s the stuff that makes our computers, phones, and all those other gadgets work, and it connects us to pretty much everything.
“Software-Orchestrated Services™ represent a fundamental shift from people-dependent execution to governed, software-led orchestration. We’re building a future where human expertise is amplified by ...
General Motors will start rolling out more powerful Nvidia computers on its vehicles 2028 onwards. The automaker is moving towards a centralized architecture which reduces the number of on-board ...
The preview of Gemini 2.5 Computer Use is only for developers at the moment, but it shows that the era of agentic AI is here. Jon covers artificial intelligence. He previously led CNET's home energy ...
Now in its fifth year, the Northwestern Computer Science PhD Application Feedback Program, led by Northwestern Engineering’s Fabian E. Bustamante, aims to assist prospective students with their ...
A ransomware attack at Motility Software Solutions, a provider of dealer management software (DMS), has exposed the sensitive data of 766,000 customers. Motility (formerly known as Systems 2000/Sys2K) ...
Despite the possibility of a government shutdown next week, the Education Department is slated to begin the complicated endeavor of determining how to carry out the sweeping higher ed changes in ...
Running a business today means handling many moving parts at once. From keeping track of products to making sure orders reach customers on time, there's a lot that needs to flow smoothly. That's where ...
The original version of this story appeared in Quanta Magazine. Imagine that someone gives you a list of five numbers: 1, 6, 21, 107, and—wait for it—47,176,870. Can you guess what comes next? If ...