The 2026 World Cup has added AI and computer vision to the officiating crew — a sensor inside the ball, semi-automated offside calls, and 16 tracking cameras per stadium.
AI systems rarely fail for one reason; they fail when real-world conditions introduce complexity that teams did not fully ...
Ambarella, a leader in AI-powered video processing chips, reported a notable insider sale amid a year of strong share performance.
This AI chipmaker for automotive and security markets reported a notable insider sale amid a pattern of steady multi-year ...
The Midtown transformation plan seeks not only to replace housing, but also to improve lives, attract investment and build ...
AI, an IBM Silver Partner specializing in advanced artificial intelligence and edge computing solutions, is pleased to announce that its Cognitive Visual Recognition (CVR) solution has received ...
Soccer officials already rely on cameras to see who’s offside and who sent the ball out of bounds. But during this World Cup, refs will use digital twins of each player to view plays from every angle.
You can project a 115in display in front of you, play AR games and view turn-by-turn directions in your vision ...
Neuralink says it has successfully performed a new surgical technique that could make brain implant procedures safer and less ...
Alice Rhee, a remote tech employee based in Fairbanks, Alaska, and her husband, a long-term public school teacher, agreed on ...
As football fans revel in the real world tournament, its digital counterparts continue to stumble in capturing the ​hyped up ​atmosphere ...
The recent US-Iran war has given the world one of the clearest glimpses yet of this transformation. The US used AI services, ...