Forget playing Doom on a calculator. Now you can play it with a clump of brain cells--no brainstem necessary.
Binny Gill, CEO of Kognitos, describes his company's mission to make "English as code" — a platform that lets businesses write rules for AI in plain language and have them execute deterministically, ...
Atek Midas, a Turkish company, has launched DSG-22.6 GHz, a high-performance, open-source RF signal generator designed to provide professional-grade ...
A new open-source project, WiFi DensePose, uses ordinary WiFi signals to detect human movement behind walls without cameras.
AI can help build surprisingly capable apps—if you know how to steer it in the right direction. Follow my tips to save yourself time and frustration.
The rapidly-improving speed and versatility of digital computers has mostly driven analogue computers out of use in modern ...
Regular Hackaday readers will no doubt be familiar with the work of Matthew Alt, AKA [wrongbaud]. His deep-dive blog posts ...
Your weekly cybersecurity roundup covering the latest threats, exploits, vulnerabilities, and security news you need to know.
OpenAI's Codex coding app is available on Windows after a period of exclusivity to macOS. The app is a hub where developers can manage multiple AI agents within a single project, allowing them to ...
Can you still mine Bitcoin on a PC in 2026? Explore the reality of ASIC dominance, rising mining difficulty and why home mining rarely pays.
Understandably, you're likely scratching your head, wondering how it's even possible for a petri dish to play Doom. Good question. The answer is the CL1, "the world’s first code ...