Search results for: “♊ близнецы гороскоп на сегодня ❰гороскоп на сегодня близнецы❱♊-bit.ly/Gemini-serodnya”
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Serving our nation and the world
Six ways Princeton Engineering improves lives and drives economic growth.
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A Hands-on Intro to Google’s Gemini API
The Gemini API (https://ai.google.dev lets you develop applications with Google’s state-of-the-art LLMs. This hands-on workshop will guide you through getting started using examples from the Gemini API Cookbook (https://github.com/google-gemini/cookbook. You’ll also gain insights into LLMs, and have the chance to share your feedback with the Google AI team. This workshop will be given at a…
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Tech Consumers Should Demand Better Security: Ruby Lee, Princeton University
As a chief computer architect at Hewlett-Packard in the 1980s, Ruby Lee was a leader in changing the way computers are built, simplifying their core instructions so they could do more.
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Dean Andrew Houck explains a classic experiment in a talk welcoming first-year families. Photos by Sameer A. Khan/Fotobuddy Dean gives visiting families a glimpse of quantum ‘magic’
In a lecture for first-year students and their families, Princeton Engineering dean Andrew Houck explained how quantum computers could solve currently “impossible” problems and highlighted Princeton’s role in advancing quantum science and engineering.
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Episode 4: Bethany Beardslee Winham and Chris Winham
In this remarkable interview, Bethany Beardslee Winham looks back at a time when Milton Babbitt and Godfrey Winham — as well as Beardslee herself — were changing the sound of music.
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Episode 2: Composers in the Computer Center
Princeton music composers spent late nights in the Engineering Quadrangle in the 1960s, punching their cards and running huge jobs overnight on the room-sized, silent IBM 7090. With the help of Princeton engineers, they were helping light the spark of the digital music revolution.
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Cookies: Tech Security & Privacy, Episode 7, Colleen Josephson & Yan Shvartsnaider Your movements are being tracked down to the inch: Colleen Josephson and Yan Shvartzshnaider
Our guests today, Yan Shvartzshnaider and Colleen Josephson, discuss how a new technology embedded in newer Apple iPhones has the technology to track the owner’s movements, down to the inch, indoors.
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The security flaws of online learning: Mihir Kshirsagar
Are online learning platforms really secure? Mihir Kshirsagar co-wrote a paper that spells out in startling detail everything you’ve wondered about — but didn’t want to know — about how online platforms are allowing students to have their personal data exploited as the students use them for online learning. And he discusses the one mistake…
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Memoirs of a qubit: Hybrid memory solves key problem for quantum computing
An international team of scientists has performed the ultimate miniaturization of computer memory: storing information inside the nucleus of an atom. This breakthrough is a key step in bringing to life a quantum computer – a device based on the fundamental theory of quantum mechanics which could crack problems unsolvable by current technology.
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Barton Gellman deletes his account
To kick off our second season, we’re honored to welcome Barton Gellman, Princeton Class of 1982.