A new report from scientists at Project CETI demonstrates that the noises that sperm whales make to communicate with each other contain what humans would describe as vowels.
Today: We learn about Project Metis and its goal of making Houston a global leader in brain health innovation, talk with the ...
Google’s Gemini 3.1 Flash TTS adds audio tags, 70-plus languages, and SynthID watermarking for more controllable AI-generated ...
Meta is reportedly building an AI version of Mark Zuckerberg for staff, raising new questions about trust, authority, and how ...
For two and a half years, the NBC New York I-Team has been asking City Hall for controversial audio files that depict Eric ...
They were easier to hear, because the world had suddenly become quieter. Car traffic plummeted as people sheltered at home ...
Drumming and singing at the same time is impressive, whether you’re Karen Carpenter, Ringo Starr or a chimpanzee. Japanese ...
The Mercury’s front page on 4/7 detailed the reduction of Fentanyl deaths due to the hard work of President Trump and the ...
So, you want to learn Python, and you’re thinking YouTube is the place to do it. Smart move! The internet is packed with ...
Tourism at a cave swarming with bats known to have transmitted a deadly fever disease? The popularity of Uganda's Python Cave points to yet another way interactions at the animal-human interface—where ...
You can write the most inane garbage and it will generally try to be supportive when critiquing your work. And the latest over-the-top example just dropped. Someone on X decided to test just how ...
Reynolds’ weekly column exploring songs and scenes at the intersection of music and digital culture, separating shitpost ...