News

Generative AI exploded onto the scene at the end of 2022, and forever changed our perception – and use – of AI technology. From a predictive model, based on classification and automation, AI shifted ...
Alphabet’s AI-powered drug discovery company ... a fundamental building block of biology. That innovation has since evolved into AlphaFold 3, capable of modelling how proteins interact with DNA, RNA, ...
Sperm whale clicking might not sound like much in a recording, but their vocalizations are the loudest on Earth, with these clicks reaching upwards of 230 decibels. Now a new analysis has revealed ...
Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOG) led underperformance as it fell in tandem with the other mega cap tech stocks.
Speech, it seems, can long outlast biology.If it wasn’t for the Phoenician alphabet, you probably wouldn’t be reading this right now—but the DNA of these vanished Levantine people didn’t ...
Alphabet has the lowest forward P/E ratio of any Magnificent Seven stock today. It has risks from the likes of OpenAI and antitrust lawsuits, but these are not the end of the world for the company ...
In this review, we aim to cover the basic aspects of plant NLR biology, with an emphasis on NLR network biology. We touch on recent breakthroughs in NLR structure, function, and activation, which have ...
Chorus, an Alphabet moonshot to give businesses a real-time view into the supply chain, is spinning out.
In this video I explore new research proposing a 'phonetic alphabet' for sperm whale vocalizations!
Alphabet is letting its laser-based internet company Taara fly and be free, according to reporting by Financial Times. Google’s parent company is spinning off the service from X, its moonshot ...
Scripps Research scientists have created a method using four-nucleotide codons to incorporate non-canonical amino acids into proteins, expanding protein engineering possibilities without requiring ...
It's a dogma taught in every introductory biology class: Proteins are composed of combinations of 20 different amino acids, arranged into diverse sequences like words. But researchers trying to ...