Many still skip VPNs, private browsers, antivirus, and security suites altogether, but those who don’t have strong ...
In a recent work published in BME Frontiers, a collaborative study by researchers from Griffith University, Queensland University of Technology, University of Queensland, and Nanjing Stomatological ...
Microsoft 365’s Accessibility Assistant gets smarter at detecting tables and shapes, helping users create more inclusive ...
Abstract: Cross-modal 3D shape retrieval is a crucial and widely applied task in the field of 3D vision. Its goal is to construct retrieval representations capable of measuring the similarity between ...
Abstract: Equivariant quantum graph neural networks (EQGNNs) offer a potentially powerful method to process graph data. However, existing EQGNN models only consider the permutation symmetry of graphs, ...
With a new set of Microsoft 365 features, knowledge workers will be able to generate complex Word documents or Excel spreadsheets using only text prompts to Microsoft’s chatbot. Two distinct products ...
Alabama football continued to rotate on the offensive line in its biggest game of the 2025 season. In the Crimson Tide's SEC-opening 24-21 win against Georgia, Alabama used nine offensive linemen, ...
Microsoft launches new AI agents to power the future of "vibe working" Agent Mode and Office Agent will do your hard work for you Only US users get Office Agent from launch Inspired by vibe coding ...
When Andrew Grigolyunovich first started using Excel more than two decades ago, he never imagined the spreadsheet program would land him in Las Vegas or on ESPN. The Latvian financial consultant ...
Microsoft Corp. envisions a future where everyone starts “vibe working” with the launch of its new Agent Mode in Office Apps and Agent Mode in Copilot Chat offering new ways to automate business and ...
Microsoft has launched AI agents for Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. The agents are available for business and individual subscribers. Now accessible on the web, the agents will expand to the desktop.
Survey data from thousands of PCMag readers reveals which companies make the most (and least) dependable devices you can buy.