Analogue is set to release the Analogue 3D in Q1 2025, promising to revolutionize classic Nintendo 64 (N64) games, boasting 100% compatibility with all original cartridges and a stunning 4K resolution output.
Meta’s FAIR team is making significant strides in the field of embodied AI, with several breakthroughs poised to revolutionize robotics and bring us closer to advanced machine intelligence (AMI).
GitHub announced an expansion of its AI-powered coding assistant, GitHub Copilot, to include models from Anthropic, Google, and OpenAI, providing developers with greater choice and flexibility in their coding workflow.
TEKKEN is teaming up with Nike for an extensive collaboration in TEKKEN 8, bringing exciting digital in-game content and limited-edition physical merchandise.
Archaeologists have uncovered a previously unknown Mayan city, named Valeriana, in the Mexican state of Campeche, thanks to advanced LiDAR technology, providing new insights into the social and economic organization of the Mayan civilization.
The Analogue 3D console features four original-style controller ports and supports both wired and wireless controllers. It is also a testament to video game preservation and ensures the N64’s legacy lives on for future generations.
Meta Sparsh is a pioneering general-purpose touch representation that functions across a variety of tactile sensors and tasks, outperforming task- and sensor-specific models by an average of over 95% on a novel benchmark.
Meta Digit 360 is an artificial fingertip equipped with human-level multimodal sensing capabilities, detecting minute spatial details and forces as small as 1 millinewton, with exciting possibilities for research and applications in fields like healthcare, manufacturing, and virtual reality.
GitHub unveiled a glimpse of GitHub Spark, an AI-native tool for building applications entirely in natural language utilizing a creativity feedback loop, allowing users to see live previews of their app as it’s being built.
LiDAR technology enabled researchers to map a vast area of approximately 47 square miles, identifying over 6,700 pre-Hispanic structures and challenging previous assumptions about the Maya living in isolated villages.