Java developers absolutely must learn Maven. Maven is the most popular and pervasive build tool in the Java world. Even if you don't use Maven directly, alternatives such as Gradle, Jenkins or Ivy ...
JavaFX isn't hard to learn. In fact, any developer with a little bit of object-oriented knowledge and a penchant for desktop development in Java can quickly put together a feature-rich GUI application ...
Putin’s Trip to China Future of Warfare Russian Forces Struggle ‘The Death Zone’ Photos Advertisement Supported by Nonfiction In “Project Maven,” Katrina Manson shows us how close we are to artificial ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. In the first 24 hours of the assault on Iran, the US military struck more than 1,000 targets, nearly double the ...
A U.S. Army officer looks at the interface of the Maven Smart System during a training session. Maven was designed to process vast amounts of data from weather to troop locations. Credit: U.S. Army ...
Discover notable new fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. The veteran journalist Katrina Manson, who now covers defense tech for Bloomberg, spent much of the past few years asking precisely that question.
Project Maven, a Pentagon AI program, is now central to US strikes against Iran. This artificial intelligence system accelerates the process of identifying and striking targets. Initially a drone ...
Pentagon and Palantir declined to comment on Maven's performance in the war with Iran Washington, United States: A Pentagon AI program called Project Maven is at the center of the US strikes against ...
In the Iran war the Pentagon is using an AI program that is potentially of the most consequential changes in modern warfare — Brendan SMIALOWSKI A Pentagon AI program called Project Maven is at the ...
On a summer evening in 2020 at Fort Liberty, a sprawling US Army installation in North Carolina, soldiers from the 18th Airborne Corps pored over satellite images on the computers in their command ...
The rise of AI warfare speaks to the biggest moral and practical question there is: Who—or what—gets to decide to take a human life? And who bears that cost? In 2018, more than 3,000 Google workers ...