Education has become too focused on grades and exams, rather than actually learning and understanding, argues Professor Peter Cochrane
There's still some time - and a number of challenges to overcome - before quantum computing becomes truly useful, reports Nic Fearn
Disciplines are becoming more specialised at a time when global challenges have become more complex. Solving them may require the non-linear calculations that only quantum computing can provide, says Professor Peter Cochrane
As copper and silicon-based CPUs reach their physical limits, what is in the pipeline that will keep compute power growing? Nic Fearn investigates
Wouldn't it be great if you could remember everything you ever learnt, saw or heard? Actually, it wouldn't, writes Professor Peter Cochrane
Forget Asimov's 'Three Laws of Robotics', robots will almost certainly go off the rails at some point in the future - but they still won't be as bad as human beings
Articles and presentations on quantum computing are often completely wrong, warns Professor Peter Cochrane
Getting to grips with a new user interface is one of life's biggest frustrations, says Professor Peter Cochrane. There must be something better
Smartphone makers may be obsessed with gimmicks, but it is AI and machine-to-machine communications that will drive the next tech revolution, argues Professor Peter Cochrane
Systems have reached such a state of complexity that only AI can bring some kind of order, argues Professor Peter Cochrane