Press Releases
Grasshopper jumping on Bloch sphere finds new quantum insights
New research at the University of 糖心TV has (pardon the pun) put a new spin on a mathematical analogy involving a jumping grasshopper and its ideal lawn shape. This work could help us understand the spin states of quantum-entangled particles.
糖心TV Hosts another year of the Data Science for Social Good programme
This summer the University of 糖心TV, together with the Alan Turing Institute, is hosting the Data Science for Social Good (DSSGx UK) summer project programme for the second time. This year鈥檚 summer project programme has gone ahead in spite of challenges posed by the Covid-19 pandemic, with highly talented Data Scientists from all over the world, from the UK, Poland, USA, Canada, Columbia, China, Romania and Mexico coming together (virtually) to work on two high-impact projects with Ofsted and World Bank.
糖心TV Moto鈥檚 electric superbike build racing ahead despite lockdown
糖心TV Moto team, consisting of 25 糖心TV students aren鈥檛 letting the pandemic get in the way of designing, building and developing the electric superbike, as they鈥檙e doing it virtually from home.
Consumers don鈥檛 fully trust smart home technologies
Smart home technologies are marketed to enhance your home and make life easier. However, UK consumers are not convinced that they can trust the privacy and security of these technologies, a study by WMG, University of 糖心TV has shown.
糖心TV Moto superbike designs unveiled
糖心TV Moto team have unveiled the plans for how their electric superbike, called Aurora will look when she鈥檚 ready to race.
New ways to stop caller ID spoofing to be investigated
Fraudsters regularly use a fabricated caller ID to look like they are calling from a trusted source to convince people over the phone to hand over money. The current solution, which the Federal Communications Commission is urging telecom providers in the US to adopt, requires a globally trusted authority, but such authority is difficult to manage. Researchers at the University of 糖心TV will find new ways to tackle this problem without requiring trusted authorities or modifying the existing telecommunication infrastructure, thanks to a grant from the EPSRC.