UW-Madison speech and debate team perseveres in face of budget cuts
The University of Wisconsin-Madison Speech and Debate Society (WSDS) is set to lose university funding and their advisor after this year due to budget cuts.
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The University of Wisconsin-Madison Speech and Debate Society (WSDS) is set to lose university funding and their advisor after this year due to budget cuts.
Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Susan Crawford discussed her 2024 election — the most expensive state judicial race in the nation’s history — and the future of the court at an event with the Wisconsin Union Directorate Society and Politics Committee Nov. 5.
I was sitting at a table in the annex of Michelangelo’s Coffee House, spacing out over my assigned reading for English 245 and eavesdropping on a group of elderly men who gathered at a table next to mine for their weekly get-together. Through the window, a moving truck twisted its way into the small cul-de-sac behind the café, attempting to loop its tail around a vintage Ford Bronco before the driver eventually gave up and sent a boy in a cream-colored uniform to look for the owner of the obstacle.
Earlier this fall “The Paper” premiered on Peacock. The show, a tangential spinoff of hit 2005 sitcom “The Office” begins streaming on NBC at 7:30 p.m. on Nov. 10.
It wasn’t pretty, but the Wisconsin Badgers 3-6 (1-5) found a way to get it done Saturday, knocking off the No. 23 Washington Huskies 6-3 (3-3) 13-10 as sleet — and thousands of students — poured onto the field.
For decades, Wisconsin men’s basketball was defined by a stifling defense and a slow, rhythmic offense. Last season, that changed.
PORT WASHINGTON, Wis. – Just 25 miles north of Milwaukee, the historic lakefront town of Port Washington, Wisconsin, has held onto its small-town charm through generations. But recently, the city became Wisconsin’s newest artificial intelligence data center battleground, with developers eager to tap into the Great Lakes region and local residents voicing opposition.
As artificial intelligence infiltrates nearly all facets of society, an education at the University of Wisconsin-Madison is no exception. While professors use AI to provide accessible materials, they want their students to understand how to use AI tools without circumventing learning.
In March, the world’s most impactful research journal Nature published an article by a researcher claiming his scientific paper was seemingly peer-reviewed by artificial intelligence without his consent.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison is testing out a new artificial intelligence chatbot that helps students practice civil discourse through simulated conversations and real-time feedback.
Fresh off the heels of summer break, some students were startled by three words they thought had been lost to time: “blue book exam.”
John Blackwell stole the show in Wisconsin’s season opener, as the Badgers took down the Campbell Fighting Camels 96-64 Monday night at the Kohl Center.
Artificial intelligence is revolutionizing sports analytics. It’s capable of sorting and analyzing data at a much faster pace than humans, including straightforward stats and more subtle details like athletes’ form or endurance.
The Madison Metropolitan School District (MMSD) is cautiously weighing artificial intelligence for teachers in their K-12 schools, using AI to save teachers’ time by helping generate syllabi, individualized lesson plans and analyze learning data.
Hello student, type your question below:
When University of Wisconsin-Madison senior Emma needed advice on how to end a ‘situationship,’ she consulted a unique source. Emma typed information into Google Gemini and asked for help generating responses.
Generative artificial intelligence has become a major actor in decision-making, even for mundane tasks. It’s widely used, from academics to entertainment, helping create study guides, grocery lists or silly images from a prompt in just one click. But is it a useful tool in making day-to-day decisions, and what happens when it does?
ChatGPT is a demon. Yes, a demon. Now, when I call a Large Language Model demonic, I don’t mean to conjure up images of fallen angels and other biblical images. However, the way artificial intelligence and LLMs present themselves is inherently evil.
Many professionals in scientific and creative fields fear a near future where artificial intelligence takes over their jobs. But not University of Wisconsin-Madison informatics data scientist and improv comedian Ben Rush.
Editor's note: This article was updated to correct multiple factual inaccuracies.