Talk to MnookinBot
Hello student, type your question below:
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Daily Cardinal's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
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?
At a university with a strong drinking culture, some University of Wisconsin-Madison students are creating an alternative community with Badger Recovery programming.
The Wisconsin Alumni Student Board (WASB) collaborated with student organization Slow Food UW to host “Food For Thought” at The Crossing on October 23rd, providing a free, homemade meal and discussion on food insecurity.
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.
MagicSchool AI, an education-specific application for teachers that MMSD is currently vetting and researching the benefits of. These applications are designed to support teachers by helping them save time.
All articles featured in The Beet are creative, satirical and/or entirely fictional pieces. They are fully intended as such and should not be taken seriously as news.
Artificial intelligence is powering breakthroughs in everything from health care to climate science, but each new discovery comes with a cost: significant energy. Now, researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison are asking a new question — how can this powerful technology be more sustainable?
District 13 Alder Tag Evers proposed a new ordinance on Oct. 28 that would ban the sale of cats and dogs in retail pet stores throughout Madison.
The Kohl Center played host to a sibling rivalry Wednesday as Greg Gard, head coach of the Wisconsin Badgers, defeated his brother Jeff Gard’s , Platteville Pioneers squad 69-53.
The Wisconsin volleyball team traveled to play Washington and Oregon last weekend, adding two four-set wins to their Big Ten record.
University Health Services (UHS) warned about an uptick in cases of viral meningitis in an email sent to University of Wisconsin-Madison students Friday.
The leaves are turning, the air’s cooling and Wisconsin Cross Country is chasing another Big Ten crown.
The Wisconsin National Primate Research Center (WNPRC) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison appointed Ricardo Carrion Jr. as its next director on Oct. 23. Carrion will begin the role Nov. 3, 2025.
The University of Wisconsin System Board of Regents approved a request from University of Wisconsin-Madison on Sept. 18 seeking an additional $13.5 million to make space for a cancer research project.
Rep. Vincent Miresse’s desk might look like that of a typical legislator with a family photo, Wisconsin Blue Book and other assorted items. But Miresse’s drawer contains something different — Wisconsin conservationist Aldo Leopold’s “A Sand County Almanac.”
Journalist and author Amy Yee discussed Tibetan culture and her book “Far From the Rooftop of the World” at the Wisconsin Book Festival on Oct. 26.
A large portion of Badger volleyball’s success over the past two years can be attributed to sophomore All-American setter Charlie Fuerbringer.
Hundreds of book enthusiasts scoured the shelves of Memorial Library last week Wednesday to Saturday in search of their next novel. Twice a year, The Friends of the University of Wisconsin-Madison Libraries host a book sale giving Madisonians the opportunity to browse a diverse selection of literature and materials donated by the library and community members.