Algorithms play a big part in our day-to-day lives. From search engines to architecture, explore how these formulas affect the way we view and interact with the world around us.
Technology will continue to influence the way we learn as it increasingly facilitates collaborative learning.
To be core, the algorithm needs to be consistent enough to run by itself without much worry that it won't work right.
Yury Vetrov explains what artificial intelligence and algorithm-driven design are, and elaborates on how they're changing design as well as the future.
There is a need for a more nuanced understanding of the phenomenon of algorithmic thinking as it becomes increasingly embedded in our daily lives.
A close look at how you decide what clothes to put on in the morning can help you understand how computers work.
How does one recover from the blowback of a Google search engine algorithm update?
We asked several executives and industry influencers what programmatic means to them. Their answers may surprise you. Watch now and find out what they say.
The ideas driving “algorithmic management” are hardly new.
Backtracking is an algorithmic technique that is often used to solve complicated coding problems. It considers searching in every possible combination for solving a computational problem. Coding interview problems can sometimes be solved with backtracking. We released a full course on the freeCodeCamp.org YouTube channel that will teach you
What is an algorithm? An algorithm is a system that search engines use to determine what website should rank higher than another one in the search results wh...
The frustration and quasi freedom of being an Uber driver.
The federal government is starting to bet big on artificial intelligence in the federal space, but agencies must be careful not to repeat IT mistakes of the past that have resulted in insecure legacy technology.
You can write great software without thinking about algorithms and data structures, so why take the time to learn them?
Companies use recommendation engines to tell you what to buy, read, and watch. But those algorithms aren’t your friends.
The rise of the gig economy has contributed to employers' growing interest in the use of algorithms to manage both employees and contractors.
As more companies and services use data to target individuals, those analytics could inadvertently amplify bias.
We live in a curated world. How does it affect you?
Algorithms can save lives, make things easier and conquer chaos. But experts worry about governmental and corporate control of the data, and how algorithms can produce biased results and worsen digital divides.