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LONDON Can you crack the code? That’s the question Britain’s electronic listening agency, GCHQ, is asking in an online campaign to find the next generation of cyber specialists.
For Oxford mathematician Marcus Du Sautoy, creativity is a mystery that AI could help unlock, leading humans to new heights of invention and innovation.
It's an escape room experience designed to test potential spies. In September, Ottawa's Escape Manor launched a new room called The Recruit. Watch the video to see how two CBCers fared.
Rob Ford's admission that he has used crack cocaine addresses an important issue in the video scandal that has been plaguing the mayor of Canada's largest city for months, but many other questions ...
Researchers now have a powerful new way to understand the types of brain cells that are affected in neurodegenerative diseases and to uncover connections between conditions such as Parkinson's, ...
The 1% Club returned on Saturday night with a fiendishly difficult final question featuring a hidden code that players had to crack.
The final question in the game is regarded to be so tough that on average only 1% of the UK population would get it right. However, some viewers were left baffled by Saturday's hidden code question.
Q104 Tries to Crack the Code A key element of an effective new media strategy is driving listeners to your Web site, and by extension, to your radio station.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre rises during Question Period on Sept. 25, in Ottawa. Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press ...
The Universal Service Fund (USF) has announced the winners of its Crack the Code competition, which ran in celebration of Youth and Technology Month this November. After a month of intense coding ...