Your weekly roundup of the best stories on health care, the climate crisis, genetic engineering, robotics, space, and more.
For all our science coverage, visit WIRED Science. |
Extreme weather threatens the investment value of many properties, but financing for climate mitigation efforts are only just getting going. |
A microbiologist explains how to not catch summertime germs at the barbecue, in the pool, or on the trail. |
Optical neural networks, which use photons instead of electrons, have advantages over traditional systems. They also face major obstacles. |
A new report contends that deep sea mining is not only an environmental risk, it's also not going to help meet the world's renewable energy needs. |
Players, aided by technology, are hitting the ball farther than ever, and courses can't keep getting longer—meaning operators are having to find smarter ways to keep the sport challenging. |
The famed futurist remains inhumanly optimistic about the world and his own fate—and thinks the singularity is minutes away. |
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| In The Singularity Is Nearer: When We Merge With AI, the spiritual sequel to his (in)famous first book, Ray Kurzweil doubles down on the promise of immortality. |
| To understand how to take a match-winning penalty, you've got to understand the physics behind the perfect kick. |
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Older iPhones might well be able to cope with Apple's AI, so why won't your $900 year-old model run it? Here's why. |
| CCTV cameras and AI are being combined to monitor crowds, detect bike thefts, and spot trespassers. |
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"We have people stealing all over the world." A digital sleuth named Bryan Hance has spent the past four years obsessively uncovering a bicycle-theft pipeline of astonishing scale, running from the US West Coast to Mexico. |
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