The Future
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Lithium-ion batteries pose challenges for our transition toward renewable energy. Sodium-sulfur batteries might be a solution.
Despite their brief history, computers and AI have fundamentally changed what we see, what we know, and what we do.
Once water gets more than about 200 feet deep, building on the sea floor is out of the question.
Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.
If you gave me $400 and I gave you $3.15, would you consider yourself wealthier? That’s a financial analogy for the supposed fusion power “breakthrough.”
ChatGPT’s capabilities are astonishing.
De-extinction, if it is ever possible, will not be simple.
Synthetic milk is not a sci-fi fantasy; it already exists.
Bend it. Stretch it. Use it to conduct electricity.
Flexible organic circuits might someday hook right into your head.
The metaverse is inevitable because it is hardwired into our DNA.
Vanadium dioxide is a strange material that “remembers” information and when it was stored. This is akin to biological memory.
Population growth is driven by three changes: Fertility, mortality, and migration.
They are expected to be cheaper to build and even more reliable than today’s nuclear plants.
Inside the metaverse, your emotions and physical responses will be monitored, and AI will use that data to influence you in real time. Is that essentially mind control?
More than any other nation, Japan tends to feel comfortable with the idea of humanoid robots entering the home.
Quantum entanglement may remain spooky, but it has a very practical side.
We are not yet at the point where quantum communications can be deployed to secure the internet, but we might not be far off.
Short-hop regional flights could be running on batteries in a few years.
Meaningful pictures are assembled from meaningless noise.
Literature’s first utopia shows how far we’ve come.
The Metaverse could be the most dangerous tool of persuasion humanity has ever created.
Spaceguard shows that we can manage risks to the extinction of humanity — if only we put our mind to it.
We will become billions of people who share a single vast intellect.
From 260-year-old ciphers to the most recent Zodiac Killer solution, these unbreakable codes just needed time.
Scientists turn to nature to improve a ubiquitous building material.