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Novel engine designs could help meet our growing demand for energy.
Gadgets aren’t made hackable enough to encourage young people to become innovators in computing.
Cataloguing the uniqueness of an individual immune system offers a new understanding of disease.
A startup prepares to manufacture electronics that conform to skin, arteries, and organs, allowing new surgical and measuring methods.
The well-known investor behind the likes of Twitter and Foursquare says venture capital funds have gotten too big.
The outcome of the 2012 campaign could have less to do with grand vision than with online data analytics and peer-to-peer voter targeting.
Will cheap natural gas give us an opportunity to reduce emissions while inventing new technologies? Or will we simply become addicted to another fossil fuel?
The group that oversees Internet domain names is shaking things up for no good reason. For details, check out www.mass.confusion.
Gold nanoparticles illuminate faint traces of disease
Gas-filled microspheres quickly reverse oxygen deprivation
An improved catalyst could lead to cheaper ways of producing hydrogen from water
Google’s image recognition software improves search
The fear that our devices are somehow altering our brains might seem exclusively modern. But in 1931, Technology Review published “Machine-Made Minds: The Psychological Effects of Modern Technology,” in which John Bakeless explored how machines had transformed the very nature of human thought. Here’s what he had to say: