The Download: This startup wants to kick-start a molecular electronics revival
This is today's edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology.
This startup wants to kick-start a molecular electronics revivalIn 2000, many hoped molecular electronics (using single molecules to create circuits and components) would leapfrog silicon-based circuitry to allow computer chips to keep getting denser and more powerful.
That vision was short-lived. Five years later, flash had cornered the memory market, silicon continued to dominate chip technology, and the well-funded molecular electronics field nearly collapsed.
Now, the San Diego-based startup Roswell Biotechnologies hopes to give molecular electronics a second life. Instead of taking aim at computing circuitry, Roswell wants to integrate single molecules into electronic biosensor circuits, an approach it hopes will soon provide a cheap and convenient way to detect viruses, pick up on environmental toxins, and evaluate the effects of pharmaceuticals in real time. Read the full story.
-Karmela Padavic-Callaghan
The must-readsI've combed the internet to find you today's most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.
1 Facebook financed a secretive smear campaign against TikTok
This reveals just how rattled Meta really is. (WP $)
+ Facebook seems to be incapable of learning from its many mistakes. (Platformer $)
+ There's no 911 in the metaverse. (The Information $)
2 Apple and Meta were tricked by hackers masquerading as law enforcement
One of the perpetrators is believed to be the teenage Lapsus$ mastermind. (Bloomberg $)
+ Nvidia is still refusing to cave to pro-crypto hackers holding it ransom. (Slate $)
3 Blaming tech for mental health problems misses the bigger picture
Humans get depressed even when we don't have phones in our hands. (Wired $)
+ Please, help me stop doomscrolling. (Wired $)
+ People are swapping drinking for microdosing. (Vox)
4 More than half of Americans may have never had covid
Researchers are increasingly keen to study the never covid' cohort for immunity clues. (Bloomberg $)
+ Covid.gov has launched. Better late than never? (NPR)
5 El Salvador is courting crypto whales" for new bitcoin-backed bonds
After most big international investors shunned them. (FT $)
6 Russia's answer to Instagram is... not great
It may look like Instagram, but Instagram it ain't. (The Guardian)
+ Russian influencers aren't convinced they'll be able to make money on it, either. (Insider $)
+ Meanwhile, Instagram is still pushing reluctant creators to make Reels. (Vox)
+ ...And they're mostly ripped off from TikTok anyway. (Vox)
7 A researcher who laid the foundations for supercomputers has won the Turing Award
Dr Jack Dongarra's code paved the way for complex algorithms. (NYT $)
8 Why is everyone acting so weird right now?
Spoiler: it's not just because of the pandemic. (The Atlantic $)
9 What's it's like going down the strangest Wikipedia rabbit holes
Why did the chicken cross Yunnan Provincial Road 214? It's time to find out. (NYT $)
+ How a Wikipedia joke about the name of the Pringles mascot became fact. (The Guardian)
10 Worms are taking over
And they're surprisingly destructive. (Nat Geo)
+ There are hundreds of mammal species yet to be discovered. (The Guardian)
I cannot shoot anything, but I can fight with a keyboard and mouse."
-Ukrainian hacker Danylo tells CNN why he's been going after a Russian ransomware gang.
We can still have nice thingsA place for comfort, fun and distraction in these weird times. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or tweet 'em at me.)
+ The way these flocks of sheep move is oddly soothing.
+ When Megan Thee Stallion meets Metallica.
+ British comic The Beano's explanation of NFTs is...pretty accurate.
+ I respect dumbphones, even if muggers don't.
+ A rundown of Bruce Willis' best performances-not all of them are cops.
+ Check out the new House of the Dragon images ahead of its August 21 pilot.
+ Inevitably, Elden Ring players are turning their characters into Shrek.