![]() |
by Antonio Regalado on (#6JV8B)
This article first appeared in The Checkup, MIT Technology Review's weekly biotech newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Thursday, and read articles like this first, sign up here. A ruling by the Alabama Supreme Court last week that frozen embryos stored in labs count as children is sending shock waves" through the fertility...
|
MIT Technology Review
Link | https://www.technologyreview.com/ |
Feed | https://www.technologyreview.com/stories.rss |
Updated | 2025-04-05 00:17 |
![]() |
by Anya Kamenetz on (#6JV6J)
The other day some preschoolers were pretending to be one of their favorite Sesame Street characters, a baby goat named Ma'zooza who likes round things. They played with tomatoes-counting up to five, hiding one, and putting it back. A totally ordinary moment exploring shapes, numbers, and imagination. Except this version of Sesame Street-called Ahlan Simsim...
|
![]() |
by Charlotte Jee on (#6JTD8)
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. How tracking animal movement may save the planet Animals have long been able to offer unique insights about the natural world around us, acting as organic sensors picking up phenomena invisible to humans....
|
![]() |
by Antonio Regalado on (#6JTB1)
This spring I am looking forward to growing some biotech in my backyard for the first time. It's possible because of startups that have started selling genetically engineered plants directly to consumers, including a bright-purple tomato and a petunia that glows in the dark. This week, for $73, I ordered both by pressing a few...
|
![]() |
by Matthew Ponsford on (#6JT8E)
There was something strange about the way the sharks were moving between the islands of the Bahamas. Tiger sharks tend to hug the shoreline, explains marine biologist Austin Gallagher, but when he began tagging the 1,000-pound animals with satellite transmitters in 2016, he discovered that these predators turned away from it, toward two ancient underwater...
|
![]() |
by James O'Donnell on (#6JT8D)
An AI-trained surgical robot that can make a few stitches on its own is a small step toward systems that can aid surgeons with such repetitive tasks. A video taken by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, shows the two-armed robot completing six stitches in a row on a simple wound in imitation skin,...
|
![]() |
by Casey Crownhart on (#6JT8F)
This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review's weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here. For someone who does not own or drive a car, I sure do have a lot of thoughts about them. I spend an inordinate amount of time thinking about transportation in general,...
|
![]() |
by MIT Technology Review Insights on (#6JSHQ)
With more than 5,000 branches across 48 states and 80 million customers, each with its own unique requirements to satisfy its customers' financial needs, a clear data strategy is key for JPMorgan Chase. According to Mark Birkhead, firm-wide chief data officer at JPMorgan Chase, data analytics is the oxygen that breathes life into the firm...
|
![]() |
by Charlotte Jee on (#6JSF1)
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. Meet the divers trying to figure out how deep humans can go Two hundred thirty meters into one of the deepest underwater caves on Earth, Richard Harry" Harris knew that not far ahead...
|
![]() |
by Zeyi Yang on (#6JSCZ)
This story first appeared in China Report, MIT Technology Review's newsletter about technology in China.Sign upto receive it in your inbox every Tuesday. The first time I heard the term virtual power plants," I was reporting on how extreme heat waves in 2022 had overwhelmed the Chinese grid and led the government to restrict electric-vehicle...
|
![]() |
by Samantha Schuyler on (#6JSB9)
Two hundred thirty meters into one of the deepest underwater caves on Earth, Richard Harry" Harris knew that not far ahead of him was a 15-meter drop leading to a place no human being had seen before. Getting there had taken two helicopters, three weeks of test dives, two tons of equipment, and hard work...
|
by Deepak Bharadwaj on (#6JRRE)
At some point over the last two decades, productivity applications enabled humans (and machines!) to create information at the speed of digital-faster than any person could possibly consume or understand it. Modern inboxes and document folders are filled with information: digital haystacks with needles of insight that too often remain undiscovered. Generative AI is an...
![]() |
by Charlotte Jee on (#6JRJZ)
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. Inside the hunt for new physics at the world's largest particle collider In 2012, using data from CERN's Large Hadron Collider, researchers discovered a particle called the Higgs boson. In the process, they...
|
![]() |
by Melissa Heikkilä on (#6JRNC)
Gary Marcus meets me outside the post office of Vancouver's Granville Island wearing neon-coral sneakers and a blue Arc'teryx jacket. I'm in town for a family thing, and Marcus has lived in the city since 2018, after 20 years in New York City. I just find it to be paradise," he tells me, as I...
|
![]() |
by Dan Garisto on (#6JRGX)
In 1977, Ray and Charles Eames released a remarkable film that, over the course of just nine minutes, spanned the limits of human knowledge. Powers of Ten begins with an overhead shot of a man on a picnic blanket inside a one-square-meter frame. The camera pans out: 10, then 100 meters, then a kilometer, and...
|
![]() |
by Charlotte Jee on (#6JQYB)
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. The search for extraterrestrial life is targeting Jupiter's icy moon Europa Europa, Jupiter's fourth-largest moon, is nothing like ours. Its surface is a vast saltwater ocean, encased in a blanket of cracked ice,...
|
![]() |
by Stephen Ornes on (#6JQSD)
We've known of Europa's existence for more than four centuries, but for most of that time, Jupiter's fourth-largest moon was just a pinprick of light in our telescopes-a bright and curious companion to the solar system's resident giant. Over the last few decades, however, as astronomers have scrutinized it through telescopes and six spacecraft have...
|
![]() |
by MIT Technology Review on (#6JPDZ)
Recorded on February 15, 2024 Building a Cleaner Future: Better Batteries and Their Materials Speakers: Casey Crownhart, Climate reporter, David Rotman, Editor at large, James Temple, Sr Editor of Climate & Energy Electric vehicles are taking to the roads like never before, and a grid with a growing share of renewables like wind and solar...
|
![]() |
by Abdullahi Tsanni on (#6JP84)
On a warm, sunny day in Montevideo, Uruguay, the air is smogless and crisp. Inside a highly secured facility at the National Institute of Agricultural Research (INIA) are a sophisticated gene gun, giant microscopes, and tens of thousands of gene-edited flies, their bright blue wings fluttering against the walls of their small, white, netted cages....
|
![]() |
by Charlotte Jee on (#6JP5V)
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. OpenAI teases an amazing new generative video model called Sora OpenAI has built a striking new generative video model called Sora that can take a short text description and turn it into a...
|
![]() |
by Cassandra Willyard on (#6JP3S)
This article first appeared in The Checkup, MIT Technology Review's weekly biotech newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Thursday, and read articles like this first,sign up here. Lynn Cole had a blood infection she couldn't shake. For years, she was in and out of the hospital. Each time antibiotics would force the infection...
|
![]() |
by Will Douglas Heaven on (#6JNM3)
OpenAI has built a striking new generative video model called Sora that can take a short text description and turn it into a detailed, high-definition film clip up to a minute long. Based on four sample videos that OpenAI shared with MIT Technology Review ahead of today's announcement, the San Francisco-based firm has pushed the...
|
![]() |
by MIT Technology Review Insights on (#6JNAK)
The sudden appearance of application-ready generative AI tools over the last year has confronted us with challenging social and ethical questions. Visions of how this technology could deeply alter the ways we work, learn, and live have also accelerated conversations-and breathless media headlines-about how and whether these technologies can be responsibly used. Responsible technology use,...
|
![]() |
by James O'Donnell on (#6JNAJ)
Google DeepMind today launched the next generation of its powerful artificial-intelligence model Gemini, which has an enhanced ability to work with large amounts of video, text, and images. It's an advancement from the three versions of Gemini 1.0 that Google announced back in December, ranging in size and complexity from Nano to Pro to Ultra....
|
![]() |
by Charlotte Jee on (#6JNAM)
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. Three things to love about batteries It's hard to pick favorites when it comes to climate technologies. Really, anything that helps us get closer to tackling climate change is worth writing about, both...
|
![]() |
by Casey Crownhart on (#6JN5T)
This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review's weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here. I wouldn't exactly say I have favorites when it comes to climate technologies. Anything that could help us get closer to tackling climate change is worth writing about, both to share the...
|
![]() |
by MIT Technology Review Insights on (#6JMFE)
Whether your favorite condiment is Heinz ketchup or your preferred spread for your bagel is Philadelphia cream cheese, ensuring that all customers have access to their preferred products at the right place, at the right price, and at the right time requires careful supply chain organization and distribution. Amid the proliferation of e-commerce and shifting...
|
![]() |
by Charlotte Jee on (#6JMCA)
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. How the internet pushed China's New Year red packet tradition to the extreme If you ask any child in China what's the most exciting thing about the Lunar New Year, they are likely...
|
![]() |
by James O'Donnell on (#6JMA8)
A methane-measuring satellite will launch in March that aims to use Google's AI to quantify, map, and reduce leaks. The mission is part of a collaboration with the nonprofit Environmental Defense Fund, and the result, they say, will be the most detailed portrait yet of methane emissions. It should help to identify where the worst...
|
![]() |
by Casey Crownhart on (#6JM7T)
The key to building less-expensive batteries that could extend the range of EVs might lie in a cheap, abundant material: sulfur. Addressing climate change is going to require a whole lot of batteries, both to drive an increasingly electric fleet of vehicles and to store renewable power on the grid. Today, lithium-ion batteries are the...
|
![]() |
by Zeyi Yang on (#6JM7V)
This story first appeared in China Report, MIT Technology Review's newsletter about technology in China.Sign upto receive it in your inbox every Tuesday. If you ask any child in China what's the most exciting thing about welcoming another year, they are likely to answer: the red packets. It's a festive tradition: During the holidays, people...
|
![]() |
by Charlotte Jee on (#6JKF4)
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. How environmental DNA is giving scientists a new way to understand our world Environmental DNA is a relatively inexpensive, widespread, potentially automated way to observe the diversity and distribution of life. Unlike previous...
|
![]() |
by Melissa Heikkilä on (#6JKA4)
This story originally appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter on AI. To get stories like this in your inbox first, sign up here. This week I am happy to bring you some encouraging news from the world of AI. Following the depressingTaylor Swift deepfake porn scandaland the proliferation of political deepfakes, such asAI-generated robocalls...
|
![]() |
by Peter Andrey Smith on (#6JKA5)
In the late 1980s, at a federal research facility in Pensacola, Florida, Tamar Barkay used mud in a way that proved revolutionary in a manner she could never have imagined at the time: a crude version of a technique that is now shaking up many scientific fields. Barkay had collected several samples of mud -...
|
![]() |
by Charlotte Jee on (#6JJHZ)
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. Join us at EmTech Digital Europe in London For over ten years, academics, policymakers, and business and technology leaders have gathered at our EmTech Digital event in Silicon Valley and on the MIT...
|
![]() |
by Casey Crownhart on (#6JJDK)
Heat pumps are still a hot technology, though sales in the US, one of the world's largest markets, fell in 2023. Even with the drop, the appliances beat out gas furnaces for the second year in a row and saw their overall market share increase compared to furnaces, sales of which also fell last year....
|
![]() |
by Rhiannon Williams on (#6JGK8)
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. Why engineers are working to build better pulse oximeters Visit any health-care facility, and one of the first things they'll do is clip a pulse oximeter to your finger. These devices, which track...
|
![]() |
by Cassandra Willyard on (#6JGH9)
This article first appeared in The Checkup, MIT Technology Review's weekly biotech newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Thursday, and read articles like this first,sign up here. Visit any health-care facility, and one of the first things they'll do is clip a pulse oximeter to your finger. These devices, which track heart rate...
|
![]() |
by Rhiannon Williams on (#6JFM1)
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. Google's Gemini is now in everything. Here's how you can try it out. The news: In the biggest mass-market AI launch yet, Google is rolling out Gemini, its family of large language models,...
|
![]() |
by Will Douglas Heaven on (#6JFM2)
In the biggest mass-market AI launch yet, Google is rolling out Gemini, its family of large language models, across almost all its products, from Android to the iOS Google app to Gmail to Docs and more. You can now get your hands on Gemini Ultra, the most powerful version of the model, for the first...
|
![]() |
by Casey Crownhart on (#6JFHA)
This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review's weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here. It must be tough to be a solar panel. They're consistently exposed to sun, heat, and humidity-and the panels installed today are expected to last 30 years or more. But how can...
|
![]() |
by MIT Technology Review Insights on (#6JES3)
According to UN climate experts, 2023 was the warmest year on record. This puts the heat squarely on companies to accelerate their sustainability efforts. It's quite clear that the sense of urgency is increasing," says Jonas Bohlin, chief product officer for environmental, social, and governance (ESG) platform provider Position Green. That pressure is coming from...
|
![]() |
by June Kim on (#6JES2)
MIT Technology Review Explains: Let our writers untangle the complex, messy world of technology to help you understand what's coming next. You can read more from the series here. For more than a century, the prevalent image of power plants has been characterized by towering smokestacks, endless coal trains, and loud spinning turbines. But the...
|
![]() |
by Rhiannon Williams on (#6JEP9)
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. Why China is betting big on chiplets For the past couple of years, US sanctions have had the Chinese semiconductor industry locked in a stranglehold. Chinese companies can still manufacture chips for today's...
|
![]() |
by Zeyi Yang on (#6JEHK)
This story first appeared in China Report, MIT Technology Review's newsletter about technology in China.Sign upto receive it in your inbox every Tuesday. Last month, MIT Technology Review unveiled our pick for 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2024. These are the technological advancements that we believe will change our lives today or sometime in the future....
|
![]() |
by Zeyi Yang on (#6JDY1)
For the past couple of years, US sanctions have had the Chinese semiconductor industry locked in a stranglehold. While Chinese companies can still manufacture chips for today's uses, they are not allowed to import certain chipmaking technologies, making it almost impossible for them to produce more advanced products. There is a workaround, however. A relatively...
|
![]() |
by MIT Technology Review Insights on (#6JDTT)
In 2015, JPMorgan Chase embarked on a journey to build a more secure and open wholesale banking. For chief technology officer at Onyx by J.P.Morgan, Suresh Shetty, investing in blockchain, a distributed ledger technology in its early days, was about ubiquity. We actually weighted ubiquity in terms of who can use the technology, who was...
|
![]() |
by Rhiannon Williams on (#6JDQT)
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. A chatbot helped more people access mental-health services The news: An AI chatbot helped increase the number of patients referred for mental-health services through England's National Health Service (NHS), particularly among underrepresented groups...
|
![]() |
by Melissa Heikkilä on (#6JDK0)
This story originally appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter on AI. To get stories like this in your inbox first, sign up here. Human babies are fascinating creatures. Despite being completely dependent on their parents for a long time, they can do some amazing stuff. Babies have an innate understanding of the physics of...
|
![]() |
by Arvind P. Ravikumar on (#6JDK1)
Late last month, the Biden administration announced it's suspending permit applications for exporting liquefied natural gas (LNG) as it reevaluates the economic, environmental, and climate impacts of the fuel. LNG is produced by cooling natural gas into a liquid state, making it easier to store and ship to overseas markets. Natural gas itself has been...
|