An ultrathin self-powered patch monitors pulse and blood pressure
Systems to monitor health in real time (starting from pulse and pressure) are getting closer thanks to the development of a new ultra-thin patch that feeds itself.
Systems to monitor health in real time (starting from pulse and pressure) are getting closer thanks to the development of a new ultra-thin patch that feeds itself.
A special concrete capable of conducting electricity and heat can transform home heating systems and the sustainability of buildings.
Gender differences in the human brain? A myth to dispel with the evidence of the data, according to neuroscientist Lise Eliot. Yet still hard to die.
NASA is developing a simulation that will take place in 5 days to assess the response of agencies and governments to the impact of an asteroid with the Earth.
A joint research by the Universities of Vienna and Utrecht discovers a light wave capable of producing the almost perfect invisibility of an object.
Five steel "cards" the size of a smartphone become a travel barbecue with a game of joints. Alpha Bonfire is ingenious and essential.
Clearing old forests to plant new trees is a sensational misconception, which risks further worsening the situation. A completely different approach is needed
A newly developed “smart” lantern allows you to generate light instantly and for a long time simply by filling it with ... salt water. Of all kinds.
The regenerative mechanism of the skin: a great mystery never fully understood. To date: A new study from the University of Manchester represents perhaps the definitive turning point.
Scottish startup Gravitricity announced this week a working scale prototype of a battery that uses gravity to store energy.
The combination of artificial intelligence and Big Data will change society as we know it - this could be even more true in healthcare. Here is an overview.
For everyone, rebuilding and progressing means adding, adding, adding, more and more things and bigger and bigger. But what if the future meant taking away?
From the first dating sites to Tinder it was a short step. With the advent of VR meetings, will the first appointment be moved to virtual reality?
The effects of nuclear tests, officially stopped for decades, are still present in nature and also end up on our table. A study in Nature Communications shows us this in all its evidence.
A robot bartender capable of mixing hundreds of combinations of liqueurs, soft drinks, beer and prosecco advances in orders and sales.
Facial recognition goes on amid a thousand controversies, but "nasal" recognition can help lost dogs: how? With a new dedicated app, NOSEiD.
Guaranteeing sociality and safety, the great challenge of the public transport of the future. The concept of a South Korean designer has interesting ideas.
A robot with a tail? So far loser idea: heavier and more expensive. Then the Carnegie researchers started studying a cat, the cheetah, and the game changed.
2020 was undoubtedly the worst year in the lives of many. But was it the absolute worst? A historian has evaluated carefully and found worse.
Amazon is opening a hairdressing shop in London to test augmented reality and other retail technologies
Artificial intelligence is constantly improving, and offers new perspectives to advertising: it will soon be possible to do product placement by adding new products to old films.