Celebrations in churches and corporate meetings: VR begins to take hold
The churches are getting closer and closer to virtual reality to unite the faithful from all over the world. Here are their first, unusual steps.
The churches are getting closer and closer to virtual reality to unite the faithful from all over the world. Here are their first, unusual steps.
A "robot lawyer" equipped with artificial intelligence can go where humans cannot. How close are we to such a thing?
If the fans don't go to the stadium, the stadium goes to the fans. Or thereabouts. The Olympic test bed for 5g and 6g technologies.
Growing participation, astronomical revenues and an attractive force. For esports as an Olympic discipline, there is a smell of inevitability.
After the doubts about the Salone del Mobile in Milan, the Venice Biennale also comes to terms with Covid, amidst defections and hopes of reopening.
Virtual reality has imposed itself strongly from 2000 onwards: how will it evolve according to the current pace? Towards an experience indistinguishable from reality
An unusual project aims to create an artificial hill in central London: a new point of view in the heart of the city
Digital health jumped at least 5 years with the pandemic. Here are the solutions and technologies sketched in 2020: from 2021 onwards will they boom or flop?
Several space missions in 2020 suffered delays. In 2021 the calendar is full of events: someone will go swimmingly, someone else who knows. Here they are.
Urban greening, work reintegration, environment and innovation: in other words, Solarpunk. Here is a poster example of vertical gardens for Mexico City.
The trends in catering have experienced a sharp change in 2020. 2021 will see them change again, adapt and improve again.
Business success depends on the ability to contribute to humanity's long-term resilience - here's why.
One of the countries most affected and the one in which marriage is most popular. The sector suffers from Covid-19 and runs to adapt, but will technology be enough to save the wedding?
Jeffrey Schlegelmilch is the director of the Columbia University structure that deals with "predicting and preventing" end-of-the-world megadisasters.
A nasal spray with substances being studied to treat HIV could stop the coronavirus from replicating at its entry points into the body: the nose and mouth.
Covid-19 could be the most bitter medicine that in the end, after (much) suffering, perhaps it will give us a better world. Here because.
Between a cure and a vaccine lies the middle ground of a "temporary defense". DARPA is funding efforts to create a coronavirus shield to slow down infections while waiting for a definitive remedy.
For many, the stress of the coronavirus will turn into a diagnosable mental health problem. Here are dimensions of the problem and possible solutions.
The search for a zero patient is a crucial necessity to stem the coronavirus and prevent its possible evolutions. And the history of the Wuhan market has lost its foundation.
This is the question of the century: when will we return to normal? Here are all the scenarios (and sub-scenarios) of the Coronavirus pandemic.
Utrecht University is the first in the world to have found an antibody that stops the coronavirus. The world suspended between joy and caution.