DARPA tests a smart camera that mimics the human brain
DARPA is developing a "neuromorphic" camera, equipped with features that are unthinkable today. The “all-seeing” eye is rapidly approaching.
DARPA is developing a "neuromorphic" camera, equipped with features that are unthinkable today. The “all-seeing” eye is rapidly approaching.
An Israeli company patents an engineered sugar that can replace traditional sugar and all the sweeteners that have emerged in recent years.
Venice also suffers damage from the boats that pass through it, and in ways that you may not consider. This electric hydrofoil can solve the problem.
A new editing technique called RLR can surpass CRISPR results and open up even more important breakthroughs in genetics.
There is an elite of workers who have already experienced a return to work closer to home, to family, to nature. Digital nomads can tell us a lot about the future that is preparing in the world of work.
One technology leverages machine learning (and small data sets to adapt to skin differences) to detect vital signs remotely.
Economy, environment and future always intersect. Rubber is a real crossroads: an extraordinary material that is running out, and can cause an earthquake.
A new layer inside the Earth's core shows us new scenarios on its formation and on the geological phenomena taking place before man arrived.
An Austrian company develops the world's largest foldable MicroLED TV. And it is in everything, literally. Even in the price.
Today, Nevada announces a controversial bill to allow tech companies to create small “local governments.”
The results are surprising: a drug can replace weight reduction surgery. It has entered phase III
Aortic insufficiency now leads to heart transplant. But tomorrow? An EPFL team in Switzerland creates an artificial aorta that supports the heart.
A new method produces a material that can be inserted directly into the body for 3D printing of bone replacements.
Food technology, whether it happens or not, is capable of completely replacing animal consumption by 2035. Here are the principles behind this assumption.
Urban greening, work reintegration, environment and innovation: in other words, Solarpunk. Here is a poster example of vertical gardens for Mexico City.
By studying brain scans, a Spanish team finds new clues that the sense of self arises from a part of us that remains unchanging.
It may be the forced "stop", but this year has been quite rich in futuristic technologies. Here is a roundup of 8 of the most interesting.
An amazing soft proboscis robot called a grabber can grab oddly shaped and much heavier objects using a fine grip.
Artificial intelligence already influences many parts of modern life. Simple formulas and complex AI systems work without us even knowing it. This is already the case with video games and has been for decades. Game developers have used forms of “artificial intelligence” in many ways since the advent of this technology. Pathfinding is used to find a way from point A and point B like ghosts in Pac-Man. Finite state machines transform the ghosts themselves from chasers to… Read more
The great pause of the pandemic was unique. For the first time we understood that history can stop and be addressed.
A research team has developed electronic skin that reacts to pain just like human skin.