These synthetic supervillains have no concept of the value of human life and only seek to conquer and destroy.
Use cases are emerging for induction charging, ambient IoT and midrange power transmission, and laser power beaming.
While solar energy and wind energy have grown into global powerhouses, one source remains untapped: the ocean. This video explores a bold new chapter in the pursuit of wave energy, where a single buoy ...
In this week’s edition of The Prototype, we look at a startup building giant robot boats, manipulating DNA with electricity ...
Blackpool's 10th annual festival of light gets under way later promising 18 nights of "inspiration and creativity" and ...
Opinion: Even if you never use it, you'll be paying for it thanks to datacenters' never-ending hunger for electricity ...
NASA’s plans to build a nuclear reactor on the Moon has raised questions about the US space strategy and renewed curiosity ...
Some of these villains are so powerful that they could alone defeat all the X-Men and, on multiple occasions, have threatened to wipe out all of humanity. With villains like these, it’s a miracle that ...
In China, the longest ultrahigh-voltage power line stretches more than 2,000 miles from the far northwest to the populous ...
Those who predict that superintelligence will destroy humanity serve the same interests as those who believe that it will ...
The new sites will boost Stargate’s planned capacity to nearly 7 gigawatts—about equal to the output of seven large nuclear ...
Sceptics term the Artemis mission too ambitious and risky but space exploration has led to surprising advances in science and engineering ...