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Popular Science

Popular Science

Citizens Of The World's Edge

Not everyone believes our planet is a sphere. Welcome to flat Earth.

10+ min  |

Fall 2019
Popular Science

Popular Science

Starry Night, Done Right

IN THE BACKCOUNTRY, PEERING INTO THE MILKY WAY requires nothing more than waiting for nightfall, stepping outside, and looking up.

1 min  |

Fall 2019
Popular Science

Popular Science

Space-Time Continuum

IN THE 5 8 YEARS SINCE ALAN Shepard became the first American to orbit Earth, NASA has deemed just one watch tough enough to wear in open space.

1 min  |

Fall 2019
Popular Science

Popular Science

Dinner Is Preserved

THE FIRST AMERICANS IN SPACE SQUIRTED THEIR MEALS OUT of tubes.

1 min  |

Fall 2019
Popular Science

Popular Science

Glimpse Within

A SHARP PAIR OF EYES CAN PROBABLY SPOT SOMETHING AS wee as a paramecium swimming in a petri dish. Anything tinier requires the optical assist of lenses refracting light toward your peepers, making the itty-bitty look big. These microscopes offer increasingly powerful optics, giving you a towering perspective on hidden realms.

1 min  |

Fall 2019
PC Magazine

PC Magazine

Restoring Vision With Bionic Eyes Is No Longer Science Fiction

Bionic vision might sound like science fiction, but Dr. Michael Beyeler is working on just that.

6 min  |

August 2019
Techlife News

Techlife News

Health System Offers Free DNA Tests For 10,000 Floridians

An operator of hospitals and clinics began offering free DNA testing this week to 10,000 Floridians in a partnership with a private genomics company.

2 min  |

Techlife News #404
Techlife News

Techlife News

First Crispr Study Inside The Body To Start In US

Patients are about to be enrolled in the first study to test a gene-editing technique known as CRISPR inside the body to try to cure an inherited form of blindness.

2 min  |

Techlife News #404
Bloomberg Businessweek

Bloomberg Businessweek

Management Lessons From The Moon

Five things we can learn from how NASA put astronauts on the moon and brought them safely back 50 years ago.

8 min  |

July 22, 2019
AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

Before Moon Landing, Astronauts Learned Geology In Arizona

Before Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin knew they would be the first to walk on the moon, they took crash courses in geology at the Grand Canyon and a nearby impact crater that is the most well-preserved on Earth.

3 min  |

July 12, 2019
Techlife News

Techlife News

NASA Launches Orion Crew Capsule To Test Abort System

NASA conducted a full-stress launch abort test Tuesday for the Orion capsules designed to carry astronauts to the moon.

1 min  |

July 6, 2019
PC Magazine

PC Magazine

Bowers & Wilkins Formation Wedge: Beautiful And Pricey

Much has changed since Bowers & Wilkins released the iconic Zeppelin Wireless speaker in 2015—most notably, the company has come under new ownership. With its new Formation line of wireless speakers, B&W is still on top of its game. At $899.99, the Formation Wedge is even more expensive than the $700 Zeppelin was at launch. But like the Zeppelin, it pushes boundaries in the style department while putting out powerful, room-filling audio with some serious bass presence and excellent high-frequency clarity. Whether it’s worth the sky-high price, however, depends on how much you’re willing to pay for innovative design.

4 min  |

July 2019
PC Magazine

PC Magazine

Wacom Intuos Pro Creative Pen Tablet: For Both Pros And Amateurs

The Wacom Intuos Pro Creative Pen Tablet is a graphics tablet with a writing surface but no screen. It’s responsive to an included pen stylus and to gesture-based finger commands.

6 min  |

July 2019
AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

50 Years Later, The Moon Is Still Great For Business

Fifty years after humans first visited, businesses are still trying to make a buck off the moon.

3 min  |

June 28, 2019
AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

2 Russians Venture Into Open Space From Space Station

Two Russian crewmembers on the International Space Station ventured into open space Wednesday to conduct scientific research and help maintain the orbiting outpost.

1 min  |

May 31, 2019
Reader's Digest US

Reader's Digest US

Your Amazing Body!

Your fingerprints can predict some health issues. Looking at the sun can make you sneeze. You grow a new skeleton every ten years. Science hasn’t uncovered every mystery, but what it has discovered will blow your mind.

10+ min  |

June 2019
AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

NASA: Budget Boost ‘Good Start' To Put Astronauts On Moon

NASA’s chief said that the Trump administration’s proposed $1.6 billion budget boost is a “good start” for getting astronauts back on the moon within five years.

2 min  |

May 17, 2019
Popular Science

Popular Science

An Ecologist Maps Trees From 7,000 Feet

On the big island of Hawaii, a fungus called ceratocystis is murdering ‘ohii‘a trees—at least 1 million in the past eight years.

3 min  |

Summer 2019

Popular Science

Rise Of The Plastic Eaters

Scientists have new hope that nature might hold a solution for our most problematic polymers

10+ min  |

Summer 2019
Popular Science

Popular Science

What You Take With You

Death might be life’s natural and unavoidable conclusion, but humans have ensured that what happens to our bodies afterward is anything but.

2 min  |

Summer 2019
Popular Science

Popular Science

Where The Buffalo No Longer

DESPITE WHAT SEEMS LIKE A CONSERVATION SUCCESS STORY, OUR NATIONAL MAMMAL MIGHT STILL BE AT RISK.

10+ min  |

Summer 2019
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Marie Tharp - The Woman Who Mapped the Ocean Floor

The woman who mapped the ocean floor

5 min  |

May - June 2019
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Muse Science Magazine for Kids

A Live Map Of Everywhere On Earth: Creepy Or Cool?

Imagine turning on the GPS and seeing an image of your car from above.

2 min  |

May - June 2019
AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

Mars Lander Picks Up What's Likely 1st Detected Marsquake

NASA’s InSight lander has picked up a gentle rumble at Mars, believed to be the first marsquake ever detected.

1 min  |

AppleMagazine #391
Inc.

Inc.

How Synbio Will Save The World

Reprogramming microbes so they eat toxins and CO2? t’s not science fiction. It’s happening right now.

10+ min  |

May 2019
Metropolis Magazine

Metropolis Magazine

Science Says Light Brighter!

In Troy, New York, a leading research center studies the connection between light, color, and well-being.

4 min  |

April 2019
Metropolis Magazine

Metropolis Magazine

Connection Between Light, Color, And Well-being

In Troy, New York, a leading research center studies the connection between light, color, and well-being.

4 min  |

April 2019
AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

Nasa's Plan To Scoop Up Dirt From Asteroid Hits A Snag

NASA’s plan to scoop up dirt and gravel from an asteroid has hit a snag, but scientists say they can overcome it.

2 min  |

March 22, 2019
AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

Ocean Mission's Emergency Ascent Caused By Motor Burning Out

A drama in which a submersible made an emergency ascent from 250 meters (820 feet) below the Indian Ocean was caused by condensation burning out a small motor in the cockpit, the director of the British-led Nekton Mission said.

1 min  |

March 22, 2019
Techlife News

Techlife News

NASA's New Rocket Won't Be Ready For Moon Shot Next Year

NASA’s top official says the space agency’s new rocket won’t be ready for a moon shot next year.

1 min  |

March 16, 2019