The agency's Innovative Advanced Concepts program seeks out futuristic ideas that could become real technology.
A select cohort of Democratic representatives are using TikTok to build their brands, share dumb memes, and defend the app against an impending ban.
Dave Filoni broke the massive casting at Star Wars Celebration with a special teaser.
Pentagon and NATO war plans are said to have leaked online yesterday. More followed today. But are they legit or is someone messing with us?
Honor Among Thieves was great, but there’s still so much of the world of D&D left to explore.
Advertising executives fear unhinged antics from Musk at an upcoming conference could sully their brands.
I started testing the Bird Buddy. Did you know birds are living their own soap opera?
“Surrender” sets the stage for Picard ’s endgame with a messy, emotional clearing of the board.
Canada says this is the first known case of its kind in the country.
An errant move of the mouse in an Armageddon-style showdown cost longtime champion Magnus Carlsen the win.
A professor who earns hundreds of thousands of dollars from ConocoPhillips used her connections to facilitate a meeting with the SEC.
iPhone owners in search of their missing devices were directed to the wrong address thanks to a Find My fluke.
The pen-testing tool that's gained popularity on TikTok has a lot of uses, but Amazon has decided to no longer promote it.
Star Wars has had a sloppy history with its robotic beings, allegorically speaking, but the Disney+ show’s clumsy approach to the matter makes things worse.
Dude With Sign copyrighted several Instagram photos posted in 2022, one of which was allegedly used on the JEM Organics Instagram page.
The world of Keanu Reeves' John Wick is built into the storytelling, and it does not give the audience any more than it needs.
Fear not, there's lots of bounties from the films and Disney+ series to be found online and in stores!
The #SaveVERITAS effort is pushing a 2029 launch date for the Venus orbiter, which is delayed indefinitely by problems at NASA.
Thirty years ago, the U.S. government first floated the idea of a backdoor into public-key encryption, an idea it's been obsessed with ever since.
Exploded stellar remnants 11,000 light-years away appear much more vivid in a new Webb telescope image.