The 2003 novel by the author of the acclaimed Three-Body Problem will be simultaneously produced in English and Chinese.
A new analysis puts some scary numbers on our global plastic problem.
States have decided to free themselves from clock chaos. They may not. Here is why.
An exotic wild cat found with cocaine in its system in Cincinnati was rescued in January and is now safe and sound at the local zoo.
The latest Gundam series was one of the best animated shows of 2022, and it's back for more robot action and sapphic vibes.
Russia may expedite launch of its next ISS crew mission after saying a manufacturing defect, not a micrometeorite, may have caused two recent coolant leaks.
The Last of Us may be more real than you think. The spread of fungal pathogens in humans and other species are a disaster waiting to happen.
A room-temperature superconductor would revolutionize electricity, but this week's big announcement has been met with some skepticism.
Lego celebrates Mar10 day with a Super Mario baddie who first appeared 17 years ago.
HP customers complain that their perfectly good printers are now rejecting perfectly good third-party ink.
Sumplete's human co-creator, Daniel Tait, is unhappy that OpenAI’s chatbot seemed completely sure that it had made a new game.
The Wednesday actor can't seem to escape director Tim Burton's orbit.
The pioneering project cuts cement from the recipe and replaces it with industrial waste and carbon dioxide captured from the atmosphere.
Plus, a new sequel to Ready or Not could be on the way.
The company confirmed it was ‘exploring’ a standalone text-sharing app, one that could be foisted upon already beleaguered Instagram users.
The resilient format raked in $1.2 billion in 2022, outselling CDs by nearly 8 million units.
D&D historian Ben Riggs examines what happened when the game's publisher tried to change its open gaming license.
This week, 23 more activists in the ongoing Atlanta, Georgia struggle now face domestic terrorism charges, and the cops' reasoning seems especially thin.
Music videos and AI-generated songs show the rapid, strange, ambitious, and at times creepy evolution of deepfake technology.
Latvia has the highest drunk driving rate in all of Europe. Under a new law, the Latvian government can seize the cars of drunk drivers and sell or donate them.