MIT engineers have revealed a new gastric balloon design that can inflate on demand to make you feel full before meals.
Companies use formaldehyde for everything from making furniture to sterilizing food. Industry has repeatedly thwarted government efforts to limit its health risks.
Mark and the rest of his superfriends will fight dragons, new villains, and each other when Invincible returns in February.
Michelle Yeoh leads a team of Section 31 agents on a risky mission that kind of feels like other current Star Trek stuff.
Tactical Takedown gives the Ninja Turtles a cool new game genre to play with as they approach adulthood and fight the Foot.
The weird adventures at Lumon continue when Severance season two drops on January 17, 2025.
Prime Video's video game anthology series has its heart in the right place, but hasn't grown into its best self.
We're wasting too much of the clean energy we generate. Reservoirs and caverns can store excess solar and wind power.
The long-awaited 28 Years Later is slated to hit theaters on June 20, 2025.
AI is a plaque upon housing in America.
Teyonah Parris and Sam Richardson are the latest stars to be a part of whatever this Matchbox movie's gonna be.
The NanoGripper, made from a single piece of folded DNA, was shown to detect covid-19 and block infections.
The Acer Swift 16 AI with Lunar Lake has the display of a great laptop, but not the chassis or audio quality of one.
The Frontier supercomputer's calculations provide a new foundation for simulating the universe's conventional physics, but also the enigmatic behaviors and properties of dark matter.
A hat and sunglasses may not be enough to fool the most sophisticated facial recognition algorithms.
Whether you're at home or in the movie theater (at a dedicated singalong showing, we hope), here's what we're holding space for on Wicked's excellent songs.
The "government efficiency" project is drawing up a list of enemies.
You'll have to make up your own mythology for the movie's mysterious monsters.
Dolphins in the Gulf of Mexico tested positive for pharmaceuticals, as well as the opioid fentanyl.
A new CDC report details how splash pads have caused dozens of waterborne outbreaks and plenty of gastrointestinal illness since they became popular in the 1990s.