Universal's new horror film starring Scream 's Melissa Barrera and Godzilla x Kong 's Dan Stevens opens April 19.
NASA's Juno spacecraft saw molten rock—and a mountain straight out of Star Wars —on Jupiter's moon Io.
Dogecoin, Ether, and other cryptocurrencies investors should keep an eye on as the mining reward for Bitcoin gets cut in half.
The Solar Sail mission will launch on April 23 on board Rocket Lab's Electron vehicle.
After going missing from Gene Roddenberry's collection half a century ago, the very first model of the Starship Enterprise is back in his family's hands.
TikTok is a place where earnest self-promotion goes to die. Chinese glycine producer Donghua Jinlong found that out the hard way.
None of them are located in Africa or South America. Only one is in the western hemisphere.
"That's the only thing I've done that's different. Then I pulled it in the garage, and nothing."
Despite what you've heard, gold-plated connectors don't produce better sound.
Megan Shipman and Natalie Van Sistine dish on playing Anya and Yor and keeping up with the anime's sheer ridiculous energy.
In "Face the Strange," Discovery returns to a Trek trope it mastered in its first season to deliver a clever, thoughtful reflection on how far it's come.
DARPA's abortive attempt to build Skynet from 1983-1993 has gotten a second chance.
How does a light pole cause a 911 outage in multiple states? The tech details are still unclear.
Artist Deb JJ Lee has created a stunning poster for Denis Villeneuve's Dune: Part One.
The organization's latest investigation suggests that 20% of commonly sold fruits and vegetables contain unsafe levels of pesticides.
Trap , Shyamalan's new film starring Josh Hartnett, is out August 9.
The Resident Evil star and Dreamgirls Oscar winner team up in a new sci-fi film.
Vertebrae found in a mine in India could belong to a serpent over twice as big as any modern snake.
The fourth season, now starring Liam Hemsworth as Geralt of Rivia, is currently in production.
They're calling it “bacterial vampirism." E. coli and other species crave human blood serum as a food source, a recent experiment revealed.