Quantcast
Channel: Stuart Fox | Popular Science
Browsing all 2573 articles
Browse latest View live

US Troops In Afghanistan to Get Sensors That See Through Walls

As if aerial robots and bionic limbs didn’t make the Army seem futuristic enough, it looks like another hallmark of sci-fi, X-ray vision, will ship off to Afghanistan later this year. The device in...

View Article


Ion Engines Will Make Little CubeSats Steerable

The DIY miniature satellites known as CubeSats have a lot going for them. They’re cheap, they’re easy to program, and they’re small. That last benefit also adds a downside, in that the CubeSats are...

View Article


Marine Corps’ Unmanned Programmable Copter Passes First Major Test

The difficulty of supplying remote outposts across rugged terrain has contributed to many of the deadliest moments in the Afghan War, by preventing the delivery of weapons and ammo to engaged...

View Article

Miniature Sensor Perpetually Charges Self Using Environmental Energy

Scientistsu, engineers, and doctors yearn for tiny sensors to record a vast array of events in the world’s many hard-to-reach places. And so far, the tradeoff between battery life and size has...

View Article

IBM Develops Higher-Efficiency Solar Cells Using Non-Rare Materials

While IBM is primarily known for its information technology products, the company has recently begun expanding into the alternative energy market. So far, that change has mainly taken the form of a...

View Article


Nanofiber Lamps Are More Efficient Than Incandescent Bulbs, Eco-Friendlier...

For those who want to start saving the planet at home, lighting presents a vexing paradox. While incandescent bulbs are wildly inefficient, compact fluorescent bulbs contain hazardous chemicals. With...

View Article

Iran Loads Up On High-Tech Chinese Riot-Control Trucks

Today marks the 31st anniversary of the Islamic Revolution in Iran. And in anticipation of Green Movement protests today, Iran has a new fleet of scary, high-tech riot-control trucks. Made in China,...

View Article

Windows Phone Series 7 Takes Aim at iPhone, Android

Gadget lovers are nothing if not fickle, always ditching their older tech for pretty young things. And recently, all the attention on the iPhone and Google’s Android OS has made Microsoft seem a bit...

View Article


Changing the Language of DNA: Altered Cells Taught To Read 4-Base-Pair Codons

Much like your four-year-old nephew, RNA can only read three-letter combinations. Called codons, these three DNA-base-pair groups form the phrases that RNA translates into the 21 amino acids that...

View Article


Breakthrough Danish Enzymes to Lower Biofuel Price Point To Petroleum Levels

Producing a biofuel cheap enough to compete at the pump with oil has remained as elusive as a ghost on the walls of Elsinore castle. But this week, two Danish companies announced they had developed...

View Article

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

Google Goggles Could Add Optical Character Recognition and Real-Time...

The Google Goggles Android app can already copy business cards directly into the address book and provide augmented reality overlays for restaurants. But now, Google has unveiled a prototype of a...

View Article

Video: Half-Kilometer-Long Explosive Whip Clears IEDs The Explode-y Way

Clearing battlefield obstacles has pitted trapper against sapper since Roman times. But whereas the minefields and dragon teeth of previous conflicts merely slowed advancing armies, the IEDs favored...

View Article

Campbell’s Uses Neuromarketing To Design New Soup Can Labels

For over a hundred years, Campbell’s Soup cans have sported the iconic label inspired by Cornell’s football uniform and made famous by Andy Warhol. Now, thanks to market research that measured...

View Article


Next for NASA: Inflatable Space Stations, In-Orbit Refueling, Space UAVs and...

As we’ve been hearing for months, 2010 is going to be a year of belt-tightening for NASA. But now, with the release of the new NASA budget, we can see that even with substantially less money, NASA...

View Article

NASA Tests Handy-Man Space Robots For Orbital Repairs

With cuts in the manned space program and the impending retirement of the Space Shuttle, NASA will soon face the need to repair satellites without the ability to send any astronauts to do it....

View Article


Antarctic Collision Snaps Rhode-Island-Sized Iceberg Off Glacier

This month, an iceberg roughly the size of Luxembourg slammed into an Antarctic glacier known as the Mertz Ice Tongue. Then, last week, a Rhode Island-sized section of the Mertz Ice Tongue finally...

View Article

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

MIT Stumbles on a Way to Print Flexible Coatings Made of Micromachines

Microelectromechanical devices (MEMS) have the potential to enable a wide range of nanomachines. Unfortunately, MEMS suffer from the critical drawbacks of an expensive manufacturing process, a high...

View Article


Lab Rats’ Pampered Lifestyles Found to Skew Research Results

Sure, the maze gets boring every so often. And yeah, there’s not much variety in the food. But compared to the kill or be killed world of the wild, being a lab rat is a pretty good life. So good, in...

View Article

A New Breed of Medical Screws Dissolve In Body and Promote Bone Growth

The screws used by doctors to repair broken bones and torn ligaments enable recovery from a wide range of injuries. Unfortunately, they also leave holes in bones, require secondary surgery for...

View Article

New Brain Scan Quantifies The Formerly Subjective Feeling of Pain

The seemingly subjective nature of pain always proves problematic for doctors, who have to use a woefully imprecise chart to gauge a patient’s suffering. But by using a new interpretation of fMRI...

View Article
Browsing all 2573 articles
Browse latest View live