Humans and Technology Freeman Dyson in his own words One of the 20th century’s foremost physicists died today. by Konstantin Kakaes 2020-02-28T16:49:40-05:00
Humans and Technology 5 of the best books about prediction Predictions of any importance are never only about saying what will happen. Right or wrong, they also shape the course of events. by Konstantin Kakaes 2020-02-26T07:00:25-05:00
Humans and Technology Baseball’s ban on sign-stealing technology doesn’t make sense Red Sox and Astros managers should not have been fired for seeking a competitive advantage by Konstantin Kakaes 2020-01-15T09:26:47-05:00
Tech Policy The limits of Chinese military power The US military is without peer in its ability to project power around the world, and that’s not about to change. by Konstantin Kakaes 2019-10-24T14:18:34-04:00
Computing Quantum supremacy from Google? Not so fast, says IBM. The rival maker of quantum computers is disputing the much-vaunted claim that Google has hit a new milestone. by Gideon Lichfield and Konstantin Kakaes 2019-10-21T20:12:18-04:00
Space NASA announces plans to send a drone to explore Titan for signs of life Get ready for Dragonfly’s autonomous flight on Saturn’s largest moon. by Konstantin Kakaes 2019-06-27T23:25:24-04:00
Space Five schemes for cheaper space launches—and five cautionary tales Spaceplanes, giant rockets, tethers and catapults by Konstantin Kakaes 2019-06-26T07:10:00-04:00
Space What Neil Armstrong got wrong Space technology has changed the world—but not in the way the dreamers of the 1960s imagined it would by Konstantin Kakaes 2019-06-26T07:00:29-04:00
Space The number of satellites orbiting Earth could quintuple in the next decade The coming explosion of constellations by Tate Ryan-Mosley , Erin Winick , and Konstantin Kakaes 2019-06-26T07:00:24-04:00
Space Where does space begin? The not-so-final frontier by Konstantin Kakaes 2019-06-26T07:00:03-04:00