Features
In-depth analysis and opinion from the worlds of science and emerging technology.
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Brilliantly innovative on-demand transit system set to open in 2026
January 15, 2025 | Loz BlainThis is not your grandad's cable car gondola. Born of an amusement ride and opening to the public in 2026, this remarkably clever kiwi idea offers quick, cheap, on-demand urban transit – that's much more direct and private than public transport. -
Nuclear waste: What is it and how do we dispose of it?
December 28, 2024 | David SzondyNuclear waste. We've all heard about it but what exactly is it and why is it so important? How big is the problem and is it a problem without a solution? New Atlas takes a look at the basics. -
Holodeck watch: Real-time volumetric video takes a giant leap
December 16, 2024 | Loz BlainImagine a next-gen VR experience that lets you speak realistic scenes, intelligent characters and complex situations into being, then interact with them in real time. It's coming, due to a convergence of tech like this advance in real-time 3D video. -
'Self-assembling' electronics: A wild new manufacturing process
December 03, 2024 | Loz BlainA remarkable proof-of-concept project has successfully manufactured nanoscale diodes and transistors using a fast, cheap new production technique in which liquid metal is directed to self-assemble into precise 3D structures. -
Uncanny: AI video conversation agents can now look back at you
November 30, 2024 | Loz BlainEvery facet of AI feels like it's advanced by a decade in the last year, and in the whirlwind of new releases and capabilities, you may have missed something important: interactive video chatbots that can see, hear and converse with you in real time. -
Manufacturing leap: Dirtbikes are about to get super weird
November 19, 2024 | Loz BlainPrepare to start seeing unprecedented shapes and designs in the motocross world. Spanish company Stark Future is taking titanium 3D printing out of the prototyping lab, and into mass production of its insane electric dirtbikes. -
Review: Fender's ultra-modern American Ultra II Telecaster
October 15, 2024 | Loz BlainYou could argue that the American Ultra II is a blasphemy against the purity of Leo Fender's first masterpiece – or you could evaluate this guitar without the baggage of its heritage. Either way, it's certainly a fascinating and inspiring instrument. -
AI begins its ominous split away from human thinking
September 29, 2024 | Loz BlainAIs have a big problem with truth and correctness – and human thinking appears to be a big part of that problem. A new generation of AI is now starting to take a much more experimental approach that could catapult machine learning way past humans. -
Sega Jet Rocket: The trailblazing '70s arcade game with no computer or screen
August 03, 2024 | Ben CoxworthBack in 1970, Sega introduced an arcade game that would pave the way for many of today's most popular video games. Known as Jet Rocket, the electromechanical marvel boasted three world-firsts – even though most folks today don't know it ever existed. -
The life of Victoria the T-Rex, and what Jurassic Park got wrong
July 19, 2024 | Michael IrvingHow do we separate the movie myths of Tyrannosaurus rex from the actual animal? The Victoria the T-rex exhibition sets the record straight with recent discoveries about what T-rex looked and sounded like, how it sensed the world, and how it hunted. -
The Stratocaster turns 70: An ode to the world's greatest guitar design
July 10, 2024 | Loz BlainJoin us on a trip through Fender's factory, Custom Shop, Master Builder department and head office, in celebration of a radically innovative instrument that continues to find new ways to move music forward, even seven decades after its launch. -
Lessons to be learned as Ukraine war shifts defense priorities
February 26, 2023 | David SzondyRussia's invasion of Ukraine and the fighting for the past year has not only overturned our preconceptions, it's given a powerful kick to innovation in military and civilian spheres. New Atlas looks at how the war is set to affect technology for decades.
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