Finding empty pools for skateboarding has never been so easy.
The eLISA space mission aims to detect gravitational waves with an enormous laser triangle and floating gold cubes.
A fatal crash calls into question the car company’s approach to building autonomous vehicles—and underscores the stark contrast between its strategy and Google’s.
Archivists are figuring out which pieces of artists’ digital lives to preserve alongside letters, sketchbooks, and scribbled-on napkins.
A stunning new video of Juno’s approach to Jupiter captures an unprecedented glimpse of its moons.
The best science, technology, and health stories from around the web.
Many generations have gone by since the world-riveting exploits of Charles Lindbergh, since the tragic mystery of Amelia Earhart, since…
A group of academics and journalists say a federal computer-fraud law criminalizes their work.
Hillary Clinton wrote something for The Toast today. Are you sobbing yet?
A case soon to be decided by the Wisconsin Supreme Court considers the proper role of mathematical prediction in the courtroom—and beyond.
The Model S’s Autopilot isn’t technically a driverless feature, but the federal investigation into why a driver using it was killed will still influence the future of driverless vehicles.
A Manchester-based company has launched a dating app for Remain voters seeking other Remainers.
Magnificent auroras light up the Jovian atmosphere as the spacecraft prepares to enter the planet’s orbit.
The gun’s name may have been coined by Adolf Hitler.
The secret of technological process is that leftover devices never truly get left behind. An Object Lesson.
Astronomers say they have discovered an ancient astronomical tool, potentially used by prehistoric humans for stargazing rituals.
A proposed change to a common U.S. customs form would allow the government to vet travelers’ social media accounts.
Isaac Asimov, John Updike, and John Hersey changed their writing habits to adapt to word processors, according to the first literary historian of the technology.
The driverless vehicles of the 1920s were called “phantom autos,” and they were remote-controlled by the tapping of a telegraph key.
The 2016 Olympics will be a test of how well Comcast and NBC can deliver live programming in the digital, on-demand era.
Museum tours may one day rocket beyond Earth to explore abandoned satellites and derelict spacecraft.
The challenge of accounting for the damage reflects an outdated approach to cybersecurity.