Many owners think so, thanks to the “talking buttons” craze on TikTok and Instagram. Scientists are less convinced.
We asked New Scientist writers to pick their favourite sci-fi short story. From H.G. Wells’s The Time Machine to Octavia E.
His reports, articles and commentaries have been published in newspapers, magazines and online in the UK and across the world. He has been a contributing editor of PETplanet Insider since 2008 ...
According to this method, everyone belongs to a “season,” and a “subseason,” determined by the coloring of their skin and ...
Discover the 100 Most Influential Africans of 2024, as recognised by New African magazine, celebrating remarkable ...
This poster attached to a curbside mailbox advised World War ... writer for Live Science from 2010 to 2012 and is currently a senior physics writer and editor for Quanta Magazine.
A succession of foreshocks and aftershocks are reshaping the geopolitical landscape. How will the global politics of 2025 be ...
In a world where innovation and resilience redefine success, certain entrepreneurs stand out for their unmatched vision, ...
This article appears in the February 2025 print edition with the headline “The New Rasputins.” ...
The increasing amount of debris has heightened fears about the "Kessler syndrome". Named after an American astrophysicist ...
A machine gun capable of firing bullets at a faster rate than the world has ever seen is being developed by Chinese ...
The story introduces a simulated gravitationless environment—a concept that, while seemingly futuristic, has roots in ...