Engineering
Latest about Engineering
This flexible sensor could let us make foldable touchscreens
By Duncan Geere published
Engineers at the University of British Columbia have developed a touchscreen sensor that works when folded, stretched or bent.
In the future, you could unlock your phone with your lips
By Duncan Geere published
Biometric engineers at Hong Kong Baptist University have developed a "lip motion password" that uses your lip movements as a security measure.
This computer model can predict when you want your phone to interrupt you
By Duncan Geere published
Rutgers University engineers have developed a computer model that can predict when people are busy and restrict smartphone notifications during that time.
This 3D display is made from laser-generated bubbles
By Duncan Geere published
Optical engineers have invented a new kind of display that creates three-dimensional images in a liquid.
Robot insects are now faster than the real thing
By Duncan Geere published
A team of engineers has developed a robotic insect that can run faster and more efficiently than real insects found in nature.
Terahertz networks could make wireless as fast as fibreoptic cables
By Duncan Geere published
Engineers at Hiroshima University have built a terahertz transmitter capable of data transfer speeds exceeding 100 Gbps.
Blueprints for a large-scale quantum computer have arrived
By Duncan Geere published
Researchers have published industrial blueprints for the construction of a large-scale ion-trapping quantum computing system.
The Siri of the future could detect the tone of your conversations
By Duncan Geere published
MIT engineers have developed a wrist-mounted artificial intelligence that can detect a conversation's tone.
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