Science News
A Concise History Of The NSA's Online Spying Program PRISM
Popular Science - 8 Jun 2013 01:00
Crucial to the program? Online tech companies. This was a bad week for spies, and a great week to find out how we were spied on. Following revelations Wednesday that Verizon handed over millions of call records to the Na...
Let's All Just Believe What This Shifty CIA-Funded Data-Collecting Company Says
Popular Science - 7 Jun 2013 23:20
Really: Why would they bother telling us the truth? Palantir Technologies has denied, sort of, that it is involved in the massive PRISM scandal, in which the National Security Agency was found to have gotten access to ma...
How Do You Move An Entire Bridge?
Popular Science - 7 Jun 2013 23:15
Mind the 3,400-ton truss! The Problem When the Sellwood Bridge in Portland, Oregon, was built in 1925, it wasn't designed to carry 30,000 vehicles a day. Or to hold back a slow landslide. But by the 1980s, cracks were fo...
Today on New Scientist
New Scientist - 7 Jun 2013 21:06
All the latest on newscientist.com: US spying on its people, nuclear bomb tests show brain regeneration, when atheists get religion, glowing plants, and more
Envisioning A Future Of Custom-Grown Meat
Popular Science - 7 Jun 2013 20:59
"Today's special meat is a chop of Grévy's zebra flank, fresh out of the exercise amplifier and seared in giant squid fat." The era of exotic meats grown to order--with no animals killed in the process--could be on its ...
Spy program shows just how well US knows its people
New Scientist - 7 Jun 2013 20:35
The US government is spying on its own citizens' phone calls and internet data. So what can these huge datasets tell them about us?
Is This Mysterious Silicon Valley Company Helping The NSA Spy On Americans?
Popular Science - 7 Jun 2013 20:31
Hey Palantir Technologies: Are you reading this right now? Last night we learned about PRISM, a classified National Security Agency program that involves huge, wide-ranging data pulls from major tech companies including ...
Tendrils of death reach into a star nursery
New Scientist - 7 Jun 2013 20:30
Wisps of matter from an exploded star float through a nebula glowing with newborns in the latest view from a pair of NASA space telescopes
Astrophile: The supernova that blew up a galaxy
New Scientist - 7 Jun 2013 20:14
Some juvenile galaxies in the early universe may have grown abnormally big, finally forming gigantic stars that exploded to create massive black holes
A Racquet Made With The World's Strongest Material
Popular Science - 7 Jun 2013 20:00
Head's YouTek Graphene Speed Pro is one of the first racquets to deliver both crushing power and precise control. For years, racquet designers at Head struggled with the same problem: They couldn't increase the power of ...
Nicaragua Enlists China To Build An Alternative To The Panama Canal
Popular Science - 7 Jun 2013 19:00
"A-UG!," a racing "oooog": Nicaragua! After a century as an only child, the Panama Canal is about to get a sister. Nicaragua announced recently that it is awarding China a contract to build an alternative to the Panama C...
Do glowing house plants take gene tinkering too far?
New Scientist - 7 Jun 2013 18:49
People backing a crowd-funded project to genetically engineer a glowing plant will receive its seeds. Is it setting a dangerous precedent or harmless fun?
Atheists turn to science during times of stress
New Scientist - 7 Jun 2013 18:35
Religious faith can help believers cope with stress - now it seems that trusting in science might do the same for non-believers
Images that have changed perspectives on the universe
New Scientist - 7 Jun 2013 17:34
A new exhibition, Visions of the Universe, reveals how technology has altered perceptions of the cosmos and our place in it - see our favourite images
Nuclear bomb tests reveal brain regeneration in humans
New Scientist - 7 Jun 2013 15:05
Carbon dating brain cells provides conclusive evidence that part of the adult human brain constantly renews itself - and that this neurogenesis persists in old age
Obese black holes outshone stars in earliest galaxies
New Scientist - 7 Jun 2013 14:00
Collapsing gas clouds in the very young universe could have formed many "obese" black holes, pouring out energy that is still visible today
Feedback: Tumble dryer in the groove
New Scientist - 7 Jun 2013 13:24
Music to wash clothes by, laundry emergencies, Dickkopf determinism, and more (full text available to subscribers)