Measuring wrinkles, sun damage with software
New technology promises to help people protect their skin from further sun damage and from cancer.Smoking out photo hoaxes with software
Did Brad Pitt meet up with aliens at the World Economic Forum? Software for detecting photo fraud may have the answer.Flying car ready for takeoff?
MIT students working on a vehicle--resembling an SUV with retractable wings--they hope will carry two people on 100- to 500-mile hops.Turning nature's design into scientific breakthrough
A start-up is trying to make everything from PC fans to water purifiers more efficient with a design inspired by nature.Bacteria could power tiny robots
Microbe that releases electrons as a waste product someday could fit in a fuel cell.The best of times in science and tech
SRI head Curt Carlson tells why these are heady days and where things are going from here.Playing science's genetic lottery
special report Single-celled animals might be some of the most important figures in high tech.Tech shakes up seismology
As San Francisco marks the centennial of the great quake, technologies that help predict quakes and determine potential damage take confab spotlight.Knowledge is power, but can you handle it?
The Internet is making it easy to get DNA testing, but the results could be disturbing if not handled correctly.This is your brain on a microchip
Cognitive computing experts say the day that computers work like brains is getting closer.Astronomers count Pluto out
Forget what your science textbook taught you about the nine planets--Pluto doesn't loom large enough any more.Restaurant at end of universe not so far off
Executives and government officials discuss commercializing space exploration. Hint: There will be a Starbucks.Up, up and away at the X Prize Cup
New Mexico fest is the place to see the next new things in space tech, from rockets to orbital elevators.Photos: Rocketeers aim high at X Prize Cup
NASA launches twin robots to map the sun
The two-year mission aims to capture the first-ever 3D images of solar storms--which can pack the punch of an armory's worth of nuclear bombs.Photos: Twin robots to map the sun
Industrial design takes cues from bugs, leaves, crabs
Researchers are studying nature to find ways to do everything from conserving energy to creating better skid-resistance.Photos: Nature's brainstorms
Don't be rude to this robot
A robotic dinosaur that gets depressed when its owner is curt? Yes, this highly sensitive little pet is coming in 2007.Photos: Pleo the sensitive bot
- NASA budget emphasizes space exploration
- Spintronics may save Moore's Law
- Computing grid hunts for bird flu cure
- Nanotubes squeeze salt from water
- Space tourist tells tales of rockets, diapers
- Microsoft enters robotics race
- Rocket shoots science, souvenirs into space
- Divining AI and the future of consumer robotics
- Airport security meets science fiction
- Pumping up the space industry
- Berners-Lee, universities launch 'Web science' initiative
- Microbes could one day make airplanes safer
- Doom creator turned rocket pioneer
- How a robot learns to walk--and limp

