A Glue That Only Hardens When Electrified Will Even Work Under Water
It's been nicknamed Voltaglue because apparently all the cool glue names were already taken.
It's been nicknamed Voltaglue because apparently all the cool glue names were already taken.
It's elementary, my dear Poirot.
Projectile vomiting: Disgusting, yes, but also your body’s natural way of dealing with being ill. Oh, and a great way to spread your vile germs to others, according to research.
MIT CSAIL’s MultiFab 3D printer that can use ten different materials to build working devices in a single print run. It's one giant leap towards the holy grail of 3D printing: a fully-functional replicator. Read More >>
The team put together to make the lenses have just been spun off into their own Alphabet-owned company.
Public Health England claims that the devices "removed all the risks" commonly associated with smoking tobacco.
The sun’s harsh rays don’t just turn metal surfaces into frying pans, they can also accelerate deterioration and corrosion, and make it harder to keep structures cool. So researchers have created a new type of paint made of glass that reflects those rays away. See more >>
Researchers at MIT have created an AI that can learn to drift an RC car, which means that one day the terminators will drive even better than Ken Block can. Read More >>
A splash of nature near transport stops could be the answer to make time fly.
A new breakthrough in CGI animation means that creating realistic human skin is no longer an impossible task. Read more >>
You can think of this robot as similar to the unmanned flying drones the military uses that are piloted by a human from a safe and remote location.
Genius invention or solution in need of a problem?
A shotgun is obviously the more satisfying approach but for when you don't fancy getting arrested...
Researchers at Ishikawa Watanabe Laboratory, the University of Tokyo, and Tokyo Electron Device have developed a high-speed projector system that can track and flawlessly match the complex movements of whatever surface it’s projecting on. Read more >>
Japan wants to see how micro gravity affects the whisky's ageing process.
The newly formed composite has some crazy potential applications.