Infographic: Just how safe is your neighborhood? It's the one question that's often on the forefront of people's minds when they consider where to live or buy real estate. Read the full story Sun-powered high speed rail rises in Europe Rail travel between Paris and Amsterdam just got sunnier. Through a tunnel and an ancient forest in Belgium, solar-powered trains are beaming with light. Read the full story Privately-funded, 'open-source' rocket lifts off Adventurers take a big step in their dream to launch a human into space without government assistance or interference. Read the full story For urban mission control, an intelligent operations center IBM's new Intelligent Operations Center aims to help resource-strapped cities become more efficient through a turnkey solution and a single point of command. Read the full story Carbon air war looms China threatens retaliation if Europe forces global airlines into emissions trading scheme. Ultimately the consumer will pay the price. Are aviation bioufuels the answer? Read the full story American Airlines sustainability measures save 123M gallons in jet fuel annually The airline seeks to improve its carbon dioxide emissions to jet fuel intensity ratio by 1.5 percent each year. Read the full story The 19-year-old innovator revolutionizing solar energy systems Armed with a $100,000 fellowship, a Princeton sophomore is taking a break from college to perfect her first invention -- and continue her innovations. Read the full story Liquid fuel: An alternative to existing electric car batteries Can a new battery reinvent the idea of a rechargeable battery? Call it Cambridge crude. It could make refueling as easy as getting gas is. Read the full story DNA computer can calculate square roots Today, square roots... tomorrow, disease detection! Researchers have developed the most powerful molecular computer ever. If successfully integrated into living cells, it could diagnose disease. Read the full story Why is it so hard to pinpoint the cause of E. coli? First, they thought it was cucumbers. Then, sprouts. Why can't German health authorities figure out what is causing the deadliest outbreak of E. coli in recent history? Read the full story Coming soon: a bandage that changes color with your wound This "mood ring" of bandages will change colors to indicate the status of your wound. Read the full story A new generation of uninsured college graduates If you knew your child was struggling, would you help? It's a question that haunts many parents across the country as they make the difficult decision to remove their adult child from the family's healthcare plan. Read the full story MyPlate: will the new, tangible logo help us eat healthier? The government has done away with the abstract, 20-year-old food pyramid, in favor of a $2.9-million plate schematic. Read the full story Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveils iCloud At Apple's WWDC in San Francisco, CEO Steve Jobs announces the company's cloud service, iCloud. The service will store content in the cloud and then push it wirelessly to all of the user's devices. Apple is not charging for the service at this time. Read the full story World's largest bike-share system in China dwarfs popular U.S. program Hangzhou's bike-share system has more than 50,000 bikes throughout the city. Find out how that stacks up against the largest bike-share system in the U.S. Read the full story Unstructured data 'out of control': survey MarkLogic survey of 446 organizations finds many are overwhelmed with the volumes of unstructured information -- audio, video, graphics, social media messages -- coming into their premises. Their technology and management are not ready to handle this information. Read the full story Sales of hybrids, plug-ins hit a 16-month low Sales of hybrids and plug-ins hit a 16-month low as supply from earthquake-stricken Japan dwindles and competition from cheaper, fuel-efficient gas-powered cars rises. Read the full story |
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