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PC / Tech. > Wired: Tech.
Wednesday March 20, 2024. 03:00 PM
A new UN report finds that humanity is generating 137 billion pounds of TVs, smartphones, and other e-waste a year—and recycling less than a quarter of it.
Researchers and journalists have been blocked on X from sharing the alleged identity of the neo-Nazi cartoonist Stonetoss.
The major electronics brand has some big things planned for new TV models this year, including a major update to WebOS.
Ever wish you could smash a tablet and smart speaker together? These devices offer the best of both.
Amazon’s five-day sale is the perfect chance to start fresh with new tech, including headphones, video doorbells, and chargers.
The Vision Pro is a big leap for spatial computing in an unfriendly package.
They met by chance, got hooked on an idea, and wrote the “Transformers” paper—the most consequential tech breakthrough in recent history.
Anonymous, candid reviews made Glassdoor a powerful place to research potential employers. A policy shift requiring users to privately verify their real names is raising privacy concerns.
Trailing weighted nets across the seabed wrecks fish stocks and kills carbon-capturing seagrasses—but one fisherman’s sculpture project has turned the tide.
The Nywaigi people in Australia have discovered a way to sequester carbon, boost coastal biodiversity, and create jobs.
Removing cars from urban areas means lower carbon emissions, less air pollution, and fewer road traffic accidents. So why are residents so resistant?
Idle electric vehicles could act as massive batteries for homes and the energy grid. But the technology to pull this off is tricky.
From water-testing polluted rivers to measuring radiation levels, ordinary people are taking environmental research into their own hands.
Toucan is leveraging blockchain to reinvent the carbon credit market. But thorny questions abound.
Super-reflective clouds could shelter coral from scorching sunlight. But environmentalists are concerned that such plans could prolong our addiction to fossil fuels.
The London-based social enterprise is turning regular people into at-home zookeepers.
The shift to electric vehicles is exciting, but it will leave us with thousands of tonnes of spent batteries.
Concrete is responsible for more than four percent of all global CO2 emissions. In the race to find alternatives, some companies are using it to sequester CO2 instead
For half-a-century scientists have wondered what clues this enigmatic Greenland cave might hold. Now they're about to find out
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