Cornell research shows that underwater 3D printing can be used to build or repair ocean structures in place — DARPA-funded project aims to make underwater construction faster, cheaper, and saferTom's Hardware
Look Up: Here's How Many Starlink Satellites Are Flying Over You Right Now. And It's Just the BeginningPC Mag
ZX Spectrum flies simulated spacecraft using BASIC, Python, and serial — Kerbal Space Program Lunar lander powered by 1980s hardwareTom's Hardware
Researchers make AI-powered breakthrough in pursuit of limitless energy source: 'Revolutionary technology'The Cool Down
Smart drones and robots backed by German military track radioactive waste in minutesInteresting Engineering
A Chinese humanoid robot flopped face-first onto the ground during a public showcase. Its CEO says it's all part of 'learning to walk.'Business Insider
Chinese researchers discover new salty cooling solution that can drop temperatures by more than 50 degrees Celsius in seconds — depressurizing saturated fluid triggers massive amounts of heat transferTom's Hardware
Quantum threat gets real: Ethereum Foundation prioritizes security with leanVM and PQ signaturesCoinDesk
SpaceX formalizes plan to build 1 million satellite Orbital Data Center System — FCC filing sketches out plans, but over-packed orbits could be limiting factorTom's Hardware
Shanghai scientists create computer chip in fiber thinner than a human hair, yet can withstand crushing force of 15.6 tons — fiber packs 100,000 transistors per centimeterTom's Hardware
Finland’s sand battery offers 10x more heat transfer efficiency, cuts energy bills by 70%Interesting Engineering
Chinese space tourism startup eyes 2028 for 1st crewed mission, signs celebrity for future flightSpace
Scientists share design so you can make your own 3D-printable 'eFlesh' for robots — affordable, easy to produce, and highly-tactile robot sensor grips can be printed at homeTom's Hardware
Neutron Rocket's 'Hungry Hippo' Fairing Reaches Virginia for Testing Despite Fuel Tank CollapseExtreme Tech
Drones could achieve 'infinite flight' after engineers create laser-based wireless power system that charges them from the groundLive Science