LiFi, an emerging wireless technology that enables users to send and receive data in beams of LED light, will help overcome the limitations of radio frequency communications. Jon Excell reports.
Eye-tracking can potentially replace the mouse, touchscreen and pad as the way we interact with computers, and may be the closest we get to a technbology that can read our minds
Remembered primarily for inventing a rudimentary screw pump, there is so much more to the Ancient Greek polymath Archimedes of Syracuse, the greatest scientist of antiquity, writes Nick Smith.
With the UK on the brink of an infrastructure renaissance, there are numerous reasons students and graduates should consider a career in civil engineering - and many options open to them.
Our expert panel discusses the feasibility of using geoengineering techniques to counteract climate change
For nearly two decades, EMEC has been a leading testbed for wave and tidal power, underdeveloped renewables that could play a vital role in the path to net zero. Andrew Wade reports.
In our latest Q&A feature, we hear from three experts working in different areas of micromobility, the fast-growing sector where e-bikes, e-scooters and other devices are helping to move people...
The UK’s new innovation centres are aimed at changing the way we commercialise technology.
Deep within Antarctica’s inhospitable ice, engineers aim to build an observatory to detect neutrinos, or high-energy particles that could explain many of the universe’s secrets such as black holes....
A radical design for wind turbines aimed at harnessing the winds that gust in city streets could be a common sight in London in the run-up to the 2012 Olympics. Stuart Nathan reports