While there is an urgent need for more ventilators currently, the need for them to be safe and effective is just as great, says Dr JT Janssen, Chief Scientist at the National Physical Laboratory...
Features editor A fascinating conversation at the Global Grand Challenge Summit focused attention on how engineering is taught and why it needs to change — with input from an unexpected, but eloquent,...
The Engineer’s latest Business Confidence survey - which is run in partnership with Dassault Systèmes - reveals an industry bullish in the face of economic challenges and determined to invest in the...
A stadium linking the physical and digital worlds so that spectators at a game or event can enjoy the same technical benefits as those watching at home is to be developed by researchers at Glasgow...
Vehicle interiors are one of the modern world’s most challenging environments for delivering high-quality audio, but there are ways to overcome it, says Hendrik Hermann, automotive vice president,...
Amid worries over food shortages and the destruction of huge tracts of rain forest to grow fuel crops, governments have begun backing away from their earlier enthusiasm for biofuels.
Researchers have developed a small, soft, flexible implant that relieves pain on demand, a first-of-its-kind device that could provide an alternative to opioids and other addictive medications.
A UK team is working on a suite of computer-based technologies that is designed to improve the response of the emergency services in disaster zones. Jon Excell reports
Features editor It would be difficult for a new volume car maker to arise in the UK, but the expertise and supply chains in the industry’s historic strongholds are still strong
Suicide bombers could be spotted in a crowd before they carry out their deadly mission, thanks to a combination of ultrawideband radio technology and an obscure law of physics.