MacroSolve: Donald Trump Jr.’s favorite patent enforcer
Trump's son knows the difference between "patent trolls" and "true innovators."
Trump's son knows the difference between "patent trolls" and "true innovators."
Whether it involved trucks, buildings, or banquettes, AR/MR headset has made life easier.
A congressman, a billionaire movie director, and an unparalleled mission of discovery.
Plus, a review of 1-2 Switch—though Switch parties are more than just milking cows.
The good news is that it doesn't have to suck, if you build it out properly.
Intel's architecture is still better, but AMD has significantly narrowed the gap.
Review: an excellent workstation CPU, but it doesn't game as hard as we hoped.
Hybrid system merges an amazing portable experience with a middling TV console.
“Pain is just the visible part of the iceberg of suffering."
Ars tours the training facility the military is using to teach humans how to help robots help us.
For people missing limbs, 3D printing can make new prosthetics—faster, cheaper, and better.
LG, Nokia, BlackBerry, Sony, and Huawei should all be in attendance.
A 7-time astronaut has a NASA contract and is ready to prove the doubters wrong.
You’ll remember new hero Aloy—and her massive, explosive journey—for a long time.
Incredible box, and promising twist on "programmable" cards, aren't quite enough.
From photovoltaic paint to thermal fuel, we peek at a future beyond today's solar cells.
A deep dive into building robots from scratch and their controlling hive mind.
Common in affluent countries, the pulse oximeter continues changing lives worldwide.
We brave beta software and do some cautious testing—and it looks like it works.
Seriously, we've backed up a Linux system to the land much of the Internet forgot.
First Android Wear 2.0 device takes the smartwatch platform in a new direction.
It started as anecdotal instinct but has expanded worldwide with research behind it.
Choosing solar in a vacuum now makes sense—but location and bureaucracy still loom IRL.
No definitive answer, but the search has gotten more interesting since the 19th century.
Getting data offsite is easier today, but what happens when the Internet isn’t there?
Can VR serve as a cheaper, more widespread version of sedation?
A bit of Linux, a bit of Nginx, and boom—fast and free Steam downloads.
Building bridges with board games.
Lesson: “Something that works with two million users doesn’t always work with 10 million."
"I heard them scream get me out of here. And then there was dead silence on the pad."