<H1> MIT Technology Review </H1> |
<H1> Now read the rest of The Spark </H1> |
<H2> Featured Story </H2> |
<H2> Must reads </H2> |
<H2> Most Popular </H2> |
<H2> Features </H2> |
<H2> Magazine </H2> |
<H2> What's Next </H2> |
<H2> MIT Alumni News </H2> |
<H2> Highlights </H2> |
<H2> The Feed </H2> |
<H3> What’s next for MDMA </H3> |
<H3> Why Google’s AI Overviews gets things wrong </H3> |
<H3> What’s next for bird flu vaccines </H3> |
<H3> That viral video showing a head transplant is a fake. But it might be real someday. </H3> |
<H3> OpenAI’s latest blunder shows the challenges facing Chinese AI models </H3> |
<H3> What I learned from the UN’s “AI for Good” summit </H3> |
<H3> The messy quest to replace drugs with electricity </H3> |
<H3> AI-directed drones could help find lost hikers faster </H3> |
<H3> Why bigger EVs aren’t always better </H3> |
<H3> It’s time to retire the term “user” </H3> |
<H3> Sam Altman says helpful agents are poised to become AI’s killer function </H3> |
<H3> An AI startup made a hyperrealistic deepfake of me that’s so good it’s scary </H3> |
<H3> A brief, weird history of brainwashing </H3> |
<H3> Is robotics about to have its own ChatGPT moment? </H3> |
<H3> Deepfakes of your dead loved ones are a booming Chinese business </H3> |
<H3> This solar giant is moving manufacturing back to the US </H3> |
<H3> Generative AI can turn your most precious memories into photos that never existed </H3> |
<H3> Google helped make an exquisitely detailed map of a tiny piece of the human brain </H3> |
<H3> Five ways criminals are using AI </H3> |
<H3> Why bigger EVs aren’t always better </H3> |
<H3> Related reading </H3> |
<H3> Keeping up with climate </H3> |
<H3> This grim but revolutionary DNA technology is changing how we respond to mass disasters </H3> |
<H3> Chatbot answers are all made up. This new tool helps you figure out which ones to trust. </H3> |
<H3> A wave of retractions is shaking physics </H3> |
<H3> OpenAI’s new GPT-4o lets people interact using voice or video in the same model </H3> |
<H3> OpenAI and Google are launching supercharged AI assistants. Here’s how you can try them out. </H3> |
<H3> GPT-4o’s Chinese token-training data is polluted by spam and porn websites </H3> |
<H3> The Build issue </H3> |
<H3> Is robotics about to have its own ChatGPT moment? </H3> |
<H3> How to stop a state from sinking </H3> |
<H3> The great commercial takeover of low Earth orbit </H3> |
<H3> A brief, weird history of brainwashing </H3> |
<H3> AI was supposed to make police bodycams better. What happened? </H3> |
<H3> What’s next in chips </H3> |
<H3> What’s next for generative video </H3> |
<H3> What’s next for offshore wind </H3> |
<H3> What’s next for robotaxis in 2024 </H3> |
<H3> What’s next for AI in 2024 </H3> |
<H3> What’s next for AI regulation in 2024? </H3> |
<H3> What’s next for the world’s fastest supercomputers </H3> |
<H3> What’s next for China’s digital currency? </H3> |
<H3> What’s next for the moon </H3> |
<H3> “I wanted to work on something that didn’t exist” </H3> |
<H3> Raman to go </H3> |
<H3> A walking antidote to political cynicism </H3> |
<H3> An invisibility cloak for would-be cancers </H3> |
<H3> Competitive math </H3> |
<H3> The energy transition’s effects on jobs </H3> |
<H3> A linguistic warning sign for dementia </H3> |
<H3> MIT’s superconducting magnets are ready for fusion </H3> |
<H3> A smart glove to guide your hands </H3> |
<H3> MIT Alumni News </H3> |
<H3> Purpose-built AI builds better customer experiences </H3> |
<H3> 10 Breakthrough Technologies 2024 </H3> |
<H3> 5 things we didn’t put on our 2024 list of 10 Breakthrough Technologies </H3> |
<H3> AI for everything: 10 Breakthrough Technologies 2024 </H3> |
<H3> The first gene-editing treatment: 10 Breakthrough Technologies 2024 </H3> |
<H3> Enhanced geothermal systems: 10 Breakthrough Technologies 2024 </H3> |
<H3> Exascale computers: 10 Breakthrough Technologies 2024 </H3> |
<H3> The latest iteration of a legacy </H3> |
<H3> Advertise with MIT Technology Review </H3> |
<H3> About </H3> |
<H3> Help </H3> |
Social
Données sociales
Le coût et les frais généraux ont précédemment rendu cette forme semi-publique de communication inviolable.
Mais les progrès réalisés dans la technologie des réseaux sociaux depuis 2004-2010 ont rendu possibles des concepts plus larges de partage.