The Surprising Origins of Kotex Pads
Before the first disposable sanitary napkin hit the mass market, periods were thought of in a much different way
Eno Umoh Is Getting Kids to Think About the Positive Powers of Drones
Latina American writer Gabby Rivera interviews the co-founder of Global Air Media about giving students access to the technology
Optical Tweezers Give Scientists a Tool to Test the Laws of Quantum Mechanics
Quantum superposition is one of the great mysteries of physics—a mass existing in two states at once—and scientists hope to probe the phenomenon
What Are the Economic Incentives to Invent?
Prizes and patents may fulfill different needs, but together they fuel innovation
There’s a New Ranking System For Best Countries to Live In, and Norway Isn’t Number One
Most researchers use the UN’s Human Development Index to measure each country’s progress, but that system has flaws. A new index aims to do it better
Could 3-D Printing Save Music Education?
D.C. chef Erik Bruner-Yang interviews Jill-of-all-trades Kaitlyn Hova about her plan to infuse STEM education with open source, 3-D printable instruments
Restaurateur José Andrés Dreams of Milking the Clouds
In a conversation with architect David Rockwell, the philanthropic chef urges an invested effort in technology that could collect water from the clouds
Can Artificial Intelligence Detect Depression in a Person’s Voice?
MIT scientists have trained an AI model to spot the condition through how people speak rather than what they tell a doctor
Let’s Build Cars Out of Batteries
If batteries could make up the very structure of our vehicles and electronics, those products would be far lighter and more efficient
2018 Smithsonian Ingenuity Awards
Why John Leguizamo Is So Invested in Telling the Country About Latino History
His uproariously inventive one-man show, soon to be shown on Netflix, puts the story of a neglected culture center stage
When Pulling a Lever Tallied the Vote
An innovative 1890s gear-and-lever voting machine mechanized the counting of the ballots so they could be tallied in minutes, not hours or days
The Musical Performance “Sight Machine” Reveals What Artificial Intelligence Is “Thinking” About Us
Like artist Trevor Paglen’s other work, the show asked viewers to reexamine the human relationship to technology
Good Dogs Could Help Identify Malaria Carriers
In a small proof-of-concept study, trained dogs neared the accuracy rate recommended by the World Health Organization for detecting the malaria parasite
With AI Art, Process Is More Important Than the Product
Christie’s just auctioned its first piece of AI art—a portrait created via machine learning
People Feared Being Buried Alive So Much They Invented These Special Safety Coffins
For centuries, inventors have been patenting technology to prevent such a nightmare from happening
17 Inventions That Will Put You in the Halloween Mood
Here are some bizarre costume ideas, decorations and supplies culled from the U.S. patent archives
In the Wake of Apollo’s ‘Giant Leap,’ What’s Next for Lunar Exploration?
A new Smithsonian Book unpacks the possible future of missions to the Moon
This Game Is Moving People to Take Action Against Climate Change
In the ‘World Climate’ simulation, people play delegates to UN climate negotiations and work to strike an agreement that meets global climate goals
This 12-Year-Old Girl Built a Robot That Can Find Microplastics In the Ocean
Massachusetts seventh grader Anna Du has developed an ROV that moves through water and detects microplastics on the seafloor
How Cities Are Upgrading Infrastructure to Prepare for Climate Change
The threat of extreme weather and other climate-related events has city planners rethinking the stability of critical infrastructure
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