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Eight Scientists, a Billion Dollars, and the Moonshot Agency Trying to Make Britain Great Again
The Advanced Research and Invention Agency—ARIA—is the UK’s answer to Darpa. But can it put the country back on the ... -
Eight Scientists, a Billion Dollars, and the Moonshot Agency Trying to Make Britain Great Again
The Advanced Research and Invention Agency—ARIA—is the UK’s answer to Darpa. But can it put the country back on the ... -
The UK Has No Coal-Fired Power Plants for the First Time in 142 Years
With Monday’s closure of Ratcliffe-on-Soar, coal is no longer being used to provide electricity in the UK. http://www.wired.com/ -
We Staged a Debate to Test the Bluetooth Earrings Kamala Harris Didn’t Wear
Could Vice President Harris have used these Bluetooth audio earrings to gain any debate advantage? Not on your life. http://www.wired.com/ -
23andMe Is Sinking Fast. Can the Company Survive?
The home DNA testing boom is over, and 23andMe is running out of options. http://www.wired.com/ -
ICE Signs $2 Million Contract With Spyware Maker Paragon Solutions
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s one-year contract with Paragon’s US subsidiary comes amid the Biden administration’s years-long crackdown on commercial ... -
Notorious Evil Corp Hackers Targeted NATO Allies for Russian Intelligence
UK law enforcement and international partners have released new details about the cybercriminal gang Evil Corp, including its use of ... -
Microsoft’s AI Boss Wants Copilot to Bring ‘Emotional Support’ to Windows and Office
Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman is overseeing an overhaul that gives Copilot an empathetic voice, the ability to see, and ... -
Microsoft’s Copilot AI Gets a Voice, Vision, and a ‘Hype Man’ Persona
Powered by OpenAI’s latest models, Microsoft’s Copilot assistant is becoming a lot more handy—and wants to be an “encouraging” digital ... -
Chromebooks Are Getting a New Button and Google AI Features
Google software updates are coming, plus two new laptops—including Samsung’s first Galaxy Chromebook Plus. http://www.wired.com/