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A Rocket From 1966 Has Found Its Way Back to Earth’s Orbit
More than 50 years after its course correction failure, Surveyor 2’s rocket booster seems to have reappeared. http://www.wired.com/ -
Something Was Wrong. My Nightgown Was in Flames
When a body is reduced, all at once, to a crude dichotomy of hot and cold, what happens to your ... -
There Are No Real Rules for Repairing Satellites in Space—Yet
Fixing, refueling, and upgrading satellites in orbit is about to become more common. A group is pushing for international standards ... -
Gaming on a Budget? Try Your Local Library
While you may have to wait to check out the most popular releases, libraries across the country are increasingly adding ... -
Apple's HomePod Mini Falls Short As a Smart Speaker
Apple’s small spherical speaker is a convenient satellite for Siri-loving Apple users, but it doesn’t score many points beyond that. ... -
Get Rich Selling Used Fashion Online—or Cry Trying
The social shopping app Poshmark promises women the chance to spin gold out of secondhand threads. The reality is a ... -
The Dark Side of Big Tech’s Funding for AI Research
Timnit Gebru’s exit from Google is a powerful reminder of how thoroughly companies dominate the field, with the biggest computers ... -
Hello, World! It Is ‘I,’ the Internet
When did “the Internet” become “the internet?” Why did that happen, and how has it changed us? http://www.wired.com/ -
A Cyberpunk Founding Father Isn't Surprised By Its Comeback
Mike Pondsmith, who wrote the tabletop RPG that inspired Cyberpunk 2077, explains why the genre feels vital in 2020. http://www.wired.com/ -
The Smoking Gun in the Facebook Antitrust Case
The government wants to break up the world’s biggest social network. Internal company emails show why. http://www.wired.com/