Little things mean a lot: The world’s microbiome under threat
The smallest living things in the world may be the most important to us humans.
The smallest living things in the world may be the most important to us humans.
The first stage of scarcity is not running out, but having less and less available. Platinum may end up being a good example in the coming year.
It is fashionable to be pessimistic about new and emerging technologies. Less fashionable is dealing with the existing technologies that are already killing us and the biosphere.
The late Eric Sevareid, a CBS reporter and commentator, coined what is now known as Sevareid’s law: The chief cause of problems is solutions.
You should be very, very cautious about any device that uses the word “smart” in its name.
Radioactivity-resistant soldiers? Life tries to imitate art.
Energy-thrifty Europeans cut energy use dramatically in the wake of the loss of Russian natural gas imports. Will they go further?
Satellite mega-constellations are coming to a sky near you and the results could over time be catastrophic for the ozone layer unless something is done.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is now the focus of the most recent automation-is-a-job-killer stories. History suggests an alternate narrative.
The toxic Ohio derailment is demonstrating that the drive for efficiency can be extremely dangerous.
Limits to growth in the American West were always there. Now residents are having to face them.
Everything comes to an end except our modern technical civilization. Or so a lot of people believe. It’s a dangerous thought for those who arrive after our civilization is gone.