Discover what comes next with this in-depth look at how science and technology are revolutionizing the way we live, work and play. Join our award-winning team of journalists as we crisscross the country to interview the leaders and luminaries reshaping our world.
The Longevity Business Is Booming, But Is There a Limit to Our Lifespan?
Life expectancy has been increasing over the years, and so has the longevity business. WSJ health and wellness reporter Alex Janin tells WSJ’s Charlotte Gartenberg about the booming business of extending our healthy years and our lives overall. But, despite the increase in life expectancy in the past few generations, some scientists believe we’ve already reached a plateau. WSJ health and science reporter Amy Dockser Marcus looks at the debate over the limits to longevity and finds that, no matter the hype, some scientists think you won’t live to 100.
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Further reading:
Think You Will Live to 100? These Scientists Think You’re Wrong
The Longevity Vacation: Poolside Lounging With an IV Drip
The Longevity Clinic Will See You Now—for $100,000
For This Venture Capitalist, Research on Aging Is Personal; ‘Bob Has a Big Fear of Death’
Outliving Your Peers Is Now a Competitive Sport
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10/18/2024 • 19 minutes, 8 seconds
The New Pharma Frontier: Could Drugs Made in Space Help You Live Longer?
In the future, the drugs helping you live healthier, happier and longer may have components manufactured in space. In this conversation with WSJ’s Danny Lewis from the Future of Everything Festival in May, Eric Lasker, an executive at Varda Space Industries, and Sita Sonty, former CEO of Space Tango, discuss the advantages and limitations of space manufacturing and how it can benefit pharmaceutical development.
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Further reading:
Is Space the Next Manufacturing Frontier?
Varda Hopes New Research Draws More Drugmakers to Space Factories
How Research in Space Helps Doctors Treat People on Earth
Space Manufacturing: Building an Economy Beyond Earth
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10/11/2024 • 15 minutes, 4 seconds
People Are Living Longer. Can Old Age Be an Opportunity?
More and more people are living longer lives thanks to modern technology and medicine. But what does that mean for our mental health and making sure we’re living better as well as longer? Stanford University Center on Longevity founding director Laura Carstensen digs into how the milestones of life should be reworked, and tells WSJ’s Danny Lewis how society can adapt and plan for the 100-year lifespan to become common.
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Further reading:
The Keys to Aging at Home? Frank Conversations and Financial Planning
Outliving Your Peers Is Now a Competitive Sport
Star Scientist’s Claim of ‘Reverse Aging’ Draws Hail of Criticism
The Secret to Living to 100? It’s Not Good Habits
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10/4/2024 • 17 minutes, 54 seconds
Science of Success: Is Your Home Oversubscribed?
What makes your house a home? For starters, it’s spending time there, relaxing, cooking and watching TV. These days, that means lots of subscriptions, which also means lots of money. In fact, Americans spend billions of dollars on subscriptions they’ve actually forgotten about. On the Science of Success, WSJ’s Ben Cohen looks at the booming subscription business and ways to help you get that spending in check.
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Further reading:
The Real Reason You’re Paying for So Many Subscriptions
Americans Are Canceling More of Their Streaming Services
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9/27/2024 • 12 minutes, 46 seconds
Will AI Make Home Renovations Easier?
Whether you’re sprucing up a kitchen or gutting a house, home renovations can be stressful, complicated and expensive. But new tools using artificial intelligence are trying to take some of the struggle out of the process by helping homeowners envision their dream home and communicate with architects and contractors. WSJ real estate, architecture and design reporter Nancy Keates joins host Danny Lewis to talk about how AI is making inroads into home renovations.
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Further reading:
Stressing Over Your Next Home Renovation Project? Let AI Handle It.
The Big Risk for the Market: Becoming an AI Echo Chamber
United Arab Emirates Fund in Talks to Invest in OpenAI
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9/20/2024 • 14 minutes, 35 seconds
It Cooks, It Cleans! When Will Robots Be Doing Our Chores?
What if you had a robot that could take care of your household chores, from doing laundry to making dinner? When the Roomba came out over 20 years ago, it seemed like other autonomous robots for the home were not far off. But no other home robot has yet become a household name. WSJ’s Charlotte Gartenberg speaks with Charlie Kemp, co-founder and chief technology officer of Hello Robot, about his company's dexterous robot called Stretch 3.They also talk about the technological hurdles we’ll have to overcome before truly helpful robots move into our homes.
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Further reading:
Elon Musk Says Tesla to Use Humanoid Robots Next Year
AI Startup Making Humanoid Robots Raises $675 Million With Bezos, Nvidia in Funding Round
Companies Brought in Robots. Now They Need Human ‘Robot Wranglers.’
Rise of the Restaurant Robots: Chipotle, Sweetgreen and Others Bet on Automation
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9/13/2024 • 19 minutes, 24 seconds
The Home-Solar Boom May Have Gone Bust. What’s Next for Solar Power?
The amount of electricity generated by solar panels has surged over the last decade. But while rooftop solar panels are more common than ever, the balance of solar-power generation has shifted from power systems on individual homes to large-scale commercial arrays used by utilities. WSJ’s Danny Lewis sits down with energy and climate reporter Phred Dvorak and Pvilion CEO Colin Touhey to talk about the future of home solar, and the new role it might play in the power grid.
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Further reading:
The Home-Solar Boom Gets a ‘Gut Punch’
The Solar Breakthrough That Could Help the U.S. Compete With China
Why Californians Have Some of the Highest Power Bills in the U.S.
Coming Soon for Homeowners: Solar Panels That Actually Look Attractive
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9/6/2024 • 15 minutes, 31 seconds
Meet the CEO Bringing Seaweed to Your Grocery Store
Seaweed has lots of practical applications. We use it as fertilizer, incorporate it into face creams and packaging as a plastic alternative, and we eat it. Very little of the seaweed used worldwide is grown in the U.S., which some proponents and regulators are looking to change because seaweed has been shown to have some positive effects on ecosystems. Maine-based Atlantic Sea Farms is one company looking to increase the amount of seaweed grown in U.S. waters. WSJ’s Alex Ossola speaks with Atlantic Sea Farms CEO Briana Warner about how her company is making that happen, and what it will take for seaweed aquaculture to truly scale in the U.S.
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Further reading:
A Seaweed Crop Finds a Spot in Maine Waters
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8/30/2024 • 14 minutes, 21 seconds
Science of Success: A Better Way to Board a Plane
It seems like every airline has a different way of boarding a plane. But which way works best? Astrophysicist Jason Steffen has spent his career trying to crack the deepest mysteries of the universe, and 15 years ago he discovered and published what he says is the optimal boarding strategy. So why aren’t all commercial airlines using it? On the Science of Success, WSJ’s Ben Cohen looks at what goes into planning the most efficient boarding process and what airlines are doing to help customers have a smooth entry to their flights.
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Further reading:
The Astrophysicist Who Has a Better Way to Board Airplanes
Southwest Airlines Is Ditching Open Seating on Flights
Southwest Fans Wonder if the Airline Has Changed Forever
It Can’t Be This Hard to Board a Plane
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8/23/2024 • 10 minutes, 45 seconds
Pokémon Go as a Travel Guide? Meet the Fans Booking Trips to Catch 'Em All
The Pokémon videogame series has always been about traveling the world. But eight years after the launch of the mobile-phone game Pokémon Go, some players are taking that to extremes by using the game as a tool to plan their real-life travels. Salvador Rodriguez joins host Danny Lewis to talk about the people circling the globe in order to catch and trade the digital monsters.
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Further reading:
The Adults Who Book Vacations Based on…. Pokémon?
Science of Success: The Mind at Work Behind an Iconic Song
How Pokémon Became a Monster Hit
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8/16/2024 • 16 minutes, 23 seconds
Are the Skies Going Hypersonic?
The Concorde has long been retired, but future skies may be filled with aircraft that can go even faster, criss-crossing the world in a matter of hours. Hypersonic engines that are being developed for military and government applications, like defense, drones and missiles, could one day propel future planes much faster than conventional engines for less money. Host Danny Lewis looks at the technical and business obstacles, and finds out what it would take to make hypersonic air travel a reality.
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Further reading:
Silicon Valley’s Next Mission: Help the U.S. Catch China and Russia in Hypersonic Weapons
How Hypersonic Flight Could Transform Transatlantic Flights
Hypersonic Missiles Are Game-Changers, and America Doesn’t Have Them
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8/9/2024 • 22 minutes, 32 seconds
Google’s AI Can Help Plan Your Next Vacation. Should You Rely On It?
From flights to hotels to entire itineraries, AI tools like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini Advanced can help you plan your next vacation. In fact, more than 30% of “active leisure travelers” have used artificial intelligence for travel planning, according to MMGY global, a travel marketing agency. But how soon might these bots go from travel planning tool to travel planning agent? WSJ’s Charlotte Gartenberg speaks with Google’s Amar Subramanya, vice president of engineering for Gemini experiences, about the future of using AI for travel planning.
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Further reading:
How Well Can AI Plan Your Next Trip? We Tested Gemini and ChatGPT
Don’t Trust an AI Chatbot With All Your Travel Plans Just Yet
AI Apps For Travel
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8/2/2024 • 19 minutes, 46 seconds
Science of Success: What It Takes to Make a Better Berry
What makes for a luxury strawberry? Is it the taste? Texture? Color? Around five years ago, berry company Driscoll’s released a new, premium line of berries with a higher price tag. Some consumers are shelling out almost 70% more to get their hands on this fancy fruit. But what are the qualities of a premium berry? On this Science of Success, we delve into the food science behind breeding and selling Driscoll’s Sweetest Batch, from creating more objective benchmarks for the highly subjective experience of taste to how the company works with supertasters and sensory analysts to create the best possible berry.
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Further reading:
Why America’s Berries Have Never Tasted So Good
How Designer Fruit Is Taking Over the Grocery Store
Trying to Breed Better Fruit
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7/26/2024 • 11 minutes, 6 seconds
Can Robots Reinvent Fast Food?
Restaurants are a tough business with tight margins, from the cost of food to paying for staff. Kernel, the new venture by Steve Ells, the founder and former CEO of Chipotle Mexican Grill, is trying to fix that by introducing food-making robots and a "digital-first" approach to restaurants. In this conversation from the WSJ Global Food Forum in June, reporter Heather Haddon talks with Ells about his new bet on consumers’ desire to eat less meat, and on a business model that could solve some of the industry’s thorny challenges.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
Rise of the Restaurant Robots: Chipotle, Sweetgreen and Others Bet on Automation
How Chipotle’s Founder Is Moving Beyond Burritos
Chipotle’s Labor Costs Are Rising. Customers Will See It in Pricing.
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7/19/2024 • 13 minutes, 59 seconds
Why You Might Be Eating More Seaweed in the Future
To hear proponents talk about it, seaweed could solve a whole lot of problems. It could feed people, restore polluted habitats and be an economic boost for fishermen. Though seaweed aquaculture has grown in the U.S. in recent years, the country produced less than 1% of the global seaweed crop in 2019. Now, some companies are trying to get seaweed aquaculture to scale in the U.S. But there are regulatory hurdles to overcome, and researchers have questions about how a scaled industry would affect existing ecosystems. WSJ’s Alex Ossola looks at what it will take to make seaweed a bigger part of the American diet in the future.
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Further reading:
Inside the Quest for a Super Kelp That Can Survive Hotter Oceans
Cows Make Climate Change Worse. Could Seaweed Help?
A Sargassum Bloom Is Hitting Florida: What to Know About the Seaweed Mass
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7/12/2024 • 17 minutes, 55 seconds
How Designer Fruit Is Taking Over the Grocery Store
No more mealy apples and flavorless oranges. There’s a growing category of produce available in your local grocery store: fruits and vegetables that have been carefully bred with flavor in mind. But these more delicious varieties tend to come in premium packaging—with a premium price to boot. WSJ contributor Elizabeth G. Dunn tells host Alex Ossola how this produce is bred and whether we can expect to see more of it in the future.
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Further reading:
This Strawberry Will Blow Your Mind: Inside the Startlingly Delicious World of Designer Produce
The Race to Save Ketchup: Building a Tomato for a Hotter World
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7/5/2024 • 14 minutes, 30 seconds
Science of Success: The Hot Window AC Making Summers Cool
They’re ugly. They’re clunky. They’re loud. And, worst of all, they spike your energy bills every summer. The window air conditioner is a dreaded summer staple in many homes. But one company is redefining how an AC functions by thinking outside the typical window box. For Science of Success, WSJ’s Ben Cohen tells the story of Midea’s U-shaped window AC that captured the collective consciousness for its noise reduction and energy efficiency.
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Further reading:
How Did the World’s Coolest Air Conditioner Get So Hot?
The Race to Build a Better Air Conditioner
Does Turning Off Your A/C When You’re Not Home Actually Save Money?
My Love Affair With Air-Conditioning
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6/28/2024 • 11 minutes, 22 seconds
How NASA Sees Climate Change From Space
Our climate is changing. In the last 100 years, the planet has warmed about 1.5 degrees Celsius, according to NASA. But how can we learn more about our planet’s climate and what we can do to slow the changes? Gavin A. Schmidt, a top NASA climate scientist and director of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, spoke with WSJ reporter Emily Glazer at the Future of Everything Festival on May 22, 2024 about the future of climate science and the data NASA is collecting on the Earth by looking at it from space.
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Further reading:
2023 Was the Hottest Year on Record
Extreme Heat, Floods, Fire: Was Summer 2023 the New Normal?
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6/21/2024 • 16 minutes, 15 seconds
Keeping Cities Cool in a Warmer Future
2023 was the world’s hottest year on record, and temperatures are expected to continue heating up. Cities, where more than half of the world lives, are contending with this extreme heat. But some places, such as Singapore, are looking for ways to modify aspects of their cities to make them more comfortable for people to live. The Cooling Singapore project is creating a hyper detailed digital twin of the city-state to be able to test the effectiveness of new methods the city would want to implement. WSJ’s Alex Ossola explains what they’ve learned, and how it can help us understand how more cities in the future might make changes to combat heat.
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Sign up for the WSJ's free The Future of Everything newsletter. Further reading:
Cooing Singapore project
2023 Was the Hottest Year on Record
Earth Just Had Its Hottest Month Ever. How Six Cities Are Coping.
How Reflective Paint Brings Down Scorching City Temperatures
These Photos Show How Urban Growth Fuels Extreme Heat
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6/14/2024 • 18 minutes, 38 seconds
Saving Ketchup: The Race to Breed a Tomato for a Warming World
What good is a future without ketchup or pasta sauce? These are just two potential casualties of a changing climate, as tomato growers face shrinking harvests due to hotter and drier weather. WSJ reporter Patrick Thomas takes us behind the scenes of how seed breeders are trying to make a tomato that can thrive with less water, and how that highlights the efforts going into protecting crops against the effects of climate change.
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What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
The Race to Save Ketchup: Building a Tomato for a Hotter World
How to Eat Your Way to a Greener Planet
Sustainable Agriculture Gets a Push From Big Corporations
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6/7/2024 • 17 minutes, 17 seconds
Science of Success: Birkenstocks and the Promise of Healthy Feet
How did a sandal that originally entered the U.S. market as a health product become a fashion staple and the crowning shoe of a multibillion dollar company? Margot Fraser originally brought Birkenstocks to the U.S. thinking that the comfort of the German sandal would appeal to women. But she couldn’t get shoe stores to sell them. They finally made it into the U.S. market through health food stores. Now, the seductively ugly shoe is a cultural icon and was valued at about $8.6 billion when the company went public last year. WSJ’s Ben Cohen explores the history of Birkenstock and how it paved the way for the future of women’s feet.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
Why Americans Are Obsessed With These Ugly Sandals
A Key to Birkenstock’s Billion Dollar Success? Its Frumpiest Shoe
A Visual History of Birkenstock’s Rise, From Insoles to IPO
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5/24/2024 • 10 minutes, 52 seconds
Will a Treatment Work? Try the 'Digital Twin' First.
How does your doctor know that a drug or procedure will work to treat a condition before they try it? Often, they don’t. Researchers are looking to create “digital twins,” digital versions of individual organs, to see how a patient will respond. Eventually there could be digital twins of entire bodies that are updated in real time with patient data. WSJ’s Alex Ossola speaks with WSJ senior special writer Stephanie Armour about how that might change the way we treat diseases in the future.
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Further reading: A ‘Digital Twin’ of Your Heart Lets Doctors Test Treatments Before Surgery
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5/17/2024 • 9 minutes, 53 seconds
Ultrasound Isn’t Just for Pregnancy. How It’s Helping Treat the Brain.
Ultrasound is known for its use in imaging during pregnancy. But new advancements in the technology suggest that in the future, ultrasound could be used to disrupt the blood-brain barrier. This would allow doctors to more easily diagnose and directly treat illnesses like brain cancer without major surgery. WSJ’s Danny Lewis and Charlotte Gartenberg examine the new ways that ultrasound could be used more specifically and subtly to deliver accurate diagnoses and precise treatments.
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Further reading:
New Ultrasound Therapy Could Help Treat Alzheimer’s, Cancer
Treatment Breakthrough for an Intractable Brain Cancer
The ‘Mini Brains’ solving medical mysteries and raising concerns
We Can Now See the Brain Like Never Before
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5/10/2024 • 22 minutes, 30 seconds
Chip in the Brain? How Brain-Computer Interfaces Could Change Medicine
A day when people can interact directly with computers using their thoughts could be on the horizon. Several companies, including Elon Musk’s Neuralink, have begun preliminary human trials of brain-computer interfaces - devices that decode the electrical signals in their brain and translate them into digital bits. Neurosurgeon Benjamin Rapoport is a co-founder and chief science officer of Precision Neuroscience, a company working on brain-computer interfaces. He spoke with WSJ’s Danny Lewis about how the technology works and how these implants could improve the lives of hundreds of thousands of people who could gain the ability to independently engage with the digital world.
Correction: Dr. Benjamin Rapoport is the co-founder of Precision Neuroscience. An earlier version misspelled his name Rapaport. (Corrected on May 3)
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Further reading:
Inside the Operating Room: Doctors Test a Revolutionary Brain-Computer Implant
Elon Musk’s Neuralink Wants to Make ‘The Matrix’ a Reality. It Has a Lot to Prove First.
She Didn’t Speak for 18 Years. A Computer Helped Find Her Voice.
The Devices That Will Read Your Brain—and Enhance It
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5/3/2024 • 20 minutes, 47 seconds
Science of Success: How Barnes & Noble Is Redesigning the Bookstore Chain
What does the brick and mortar bookstore of the future look like? For Barnes & Noble, it looks more like the indie bookstores they once threatened to put out of business 20 years ago. The company recently redesigned their national chain of over 500 bookstores, shedding the big box personality in favor of a look reminiscent of local bookshops. On this week’s Science of Success, WSJ columnist Ben Cohen speaks to Barnes & Noble CEO James Daunt about the look, feel and idea behind Barnes & Noble’s new indie design.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
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Further reading:
That Cool New Bookstore? It’s a Barnes & Noble.
New CEO Wants to Make Barnes & Noble Your Local Bookstore
Barnes & Noble’s New Boss Tries to Save the Chain—and Traditional Bookselling
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4/26/2024 • 11 minutes, 20 seconds
Designing the Sneaker of the Future
Can technology help us design the perfect running shoe that’s stronger, faster and better for the environment? David Allemann, co-founder of On, thinks technology can get us part of the way there, but it’s not the whole story. The performance running shoe and sportswear company is experimenting with computer simulation and bio-based materials to design sneakers to advance both runners and sustainability goals. WSJ men’s fashion columnist Jacob Gallagher speaks with Allemann about the future of running shoe tech and how sneakers might redefine the design cannon.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
How On’s Running Sneakers Won Over Tech Bros and High Fashion Alike
Where Did All the Crazy Sneakers Go?
This Designer Knows What Sneakers You’ll Be Wearing Next Year
These Grandpa Sneakers Are Made in America. They’re a Hit Overseas.
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4/19/2024 • 18 minutes, 48 seconds
How 3D Printing Could Drive the Factory of the Future
3D printing isn’t just for hobbyists – it could be central to the future of manufacturing. Companies are turning to this technology to make everything from car and airplane parts to houses faster and cheaper than with traditional techniques. Now, as 3D printing – also known as additive manufacturing – is getting quicker, researchers are testing its limits. WSJ’s Alex Ossola and Danny Lewis take a look at how this tech is building the factory of the future.
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Further reading:
This 3-D Printed Icelandic Fish-Gutting Machine Contains the Secret of a Future, Less-Globalized Economy
Venture Investors Are Pumping Capital Into 3-D Printing Startups. Here’s Why.
Energy Companies Turn to 3-D Printing to Bypass Snarled Supply Chains
3-D Printed Houses Are Sprouting Near Austin as Demand for Homes Grows
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4/12/2024 • 22 minutes, 17 seconds
Did Tesla’s Cybertruck Break the Mold on EV Pickup Truck Design?
When Tesla started developing the Cybertruck, CEO Elon Musk tasked the company's chief designer with creating a car that "feels like the future." But did it break the mold on what a pickup truck is? And how will it change truck design in the future? WSJ auto columnist Dan Neil test drove the Cybertruck. He spoke with WSJ’s Charlotte Gartenberg about his take on Tesla’s polarizing vehicle, and what it means for the future of EV design.
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Further reading:
I Gave Tesla’s Cybertruck a 48-Hour Thrashing. It (Mostly) Survived.
Tesla Hopes the Cybertruck Design Gives It an Edge
Tesla Designer: Cybertruck’s Funky Design Gives It an Edge
How Tesla’s Cybertruck Compares with Other Pickups
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4/5/2024 • 17 minutes, 19 seconds
Science of Success: How Self-Reporting Made Flying Safer
This year, several high profile incidents have kept flying in the limelight. Yet air travel is currently safer than ever. The biggest U.S. commercial airlines have now gone 15 years without a fatal crash. So, how did hurtling through the sky in a giant metal tube become this safe? WSJ columnist Ben Cohen speaks with former FAA and International Civil Aviation Organization executive William Voss about the voluntary self-reporting programs that made flying the safest form of travel and asks if the airline industry’s safety measures could provide a blueprint for regulation in other fields.
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Further reading:
Flying in America Has Actually Never Been Safer
Boeing Tells Airlines to Check 787 Cockpit Seats After Mishap on Latam Flight
Behind the Alaska Blowout: a Manufacturing Habit Boeing Can’t Break
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3/22/2024 • 13 minutes, 10 seconds
Why Waymo's Robotaxis Are Hitting the Arizona Freeway
After years of promises that driverless cars were just over the horizon, one of the industry's biggest players is headed for the freeway. Now, for the first time, Alphabet’s Waymo is allowing robotaxis to take its employees on high-speed roads in Phoenix, Arizona without a human driver. The move comes just as the industry is facing a harsh reality after high-profile crashes: GM’s Cruise had its permits to operate driverless robotaxis pulled by the California DMV, and Waymo issued its first-ever recall after two of its cars collided with a pickup truck being towed. WSJ reporter Meghan Bobrowsky discusses what this could mean for the future of self-driving cars and where the industry is heading.
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Further reading:
Self-Driving Cars Enter the Next Frontier: Freeways
Self-Driving Car Company Waymo Issues First-Ever Recall After Two Phoenix Crashes
GM’s Cruise Says U.S. Is Investigating Driverless Car’s Collision With Pedestrian
America’s Most Tech-Forward City Has Doubts About Self-Driving Cars
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3/15/2024 • 16 minutes, 25 seconds
Recharge as You Drive? The Future of EVs Could Be Wireless.
Imagine driving down a road that recharges your electric car as it moves. Companies around the world are experimenting with new technology that can wirelessly charge EVs while they drive, thanks to copper coils buried beneath the asphalt. It could mean less time spent plugging in at slow chargers, no need for heavy, expensive lithium-ion batteries and wave goodbye to range anxiety. WSJ’s Danny Lewis reports on what it would take for this tech to hit the road, and how it could change the way we refuel our vehicles.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
These Companies Want to Charge Your Electric Vehicle as You Drive
No More Charging Stops? We Take a Road Trip in an Ultralong-Range EV
The Big Year for EVs Gets Off to a Bumpy Start
Electric Cars and Driving Range: Here’s What to Know About EV Range
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3/8/2024 • 20 minutes, 12 seconds
How Today’s Aircraft Accidents Could Make Future Planes Safer
In recent months, an Alaska Airlines jet lost a door plug mid-flight, and a Japan Airlines plane collided with another aircraft at an airport in Tokyo. Accidents like these are uncommon, but they could help engineers design safer airplanes. Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University associate professor Anthony Brickhouse tells WSJ’s Danny Lewis how advanced materials and computer systems could bring flight into a safer future, while making sure human pilots are still part of the equation.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
How Safe Is Flying Today? Answering Your Questions
Boeing 737 MAX Missing Critical Bolts in Alaska Airlines Blowout, NTSB Says
Boeing Finds New Problem With 737 MAX Fuselages
Inside a Flaming Jet, 367 Passengers Had Minutes to Flee. Here’s How They Did It.
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3/1/2024 • 13 minutes, 19 seconds
Science of Success: The Mind at Work Behind an Iconic Song
Is it an earworm or an icon? The Super Mario Bros. theme is the soundtrack to many childhoods and has remained resonant today. Recently inducted into the Library of Congress’s National Recording Registry, the song was not easy to write. Video game composer Koji Kondo faced musical and technical challenges in creating the song. Columnist Ben Cohen talks to New England Conservatory musicologist Andrew Schartmann about how Kondo created this lasting and genre-changing piece of music.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
The Mind Behind the Music You Can't Get Out of Your Head
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2/23/2024 • 13 minutes, 33 seconds
Could AI Prevent the Next Global Supply Chain Crisis?
AI has brought new challenges for corporate executives in managing their workforces and supply chains. Flex CEO Revathi Advaithi tells WSJ reporter Emily Glazer how she is adjusting to uncertainty and gives her outlook on the future of the workplace and manufacturing. This conversation was recorded at WSJ’s CEO Council Summit on December 12, 2023.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
Leading in Uncertain Times
Sam Altman Seeks Trillions of Dollars to Reshape Business of Chips and AI
Logistics-Tech Startups Face Uncertain Future as Freight Slump Continues
The Do’s and Don’ts of Using Generative AI in the Workplace
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2/16/2024 • 14 minutes, 27 seconds
How Face Scans and Fingerprints Could Become Your Work Badge
Badge swipes and passwords are cornerstones of security in the modern workplace. But in a world where security is increasingly tied to biometrics and personal devices, your face or fingerprint may soon become the key to workplace security. While biometrics could provide better protection for sensitive information than an easily forgettable password, what are the privacy risks of biometric tech going mainstream? WSJ’s Danny Lewis explores the future of biometric security at work, and whether it could even go beyond face scans and fingerprints.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
Your Face Is Your Ticket: A Creepy Convenience
Apple Makes Security Changes to Protect Users From iPhone Thefts
Rite Aid Banned From Using AI Facial Recognition in FTC Settlement
What Is the Future of Identity Verification?
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2/9/2024 • 20 minutes
Is AI Taking the Human Out of the HR Department?
Will the human resources department be replaced by robots? Not quite, but the use of generative artificial intelligence in HR is on the rise. WSJ reporter Chip Cutter tells us how companies are incorporating AI tools internally and what might change in the future. Plus, we hear from Reshma Saujani, the founder of Girls Who Code and Moms First, who recently introduced paidleave.ai, a free AI-powered chatbot designed to help workers navigate paid family leave benefits. Saujani tells WSJ’s Charlotte Gartenberg about what she sees as the potential risks and benefits of AI in the workplace.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
New York City Passed an AI Hiring Law. So Far, Few Companies Are Following It.
How AI Will Change the Workplace
HR Departments Turn to AI-Enabled Recruiting in Race for Talent
The Do's and Don'ts of Using Generative AI in the Workplace
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2/2/2024 • 20 minutes, 23 seconds
Science of Success: The Nvidia CEO’s Lessons in Building a $1T Company
Nvidia's Jensen Huang is Silicon Valley's longest tenured CEO, and his company recently joined the trillion dollar club. But if he knew at the start what he knows now, would he do it all again? WSJ Science of Success columnist Ben Cohen explains Huang’s approach to success and what that might mean for tomorrow's entrepreneurs.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or e mail us: [email protected]
Further reading:
He Built a Trillion-Dollar Company. He Wouldn’t Do It Again.
Tech’s ‘Magnificent Seven’ Stocks Are Back on Top
Markets Analysis: Nvidia Stock Jumps to Record High
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1/26/2024 • 10 minutes, 31 seconds
Why AI Keeps Getting Better at Making Fake Images
Fake images are already turning heads online, and Hany Farid, a professor of computer science at the University of California, Berkeley, says we’re only going to see more of it. Farid specializes in image analysis and digital forensics. He tells WSJ’s Alex Ossola why it’s so easy to use generative AI to create convincing fake images, and why it could cause problems in the future. Plus, he discusses the potential tech solutions that will help us decipher whether an image or video we’re seeing online is too good to be true.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
Real or AI? The Tech Giants Racing to Stop the Spread of Fake Images
Reality Is Broken. We Have AI Photos to Blame.
A New Way to Tell Deepfakes From Real Photos: Can It Work?
AI-Created Images Are So Good Even AI Has Trouble Spotting Some
Sharing Fake Nude Images Could Become a Federal Crime Under Proposed Law
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1/19/2024 • 18 minutes, 22 seconds
Alexa, Can You Hear Me? Making AI Voice Assistants Better for Everyone.
AI voice assistants like Apple’s Siri and Amazon’s Alexa have become part of our everyday lives. But for people with atypical voices, including those with conditions like Parkinson’s disease and muscular dystrophy, these tools can be frustrating to use. Now a number of big tech companies including Amazon and Google, as well as research organizations are coming up with ways to make them more useful. What will it take to create voice assistants that work for everyone right out of the box?
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
Tech Firms Train Voice Assistants to Understand Atypical Speech
Amazon Makes Alexa Chattier and More Capable Using Generative AI
Alexa, Siri, Cortana: Why All Your Bots Are Female
Deep Speech: Scaling up end-to-end speech recognition (2014, arXiv)
Librispeech: An ASR corpus based on public domain audio books (2015, IEEE International Conference)
Speech Accessibility Project from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
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1/12/2024 • 22 minutes, 45 seconds
Why AI Should Be Taught to Know Its Limits
One of AI’s biggest, unsolved problems is what the advanced algorithms should do when they confront a situation they don’t have an answer for. For programs like Chat GPT, that could mean providing a confidently wrong answer, what’s often called a “hallucination”; for others, as with self-driving cars, there could be much more serious consequences. But what if AIs could be taught to recognize what they don’t understand and adjust accordingly? Usama Fayyad, the executive director for the Institute for Experiential Artificial Intelligence at Northeastern University thinks this could be the algorithmic answer to making future AIs better at what they do, by doing something too few humans can: recognizing their own limits.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
How Did Companies Use Generative AI in 2023? Here’s a Look at Five Early Adopters.
Your Medical Devices Are Getting Smarter. Can the FDA Keep Them Safe?
Artificial: The OpenAI Story
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1/5/2024 • 17 minutes, 43 seconds
Are Sailboats the Future of Shipping? The New, Old Tech Making Waves.
Sail-powered cargo ships are making waves on the seas. High-tech versions of old tools are being installed on existing cargo ships in order to reduce fuel costs and help decarbonize the industry, which currently generates 3% of all human-created greenhouse gasses. Retrofitting cargo ships with sails could make maritime shipping greener and cheaper, and even change how the complicated shipping industry works. WSJ host Danny Lewis reports.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
Old-School Wind Power Is Back for Cargo Shipping
Shipping Regulator to Steer Clear of Stricter Rules on Carbon Emissions
Fertilizer Companies Are Betting on Ammonia as a Low-Carbon Fuel
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12/22/2023 • 20 minutes, 54 seconds
The Future of Baby Formula May Be Artificial Breast Milk
Breast milk imparts a number of long-term health benefits to babies, including a lower risk of asthma, obesity, Type 1 diabetes and sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But for a variety of reasons, many parents turn to formula. Now, several startups such as BIOMILQ and Helaina are working on new kinds of infant nutrition products that promise to better mimic parts of human breast milk—and may lead to advances in adult nutrition along the way. But to bring artificial breast milk to market, they’ll need to do some tough science and overcome regulatory and ethical hurdles.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
The ‘Arms Race’ to Build a Better Baby Formula
Baby-Formula Shortage Worsened by Drop in Breast-Feeding Rates
Baby-Formula Makers Face FTC Investigation for Collusion
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12/8/2023 • 24 minutes, 3 seconds
A Nuclear Power Plant in Your Backyard? Future Reactors Are Going Small
The next generation of nuclear power plants could be tiny, and that could mean big things for carbon-free electricity. Several companies including NuScale Power and Bill Gates’ TerraPower are developing small modular reactors that promise to be more adaptable than the towering conventional nuclear power plants. After years of development and growing investment, the first of these next-generation reactors could go online by 2030. But will their promises to provide safe and plentiful energy live up to the hype, and overcome the economic challenges of their predecessors? WSJ’s Danny Lewis looks at what small reactors could mean for the business of nuclear power and how you get your electricity.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
A Futuristic Plan to Make Steel With Nuclear Fusion
Nuclear Power Is Staging a Comeback, but Is It Affordable and Safe?
OpenAI’s Sam Altman Is Taking a Nuclear-Energy Startup Public
Nuclear Power Is Poised for a Comeback. The Problem Is Building the Reactors.
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11/22/2023 • 26 minutes, 40 seconds
Hearing Aid Tech Isn’t Just for Listening Anymore
There may come a day when everyone will be wearing hearing aids. That’s because today’s hearing aids can do much more than clarify and amplify sound. Companies like Starkey are adding features like cognitive activity tracking and exercise monitoring. They’re developing tech that aims to warn users before they might fall and predict aspects of mental health too. If barriers like high cost and social stigma are addressed, hearing aids could become a vital accessory, whether or not you’re one of the 55 million Americans projected to have hearing loss by 2030.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
Wait, Are Hearing Aids Cool Now? Ask Millennials
Apple AirPods Could Help You Hear Better
Buying Help for Over-the-Counter Hearing Aids—Whether You Spend $250 or $2,500
Cheaper Over-the-Counter Hearing Aids Are Coming. Here’s How to Comparison Shop.
Cures for Hearing Loss May Be Found in New Drugs
Using Teeth to Help Restore Hearing
Better Hearing Can Lead to Better Thinking
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11/10/2023 • 26 minutes, 9 seconds
Beaming Solar Energy From Space Takes a Big Step Forward
What if there were a way to generate clean solar electricity from space and send it directly to Earth? It sounds like science-fiction, but Caltech engineers are working on ways to collect solar energy on orbiting satellites and wirelessly beam that power back to stations on the ground. The results of their experiments suggest that space-based solar power may have a bright future. But while they’ve been able to show it’s possible on a demonstration satellite, getting power from orbit to Earth is a big challenge. WSJ’s Danny Lewis talks with science journalist Corey S. Powell about what it will take to wirelessly transmit solar energy and how it could transform the future of the grid.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
Beaming Solar Energy From Space Gets a Step Closer
The Next Bets for Renewable Energy
Solar Boom Spreads to Timberlands and Self-Storage Rooftops
Investments in Solar Power Eclipse Oil for First Time
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10/27/2023 • 16 minutes, 21 seconds
Going Electric? Why Future Power Could Come From Hot Rocks
Want to go electric? We might need to dig a little deeper… into the Earth’s crust. Researchers and startups are testing new technology and drilling techniques to harness geothermal energy – heat from the Earth that can be used to generate electricity. It’s a renewable energy source that has been billed as a way to boost energy independence while reducing carbon emissions. But because of technical limitations, geothermal made up just 0.4% of all electricity generated in the U.S last year. The Biden Administration and energy giants such as Chevron are investing in geothermal, with the aim that your lights, your cell phone and your electric car might be powered by geothermal in the future. WSJ’s Alex Ossola explores what it will take for geothermal energy to scale.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
Can the Oil-and-Gas Industry Crack Geothermal Energy?
‘Deep Geothermal’ Promises to Let Drillers Go Deeper, Faster and Hotter
The Next Bets for Renewable Energy
Fracking for Geothermal Energy? Not So Fast
The Race to Drill America’s Longest Oil and Gas Wells
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10/13/2023 • 25 minutes, 51 seconds
What Planets Outside Our Solar System Can Tell Us About Life on Earth
Is there life on planets other than Earth? For generations, scientists have puzzled over the question, searching for planets that might have the right conditions both inside and outside the Milky Way. There are thousands of exoplanets – those beyond our solar system – ranging from gas giants, to balls of rock, to possible ocean worlds and so-called “super Earths.” But even as new technology has given scientists a glimpse at these distant worlds, one lingering question is whether any of them can support life and what forms it might take. WSJ’s Danny Lewis speaks to University of Arizona astronomer Chris Impey about what makes a planet habitable and how learning about exoplanets can teach us more about our own world.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
A Moon of Saturn Has All the Ingredients Needed for Life
Jupiter Mission Launches on Journey to Explore Icy Worlds
Astronomers Catch a Star Swallowing a Planet
These Scientists Want to Send Space Aliens a Cosmic Road Map to Earth
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9/29/2023 • 21 minutes, 40 seconds
Real or AI? The Tech Giants Racing to Stop the Spread of Fake Images
AI-generated or manipulated images are quickly becoming a lot more realistic. Soon, it may be impossible to tell the difference. That could create an opportunity for people to spread misinformation, and make it difficult to know what’s real. Tech companies like Adobe, Microsoft and Google, academics and government agencies are coming up with frameworks to verify images and, in some cases, show how they’ve been altered. But, these techniques may come with security risks of their own. WSJ’s Alex Ossola and Charlotte Gartenberg explore the new technology solutions that will identify fake images online and the potential issues getting them in front of users.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
AI-Created Images Are So Good Even AI Has Trouble Spotting Some
Ask an AI Art Generator for Any Image. The Results Are Amazing—and Terrifying
Paparazzi Photos Were the Scourge of Celebrities. Now, It’s AI
AI, Art and the Future of Looking at a Painting
Some of the Thorniest Questions About AI Will Be Answered in Court
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9/15/2023 • 27 minutes, 38 seconds
No More Charging Stops? We Take a Road Trip in an Ultralong-Range EV
The great American road trip has long been powered by gasoline. Gas stations are everywhere, making it easy to fill-up when your gas tank nears empty. But what if you’re trying to travel long-distance in an electric car and can’t find a charger? WSJ’s Danny Lewis speaks to WSJ tech columnist Christopher Mims about his recent road trip in an ultralong-range Lucid Motors EV. The car aims to eliminate range anxiety by traveling an Environmental Protection Agency-estimated range of more than 500 miles without needing to recharge.
What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected]
Further reading:
Ultralong-Range Electric Cars Are Arriving. Say Goodbye to Charging Stops
Why America Isn’t Ready for the EV Takeover
The Key to Widespread Adoption of EVs: Less Range
Big Automakers Plan Thousands of EV Chargers in $1 Billion U.S. Push Ford Venture Gets Record $9.2 Billion Government Loan for EV Batteries
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9/1/2023 • 19 minutes, 3 seconds
Meet the Soft Robots Doing the Hard Jobs of the Future
When you think of a robot, what comes to mind? A big metal arm in a car factory? A shiny android like C3PO from “Star Wars”? What about a robot that’s soft, floppy and looks a little more like the hot dog fingers from “Everything Everywhere, All at Once”? Soft robots are engineered for more delicate tasks that used to require a human touch – like handling food or conducting tests inside our bodies. But for now, they’re isolated to specific fields, like manufacturing and medicine, and haven’t really made their way into the daily lives of most people. WSJ’s Alex Ossola looks into what it will take to bring soft robots out of the factory and hospital and into our homes.
Further reading:
Robots Are Learning to Handle With Care
Robots Are Looking to Bring a Human Touch to Warehouses
What Picking Up an Apple Tells You About the Future of Robotics
First Autonomous, Entirely Soft Robot Developed
Amid the Labor Shortage, Robots Step in to Make the French Fries
The Quest for a Robot With a Sense of Touch
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8/18/2023 • 25 minutes, 57 seconds
The Sensors Helping Farmers Adapt to Extreme Weather
Farmers across the U.S. are facing challenges from extreme weather. From intense heat and drought roasting crops to rain-delayed harvests, many who grow the food we rely on are having to find new ways to adapt. For some, that means going high-tech, using sensors that can tell them when their plants need more water or fertilizer. WSJ’s Jala Everett looks into how modern sensors are changing the world of farming and how some sensors the size of “bandages” could deliver even more precise data from individual plants.
Further reading:
Five Farming Technologies Tackle Climate Change Threats
Widespread Drought Creates Winners and Losers in U.S Agriculture
Harvesting Crews Hustle to Bring In Wheat Crop Hit by Drought, Late Rains
The Environmental Upside of Modern Farming
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8/11/2023 • 19 minutes, 31 seconds
How Vaccines Could Help Ease the Threat of Deadly Fungal Infections
The risks from fungal pathogens are increasing. Severe infections used to be rare, but the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates more than 75,000 people in the U.S. are hospitalized for fungal diseases each year, and the World Health Organization says rates of severe fungal infections are likely to increase as fungi adapt to warmer temperatures and become resistant to drugs. Could a vaccine be the answer? WSJ’s Danny Lewis explores how scientists are looking into new ways of reducing the threat from dangerous fungi.
Further reading:
Deadly Fungal Infections Confound Doctors—‘It’s Going to Get Worse’
Deadly Fungi Are Becoming More Common and We’re Running Out of Ways to Treat Them
Dangerous Fungi Are Spreading Across U.S. as Temperatures Rise
Fatal Fungi Threaten Global Health, WHO Says
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8/4/2023 • 23 minutes, 41 seconds
The Wrinkles in Getting ‘Forever Chemicals’ Out of Our Clothes
So-called “forever chemicals” are seemingly everywhere. A recent government study found close to half of U.S. tap water contains at least one PFAS chemical. They’re also on a lot of our clothes, where the chemicals are used to promote water resistance or repel stains. But some of the things that make PFAS so effective also means they stay in our bodies for years. And these chemicals have been linked to health issues, including high cholesterol and an increased risk of kidney cancer. Now, as clothing companies look to eliminate PFAS from their products, they’re facing another challenge: what to replace the chemicals with—ideally without sacrificing performance. WSJ’s Alex Ossola dives into the textile industry’s efforts to move on from PFAS and change our expectations around our clothing.
Further reading:
Lots of Tap Water Contains ‘Forever Chemicals.’ Take These Steps to Reduce Your Risk.
What to Know About ‘Forever Chemicals,’ or PFAS, and Your Health
How ‘Forever Chemicals’ Are All Around Us, From Winter Coats to Fast-Food Wrappers
EPA Proposes Limits for ‘Forever Chemicals’ in Drinking Water
Coastal Town Brings Mass Litigation—and an ‘Existential Threat’—to Chemical Giants
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7/21/2023 • 25 minutes, 38 seconds
How Drugs Like Ozempic Are Changing What We Think About Weight Loss
You may have heard about Ozempic, Wegovy and Mounjaro. It’s tough to miss the online chatter, the ads on TV and all the news coverage. They are part of a class of drugs originally designed to treat diabetes, and all three have been shown to help people lose significant amounts of weight. That’s leading to big sales for drug companies and helping change the way we think about weight loss. WSJ’s Ariana Aspuru digs into how these drugs work, the big money involved and what it means for millions of Americans who meet the criteria for obesity.
Further reading:
Pill for Obesity Has Wall Street Salivating
Will Ozempic Change ‘Body Positivity’ for Good?
No More Shots: Pill Versions of Ozempic-Like Drugs Are Coming
The Drugs That Are Gaining on Ozempic
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7/14/2023 • 30 minutes, 50 seconds
Astronaut Fashion Is Changing. This Is Not Your Grandpa’s Spacesuit
For the first time in decades, NASA is planning to send astronauts back to the moon. Their spacesuits will be very different from what Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin wore when they walked the lunar surface in 1969. Spacesuits today are thinner and lighter, while still making sure astronauts can complete tasks and stay alive. In this conversation from the Future of Everything festival in May, WSJ’s Danny Lewis speaks to Amy Ross, one of NASA’s top spacesuit engineers. She explains how the lessons learned from designing next-generation moon suits will eventually help astronauts explore Mars, while leading to other innovations here on Earth.
Further reading:
NASA, Canadian Space Agency Select Astronauts for Artemis Moon Mission
NASA's New Artemis Spacesuits Are Designed to Put a Woman on the Moon
NASA Plans to Bring Bits of Mars to Earth. It May Change How We See Space
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7/7/2023 • 24 minutes, 19 seconds
How Do You Make Hurricane Forecasts Better? Send In the Drones
Forecasting hurricanes is an inexact science. That's why they're called forecasts. But government researchers and meteorologists are working to make their predictions better, to help people know when they should evacuate and when it's safe to stay put. And that means using all sorts of new technology, including drones that sail right into the storms. WSJ's Ariana Aspuru visited the National Hurricane Center in Florida to find out how those forecasts come together and see the new models in the works to improve accuracy and save lives.
Further reading:
The Science for Determining Climate-Change Damage Is Unsettled - WSJ
Atlantic Hurricane Seasons Are Starting Weeks Earlier, Raising Risks to Coastal Areas - WSJ Tornadoes, Hurricanes and Wildfires Racked Up $165 Billion in Disaster Damage in 2022 - WSJ
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6/23/2023 • 30 minutes, 32 seconds
Greener Planes Are Taking Flight. That Could Change How We Travel
Some of the world’s biggest aviation companies, including Boeing and Airbus, are working on the next generation of planes. One big goal? Making air travel greener by cutting its carbon footprint. So, they're ditching traditional jet fuel in favor of other options, like hydrogen fuel cells, electricity from batteries, and “sustainable aviation fuels." That could mean major changes in how we fly and how much we pay to get to our destinations. WSJ’s Danny Lewis talks with Boeing, Airbus and others about how this push to change how planes are powered could shape the future of flight.
Further reading:
The Most Valuable U.S. Power Company Is Making a Huge Bet on Hydrogen
Electric Planes Could Soon Take Off, but They May Not Go Far
Fossil-Fuel Veterans Find Next Act With Green Hydrogen
United Airlines Creates Fund for Sustainable Aviation Fuel
Airlines Push to Reduce Carbon Footprint With Greener Fuels
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6/9/2023 • 27 minutes, 13 seconds
Can Flying Taxis Get Off the Ground?
Imagine getting from your home to the airport and skipping all the traffic on the road in a flying taxi. They once were the domain of science fiction and Saturday morning cartoons, but a growing number of companies are working to make taxis in the sky a reality, and the FAA is coming up with regulations to keep them safe. In this conversation from the Future of Everything festival in May, WSJ’s Alex Ossola speaks to Billy Nolen, the acting FAA administrator, about the business and technology behind air-taxi travel and the challenges facing regulators.
Further reading:
FAA Plans New Sky Lanes for Air Taxis
When Will Flying Taxis Get Off the Ground? The CEO of Boeing-Backed Wisk Aero Has Some Ideas.
United to Invest $15 Million in Flying-Taxi Maker Backed by Embraer
For eVTOLs to Really Take Off, Airspace Needs an Overhaul. Here’s Why.
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5/26/2023 • 20 minutes, 3 seconds
NASA Plans to Bring Bits of Mars to Earth. It May Change How We See Space
NASA’s Perseverance rover is currently collecting samples on the surface of Mars, and some of them will be coming to Earth—that is, if all goes well. NASA has a complex plan to bring bits of the Red Planet here, arriving in 2033, so scientists can study them to answer some burning questions. What’s the planet’s history? What is its dust like? And, are there any signs that life may have existed there? WSJ’s Alex Ossola speaks to Lindsay Hays, an astrobiologist at NASA and deputy lead scientist for the Mars Sample Return mission, about how this mission could help us better understand the history of our own planet and shape future missions to Mars and beyond.
Further reading:
NASA Lands Perseverance Rover Safely on Mars After ‘Seven Minutes of Terror’
NASA Collects Mars Rock Samples in Historic First for Perseverance Rover
NASA’s Perseverance Rover Begins Its Search for Life on Mars
Mars Photos: See NASA’s Perseverance Rover’s First Visions of Red Planet
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5/12/2023 • 26 minutes, 32 seconds
Forecasting Future Diseases With Every Flush
At the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, epidemiologists looked to our sewers to help figure out the scale of the virus’ spread. It worked, giving some public health officials a heads-up before Covid surges. Now, researchers are taking the lessons from that pandemic, and working to put the wastewater from bathing, toilets, laundry machines and dishwashers to use in monitoring the spread of other diseases. WSJ’s Danny Lewis speaks with environmental microbiologist, engineer and epidemiologist Marlene Wolfe about why it’s so important to look at wastewater if we want to stop the next pandemic.
Further reading:
For Future Viral Threats, Health Officials Look to Sewage - WSJ
From the Sewers, Clues to Covid-19’s Next Moves - WSJ
CDC Will Test Sewage for Polio in Some U.S. Communities - WSJ
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4/28/2023 • 18 minutes, 40 seconds
How Recycling Wastewater Could Help Quench the West’s Thirst
Severe droughts in the American South and West are raising new questions about how to ensure millions of people have access to clean, safe water. That’s why several local water systems, including one that provides water to 19 million people in Southern California, are looking to a method of water recycling that brings treated wastewater back into the system. It’s called “direct potable reuse,” but many people have dubbed it “toilet to tap.” Can it succeed despite the ick factor? WSJ’s Alex Ossola visited Los Angeles to find out just how it would work, and how the public is reacting.
Further reading:
California Could Face Cuts to Colorado River Usage Under Federal Proposal
California Governor Lifts Most Drought Restrictions on Water Use
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4/14/2023 • 26 minutes, 27 seconds
How Smell is Helping Treat the Toughest Cases of Trauma
Our sense of smell is deeply linked to our emotions, due to the connections between the tissue structures that identify odors and the parts of the brain that govern our memories and feelings. But what if those smells are linked to traumatic memories? Researchers are finding success using a combination of artificial scents and virtual reality to treat people with severe cases of trauma. WSJ’s Danny Lewis examines how new innovations could make this therapy more accessible.
Further reading:
High-Tech Smell Sensors Aim to Sniff Out Disease, Explosives—and Even Moods - WSJ
The Metaverse’s Effects on Mental Health: Trivial or Troubling? - WSJ
The New Halloween Scare: ‘Oh, My God, That Smell Was Gross.’ - WSJ
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3/31/2023 • 22 minutes, 53 seconds
The ‘Mini Brains’ solving medical mysteries and raising concerns
It may seem like science fiction, but over the past decade scientists have been using stem cells to grow so-called “mini brains.” Researchers prefer the term brain organoids, a collection of human cells in a petri dish that mimic the structure and cell types of our own brains. They’ve been used to study diseases like cancer and Parkinson’s, and evaluate potential treatments, but now the research is becoming more sophisticated, and that’s raising big concerns. Could they become conscious? Should we even be experimenting on our own cells? WSJ’s Alex Ossola explores the advantages, and potential issues, as scientists look to use brain organoids to test new medicines or even replace the chips in our computers.
Further reading:
Scientists Grow Human Cells in Rat Brains to Study Autism, Schizophrenia
Engineered Mini Brain Models Show Patterns of Activity That Resemble Babies’
Startup Uses ‘Mini Brains’ and Software to Power Drug Research
Thomas Hartung’s laboratory at Johns Hopkins University
Paola Arlotta’s laboratory at Harvard University
The Brainstorm Project
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3/17/2023 • 25 minutes, 21 seconds
Melting Ice & Undersea Cables: How the Arctic Is Getting Fast Internet
High-speed internet is something many of us take for granted. But the FCC says millions of Americans lack access to broadband service. That includes many people who live in the northernmost parts of Alaska, where satellite internet has long been the only option. That’s changing, though, as melting sea ice is leading a rush of companies to step in and start laying new undersea cables. WSJ Pro reporter Isabelle Bousquette visited parts of the Arctic where high-speed internet has made it easier to learn and even saved lives. She speaks with WSJ’s Danny Lewis about the huge educational, medical and research implications for people in the Arctic and beyond.
Further reading:
A Warming Arctic Emerges as a Route for Subsea Cables - WSJ
Climate Change in Arctic Is Changing How People There Live and Work - WSJ
Google, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft Weave a Fiber-Optic Web of Power - WSJ
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3/10/2023 • 28 minutes, 43 seconds
Encore: Beyond Silicon? The New Materials Charting the Future of Microchips
Microchips are in pretty much all of our electronic devices—if it’s got a plug or a battery, it’s probably got a chip. For the past 60 years, most of these have been made of silicon. But new devices demand faster, better, and more efficient processors, and engineers are hitting silicon’s physical limits. In this encore episode of the Future of Everything, WSJ’s Alex Ossola digs into the future of chips—how scientists are boosting silicon’s capabilities and looking for other materials that could take its place.
Further reading:
Graphene and Beyond: The Wonder Materials That Could Replace Silicon in Future Tech
The Microchip Era Is Giving Way to the Megachip Age
Chips Act Will Create More Than One Million Jobs, Biden Says
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3/3/2023 • 21 minutes, 35 seconds
Why the Future of Mental Health Care Could Be in Your Gut
A growing body of research suggests that the gut microbiome, the bacteria and other organisms that live in the gut, is linked to our mental health. But what if doctors could act on that information to treat mental illness by changing the gut microbiome? WSJ’s Alex Ossola talks to some of the top researchers in the emerging field of psychobiotics to explore how changing what’s in the gut could lead to future psychiatric treatments.
Help is available: Reach the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (formerly known as the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline) by dialing or texting 988.
Further reading:
Gut Bacteria Are Linked to Depression
What Is Your Microbiome? A Wellness Trend Taking On Post-Covid Urgency
Modern Life Is Messing With Our Microbiomes, but Science Is Fighting Back
Diets Engineered to Work With Your Microbiome Are Latest Startup Craze
Those Probiotics May Actually Be Hurting Your ‘Gut Health’
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2/17/2023 • 27 minutes, 47 seconds
How Football Tech May Change the Game for Head Injuries
When the game clock starts, football players aren’t just heading out with their pads and a game plan. Technology like helmet sensors that track the hits players take are becoming more common, especially for young players. They’re being used to figure out when a player might be at risk for a concussion or another brain injury. The data collected is helping researchers and doctors learn more about what happens to the brain over time. But could these innovations and research shape how we play football?
Further reading:
Tua Tagovailoa Is in the NFL’s Concussion Protocols Again - WSJ
Severity, Not Frequency, Sets Football Injuries Apart - WSJ
NFL and Nike Court a New Football Market: Girls - WSJ
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2/3/2023 • 28 minutes, 22 seconds
Algorithms Are Everywhere. How You Can Take Back Control
Computer algorithms and artificial intelligence increasingly affect more and more of our lives, from the content we’re shown online, to the music we enjoy, to how our household appliances work. But the results these algorithms produce may be changing our world in ways users may not fully understand. WSJ’s Danny Lewis speaks with psychologist Gerd Gigerenzer, director of the Harding Center for Risk Literacy at the University of Potsdam. He’s spent decades studying how people make choices and find patterns when faced with uncertainty, and has some ideas about how to navigate and improve the relationship between AI and our society.
Further reading:
The Backstory of ChatGPT Creator OpenAI
New York City Delays Enforcement of AI Bias Law
How AI That Powers Chatbots and Search Queries Could Discover New Drugs
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1/20/2023 • 21 minutes, 15 seconds
From Laundry to the Ocean: Fixing the Microplastics Problem in Clothes
Our clothes are in need of a refresh, but not in the way you might think. With each wash, everything from sweaters to socks are releasing tiny, microscopic fibers into our water. Almost 35% of the primary microplastics in oceans right now come from laundry, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
From filters in our washing machines to new materials for our clothes, alternatives are in the works to stop microplastics from coming off our clothes. But will it be enough? WSJ’s Alex Ossola and Ariana Aspuru speak about the steps researchers and companies are taking to solve the problem of microplastics in our wash.
Further reading:
The Tiny Plastics in Your Clothes Are Becoming a Big Problem - WSJ
Ocean Garbage Patches Have a Microscopic Problem - WSJ
Fashion Firms Look to Single-Fiber Clothes as EU Recycling Regulations Loom - WSJ
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1/6/2023 • 25 minutes, 7 seconds
Navigating The Future of Maps
From paper maps to smartphone apps, the way people navigate the world has changed tremendously due to the rise of the internet. Google Maps is the fourth most popular mobile app in the U.S. by unique visitors, according to Comscore. That makes it more popular than Instagram, Tiktok and Spotify or its closest competitor, Apple Maps. Christopher Phillips, who runs Google’s Geo team and oversees Google Maps, speaks with WSJ’s Danny Lewis about how his company is thinking about the role maps play in bringing more information to our fingertips.
Further reading:
WSJ: The Future of Transportation
Google Combines Maps and Waze Teams Amid Pressure to Cut Costs
Google Reaches $391.5 Million Settlement With States Over Location Tracking Practices
Slow Self-Driving Car Progress Tests Investors’ Patience
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12/23/2022 • 20 minutes, 13 seconds
Making It Rain: How Cloud Seeding Could Help Combat Future Droughts
This past summer, many parts of the world suffered from some of the worst drought conditions in decades. In an effort to create more rain, the government of China turned once again to cloud seeding, a controversial technique that aims to target precipitation in key areas. WSJ’s Alex Ossola talks to Dr. Katja Friedrich, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Colorado Boulder, about the advantages and disadvantages of using cloud seeding to get more water where it is needed.
Further reading:
China Extends Power Curbs Amid Heat Wave, Drought
China, Thirsty and Craving Rain, Lines Clouds With Silver Bullets
When the U.S. Tried to Control Hurricanes
Indonesian Snapshot: The Rainmakers of Riau
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12/9/2022 • 22 minutes, 23 seconds
Thanksgiving of the Future: What Climate Change Means for Your Plate
Thanksgiving often centers around a meal: turkey, sides and a lot of desserts. This year, many Thanksgiving staples are more expensive due to inflation; in the future, many of those staples will cost even more due to the effects of climate change. WSJ’s Alex Ossola looks into how environmental conditions, alongside technological advances, will change what makes its way to our Thanksgiving tables, and how our individual choices may spark new traditions.
Further reading:
The Trouble With Butter: Tight Dairy Supplies Send Prices Surging Ahead of Baking Season
Record Turkey Prices Are Coming for Thanksgiving
Lab-Grown Poultry Clears First Hurdle at FDA
Sean Sherman’s 2018 op-ed in Time
The Essential Thanksgiving Playbook
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11/24/2022 • 21 minutes, 38 seconds
The Problem With Plastics: Could New Recycling Tech Help the Planet?
World leaders are still trying to figure out how to handle the hundreds of millions of tons of plastic waste generated every year. Back in the 1990s, it was tough to switch on the TV and not see ads or shows offering viewers a simple solution: to reduce, reuse, and recycle plastics. Nice words, but it turns out that wasn’t enough to solve the problem. New high tech methods have shown promise in breaking down plastics or creating new ones that are easier to recycle. But they’re expensive alternatives. Will the economics work out? WSJ’s Danny Lewis sorts through the future of plastics recycling.
Would you pay more for plastic products designed to be easily recycled? Email us at [email protected]
Further reading:
U.S. Recycles 5% of Plastic Waste, Studies Show
The 100% Recyclable Running Shoe That’s Only Available by Subscription
‘Widely Recyclable’ Label Introduced to Plastic Packaging
Soda Brands Are About to Get Possessive of Their Trash
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11/11/2022 • 21 minutes, 28 seconds
Siddhartha Mukherjee on the Future of Cellular Medicine
Cells are the basic unit of life, but you could be forgiven if you stopped thinking about them after high school biology. In his newest book, “The Song of the Cell,” physician and author Dr. Siddhartha Mukherjee explores the myriad ways the humble cell is key to our world and our biology. He speaks to WSJ’s Alex Ossola about how our understanding of the cell is opening up a new frontier in medicine, how it is helping create new treatments for difficult diseases like cancer, and how it could one day help fix or even enhance our bodies.
What’s something you’re curious about that could shape the future? Email us at [email protected]
Further reading:
Book Review: The Emperor of All Maladies
Peeking Into Pandora’s Box
Publisher Tweaks ‘Gene’ Book After New Yorker Article Uproar
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10/28/2022 • 25 minutes, 33 seconds
Are Personal Pigs The Future of Human Medicine?
In the future, you might leave your doctor’s office with a prescription for a pig whose DNA has been modified to match your own. Scientists are already working on genetically engineering pigs to help predict the progression of a disease, or serve as an organ donor for those who need a transplant. But could pigs one day become keys to truly personalized medicine? WSJ’s Danny Lewis explores the promise and potential pitfalls of using animals to help human health.
What’s something you’re curious about that could shape the future? Email us at [email protected]
Further reading:
Growing a New Type of Organ Donor
Scientists to Study Pig-Organ Transplants in Brain-Dead People for Longer Periods
Scientists Transplant Human Tissue into Rat Brains, Opening Door to New Research
The Human Genome “Rosetta Stone” and The Future of Health
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10/14/2022 • 21 minutes, 30 seconds
Beyond Silicon? The New Materials Charting the Future of Microchips
Microchips are in pretty much all of our electronic devices—if it’s got a plug or a battery, it’s probably got a chip. For the past 60 years, most of these have been made of silicon. But new devices demand faster, better, and more efficient processors, and engineers are hitting silicon’s physical limits. In this episode of the Future of Everything, WSJ’s Alex Ossola digs into the future of chips—how scientists are boosting silicon’s capabilities and looking for other materials that could take its place.
Further reading:
Graphene and Beyond: The Wonder Materials That Could Replace Silicon in Future Tech
The Microchip Era Is Giving Way to the Megachip Age
Chips Act Will Create More Than One Million Jobs, Biden Says Timeline of silicon’s development (Computer History Museum)
Christopher Mims’ tech column for the Wall Street Journal
Deji Akinwande's research page at the University of Texas at Austin
Stephen Forrest's profile page at the University of Michigan
Deep Jariwala's lab page the the University of Pennsylvania Wolfspeed's website
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9/30/2022 • 21 minutes, 35 seconds
The Conservation Conundrum: How Do We Decide Which Species to Save?
From “save the whales” to “protect the bumblebee,” animal conservationists rally advocates and officials to put resources toward ensuring the survival of a threatened species. But can we really save them all? Or are we overlooking the trade-offs as we decide which animals are protected to the detriment of others? WSJ’s Danny Lewis speaks to Dr. Rebecca Nesbit, ecologist and author of the book “Tickets for The Ark: From Wasps to Whales – How Do We Choose What to Save?” about the tricky ethical questions behind conservation.
Further Reading:
A Belgian City Opens a Hotel for an Unusual Clientele: Insects | WSJ
Are Shark Attacks a Sign of Conservation Success? | WSJ
Bird Populations Plummet in North America | WSJ
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9/16/2022 • 24 minutes, 1 second
Why Sound Could be Key to the Future of Coral Reefs
With climate change warming the oceans, coral reefs remain some of the most vulnerable ecosystems. Keeping an eye on them can be time-consuming and expensive, since it requires divers to do spot-checks to see if the reefs are bustling, lively environments or if they are degrading into abandoned neighborhoods. But some researchers are increasingly tuning in to how reefs sound to monitor the corals’ health and maybe even make them more resilient. In this episode of The Future of Everything, WSJ’s Danny Lewis explores how listening to reefs may be the next frontier in trying to save them.
Further reading:
Financing a Healthy Future for Coral Reefs
Listen: Scientists Are Recording Ocean Sounds to Spot New Species
Divers Discover Coral Reef in Pristine Condition
Google AI Tries to Save the Whales
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9/2/2022 • 20 minutes, 10 seconds
AI, Art and the Future of Looking at a Painting
Three controversial paintings by Austrian symbolist painter Gustav Klimt were lost to a fire in WWII. All that remained were black and white photos - and art historians have discussed what the paintings’ motifs and colors actually looked like for decades. Recently, the Google Arts and Culture Lab gave it a try ... by tapping into artificial intelligence. In this episode of the Future of Everything, WSJ's Ariana Aspuru explores how researchers are using AI to better understand art, artists and the creative process.
Further reading:
The Klimt Color Enigma — Google Arts & Culture
‘Klimt vs. Klimt: The Man of Contradictions’ Review: Exploring an Art-Nouveau Master Online - WSJ
Using AI to recreate how artists painted their masterpieces | MIT CSAIL
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8/19/2022 • 24 minutes, 59 seconds
How Gene-Edited Crops Could be the Future of Feeding the World
In the decade since CRISPR gene-editing technology was first developed, it has been used to address a host of issues, such as developing new cancer treatments, designing faster rapid COVID-19 tests and to make biofuel-producing algae. Proponents say CRISPR could also help solve some of the world’s biggest food-related problems: salad greens could be more nutritious, fruits could taste better, and crops of all kinds could be altered to grow using fewer resources. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently gave the go-ahead to bring gene-edited beef to market, and CRISPR-modified purple tomatoes could be coming later this year. But agricultural technology companies still have to figure out how to overcome consumer skepticism. In this session from the WSJ Global Food Forum, leaders from two firms working to scale-up gene-edited foods discuss what it takes to get the new technology out of the lab and into supermarkets.
Further reading:
Get Ready for Gene-Edited Food
GMO Tomatoes Could Be Returning After 25 Years. Will People Eat Them?
Crispr’s Next Frontier: Treating Common Conditions
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8/5/2022 • 22 minutes, 31 seconds
Making “Organic Architecture” Truly Organic
Neri Oxman spends her time thinking about the future of materials science and how it should influence architecture and design. In this session from the Future of Everything Festival, the architect and former tenured professor at MIT’s Media Lab speaks with WSJ Health and Science coverage chief Stefanie Ilgenfritz about her vision of a future where science, technology and organic design work together to create products and buildings that may counteract climate change in urban areas.
Further reading:
A Science of Buildings That Can Grow—and Melt Away | WSJ
JPMorgan’s New Manhattan Headquarters to Be All Electric Powered | WSJ
Biophilic Design Is Helping Big-City Apartment Towers Get Back to Nature | WSJ
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7/22/2022 • 20 minutes, 22 seconds
Fertility and the Future of Health
Welcoming a child into your family can be life changing, but for those struggling to get pregnant the process can be emotionally taxing and expensive. Reproductive science is quickly changing, as is society’s approach to the issues around fertility. In this episode, we bring you a conversation from the WSJ Future of Everything Festival, where a handful of medical practitioners and reproductive entrepreneurs discussed the future of fertility with WSJ’s Amy Dockser Marcus. Guests include: sociologist Rene Almeling, Stephen Krawetz, the Associate Director of the CS Mott Center for Human Growth and Development, Daisy Robinton, the CEO of Oviva Therapeutics and Angela Stepancic, the founder of Reproductive Village Cryobank. This conversation was recorded before the Supreme Court’s decision overturning Roe v. Wade.
Useful Links:
See more videos from The WSJ Future of Everything Festival
GUYnecology: The Missing Science of Men’s Reproductive Health
Krawetz Lab at the C.S. Mott Center for Human Growth and Development
Oviva Therapeutics
Reproductive Village Cryobank
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7/8/2022 • 20 minutes, 1 second
Stocks Rise to Open Second Half of 2022
Also: GM shares rise 1.4% after automaker says profits won’t be affected by computer-chip supply shortages. Kohl’s shares fall 19.6% after calling off its sale to Franchise Group. J.R. Whalen reports.
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7/1/2022 • 2 minutes, 9 seconds
Building the Metaverse and the Future of the Internet
For decades, a virtual reality version of the internet has been a staple of science fiction. The metaverse is the latest iteration and it has the potential to become something more than a new gaming platform. But years before Facebook changed its name to Meta and launched huge investments into the space, Philip Rosedale was experiment ing with many of these same ideas in the virtual world he helped create: Second Life. In a conversation with Wall Street Journal reporter Christopher Mims during the WSJ Future of Everything Festival, Rosedale shared his vision for a metaverse where data privacy is more important than advertising, and our online and offline lives intersect in a healthier way.
Further reading:
From the Wall Street Journal:
Meta-morphosis or More Pain? Possible Futures for Facebook’s Parent Company | Christopher Mims
Second Life Founder Returns to Take On the Metaverse | Meghan Bobrowsky
The Facebook Files | WSJ Investigations
How TikTok's Algorithm Figures Out Your Deepest Desires | WSJ Investigations
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6/24/2022 • 19 minutes, 26 seconds
Waste Not, Want Not: A Future Without Food Waste
Every year, even as millions struggle with food insecurity, about a third of all the food produced for humans in the world is thrown away, according to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization. That not only means wasting water and energy resources. The food, rotting in landfills, also emits methane gas linked to climate change. Attorney Emily Broad Leib, the director and founder of the Harvard Law School Food Law and Policy Clinic, has dedicated her career to researching ways to end food waste. In this episode, she explains why food waste is such an issue around the world, how laws and regulations inadvertently lead to more food being wasted, and the simple changes to food labeling she says will make for a less wasteful future.
Further Reading:
The Harvard Law School Food Law and Policy Clinic
Recent WSJ Food Coverage:
Sustainable Chocolate Made Without Cacao | Mary Holland
How to Read a Food Label: A Healthy Skeptic’s Guide to the Buzzwords | Elizabeth G. Dunn
Emily Broad Leib’s recommended reading:
Waste Free Kitchen Handbook: A Guide to Eating Well and Saving Money By Wasting Less Food | Dana Gunders
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6/3/2022 • 19 minutes, 23 seconds
Designing the Office of the Future: Building Serendipity
The pandemic has changed the way we work and where we work. Now, as companies try to coax their employees back to the office, they are encountering new demands and shifting expectations. In this episode, we bring you a conversation from WSJ’s CEO Council Summit between world-renowned designer Thomas Heatherwick, who has spearheaded huge office complexes including Google’s new Charleston East headquarters in California, and London Business School professor Lynda Gratton, who studies how people and organizations interact. They detail why office spaces must be flexible, but also encourage “serendipity” to facilitate vibrant and productive work. 2022 WSJ CEO Council
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5/13/2022 • 18 minutes, 45 seconds
The Human Genome “Rosetta Stone” and The Future of Health
One person’s junk is another person’s treasure. Sometimes it’s even true in science. Nearly 20 years ago, researchers said they had completed a groundbreaking project, sequencing the human genome. But they were missing about 8%. Some researchers at the time called the missing pieces “junk.” Still, a team of about 100 researchers kept going and has now finished a truly complete sequence. It’s a genomic “Rosetta Stone,” a reference guide capable of revealing what makes humans, human. One of the lead authors, Dr. Evan Eichler, tells us how filling in the gaps will improve the way we understand disease and advance personalized medicine.
Full research article from the Telomere-to-Telomere (T2T) Consortium: The complete sequence of a human genome Read more from the Wall Street Journal: First ‘Gapless’ Human Genome Map Is Unveiled, Years After Prior Effort
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4/15/2022 • 20 minutes, 49 seconds
Introducing ‘As We Work’
“As We Work” is a new podcast from the Wall Street Journal about the changing workplace and what you need to know to navigate it. Every week, we’ll speak with experts, Journal reporters, and you about how our jobs intersect with everything else. In season one, we break down how our relationship to work has evolved in the wake of the pandemic and other social phenomena. Hosted by Tess Vigeland. For further reading on pay transparency, check out WSJ reporter Chip Cutter's January article "You'll Soon Get to See Pay on NYC Job Postings," as well as Dr. Jake Rosenfeld's book "You're Paid What You're Worth – and Other Myths of the Modern Economy." Questions? Story ideas? Want to tell us how much you make? Email us at [email protected].
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4/1/2022 • 30 minutes, 51 seconds
After Higgs Boson: Physics’ Next Move to Understand the Universe
It’s been more than a decade since the European Organization for Nuclear Research (known as CERN) discovered the Higgs Boson, using their gigantic particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider. After three years of upgrades, they’re turning the world’s largest machine back on. What secrets of the universe are they hoping to discover? Will there be another “God Particle” moment? And are these expensive, high-energy colliders the best way forward in physics?
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3/18/2022 • 31 minutes, 38 seconds
Dark Matter, Public Enemy and the Future of Physics
Physicist Stephon Alexander was born in Trinidad and grew up in a working class household in the Bronx. Now he’s a professor at Brown University and president of the National Society of Black Physicists. Speaking with host Janet Babin, Alexander discusses how his latest book, "Fear of a Black Universe: An Outsider's Guide to the Future of Physics" was inspired by cultural icons like the hip hop group Public Enemy and artist Jean-Michel Basquiat and why being an "outsider" could help the world answer some of the most pressing questions for the future of physics.
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2/25/2022 • 23 minutes, 9 seconds
Migratory Birds Struggle and Adapt to a Challenging Future
Long-time naturalist and writer Scott Weidensaul has spent decades tracking migratory birds and studying their habits. But there's still a lot science doesn't know. In this episode of The Future of Everything, we talk to Weidensaul about the findings of his latest book, "A World On The Wing”, including the risks facing migrators and why unraveling their mysteries might have implications for the future of mankind.
To read Weidensaul's "A World On The Wing: The Global Odyssey of Migratory Birds" visit: https://bit.ly/3rtvUJq
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2/4/2022 • 26 minutes, 31 seconds
Historical Soundscapes Reveal Quieter Future For Natural World
A group of researchers reconstructed historical soundscapes using bird data to hear the impact of dramatic declines in birds throughout the world. Host Janet Babin and former WSJ science writer Robert Lee Hotz explore how these declines in our natural soundscapes could have negative impacts on avian evolution, as well as humans in the future.
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1/21/2022 • 30 minutes, 53 seconds
Why Finding the Origins of Covid-19 Matters for the Next Pandemic
It's been more than two years since the global pandemic started, and the search for the origin of the virus continues. Scientists, government agencies and the World Health Organization-as well as our own Wall Street Journal reporters-have tried to nail down whether the pandemic began when an animal transferred the virus to humans, or if it came out of a laboratory accident. But the hunt has been marred by secrecy and confusion. In this episode: why it's so important to find answers, and what new monitoring systems are being developed to ease identification of future viral outbreaks.
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12/31/2021 • 33 minutes, 24 seconds
How Psychedelic Drugs Are Making A Comeback To Treat Depression
The hallucinogenic compound psilocybin is undergoing a renaissance-not as a recreational drug but as a potential treatment for mental health conditions. We follow the journey of one participant of a scientific study into the psychedelic drug's effect on depression.
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12/17/2021 • 37 minutes, 15 seconds
Superconductivity: One Step Closer
Superconductivity means zero wasted electricity; perfectly conducted energy. Typically it's been made using either super high pressure or extremely low temperatures. This makes it inefficient and expensive for practical use. But in an incremental first, researchers have managed to create a superconducting material that works at room temperature and with less pressure. If we could create this technology large-scale, it would completely revolutionize our energy grid and the way we travel.
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11/26/2021 • 32 minutes, 37 seconds
Zero Carbon Future 4: Adaptation and the Future of Climate Modeling
While world leaders and businesses are making pledges to mitigate climate change by reducing their greenhouse gas emissions, many parts of the world are already struggling to adapt to a warming planet. The Far North - places like Siberia and Alaska, parts of which are warming three times faster than the global average - are ground zero. In this episode, we look at how they are dealing with thawing permafrost; the struggle to pay for adaptation in other U.S. cities; and why scientists say future climate models need to become more granular, to help communities prepare. Ann Simmons weighs in from Russia and Georgi Kantchev joins from Germany. Emily Schwing reports from Alaska. With science writer Robert Lee Hotz. Janet Babin hosts
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11/12/2021 • 36 minutes, 6 seconds
Zero Carbon Future 3: Suck it Up - Capturing Carbon from the Air
Experts agree that removing carbon from the atmosphere will be necessary, regardless of increases in clean energy production and storage. The process can be done both naturally and mechanically. Climate scientists say all types of carbon capture will be needed to bring down the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. We explain what methods are being used now, explore the challenges of the technology, and how carbon pricing might impact innovation and the business of carbon capture.
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10/29/2021 • 24 minutes, 14 seconds
Introducing Bad Bets
Bad Bets is a new podcast series from The Wall Street Journal that unravels big-business dramas that have had a big impact on our world. This season, we're delving into Enron. In 2001, energy company Enron was at the height of its power. Then, out of the blue, CEO Jeffrey Skilling resigned-just six months after he took the reins of a company he had helped turn into an innovation machine. Why? In this episode, we dive into the first cracks in the Enron facade.
John Emshwiller is the host of this season of Bad Bets. John and his Journal colleague Rebecca Smith did the original reporting on which this season is based. Bad Bets is a production of The Wall Street Journal. This season was produced in collaboration with Neon Hum Media.
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10/23/2021 • 30 minutes, 40 seconds
Zero Carbon Future 2: How to Store Renewable Energy For a Rainy Day
One of the challenges of clean energy like wind or solar is that they fluctuate. And they're unreliable. So finding a better way to store this energy for dark seasons and doldrum days is the next hurdle to reaching goals for decarbonization. In this episode, we explore options that are already being used, and some new methods still in beta. WSJ Senior Energy Correspondent Sarah McFarlane joins host Janet Babin.
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10/15/2021 • 26 minutes, 22 seconds
An Archipelago Leads the Way on Clean Energy
A small Scottish community is perfecting new technologies that could help to power the green energy industry. Advances in wind and tidal power have turned the Orkney Islands into an exporter of renewable energy, instead of a fossil fuel importer. Rochelle Toplensky reports, Janet Babin hosts.
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10/1/2021 • 33 minutes, 12 seconds
Paying for College and Curbing Student Debt
Student loan debt is now around $1.6 trillion. Some economists fear that debt is irreparably harming the U.S. economy. But over the past 50 years, the availability of federal student loans has changed higher education. It's led to higher attendance rates, but also higher tuitions and higher expectations from the college experience. In this episode of The Future of Everything: what structural changes could improve the lending program going forward - and how that could change what college looks like in the future. With WSJ reporters Melissa Korn and Josh Mitchell. Janet Babin hosts.
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8/28/2021 • 34 minutes, 29 seconds
Outhacking the Hackers: The Future of Cybersecurity
A recent surge in high-profile cyber attacks has companies playing defense. Some are turning to ethical hackers to find software bugs before the bad guys do. But as Ava Sasani reports, researchers are also developing new hardware - to try and stop hackers in their tracks. Janet Babin hosts.
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7/30/2021 • 24 minutes, 58 seconds
No More Noise 2: Metamaterials Can Make the World a Quieter Place
Materials scientists are getting creative in the quest to quiet our increasingly noisy world. Using metamaterials - man made materials with special properties not found in nature - researchers could soon reduce or eliminate unwanted industrial sounds.
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7/2/2021 • 23 minutes, 43 seconds
No More Noise: Turning Down The Volume on Cities - Part 1
The battle against noise has been waged, rather quietly, for decades. And yet, urban noise pollution is getting worse. A growing body of evidence indicates that it is more than a nuisance- persistent exposure to noise can cause chronic health issues. Anyone can be impacted, but marginalized communities most often live closer to sources of unwanted noise. In this episode, we look at the impacts of urban noise, new efforts to understand and track it and consider design solutions that can help mitigate unwanted sound.
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6/11/2021 • 29 minutes, 5 seconds
Grammy Award Winner Jacob Collier on Evolving in Place
Singer-songwriter and producer Jacob Collier grew up producing music in his bedroom. After years of touring the world, the pandemic allowed him to return to that space - to continue developing his genre-bending music. In this episode, the five-time Grammy Award winner shares with host Janet Babin how the pandemic impacted his creative process, and how participatory music along with social media kept him connected to his audience.
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5/14/2021 • 18 minutes, 45 seconds
Grammy-Award Nominated Music Producer Oak Felder Shares His Vision
The pandemic forced artists and musicians to learn how to collaborate remotely. Some of these newfound methods were so successful, they'll likely influence the future of music creation and performance in the post-pandemic world. In this episode we talk with record producer Oak Felder about what the pandemic year taught him and how it will continue to influence his creative process. He'll be leading a workshop at the up-coming Future of Everything Festival.
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5/7/2021 • 22 minutes, 4 seconds
How NFTs Could Disrupt the Art Market
After years of being a museum novelty, digital art is starting to sell like hotcakes--and in some cases for millions of dollars--because of a crypto asset called nonfungible tokens, or NFTs. And it isn't just art--sales of digital collectibles of all kinds are benefiting from these blockchain-based certificates of authenticity. NFTs are making the market more accessible for artists, but in the future, they also could disrupt the entire economy of the art market.
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4/16/2021 • 32 minutes, 43 seconds
What We Can Learn From 'Long Covid'
Millions of people worldwide who survived an initial Covid-19 infection continue to struggle with debilitating symptoms months later. Physicians are unable to explain their illness. But there's now a name for it: Long Covid. The medical community is hoping that the data trove from Long Covid survivors can not only help them understand their conditions, but also how to treat illnesses with similar symptoms. In a previous version of this podcast released on March 26, we said that Body Politic published survey results in December. The Patient-Led Research Collaborative for Covid-19 published the paper.
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3/26/2021 • 26 minutes, 23 seconds
How Psychedelic Drugs Are Making a Comeback to Treat Depression
The hallucinogenic compound psilocybin is undergoing a renaissance-not as a recreational drug but as a potential treatment for mental health conditions. We follow the journey of one participant of a scientific study into the psychedelic drug's effect on depression.
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3/5/2021 • 36 minutes, 50 seconds
Metals That Work Like Magic
Trains that run from New York to California in a few hours, laptops that never overheat, and rockets that fly to Jupiter: These are some of the possibilities of superconductivity. After decades of failed experiments, a new discovery may have just gotten us a step closer.
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2/12/2021 • 31 minutes, 35 seconds
How the Pandemic Fueled Scientific Discovery and Collaboration
When Chinese researchers published the draft genome of the virus that causes Covid-19 early last January, it altered the course of the pandemic--and possibly changed science forever. Will this spirit of information-sharing and collaboration persist beyond the current crisis?
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