G.I. Joe has seen a resurgence over the past few years in the realms of toys and comics courtesy of Hasbro’s hit G.I. Joe ...
Hinton moved to the University of Toronto in 1987 and began attracting young researchers who wanted to study neural networks.
The study by Power and colleagues is important as elucidating the dynamic immune responses to photoreceptor damage in vivo potentiates future work in the field to better understand the disease process ...
Africa’s working-age population is growing faster than any other region, driven by progress in child survival over the last two decades. Yet, Sub-Saharan Africa invests less in education per capita ...
Nearly half of 2024 budget not received, analysis shows US and China have not yet met funding obligations Budget cuts already affecting some climate meetings COP29 host Azerbaijan offers to fund ...
Academy Award winners and best friends Ben Affleck and Matt Damon have a shot at more Oscar recognition for producing the documentary “Kiss the Future.” Variety has learned exclusively the ...
Scientists and experts have been warning for years that if average global temperatures rise by 3 degrees Celsius compared to pre-industrial times, it will be "catastrophic" for people across the ...
“It’s scary as hell,” said Matthew Huber, director of the Institute for a Sustainable Future at Purdue University. In 2010, Dr. Huber and Steven Sherwood, a climate scientist at the ...
Vice President Kamala Harris has run a more explicitly future-focused campaign than her opponent, all the way down to her anti-nostalgic unofficial campaign slogan, “we are not going back ...
Earlier this month, Elon Musk unveiled a new autonomous taxi, designed by his car company Tesla. Musk promises that his Cybercab, a two-seater car without a steering wheel or pedals, will be on ...
By Michael Paulson “Back to the Future,” a nostalgia-rich and spectacle-laden musical adaptation of the much-loved 1985 film, will end its Broadway run on Jan. 5, succumbing to the difficult ...
Everything is now a tech thing. In creative and humorous videos, WSJ senior personal tech columnist Joanna Stern explains and reviews the products, services and trends that are changing our world.