Researchers have combined liquid metal and a heat-activated adhesive to create an electrically conductive patch that bonds to ...
Iron-on patches can repair clothing or add personal flair to backpacks and hats. And now they could power wearable tech, too.
MIT scientists found that what we see is strongly influenced by how alert or active we are. Parts of the brain responsible ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Just iron it: Liquid-metal patches turn any fabric into wearable electronics
Iron-on electronic patches could make wearable tech easy to apply at home using liquid metal and heat-activated adhesives.
News Medical on MSN
How immune signals activate brain circuits to drive sickness-induced social withdrawal
MIT researchers have discovered how an immune system molecule triggers neurons in a specific brain circuit to shut down social behavior in mice modeling infection.
Boca Raton launches MiCa, the city's first autonomous shuttle, providing a safe, all-electric loop through Mizner Park with ...
Ferroelectric materials are used in infrared cameras, medical ultrasounds, computer memory and actuators that turn electric properties into mechanical properties and vice-versa. Most of these ...
The experimental model won't compete with the biggest and best, but it could tell us why they behave in weird ways—and how trustworthy they really are. ChatGPT maker OpenAI has built an experimental ...
Our basement bedroom has a huge desktop computer that we never, ever touch -- except to dust. Why are we keeping it? A recent CNET survey found that nearly a third of us are hoarding old electronics, ...
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