- CBC - Technology & Science News
- 19/12/1 23:33
The Tip-Tap allows users to operate a computer interface using their fingertips. Researchers believe it could soon make surgeons' work...
10 articles from SUNDAY 1.12.2019
The Tip-Tap allows users to operate a computer interface using their fingertips. Researchers believe it could soon make surgeons' work...
The premiers of Ontario, Saskatchewan and New Brunswick have committed to collaborate on developing nuclear reactor technology in...
It wasn't so long ago that Calgary's burgeoning tech sector was being held up as a potential case study in diversification, a lighthouse to chart a course toward in a province rocked from oil-and-gas...
Business Insider Intelligence explores the healthcare ecosystem, industry trends driving digital transformation, and where the industry is...
BALTIMORE -- Another big Prime Air 767 takes off from Baltimore-Washington International Airport -- where Amazon's shipping last year eclipsed that of FedEx and UPS put together -- and wheels above the old industrial city. Below, the online giant seems to touch every niche of the economy, its ubiquity and range breathtaking.To the city's southeast stand two mammoth Amazon warehouses, built...
Science and art meet on a mind-blowing visit to the European Organization for Nuclear Research, while the fairytale streets of the Swiss capital are a wonder, tooThere is something retro and subterranean about the maze of narrow corridors ahead of us. Exposed steel pipes run along the ceilings, the floors are shiny linoleum and the doors are moulded wood. It looks as if it has barely changed since...
George Adams wanted to keep busy in retirement. So he started building birdhouses. He's since put up hundreds and maintains them...
The perceived hypocrisy of people flying from all corners of the globe to tackle the climate crisis at the COP 25 conference in Madrid has led to calls for an air travel ban for participants. But what is the broader airline industry doing to reduce...
The new fruit took US scientists two decades to develop and the launch cost $10m (£7.9m).
Fifteen-year-old Cheikh Bamba Diaby got into robotics after he had to unblock his sister's mobile phone.