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11 votes
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A Republican suburb designed for cyclists
15 votes -
Birth of a nation
4 votes -
Where do you see the future of IT going?
So, what's the hottest new thing in IT today, what's that coolest new tech which might prove to be a goldmine some years down the line? The way PCs, websites, databases, programming languages,...
So, what's the hottest new thing in IT today, what's that coolest new tech which might prove to be a goldmine some years down the line? The way PCs, websites, databases, programming languages, etc. used to be in the 90s or mobile computing used to be in 00s? Early 00s gave us many a goodies in terms of open source innovations, be it Web Technologies, Linux advancement and propagation through the masses or FOSS software like Wordpress and Drupal, or even the general attitude and awareness about FOSS. Bitcoin also deserves a notable mention here, whether you love it or hate it.
But today, I think IT no longer has that spark it once had. People keep mulling around AI, ML and Data Science but these are still decades old concepts, and whatever number crunching or coding the engineers are doing somehow doesn't seem to reach the masses? People get so enthusiastic about ChatGPT, but at the end of the day it's just another software like a zillion others. I deem it at par with something like Wordpress, probably even lesser. I'm yet to see any major adoption or industry usage for it.
Is it the case that IT has reached some kind of saturation point? Everything that could have been innovated, at least the low hanging fruits, has already been innovated? What do you think about this?
13 votes -
The first (and now last) overhead wire electric ferry in Europe
2 votes -
In Norway, the electric vehicle future has already arrived – the air is cleaner, the streets are quieter, but problems with unreliable chargers persist
4 votes -
The first of its kind in the world, an e-motorway may lead to an expansion of a further 3,000 km of electric roads in Sweden by 2045
3 votes -
The military base in Switzerland where the public can drive over the runway
6 votes -
Is Oslo the next great cycling city?
4 votes -
The world’s longest suspension bridge is history in the making. After 2,000 years of political and technical hitches, Italy says it’s finally ready to connect Sicily to the mainland.
8 votes -
Infrastructure that looks like science fiction (photos)
21 votes -
Chinese EV maker NIO has opened its first European "Power Swap Station" in Denmark – drivers can stop to replace their battery with a fully charged one
13 votes -
Australia is quitting coal in record time thanks to Tesla
5 votes -
Scientists use rocket to create artificial Northern Lights to better understand space weather
3 votes -
I climbed inside a giant robotic parking garage
2 votes -
A bus that transforms into a train
5 votes -
Micro datacenters begin trials as commercial heating units
19 votes -
A flock of chickens, held for ransom — Growing cyberattacks on Canada's food system threaten disaster
9 votes -
Plant Vogtle Unit 3 nuclear reactor reaches initial criticality
14 votes -
The lost art of lacing cable (2018)
9 votes -
Why Nancy is scrapping its magically bonkers monorail-bus-trams
10 votes -
Project to store carbon dioxide 1,800 metres beneath the North Sea – Denmark is the first country in the world to bury CO2 imported from abroad
5 votes -
Bergen is gearing up to open the world's longest purpose-built pedestrian and bicycle tunnel – 2.9km tunnel takes 30-45 minutes to walk through
8 votes -
Are we destroying our railroads for bikes?
2 votes -
The greatest tax system in the world – why can't America be as great as the Faroe Islands?
14 votes -
Why some roadways are made of styrofoam
3 votes -
What we learned from building GovSlack
6 votes -
Meet the man building a thousand wheelchair ramps in Iceland – Ramp Up Iceland aim to make everyday life less challenging for people with physical disabilities
4 votes -
The Lincoln Highway: Across America on the first transcontinental motor route
6 votes -
Why Copenhagen put a ski slope on a power plant
6 votes -
Every few months, when the wind's blowing in the right direction, a bottle of air is taken from Kennaook / Cape Grim, at the northern tip of Tasmania, and saved for science. Here's how and why.
6 votes -
Megacities: Reality or fiction? Architecture in sci-fi.
4 votes -
China’s global mega-projects are falling apart
8 votes -
Mystery divers rescued near Polish energy sites in the middle of the night offer dubious explanation, and vanish
12 votes -
Arizona city cuts off a neighborhood’s water supply amid drought
16 votes -
An overview of the substation attack in Moore County, North Carolina in December 2022
4 votes -
Europe's largest deposit of rare earth metals has been found in Sweden – may not reach market before 10-15 years' time due to environmental risk evaluations
5 votes -
Why Amtrak isn’t building high speed rail (and that’s okay for now)
3 votes -
Would you fall for it? General Motors' propaganda video from the 1950s.
8 votes -
Non-binary DDR5 memory could be a game-changer for businesses everywhere
3 votes -
Sweden and France could be set to join forces to build new nuclear power stations in the Nordic nation
5 votes -
High tech meets agriculture in Denmark – strategic investments mean country may one day become a major exporter of farming technology
3 votes -
Finland gets first floating liquefied natural gas terminal – will ensure future availability of gas, replacing supplies earlier imported from Russia
8 votes -
Dismantling Sellafield: The epic task of shutting down a nuclear site
6 votes -
How does the Finnish railway system differ from others?
3 votes -
The insane scale of Europe's new mega-tunnel – Denmark is building a record-breaking tunnel to Germany
3 votes -
How long would society last during a total grid collapse?
4 votes -
Helsinki is tapping an unexpected source of energy to heat its homes – cold water extracted from deep in the Baltic Sea
6 votes -
Sweden finds explosive traces at Nord Stream blast sites, confirms sabotage
7 votes -
California approves large, controversial desalination plant for Monterey Peninsula
9 votes