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10 votes
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Why did nuclear flop in Britain?
14 votes -
Why the floppy disk just won't die
61 votes -
Who really wants megastructure cites?
3 votes -
The ground is deforming, and buildings aren't ready. First study to quantify effects of subsurface climate change on civil infrastructure
23 votes -
Oil is hard to quit, even in Norway where electric cars rule the road
15 votes -
Meet the guerrilla bike activists in Chicago installing bootleg infrastructure for safer streets
32 votes -
How Chicago solves its overheating problem
11 votes -
Why is desalination so difficult? An overview of seawater desalination: Removing salt to make drinkable water from the ocean.
15 votes -
French government could cut off social media during unrest, says Emmanuel Macron
12 votes -
Solar power proves its worth as heat wave grips Texas
15 votes -
How this train beat the plane: The TGV story
8 votes -
Stew's News US High Speed Rail Monthly - July 2023 - CAHSR Brightline Acela Texas Central Cascadia
9 votes -
Florida bill allowing radioactive roads made of potentially cancer-causing mining waste signed by Ron DeSantis
43 votes -
Renewables are the only reason Texas' power grid hasn't failed during this month's punishing heat wave
19 votes -
Heat and smoke are smothering most of the US, putting lives at risk
14 votes -
Can we cross the UK's 2nd largest city without using a single road?
14 votes -
Controversy over lack of renewable in plans to rebuild electrical grid in Puerto Rico
10 votes -
New York City is cleared for first-in-US congestion tolls as soon as April
45 votes -
A giant wind farm is taking root off Massachusetts
12 votes -
US President Joe Biden's Federal Transit Administration announces $1.7 billion in grants for electric bus fleets and infrastructure
34 votes -
A $48 billion debt is crushing the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Paying it off could disrupt the future of New York City transit.
28 votes -
Seattle plans to extend and upgrade Third Avenue transit mall in 2024
16 votes -
What the hell happened to the California of the ’50s and ’60s?
12 votes -
Oklahoma City continues planning for bus rapid transit
26 votes -
Harnessing Iceland's geothermal energy for agriculture | Focus on Europe
2 votes -
Cruising to Nome: The first US deep water port for the Arctic to host cruise ships, military
10 votes -
The Barbegal Aqueduct included a watermill complex with water cascading through a total of sixteen wheels. It may have been "the greatest known concentration of mechanical power in the ancient world"
13 votes -
NYC MTA moves forward with plans to install platform doors in three subway stations
29 votes -
No car, no problem: Philadelphia is one of the best US cities to live in without a personal vehicle
17 votes -
Swedish electric self-driving truck company Einride has partnered with Scandinavia's leading postal service PostNord in Norway
7 votes -
Finland is on the verge of becoming the first nation to bury spent nuclear fuel rods deep underground for the long term
12 votes -
I-95 highway in Philadelphia has collapsed; officials say repairs will take "months"
32 votes -
Portion of Interstate 95 collapses in Philadelphia after tanker fire burns under overpass
41 votes -
The Huussi toilet in Finland's pavilion at the 2023 Venice Architecture Biennale disposes of waste without any water
7 votes -
GM to use Tesla charging network, joining Ford in leveraging the EV leader's tech
9 votes -
Russia destroys Kherson-region dam
50 votes -
Finland's vast network of tunnels 400m underground will soon begin operating as the world's first spent nuclear fuel disposal facility
9 votes -
Nine in ten new cars sold in Norway are electric or hybrid, compared to less than half of those sold in the EU. What's Norway's secret?
11 votes -
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