Explore Topics:
AIBiotechnologyRoboticsComputingFutureScienceSpaceEnergyTech

This Week’s Awesome Stories From Around the Web (Through September 22)

SingularityHub Staff
Sep 22, 2018
NASA photo of moon

Share

ROBOTICS

Meet the Winner of Robotics' World Cup
Editorial Staff | MIT Technology Review
"If you are under the impression that the recent soccer World Cup was won by a fine French team that triumphed over Croatia in a dramatic finale, then you were watching the wrong tournament. At about the same time, on the other side of the world in Montreal, another tournament was also under way. This was the soccer World Cup for adult-size robots."

MOONSHOTS

SpaceX's Moon Trip Is the Ultimate Artist Residency
Marina Koren | The Atlantic
"If SpaceX’s latest ambitions become a reality, a spaceship carrying one Japanese billionaire and six to eight artists will blast off from Earth and head for a trip around the moon sometime around 2023."

FUTURE OF WORK

Emerging Tech Will Create More Jobs Than It Kills by 2020, World Economic Forum Predicts
George Dvorsky | Gizmodo
"The big question many of us are asking now is: Will job losses outweigh job creation in the coming years and decades? If a new World Economic Forum (WEF) report is to be believed, emerging tech will create more jobs than it destroys. At least for the next four years."

Be Part of the Future

Sign up to receive top stories about groundbreaking technologies and visionary thinkers from SingularityHub.

100% Free. No Spam. Unsubscribe any time.

GENETICS

Why Your DNA Is Still Uncharted Territory
Carl Zimmer | The New York Times
"If these trends continue as they have for decades, the human genome will remain a terra incognito for a long time. At this rate, it would take a century or longer for scientists to publish at least one paper on every one of our 20,000 genes."

SPACE

Satellite Uses Giant Net to Practice Capturing Space Junk
Loren Grush | The Verge
"Along with experimenting with a deployable net, the satellite is also equipped with a harpoon that can spear objects, as well as a drag sail that can help slow down debris and make them fall to Earth faster. The plan is to see if these technologies can even work, before trying them out on future spacecraft that are tasked with cleaning up debris."

Image Credit: NASA / Unsplash

SingularityHub chronicles the technological frontier with coverage of the breakthroughs, players, and issues shaping the future.

Related Articles

Six infrared images of Saturn's moon Titan taken by NASA's Cassini

This Week’s Awesome Tech Stories From Around the Web (Through December 20)

SingularityHub Staff
Solar panels on the ISS with Earth's horizon from space in the background

Data Centers in Space: Will 2027 Really Be the Year AI Goes to Orbit?

Domenico Vicinanza
New Gene Drive Stops the Spread of Malaria—Without Killing Any Mosquitoes

New Gene Drive Stops the Spread of Malaria—Without Killing Any Mosquitoes

Shelly Fan
Six infrared images of Saturn's moon Titan taken by NASA's Cassini

This Week’s Awesome Tech Stories From Around the Web (Through December 20)

SingularityHub Staff
Solar panels on the ISS with Earth's horizon from space in the background
Space

Data Centers in Space: Will 2027 Really Be the Year AI Goes to Orbit?

Domenico Vicinanza
New Gene Drive Stops the Spread of Malaria—Without Killing Any Mosquitoes
Biotechnology

New Gene Drive Stops the Spread of Malaria—Without Killing Any Mosquitoes

Shelly Fan

What we’re reading

Be Part of the Future

Sign up to receive top stories about groundbreaking technologies and visionary thinkers from SingularityHub.

100% Free. No Spam. Unsubscribe any time.

SingularityHub chronicles the technological frontier with coverage of the breakthroughs, players, and issues shaping the future.

Follow Us On Social

About

  • About Hub
  • About Singularity

Get in Touch

  • Contact Us
  • Pitch Us
  • Brand Partnerships

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
© 2025 Singularity