Old Phones, New Purpose: How Discarded Smartphones Could Power Tomorrow’s Data Infrastructure

Smartphones are becoming obsolete faster than ever. Most users now replace their devices every two to three years—even when the phones still function. Fueled by aggressive marketing and rapid tech advancements, this culture of constant upgrading has led to the production of more than 1.2 billion smartphones globally each year.

This cycle comes at a steep environmental cost. Manufacturing and shipping smartphones consumes vast natural resources and emits significant amounts of CO₂. While some old devices are recycled, many end up in landfills, adding to the world’s growing e-waste crisis.

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Nature-Inspired Soft Robot Mimics Worms and Snakes for Search-and-Rescue Missions

Researchers from the University of Southern Denmark (SDU) have developed a groundbreaking soft robot inspired by limbless creatures like snakes and earthworms. This flexible, bioinspired machine is capable of crawling across flat surfaces and navigating obstacle-laden environments, mimicking the natural locomotion of its biological counterparts.

The research, published in Cyborg and Bionic Systems, was accompanied by a video showcasing the robot in motion. In the footage, the robot bends and moves in a way that closely resembles the fluid movement of snakes and worms, highlighting the success of its biologically inspired design.

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Redefining 3D Printing: How MIT CSAIL is Making Prints Smarter, Softer, and More Functional

MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) is leading a new chapter in 3D printing—one where printed objects don’t just look good, but also feel realistic, move like living organisms, and even carry built-in electronics. These advances aren’t happening in isolation; they’re part of a larger shift toward smarter, more interactive, and more sustainable design and manufacturing.

In recent years, CSAIL has unveiled a range of projects that blend artificial intelligence, materials science, and automation to push the boundaries of what’s possible with additive manufacturing. These innovations are transforming how we interact with 3D-printed objects—making them more tactile, mobile, intelligent, and accessible.

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Uncovering How Diseases Cause Each Other Using AI and Medical Data

Researchers developed a new way to identify how diseases might cause or influence one another by analyzing scientific literature and validating the results using real-world patient data. They searched through PubMed articles for phrases suggesting that one disease leads to another, then standardized those disease names using ICD-10-CM medical codes to keep the data consistent.

To test whether these suggested relationships were credible, the team used a combination of five validation methods. They looked at how strongly diseases were statistically linked in the UK Biobank dataset, whether the timing of diagnoses followed the expected pattern (with the “cause” usually diagnosed before the “effect”), and how frequently the relationships appeared in the literature. They also tested how dependent the diseases were on each other and asked GPT-4, a powerful AI language model, to assess the plausibility of each connection. All of this information was combined into a confidence score for each relationship.

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MIT Unveils High-Energy Sodium–Air Fuel Cell That Could Transform Electric Transportation

MIT researchers have developed a groundbreaking sodium–air fuel cell that could reshape the future of electric transportation. Designed to replace the heavy lithium-ion batteries currently used in aviation, marine, and rail sectors, this innovative system delivers more than three times the energy density of today’s electric vehicle (EV) batteries — potentially making electric flight a reality.

The new fuel cell, developed by a team led by MIT doctoral students Karen Sugano, Sunil Mair, Saahir Ganti-Agrawal, and Professor Yet-Ming Chiang, uses liquid sodium metal and ambient air as its core materials. Unlike traditional batteries, which are limited by their weight-to-energy ratio, this system offers a fuel cell format that can be quickly refueled and deliver sustained power output.

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Veho and RIVR Launch Delivery Robots to Enhance E-Commerce Logistics

U.S.-based parcel delivery platform Veho has partnered with robotics company RIVR to enhance the efficiency and quality of e-commerce deliveries using advanced delivery robots. The collaboration aims to support human drivers rather than replace them, with robots handling part of the last-mile delivery process to boost overall speed, reduce physical strain, and improve customer satisfaction.

The pilot program has already begun in Austin, where Veho is deploying RIVR’s wheeled-legged robots to deliver parcels directly from delivery vehicles to customers’ doorsteps. These robots follow customer instructions and use the Veho app to provide photographic proof of delivery.

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Self-Healing Soft Robotics Inspired by Nature

If you grew up watching sci-fi classics like Terminator 2, you might remember the T-1000’s incredible ability to self-repair from bullet wounds and blade slashes. While real-world technology isn’t quite there yet, engineers at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln have made a major stride in that direction with a new self-healing soft robotics system.

Developed by a team led by engineer Eric Markvicka and graduate students Ethan Krings and Patrick McManigal, this system features an autonomous artificial muscle that detects and repairs its own damage. It’s designed to mimic how human and plant skin reacts to injury, pushing the boundaries of biomimicry in soft robotics.

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XCMG Delivers 100 Autonomous Electric Mining Trucks to Advance Zero-Carbon Mining in China

The mining industry is rapidly adopting autonomous vehicle technology, and Xuzhou Construction Machinery Group Co. (XCMG) is leading the charge. This week, the China-based company delivered 100 all-electric, uncrewed mining trucks to the Huaneng Yimin Open-Pit Coal Mine in Inner Mongolia.

XCMG stated that the Yimin Mine is now the world’s first site operating a fleet of 100 fully autonomous, zero-emission electric haul trucks. This development marks a significant step forward in sustainable mining and showcases collaboration across energy, technology, and equipment sectors.

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From Prompts to Proteins: How AI Is Revolutionizing Molecular Design

Chatbots like ChatGPT have made it easy for users to access complex information through simple questions. The same principle is now being applied to one of biology’s most complex challenges: protein design. Traditionally, creating custom proteins required deep technical expertise and reliance on naturally evolved templates. But scientists are now building AI models that can generate novel proteins from plain English prompts, much like asking ChatGPT for a summary or essay.

Enter Pinal, a new AI designed to act as a conversational protein engineer. Developed by an international team of researchers, Pinal allows scientists to describe the desired type, function, or structure of a protein in natural language. In response, the AI generates candidate proteins that can be tested in living cells. In one demonstration, Pinal successfully designed enzymes that broke down alcohol, some even functioning at high temperatures.

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Gene Therapy Breakthrough Targets Blood Disorders in Newborns With a Single Injection

A new approach to gene therapy may revolutionize how inherited blood diseases like sickle cell disease and Fanconi anemia are treated—by editing blood stem cells directly inside the body. Researchers from the IRCCS San Raffaele Scientific Institute in Italy have successfully edited genes in infant mice using a single injection, bypassing the need to extract, modify, and reintroduce stem cells—a process that is currently complex, costly, and physically demanding for patients.

The new treatment leverages a critical time window shortly after birth, when blood stem cells naturally circulate from the liver to the bone marrow. During this phase, stem cells are more accessible in the bloodstream, making them an ideal target for in vivo gene editing. In adult patients, these cells are typically hidden deep in the bone marrow, making them harder to reach.

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Breakthrough in Liquid Uranium Rocket Engine Could Double Spacecraft Efficiency

Researchers have announced progress in the development of a Centrifugal Nuclear Thermal Rocket (CNTR), a next-generation propulsion system powered by liquid uranium fuel. This advanced concept is being developed by teams at the University of Alabama in Huntsville and The Ohio State University.

The CNTR is a nuclear thermal propulsion (NTP) system that heats hydrogen propellant directly using the reactor’s liquid uranium fuel. By spinning the molten uranium in a centrifuge, hydrogen gas is passed through the superheated liquid and expelled through a nozzle to generate thrust. This method is designed to achieve a specific impulse of approximately 1,500 seconds—nearly double that of current solid-core NTP designs, such as NASA’s DRACO Program, which aims for around 900 seconds.

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Quantum Leap in Holography: Brown University Engineers Pioneer 3D Imaging Breakthrough

Holographic imaging has taken a significant step forward thanks to a new quantum-based technique developed by engineers at Brown University, including two undergraduate students. This innovative approach harnesses the power of quantum entanglement to generate detailed 3D holograms—without relying on traditional infrared cameras.

The method uses invisible infrared light to illuminate microscopic objects, while entangled visible light captures both the intensity and phase of the light waves—an essential element for creating true holographic images. The process, called Quantum Multi-Wavelength Holography, overcomes longstanding technical hurdles such as phase wrapping and significantly expands the depth range of holographic imaging.

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