Letting Hackers Compete, Facebook Eyes New Talent
As it readies for an IPO, the social network puts engineers, not HR, in charge of a global search for young programmers.
iRobot's Warrior is strong enough to tow a car and dexterous enough to open its trunk using the handle.
The surging social-media response to TV promises to shape future programming and advertising trends.
Opponents say ACTA would curtail Internet freedom.
As it readies for an IPO, the social network puts engineers, not HR, in charge of a global search for young programmers.
17-year-old Laura Deming doesn't drive and can't vote. Is now her chance to change the world?
A startup called Nicira is reinventing computer networking with an audacious goal: to make all kinds of Internet services smarter, faster, and cheaper.
Semprius makes solar modules using tiny cells that need less cooling.
Kaggle organizes contests for organizations looking to make valuable predictions from mountains of data.
Companies need more consumer demand for electric vehicles to grow rapidly.
Tweets and other social media comments are about to drive real-time changes in programming.
Intel teams up with a startup to create a server twice as efficient as those that power websites and apps today.
Software mines security footage to help business owners see what people do once they're inside the store.
ArrayPower says its "sequenced inverter" will cut the cost of solar by more than 10 percent.
Effort aims to merge technology from four companies to create the first sticker with all-printed electronics.
Molybdenite could have a crucial advantage over graphene for making smaller, faster electronics.
An app named Evi uses semantic data to provide a wider range of answers.
A Technology Review Special Report focusing on innovations in alternative energy sources and the technologies driving them.
Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg will eventually have to deal with the fact that all growth has limits.
Efforts to preserve the Web should make use of the powerful, distributed collaboration it allows.
By Pierre M. Galletti
Advances in artificial organs depend on our willingness to rethink the ethical and clinical standards for experiments on humans.
Who are the best young innovators from around the world? We're taking nominations for the 2012 edition of the TR35.
Our list of the 50 most innovative companies, including the following: