Volumes & issues:
Volume 11, Issue 3
April 2016
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- Author(s): D. Ross
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 4 –4
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0301
- Type: Article
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VR is exciting but should it carry a health warning? - Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 6 –7
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0302
- Type: Article
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News from around the world. - Author(s): T. Pultarova
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 8 –9
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0303
- Type: Article
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With its future in mobile technology, virtual reality is set to enter real environments and become the most social platform, according to leading experts. - Author(s): P. Neroth
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 10 –10
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0304
- Type: Article
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A German Army project would train Syrian refugees as engineers to help rebuild their shattered country. - Author(s): K. Moskvitch
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 12 –13
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0305
- Type: Article
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Scientists have detected gravitational waves: ripples in the fabric of space and time, produced by the collision of two black holes more than a billion light years from Earth. - Author(s): P. Dempsey
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 14 –14
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0306
- Type: Article
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In our second review of the science and engineering policies of the US Presidential candidates, we look at the Republican frontrunners. - Author(s): J. Loughlan
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 15 –15
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0307
- Type: Article
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A pothole-filled test track that stretches for 1.2 miles (2km) has been developed by Ford in order to test its vehicles in real road conditions. - Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 16 –17
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0338
- Type: Article
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Our pick of this year's Industrie Forum international design awards held each year in Germany, and what the jury said about them. - Author(s): J. Wilson
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 18 –19
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0339
- Type: Article
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Gas-guzzling, monstrously expensive supercars may have grabbed the headlines in Geneva, but the auto industry knows that fuel efficiency and zero emission technology is really the future. - Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 20 –20
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0340
- Type: Article
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The 570GT is the third in McLaren's Sports Series of ultra-fast sports cars and the most luxurious. The mid-engined two-seater has been designed for everyday usability and long-distance comfort. UK pricing starts at £154,00. - Author(s): C. Chambers
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 21 –21
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0341
- Type: Article
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The credibility of the European federalisation project was hit by the near-meltdown of the euro and the Greek bailout. If the UK votes for a Brexit, what does that mean for its financial future? - Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 22 –23
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0342
- Type: Article
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The extraordinary-looking construction is six metres wide and can hold 800 people at once. - Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 24 –26
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0343
- Type: Article
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Send your letters to The Editor, E&T, Michael Faraday House, Six Hills Way, Stevenage, Herts SG1 2AY, UK, or to [email protected]. We reserve the right to edit letters and to use submissions in any other format. - Author(s): C. Stoneff
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 27 –27
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0344
- Type: Article
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A box-ticking approach to cyber security can end up being little better than taking no measures at all, warns Chris Stoneff. - Author(s): P. Dempsey
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 30 –30
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0308
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Virtual reality has been prolific in the gaming industry since the 1980s, when Sega's Master System 3D glasses promised to take you inside a virtual world. The best, however, is yet to come. The pressing question facing VR gaming concerns how high a price it can sustain. Yet in the longer term it's all about Moore's Law economics, content - and whether another currently absent tech titan will finally join the fray. - Author(s): P. Dempsey
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 31 –31
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0309
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Any entertainment format needs content. There must be something to watch. Convincing content providers to adopt a new one requires two things: first, powerful research and development and promotional support for the core hardware platform. Second, a comprehensive infrastructure that enables cost-effective development and production of the content itself. The early signs for VR moviemaking are that those components are in place. In hardware, Sony (P1ayStation VR), Facebook (Oculus Rift), HTC (Niue) and Google (Cardboard) are the spearhead - megabucks players that have made Hollywood take notice. It's not an engineering question, but a cognitive one - and that's largely the point. Hollywood has accepted the viability of VR technology and is getting down to the nitty-gritty of how to exploit it. - Author(s): D. Birkett
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 32 –32
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0310
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Today's museums are embracing new technologies to help preserve and bring alive the past. VR isn't only being used to transport you to the past, but to the museum. Visitors from all over the world can virtually walk through the British Museum's galleries, wandering past over 4,500 exhibits, using innovative indoor Street View footage created in partnership with the Google Cultural Institute. Teachers can transport their students to Bloomsbury from the classroom. The British Museum, already the second most visited museum in the world, now boasts a virtual audience of over 35 million. - Author(s): V. Vitaliev
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 33 –33
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0312
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VR will play an important part in future travel by previewing, facilitating and enriching traveller experiences in useful and exciting ways, yet not entirely substituting real-life adventures with VR experiences, no matter how convincing and realistic. In fact, that future is in many ways here already. With numerous VR applications already available, a would-be traveller can have a thorough VR and 3D preview of an intended hotel or restaurant at their destination. At the Hotelympia exhibition, held at Excel London between 29 February and 3 March 2016, a registered visitor was able to enjoy a walk-in immersive VR experience by exploring the newly-built Hilton Bankside hotel in London and appraise the ambience, if not yet the food, of two brand-new London restaurants: German Gymnasium in the King's Cross area and M Restaurant in Victoria. - Author(s): R. Northfield
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 34 –34
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0313
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Museums and galleries are beginning to embrace VR to create new and exciting experiences for visitors, injecting new life into an already magnificent form of human expression. VR technology is becoming easier to produce, and many companies are dabbling. It may be easy to create VR, but it's very difficult to create beautiful VR. However, that is exactly what some creative types are trying to achieve: artistic, visually stunning VR and, so far, they have been quite successful. - Author(s): R. Northfield
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 35 –35
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0314
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Virtual reality has become fashionable, with companies rallying their investments to ensure they are at the forefront of this progressive technology and its apps. Thus, when one thinks of the perfect pairing of app and VR, it could be with a great escapism experience: theme park attractions and rollercoasters. The paper discusses how mixed realities could be on the horizon for all attractions. - Author(s): L. Jones
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 36 –39
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0315
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Receiving treatment for severe burns can be a traumatic experience. Wound cleaning and bandage changes cause pain that, even with opioids like morphine, 86 percent of patients still reported as excruciating. The paper reports that, whether it's making painful treatments more bearable, helping people to overcome mental health problems or supporting surgeons in their decisions, VR looks set to transform healthcare. - Author(s): D. Birkett
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 40 –40
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0316
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Virtual reality equips architects, developers, estate agents and house hunters with all the tools they need to design, market and purchase a property before ever setting foot inside. 'PropTech' will let you do everything - from fit out the kitchen to pick out the wallpaper - without having to leave the design studio or showroom. - Author(s): J. Fell
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 41 –41
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0317
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Fashion may not be seem like the most exciting outlet for virtual reality - virtually browsing the high street is a far cry from simulated bungee jumping and the like - but think outside the box, and there are so many ways that VR can become vogueish in the fashion industry. The potential for VR at fashion shows as a revenue-raising device is evident. This could be in the form of pay-per-view service, allowing access to exclusive fashion events, or by spreading the brand's consumer reach. - Author(s): C. Andrews
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 42 –42
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0318
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Police solved just 12 per cent of 750,000 domestic burglaries between June 2014 and 2015. In order to learn more about how burglars operate and to help law enforcement and security companies devise more effective deterrents, researchers from the Netherlands Institute for Crime and Law Enforcement and Portsmouth University have set up a virtual-reality burglary environment. This consists of the exterior and interior of three adjacent houses and their immediate surroundings. Study participants, consisting of University students and convicted burglars currently in prison, wear an Oculus Rift headset and move around the virtual street. They select a target, break in, search a house and finally exit with the stolen goods. Thus far, the study has found that experienced burglars tend to follow similar routes: upstairs first, then downstairs living rooms, checking coat pockets for wallets, credit cards and small valuables but ignoring electronic equipment. "It's almost like they're on autopilot," says Portsmouth University forensic psychologist, Claire Nee. - Author(s): M. Williamson
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 43 –43
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0320
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Virtual reality could almost be made for military applications, since the key advantage of simulating as opposed to actually engaging in a conflict situation is that nobody gets hurt. According to Brigadier SC Sharma, president of Axis Aerospace, "The military uses VR for everything from training and safety enhancement to analysing military manoeuvres and battlefield positions". Given even a basic understanding of what teenage gamers do with PS4s, it's easy to imagine how a more immersive version could provide training for real soldiers. In fact, VR can be extended to the battlefield itself and used as "battlefield visualisation", says Sharma, "to control combat operations in real time and help commanders assess their options". - Author(s): C. Andrews
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 43 –43
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0319
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NASA has long used VR to help prepare astronauts for tasks that they'll perform during voyages ever since the Hubble telescope needed repairing in 1993. However, with journeys to Mars being planned, one former astronaut, Jay Buckley, has decided to see if VR can help maintain astronauts' mental health by exposing them virtually to the world they've left behind. - Author(s): H. Cave
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 44 –47
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0321
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Working and collaborating in virtual and augmented realities can boost productivity in every phase of the industrial development process - from initial design to assembly optimisation. Despite the set-up cost, more and more manufacturers are realising that these mind-altering environments provide a huge opportunity to save time and money.The paper reports how virtual and augmented reality technology is being placed directly in the hands of industrial workers. - Author(s): C. Edwards
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 48 –49
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0322
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After conducting research that found service technicians spent almost a third of their time looking up information on a product they maintain and trying to digest the information, vehicle maker Caterpillar began to look at ways to make its manuals easier to understand. - Author(s): J. Loughran
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 50 –50
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0325
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A number of virtual reality apps are promising to revolutionise the way we experience music by placing the user in a virtual setting - on stage with your favourite band or in the rehearsal studio recording a new album - in order to feel closer to the artists, or to experience live shows as if you were in the audience or on stage. VR platforms like Google Cardboard, which is the most popular at the moment, are more focused on the visual rather than aural experience. However, the eagerly awaited Oculus Rift is due to launch at the end of March and includes a set of headphones that are described as 'entry-level professional'. - Author(s): P. Dempsey
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 51 –51
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0326
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Rupert Murdoch calls live sport "the battering ram". He thinks nothing is better at driving new broadcasting platforms. His US Fox Innovation Lab and his majority-owned Sky television operation in Europe are already researching how competitions such as English Premier League (EPL) football might pummel the public into adopting - and paying a premium for - virtual reality. Murdoch is not alone. The EPL itself and its most profitable club, Manchester United, are already talking to VR technology providers. Yet it is in the US that most serious trials have taken place so far. - Author(s): D. Lenten
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 52 –53
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0327
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You're standing on a busy street corner in the Aleppo district of Syria. People are going about their business and somewhere a young girl is singing when without warning a rocket strike hits, sending dust and debris flying everywhere. The scene dissolves and you find yourself in a refugee camp where thousands of people affected by the conflict are trying to get on with their lives. Luckily, returning to the safety of your real life is as simple as removing the virtual reality headset through which you've been experiencing the sights and sounds of war and its aftermath. Unlike watching similar scenes on television however, the emotions you're feeling are likely to be more intense and stay with you much longer. This is immersive journalism, a technique using virtual reality to put the public in the middle of the scene as news unfolds that - if it catches on - could transform the way we witness events around the world. - Author(s): C. Matheou
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 54 –57
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0328
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The deal is done: fossil fuels are on the way out, say the 187 governments that signed the Paris Agreement to fight climate change. Now engineers are exploring new ways for wind energy to take up the slack. - Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 58 –59
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0345
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Designers are finding some ingenious ways to use LEDs in lighting. These one-off pieces were collected together in the studio showroom of top industrial designer Ingo Maurer, open during the Munich Creative Business Week in February. - Author(s): S.A. Holgate
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 60 –62
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0329
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With the world's population ageing, we investigate how adopting inclusive design principles can increase profits for companies. Although it is a fundamental part of inclusive design to encompass the needs of people with reduced capability, aiming to reach as many users as you can makes your product or service better for everyone. Taking an inclusive approach to design can lead to completely new ideas for products or services. - Author(s): C. Andrews
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 64 –67
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0330
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The International Cricket Council's World Twenty20 tournament takes place this March and April in India. More than ever, technology helps professional cricketers prepare for, and play, the game. But does it make for a better spectacle? - Author(s): N. Smith
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 68 –71
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0346
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A new money-changing machine is set to make currency exchange for travellers a much more equitable and far less frustrating business. Co-founder of Fourex, Jeff Paterson, explains why. - Author(s): A. Pye
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 72 –74
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0332
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Industrial drives have developed to the point where they are seen as commodity items, but continued technology advances are bringing in new functions and capabilities for improving productivity in a digital age. The modern intelligent drive is a key enabler for continuous improvement on the line. The increased use of sensors attached to automation equipment and the sharing of information on a massive scale are the cornerstone of Industry 4.0, the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT). Under Industry 4.0 it is hypothesised that production lines will reconfigure automatically in order to optimise productivity, reduce changeover times and accommodate wide product variations. - Author(s): A. Alderson
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 76 –77
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0335
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Are your tyres slowing you down? There's a whole new science behind achieving the optimum pressure for your bike tyres. - Author(s): C. Quin
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 78 –79
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0347
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Instant furniture, squeaky-clean vinyl, supercharge your lighter, a versatile tablet, a feature-packed outdoors watch and trainers that put a spring in your step. - Author(s): P. Dempsey
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 80 –81
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0337
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The Steam Controller is a key part of Valve's attempt to extend its cloud-based PC gaming business to the TV screen, more directly challenging platforms such as the Xbox, PlayStation and Wii. Licensed versions of Valve's Steam Machine PC gaming platform already feature HDMI output, and the operating system includes a Big Picture mode that optimises the experience for your television. After some delay, the controller joins this line-up, primarily as a wireless replacement for the keyboard and mouse. It is all about the ergonomics of dropping yourself comfortably on the couch and getting at least as good a gaming experience as you would in front of a PC workstation-based set-up. To that end, the Steam Controller incorporates two highly sensitive and responsive haptic pads that are intended to do much of what a mouse has traditionally accomplished, as well as a single joystick and series of programmable buttons. Front-mounted dual triggers also feature. - Author(s): B. Betts
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 82 –83
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0348
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From safer driving through self-guided tours to using your phone as a VR headset, we look at mobile apps that are augmenting the reality your phone sees. - Author(s): N. Smith
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 84 –85
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0349
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Cases of food fraud are frighteningly common. In fact, they're on an epidemic scale says Richard Evershed, co-author of a book that uncovers how we're being duped and the resulting battle between scientists and fraudsters. - Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 86 –87
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0350
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A human perspective on the history of radiation, how the Internet could develop, and the full story of one of the world's favourite treats. - Author(s): J. Pollard
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 88 –88
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0352
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The story of Thaddeus Cahill, the man who tried to give us piped music and the Hammond organ before we were really ready. - Author(s): M. Barfield
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 90 –90
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0353
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Our monthly digest to not-too-trustworthy techno mini-stories. - Author(s): D. Sandham
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 91 –91
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0354
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Give your brain a workout with this month's testing puzzles, with the chance of a prize for the correct answer. - Author(s): N. Smith
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 92 –93
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0355
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The car we know as the Volkswagen Beetle was "quite unattractive to the average buyer" as well as "too ugly and noisy". - Author(s): J. Maltby
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 94 –94
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0356
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Jack's father considers the best way to say goodbye to an engineer. - Author(s): V. Vitaliev
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 11, Issue 3, page: 98 –98
- DOI: 10.1049/et.2016.0357
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Our columnist travels to Iceland in search of the Aurora Borealis and concludes that technology is not always helpful in observing natural phenomena.
Editor's Letter
World News
News Analysis - Communications: Virtual Utopia on the horizon as VR meets mobile technology
News Comment: View from Brussels
News Briefing: In Num6ers - Gravitational waves - Advanced LIGO
News Comment: View from Washington
News Briefing: Transport - World's worst road puts cars to the test
News Briefing: The iF Awards
News Analysis - Automotive: Geneva motor show: The need for green speed
The Graphic: McLaren 570GT sports car
News Briefing: Money & Markets
The Bigger Picture: China's glass bridge
Opinion Feedback: Your Letters
Comment "if you ask me..." - Security: Compliance for its own sake is a sure recipe for data security failure
VR in... Gaming
VR in Movies: Hollywood has fully embraced the dawn of the VR age
VR into the... Past [virtual reality]
VR around the... world
VR in... Art
VR at the... theme park
VR and... Better Healthcare
VR in... buildings
VR on the... Catwalk
VR at the... crime scene
VR in... War
VR in... space
VR in... the factory of the future
VR in the future... office
VR at Gigs
VR in...sport
VR in the...news
Windy business[energy renewables]
The Gallery: LED by design
Include or lose: design for the whole market [inclusive design]
Is it really all about the data?
Interview: Jeff Paterson
Drives in the Internet of Things
SportsTech Bicycle tyres
Gadgets
The Teardown: Steam Controller
Software Reviews: See the world through your smartphone
Book Interview: Lifting the lid on deception in the food industry
Book Reviews: Strange Glow, The Closing of the Net, The Economics of Chocolate
The Eccentric Engineer - Design: The man who wished to make sweet music for all
e&tCetera . . .
Thinking Cap
Classic Project: VW Beetle
Jack's Blog
After All - Optics: Losing sleep over Aurora's grade 3 nocturnal dance
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