Green Matters on MSN
Man Built a Tennis Ball-Sized 'Artificial Sun' and Switched It on in a Dark Forest
'I've never seen a light like this before. That is wild,' YouTuber Mathew Perks said.
If you happen to be in the market for a small artificial sun, you may be interested to know that for about $1300, you can get a tennis-ball-sized LED array that outputs 120,000 lumens.
Loading cement sacks into trucks requires precise counting for traceability, yet manual methods are error-prone and often ...
Light aircraft often use a heading indicator as a way to know where they’re going. Retired instrumentation engineer [Don Welch] recreated a heading indicator of his own, using cheap ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Tiny thermometers offer on-chip temperature monitoring for processors
The semiconductor chips driving modern-day computer processors are covered in billions of individual transistors, each of ...
In a development that could transform how scientists study cancer, neurodegeneration and inflammation, researchers have invented a new sensor that enables MRI machines to visualize molecular activity ...
Back in 2024, Renesas first released the RA0E1, an ultra-low-power Cortex-M23 MCU designed for cost-sensitive applications, followed by the RA0E2, with ...
A team of engineers at Rice University has developed a tiny new sensor that could dramatically improve the safety of self-driving cars on public roads. This is a compact, low-power millimeter-wave ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Extra 'set of eyes' for self-driving cars: Roadside radar sensors could reduce blind spots
Autonomous vehicles (AVs) are becoming increasingly common on roadways, but making them as safe as possible may entail going beyond the particular specs of the vehicles themselves to upgrading the ...
XDA Developers on MSN
5 ESP32 projects that turned out more useful than any store-bought smart device
Local-first wins.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
CERN tests microwire quantum sensors for particle colliders and dark matter detection
Researchers in the US have revealed that an emerging class of quantum sensors, called ...
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