MIT Technology Review Narrated

MIT Technology Review
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17 snips
Apr 1, 2026 • 13min

Can quantum computers now solve health care problems? We’ll soon find out.

A race to apply quantum computing to real healthcare problems, with six teams tackling drug design, genomics mapping, and cancer-signature mining. Discussion of hybrid quantum-classical strategies and the engineering limits of current machines. Coverage of a high-stakes competition, its rules and prizes, and cautious views on whether noisy hardware can deliver big wins.
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12 snips
Mar 25, 2026 • 11min

How Pokémon Go is giving delivery robots an inch-perfect view of the world

The story explores how billions of crowd‑sourced landmark photos are training a precise world model. It highlights centimeter-accurate visual positioning and how that improves delivery robot pickup and dropoff. It describes a pilot where robot cameras adapt to AR-trained maps and contrasts real-world living maps with rival spatial mapping approaches.
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12 snips
Mar 18, 2026 • 19min

How uncrewed narco subs could transform the Colombian drug trade

A seizure of an uncrewed narco sub sparks a look at autonomous semisubmersibles and how they evolved for stealthy drug shipments. The story outlines why automation cuts human risk and boosts range and profits. It examines off‑the‑shelf tech like autopilots and satellite links, detection challenges, and robot‑vs‑robot countermeasures being proposed to match smugglers.
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11 snips
Mar 11, 2026 • 35min

America was winning the race to find Martian life. Then China jumped in.

A race to return Mars rocks heats up as Perseverance finds tantalizing spotted samples. NASA and ESA plans face cost, governance, and political peril while designers seek cheaper, faster fixes. China rapidly builds sample-return capabilities with Tianwen-3 and lunar successes. The story pits broad scientific ambition against faster, narrower approaches and raises stakes for planetary leadership.
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4 snips
Mar 4, 2026 • 31min

The curious case of the disappearing Lamborghinis

High-tech theft rings targeting luxury cars in transit make for a tense investigation. Scammers exploit load boards, fake paperwork, and reused carrier identities to divert shipments. Detectives use surveillance and plate cameras to trace stolen Lamborghinis and Rolls. Industry moves toward two-factor authentication, tracking, and tougher vetting as companies rethink how vehicles are moved.
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9 snips
Feb 25, 2026 • 31min

Hackers made death threats against this security researcher. Big mistake.

A security researcher becomes the target of death threats, AI‑generated nudes, and coordinated harassment. The narrative follows years of tracking a hacker network involved in DDoS, SIM‑swap fraud, crypto theft and sextortion. It recounts unmasking techniques, archived chat evidence, and arrests linked to violent offshoots that moved from online bragging to organized crime.
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40 snips
Feb 18, 2026 • 15min

Stratospheric internet could finally start taking off this year

High-altitude platforms aim to bring internet to over 2 billion people still offline. New steerable airships, UAVs, and solar stratospheric craft plan 2026 trials across Japan and Indonesia. Regulators are preparing airspace rules as companies tout lower costs than satellites and fast disaster response. Industry debates durability, bandwidth limits, and whether HAPs can truly compete with LEO constellations.
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27 snips
Feb 11, 2026 • 10min

How next-generation nuclear reactors break out of the 20th-century blueprint

They explore breakthroughs in reactor design like TRISO fuel and molten-salt coolants. They cover small modular reactors and the promise of factory-built plants. They discuss high-assay low-enriched uranium and high-temperature, low-pressure coolant advantages. They also flag engineering challenges such as corrosion and safety demonstrations needed for long-term viability.
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29 snips
Feb 4, 2026 • 10min

China figured out how to sell EVs. Now it has to deal with their aging batteries.

A look at China’s massive EV boom and the coming wave of aging batteries flooding the market. The strain on recycling infrastructure and the rise of a risky grey market get examined. The episode contrasts repurposing packs for energy storage with full material recovery. It highlights efforts by major manufacturers to build formal take-back and closed-loop systems.
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11 snips
Jan 28, 2026 • 15min

This Nobel Prize–winning chemist dreams of making water from thin air

A Nobel-winning chemist turns porous crystals into tools that pull moisture from thin air. The conversation covers metal-organic frameworks, their huge internal surface area, and how they can harvest water at low humidity. Listeners hear about startups racing to build solar-driven, off-grid water machines and the challenges of scaling atmospheric water technologies for homes and cities.

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