A team of Purdue students and faculty recommends these microelectronic-focused toys for developing STEM skills ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Stretchable battery uses natural acids and gelatin for greener wearables
Researchers with McGill's Trottier Institute for Sustainability in Engineering and Design have developed a stretchable, ...
4hon MSN
Middle school students thinking big after attending STEM program at Worcester Polytechnic Institute
“We just had an ambassador graduate last year who went to a middle school STEM experience when she was in the 7th grade, and she admits that before going into that, she wasn’t sure about STEM, and ...
Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly changing the workplace, leaving children and their parents concerned about the potential future of work.
Discover how researchers developed a new gelatin-based battery which could be used in wearable devices and medical implants.
16hon MSN
Lyme disease often goes undetected when it's most treatable. These teens are working to change that.
Teens at a Georgia high school may have come up with a better way to detect and treat Lyme disease. They took their idea to ...
As governments crack down on online platforms from social networks to porn sites, business is booming for one sector offering ...
5don MSN
Minnesota startup has found a way to use lasers to reduce energy and water use by data centers
Maxwell Labs says cooling computer chip hotspots with lasers could drastically reduce energy consumption and increase ...
As governments crack down on online platforms from social networks to porn sites, business is booming for one sector offering ...
Her success in the solar industry has made Amyette a highly visible renewable-energy advocate, and she was named to Georgia ...
Worcester Telegram on MSN
WPI Moment of Magic club brings familiar movie faces to comfort kids
The national organization A Moment of Magic, with a local chapter at WPI, consists of members dressed as movie characters to comfort children.
"COVID-19 just really drove it home how owners would VASTLY prefer their employees to all die than take a slight hit on ...
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