Robots to drones, Australia eyes high-tech farm help to grow food
Moving carefully along a row of apple trees, two of Australia's newest agricultural workers check if the fruit is ripe or the soil needs water or fertilizer.
The world.edu network focuses on education, science, innovation and the environment.
Here you can submit and vote on the best content from the world’s leading organisations and websites.
Moving carefully along a row of apple trees, two of Australia's newest agricultural workers check if the fruit is ripe or the soil needs water or fertilizer.
There has been great interest in recent years in using tiny particles called quantum dots to produce low-cost, easily manufactured, sta
An ambitious firm has revealed their plans for a new type of personal air transport vehicle that takes off and lands like a helicopter. Will the idea fly?
On Wednesday, NASA officials announced a serious problem with the Kepler satellite, the world's most successful planet-finding machine.
Today was a strange day. I'm used to handling the brief but overwhelming burst of media attention that comes with new stories about medical breakthroughs and ethical issues.
US politicians are seeking reassurances from Google that its smart spectacles will respect personal privacy.
Eighty thousand years ago the Earth began to cool, marking the start of the last Ice Age.
A massive telescope buried in the Antarctic ice has detected 28 extremely high-energy neutrinos -- elementary particles that likely originate outside our solar system.
Google has unveiled a new version of its Maps web service, which it says has been "rebuilt from the ground up".
Human cloning has been used to produce early embryos, marking a "significant step" for medicine, say US scientists.