President Biden’s administration will end within two months, and likely to depart with him is Arati Prabhakar, the top mind for science and technology in his cabinet. As she prepares for the end of the administration, MIT Technology Review sat down with Prabhakar and asked her to reflect on President Biden’s AI accomplishments, and how AI risks, immigration policies, the CHIPS Act, and more could change under Trump.
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Founded at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1899, MIT Technology Review is a digitally oriented independent media company whose analysis, features, reviews, interviews, and live events explain the commercial, social, and political impact of new technologies. MIT Technology Review readers are curious technology enthusiasts—a global audience of business and thought leaders, innovators and early adopters, entrepreneurs and investors. Every day, we provide an authoritative filter for the flood of information about technology. We are the first to report on a broad range of new technologies, informing our audiences about how important breakthroughs will impact their careers and their lives. Get our journalism: http://technologyreview.com/newsletters.
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NASA’s huge lunar rocket, the Space Launch System, might be in trouble. As rival launchers like SpaceX’s Starship gather pace, some are questioning the need for the US national space agency to have its own mega rocket at all—something that could become a focus of the incoming Trump administration, in which SpaceX CEO Elon Musk is set to play a key role.
What’s next for NASA’s giant moon rocket?
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In our upcoming list of the 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2025, we'll examine the technologies that matter the most right now. Subscribe to gain access to every innovation and save 25%. Plus, get a free digital AI report: https://ter.li/qekx0t
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If NASA establishes a permanent presence on the moon, its astronauts’ homes could be made of a new 3D-printable, waterless concrete. Someday, so might yours.
The moon is just the beginning for this waterless concrete
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Human cases in the US are on the rise and the virus is turning up in cows and dairy products. Luckily, we have some vaccines ready to go if needed.
The risk of a bird flu pandemic is rising
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Kairos Power signed a big deal with a tech giant and got approval to build its next test facility.
This startup is getting closer to bringing next-generation nuclear to the grid
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Data center emissions have tripled since 2018. As more complex AI models like OpenAI’s Sora see broad release, those figures will likely go through the roof. Read the story: https://trib.al/dS1tCbX
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The longevity scene is having a moment, thanks to a combination of scientific advances, public interest, and an unprecedented level of investment. A few key areas of research suggest that we might be able to push human life spans further, and potentially reverse at least some signs of aging. But the field is still in its early stages, and unproven treatments—as well as a whole lot of hype—abound. Join MIT Technology Review for a special LinkedIn Live event about what's next for longevity. Register for free today!
The longevity scene is having a moment, thanks to a combination of scientific advances, public interest, and an unprecedented level of investment. On December 20, join MIT Technology Review for a special LinkedIn Live event about what's coming next in the world of longevity medicine.
What’s next for longevity
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Today in The Download, our daily newsletter: How Silicon Valley is disrupting democracy
The Download: society’s techlash, and Android XR
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Two books explore the price we’ve paid in handing over unprecedented power to Big Tech—and explain why it’s imperative we start taking it back: https://trib.al/d0FtUYG