A YEAR IN SPACE
Space travel is increasingly routine: humanity made a record 178 successful takeoffs into orbit in 2022. More interest and investment-led to a spate of scientific advancement this year.
That includes efforts to better understand space, like NASA's OSIRISREX, which gathered samples from an asteroid, and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Lunar Excursion Vehicle 2, built to explore the moon. Other innovations turned their gaze back on our planet, like NASA's TEMPO, which monitors air quality in the U.S.; Nuview's LIDAR Satellite Constellation, planned to map Earth in 3D; and Pixxel's work to detect environmental threats with its Hyperspectral Imaging Satellites.
While scientists expanded the bounds of space exploration via NASA's Moxie experiment to separate oxygen from Mars' atmosphere, they also worked to reduce our impact and clean up space trash-which causes risky collisions with the ClearSpace-1 robotic arm. -Tara Law
OUTDOORS
Trunk show
ePlant TreeTag
After wildfires ripped through Maui in August, staff at ePlant set up 15 of their Tree Tags on the Lahaina region's largest banyan tree, which had been damaged, to help arborists understand how to help it recover. The Tree Tag sticks into the trunk, combining sensors and Al to measure growth, keep track of water and light inputs, monitor carbon capture, and store the data in the cloud. "Trees have their own unique way of communicating, and our sensors are like their translators," co-founder and CEO Graham Hine says. Anyone with trees in their yard will find the information helpful in keeping them healthy. -Pranav Dixit
DESIGN
Boundary-pushing instrument
Roland 50th Anniversary Concept Piano
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November 06, 2023-Ausgabe von Time.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November 06, 2023-Ausgabe von Time.
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Q & A: Borge Brende
The World Economic Forum president talks with TIME editor Sam Jacobs
Q & A - Rene Haas
Arm's CEO on how his hardware is supporting the Fourth Industrial Revolution
The conflicts looming over 2025
WHEN DONALD TRUMP TOOK THE OATH OF OFFICE AS President in January 2017, his first foreign policy priority was to get tough on China. The Trump 2.0 Administration will continue that work. But when he strides back into the Oval Office in January 2025, Trump will also become responsible for U.S. management of two dangerous wars, the kinds of hot foreign policy crises he was fortunate to avoid during his first term.
Rev Lebaredian
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New uses and policy questions come into focus
Roy Wood Jr. The comedian on his new stand-up special, the importance of working in food service, and learning from Keanu Reeves
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A call for global cooperation in the Intelligent Age
Cultivate wisdom along with innovation
The D.C. Brief
IN THE END, THE THREAT OF A FARright revolt proved more menacing than most imagined, as Republican Mike Johnson initially came up short on Jan. 3 during the first balloting to keep him as Speaker.
The digital labor revolution
OVER THE PAST TWO YEARS, WE'VE WITNESSED advances in AI that have captured our imaginations with unprecedented capabilities in language and ingenuity. And yet, as impressive as these developments have been, they're only the opening act. We are now entering a new era of autonomous AI agents that take action on their own and augment the work of humans. This isn't just an evolution of technology. It's a revolution that will fundamentally redefine how humans work, live, and connect with one another from this point forward.
Tech we can trust
Serving humanity's best interests must be at the center of progress