more stories from The Economist

Understanding gravity 21 August 2004

An invisible hand
A gravitational mystery affecting pendulums and satellites–could General Relativity be wrong?

Propulsion 12 August 2004

The heat is on.
A more efficient spacecraft engine.

The Shipping Boom 22 July 2004

On the crest of a wave?
Things have been so good in the bulk-shipping market that it is hard to believe they can stay that way
with Iain Carson

In defense (reluctantly) of Michael Moore 8 July 2004

Sinned against
A review of a book which is a big fast stupid attack on Michael Moore.

Not so secret codes 1 July 2004

Not the usual channels
An overview of coding theory

Life of a mountaineer 24 June 2004

Ulrich Inderbinen
The oldest mountain guide around.

Quantum oddities 17 June 2004

In the twinkling of an ion
Two groups have succeeded in teleporting quantum states.

Simon diga 17 June 2004

Simon says
Bilingualism may help protect the mind in old age.

Profile: Dennis Ritchie, Unix pioneer 10 June 2004

Unix’s founding fathers
A profile of Dennis Ritchie and his colleaugues who first developed C, the programming language, and Unix.

Needles in haystacks 10 June 2004

A golden vein
The future of data mining

Am I bluffing? 10 June 2004

A chip and a chair
Why poker is a skillfull game

Without resistance 3 June 2004

Full steam ahead
What superconductors can do

Dan Brown’s aftermath 13 May 2004

Da Vinci, codes, and all that
The good, the bad, and the ugly of books about Da Vinci and the nature of mathematics.

The Bush administration and science 6 May 2004

On the turning away
How actions by the Bush administration are deterring foreign scientists and students from coming to America.
Plus a leader (editorial) on the same subject.

Ancient sports 22 April 2004

Take me out to the ballgame
Studying ulama, an old mesoamerican sport.