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Drones and Aerial Observation
The Pioneer Detectives
I published a short book with The Millions.
It's the story of the Pioneer Anomaly, a long-standing mystery. The book is short and fun—the length of a novella—but also, in the words of Amazon's reviewer, "powerful and sad". If you've got any curiosity about how NASA works behind the scenes or why scientists believe what they do, I think you'll enjoy the book.
It is available on Amazon as a Kindle Single and also on Apple's iBooks.Drone Wars
Archives by Date
clips by publication
- The American Prospect
- Aviation Week & Space Technology
- Columbia Journalism Review
- CNN.com
- The Economist
- Foreign Policy
- Huffington Post
- MIT Technology Review
- NPR
- POLITICO
- Popular Science
- Primer Stories
- Quartz
- Quanta Magazine
- Slate
- The Wall Street Journal
- Washington Post
- Vox
- Zocalo Public Square
- The Millions
- The Weekly Wonk
- Discover
- CQ Global Researcher
- Inside Mexico
- Stanford Magazine
- Poder
more stories from The Economist
Climbing the periodic table
5 February 2004
Two new elements
A Russian-American collaboration has created two new chemical elements.
Modern-day aether?
5 February 2004
A cosmological conundrum
What if the dark energy and dark matter essential to modern explanations of the universe don’t really exist?
Where are you?
29 January 2004
Satellite-navigation networks
Negotiations to harmonize America’s GPS system and Europe’s Galileo.
New approaches to cancer treatment
22 January 2004
Malignant maths
Mathematical models aid the understanding of cancer.
Plus new thermal treatmentsof cancer.
Earth and Life Sciences
tags: The Economist
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Does language structure thought?
8 January 2004
Babel’s Children
Languages may be more different from each other than is currently supposed. That may affect the way people think.
Lightening, analyzed
4 December 2003
Sturm und Drang
No one understands lightning. But here are some interesting investigations into the subject.
After the fingerprint
4 December 2003
Prepare to be scanned
Biometrics: High-tech security systems that rely on detailed measurements of the human body, known as biometrics, are taking off. But should they be?
And, an accompanying leader (editorial), written with Tom Standage.
Technology
tags: biometrics, The Economist
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Out of mind
4 December 2003
Out of sight
A transparent magnet could be used to make new kinds of memories and displays.
Technology
tags: display, memory, The Economist
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Rushing to judgement
13 November 2003
Perishing publishing
The benefits and dangers of pre-printing scientific papers on-line.
Gamma-ray mystery
3 November 2003
Bursting with controversy
Arguments continue about the biggest explosions in the universe–just what are gamma-ray bursts, and how do they work?
Robot monkeys
16 October 2003
Monkey see, monkey do
Monkeys can be made to move robot arms with their thoughts.
Earth and Life Sciences
tags: monkeys, robots, The Economist
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The chase for artificial intelligence
9 October 2003
Agents of creation
A report from the first International Workshop on Complex Agent-Based Dynamic Networks, in Oxford, England; the latest in computer modelling of complex systems.
Talking about ourselves
2 October 2003
This headline is (half) false
A new way to analyse self-referential and contradictory statements.
Exploring Jupiter
18 September 2003
Magnifico!
The life and death of Galileo, America’s Jupiter probe.