The Download
What's up in emerging technology
Now You Can Manage Entire Factories from a Phone
Alphabet Will Turn Toronto Into a Living Laboratory of Urban Design
Google’s First Mobile Chip Will Turbocharge Image Processing
Alphabet’s Drones Are Now Delivering Right Into People’s Backyards
Can Robots and Humans Learn to Labor and Love as One?
Intelligent Machines
Alibaba Aims to “Master the Laws” of AI and Put Virtual Helpers Everywhere
CTO of the e-commerce giant says its new $15 billion research academy will explore AI, fintech, and quantum computing.

Rewriting Life
FDA Vote Sets Stage for Gene Therapy’s Future
The pioneering treatment fixes a mutated gene and could soon be available in the U.S.

Sustainable Energy
Ceramic Pump That Takes the Heat Promises Cheap, Efficient Grid Storage
It can operate at a record 1,400 ˚C, enabling the use of liquid metals for thermal storage.

Rewriting Life
Scientists Can Read a Bird’s Brain and Predict Its Next Song
Next up, predicting human speech with a brain-computer interface.
Manufacturing will be key to quantum computing, but don’t throw out your current processor just yet.
Intelligent Machines
Put Humans at the Center of AI
At Stanford and Google, Fei-Fei Li is leading the development of artificial intelligence—and working to diversify the field.
Rewriting Life
GM Apples That Don’t Brown to Reach U.S. Shelves This Fall
Can genetic modification appeal to consumers? A new apple will test the market.

Custom Research Report
Finance and HR: The Cloud’s New Power Partnership
View from the Marketplace
The Customer Engagement Revolution
Great experiences require a new approach to data management.
Features
Rewriting Life
Inside the Moonshot Effort to Finally Figure Out the Brain
AI is only loosely modeled on the brain. So what if you wanted to do it right? You’d need to do what has been impossible until now: map what actually happens in neurons and nerve fibers.

Watch Video
More videosSustainable Energy
Turning Flood Water into Drinking Water 03:27
A Thai government agency has developed a mobile unit called SOS that can purify contaminated water in the aftermath of a flood.
Features
Intelligent Machines
The Seven Deadly Sins of AI Predictions
Mistaken extrapolations, limited imagination, and other common mistakes that distract us from thinking more productively about the future.

From Our Current Issue
Business Impact
How technology advances are changing the economy and providing new opportunities in many industries.
-
Why 500 Million People in China Are Talking to This AI
iFlytek’s voice recognition technology is everywhere in China, and that’s what’s making it smarter every day.
by Yiting Sun

-
Colleges Are Marketing Drone Pilot Courses, but the Career Opportunities Are Murky
At least 15 community colleges offer them, but it’s not clear how many students parlay their new skills into jobs.
by Elizabeth Woyke

-
This Chinese Startup Wants to Know Everything about Your Body
The goal is to use AI to keep you healthy. But are computers really smart enough to make sense of all that data?
by David Ewing Duncan

Connectivity
What it means to be constantly connected with each other and vast sources of information.
-
How Close Are You Really?
A diagram of your social network reveals the strength of your individual relationships, network scientists say.
by Emerging Technology from the arXiv

-
How Blockchain Could Give Us a Smarter Energy Grid
Energy experts believe that blockchain technology can solve a maze of red tape and data management problems.
by Mike Orcutt

-
Oculus Chief Scientist Speaks about Virtual Reality in the Lab and on Your Face
Michael Abrash says he’s looking at “specific aspects” of how VR affects us over time.
by Rachel Metz

Internet of Things: A World on the Move
Sponsored by Siemens
-
If Only a Simple Gadget Rating Could Save Us from Cyberattack
Suggestions that a security score be awarded to connected devices is a lovely idea that would be almost impossible to implement.
by Jamie Condliffe

-
Botnets of Things: 10 Breakthrough Technologies 2017
The relentless push to add connectivity to home gadgets is creating dangerous side effects that figure to get even worse.
by Bruce Schneier

-
Personal AI Privacy Watchdog Could Help You Regain Control of Your Data
If regulators aren’t going to help consumers make sense of what companies are doing with their data, maybe artificial intelligence can.
by Mike Orcutt

November 6-9, 2017
Cambridge, MA
Discover the emerging technologies that will change the world.
Meet the people and companies shaping our future. From next-generation brain interfaces to the impact of social media on society and much more, this is the tech conference you must not miss.
Register Now
AI Meets CRM: Transforming Customer Experiences
Sponsored by Salesforce
-
Transform Customer Experiences by Harnessing the Power of AI in CRM
Companies are using AI to build personalized and dynamic experiences to engage both internal and external audiences.
by MIT Technology Review Custom

-
Artificial Intelligence for Everyone: A Next-Generation Experience
Organizations today are challenged with mining, analyzing and putting to good use the vast amounts of data now flooding in from multiple checkpoints. How to utilize that data to get closer to internal and external customers?
by MIT Technology Review Custom

-
Customer Data Meets AI
A new day is dawning for the customer experience, driven by the application of artificial intelligence, machine learning, and automated technologies to CRM data. The potential exists to transform the customer’s experience by providing service in a more predictive and intuitive way than ever before.
by MIT Technology Review Custom

Connect with tomorrow's technology today.
Become an MIT Technology Review Insider for continuous in-depth analysis and unparalleled perspective.
Innovations, Ideas, and Insights
Provided by BBVA
-
Human Legacies When Robots Rule the Earth
Machines have been displacing humans on job tasks for several centuries, and for seventy years many of these machines have been controlled by computers.
by Robin Hanson

-
Our Extended Sensoria. How Humans Will Connect with the Internet of Things
Mark Weiser predicted the Internet of Things in a seminal article in 1991 about how people would interact with networked computation distributed into the environments and artifacts around them.
by Joseph A. Paradiso

-
Interstellar travel and post-humans
The stupendous time-spans of the evolutionary past are now part of common culture.
by Martin Rees













