Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:80/xmlui/handle/123456789/9148
Title: MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW
Keywords: MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW
July
2024
Letter from the editor The problem with plug-in hybrids; a cancer vaccine renaissance; Public (not Comic) Sans; an Apollo program for the age of AI; climate change board games; and jobs of the future: space debris analyst Why does AI hallucinate? The tendency to make things up is holding chatbots back. But that's just what they do. By Will Douglas Heaven Meet the architect who's tapping into timber's biological programming Architect Achim Menges is creating structures that warp perfectly to plan. By John Wiegand Played out Gamification was always a dubious concept. So how did it take over the world? BY BRYAN GARDINER Running on air Supershoes are transforming marathoningperhaps nowhere more so than in the world's most decorated distance-running nation. BY JONATHAN W. ROSEN Games without limits Generative AI could bring an unprecedented expansiveness to video and computer games, opening up possibilities we can only begin to imagine. BY NIALL FIRTH
Desert swell The growing business of surf pools wants to bring the ocean experience inland. But with many planned for areas facing water scarcity, who bears the cost? BY EILEEN GUO
Return ofthe tube A mainstay of 20th-century innovation, pneumatic tube systems became virtually obsolete. Now they're back. By Vanessa Armstrong An AI startup made a hyperrealistic deepfake of me that's so good it's scary Synthesia's new technology is impressive but raises big questions about a world where we increasingly can't tell what's real. By Melissa Heikkila Is this the end of animal testing? Researchers are increasingly turning to organ-on-a-chip technology for drug testing and other applications. By Harriet Brown System shock Three books reckon with technological complexity and the wicked problems it creates. By Bryan Gardiner Legos in the lab Scientists use these colorful bricks to build everything from bioprinters to microscopesincreasing the accessibility of science in the process. By Elizabeth Fernandez You are what you play What if your favorite childhood toys could help shape your future? By Bill Gourgey
Issue Date: Jul-2024
Series/Report no.: Volume-127;Number-4
URI: http://localhost:80/xmlui/handle/123456789/9148
Appears in Collections:Alerting of New Journals (AIML)

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