The 3D-printed motor matched or outperformed comparable motors made with conventional manufacturing — and only cost 50 cents ...
Formula 1 has always been a sport where the rulebook is treated less like a fence and more like a climbing frame. The latest example is a set of 3D‑printed pistons that let teams flirt with the ...
Magic Lane and P3 Bring Pioneering Capability-rich Navigation Designed for Motorcyclists to SPARQ OS
P3 digital services and Magic Lane jointly launch advanced pre-integrated navigation solution specifically to meet the ...
With the AMD Ryzen 7 9850X3D, the company is essentially doing something it has been doing for a while now, iterate from a position of comfort. The Ryzen 7 9800X3D was already a bit of a cheat code ...
In this article, we speak to a number of leading mainstream CAD developers to bring you a sneak peek into this future..
Massively popular video game "Fortnite", TV news graphics and acclaimed animated series and films have something in common: use of the powerful Unreal Engine that is quickly becoming the go-to ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Pentagon deploys 3D-printed hypersonic scramjet for sustained Mach 5+ flight trial
The Pentagon took another step toward speeding up hypersonic testing. The Defense Innovation Unit ...
A loophole in Formula 1’s new technical regulations offers a way around the 16:1 compression ratio cap, introducing controversy before the season even starts. Technical manoeuvring to push regulatory ...
Nano Banana 2 creates start and end images with Cling 3.0 video in between, a two-frame workflow for 3D scroll effects.
Technical manoeuvring to push regulatory boundaries for the slightest performance edge without actually breaking any rules is a familiar pattern in all forms of motorsport. Engineers treat the rule ...
In an unexpected bit of news, Toyota has unveiled a proprietary game engine called Fluorite. Nope, this doesn't mean the company is entering the game development any time soon, but rather, is ...
Inspired by the Japanese art of kirigami, an MIT team has designed a technique that could transform flat panels into medical devices, habitats, and other objects without the use of tools.
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