Kristin Houser
Kristin Houser is a staff writer at Freethink, where she covers science and tech. Her written work has appeared in Business Insider, NBC News, and the World Economic Forum’s Agenda, among other publications, and Stephen Colbert once talked about a piece on The Late Show, to her delight.
Prior to joining Freethink, Kristin was a staff writer for Futurism and wrote several animated and live action web series.
SpinLaunch’s launcher, which is larger than the Statue of Liberty and works like the Olympic hammer-throw event, just came online in the New Mexico desert.
“This will be one of the most important datasets since the mapping of the Human Genome.”
It’s about 7.6 million times faster than what you probably have at home.
William Shatner is going to space because Jeff Bezos loves Star Trek.
The trial will test whether adding graphene to recycled asphalt can prolong the road’s lifespan.
His family has finally gotten closure after 50 years of uncertainty.
Asteroid Bennu is still far more likely to fly right by us than to make impact.
Donate a kidney now, and your loved one will have priority status if they need one later.
Instead of digging for metals, we could extract them from salty, subterranean water.
The famous social robot is about to start rolling off the assembly line.
Deepfakes featuring your digital double could replace emails and zoom presentations.
It could analyze a photo of the Martian surface in just five seconds. NASA scientists need 40 minutes.
It walked enough miles to nearly circle the Earth twice.
The stars stood no chance against the more-massive black holes.
The new brain tumor treatment targets a cancer that kills 75% of patients within a year.
It marks a breakthrough in using gene editing to treat diseases.
South Korea is piloting a CCTV system it hopes will save lives.
The fully functional plant will serve to demo TerraPower’s nuclear tech.
The first nation to make bitcoin legal tender will use geothermal energy to mine it.
Every star we can see, including our sun, was born in one of these violent clouds.
The tiny swimmers appear to transmit signals that “persuade” the female body to have a baby.
A new model of the Antikythera mechanism reveals a “creation of genius.”