When AI Agents Learn to Pull the Pin: What Scout AI’s Live Demo Signals for Autonomous Weapons
A defense startup says it has stitched together modern “AI agents” with sensors and effectors—and then proved the system can end in an explosion. Here’s what that means technically, tactically, and ethically, and what to watch as autonomy pushes deeper into the kill chain.
Burnt Hair and Soft Power: How a “Not-Political” Women’s Brand Became a Political Force
At the first IRL event for Evie Magazine, the message wasn’t red-meat politics—it was beauty, hormones, entrepreneurship, and “common sense.” That’s the point. In 2026, lifestyle media is the new frontline of ideological persuasion.
The Best Smart Rings of 2026: What WIRED’s Testing Reveals and How to Pick the Right One
Smart rings have graduated from novelty to near-mainstream, with multi-day battery life, serious sleep tracking, and ever-tighter phone integration. Here’s what WIRED’s 2026 roundup signals about the category—and how to choose the right ring for your needs.
Lovehoney Deals Guide 2026: How to Actually Save Up to 70%—and What Matters Beyond the Price
Big promos at a major sexual-wellness retailer are great for your wallet—but it pays to think about materials, privacy, warranty, and timing. Here’s how to shop smarter during Lovehoney’s latest sale.
The Best Way to Pay Your Taxes Online (2026)
A practical, up-to-date guide to paying US federal and state taxes online in 2026—without tripping penalties, overpaying fees, or falling for phishing links.
GameHub is coming to macOS: another imperfect route to Windows gaming on a Mac
GameHub says it’s bringing its Windows-game compatibility tech to macOS. That’s good news for curious Mac gamers—but be prepared for caveats, tinker-heavy setup, and uneven results.
The Curling Controversy at the Winter Olympics Isn’t What You Think
A heated accusation between Sweden and Canada lit up social media, but the real story is how modern curling’s invisible technologies, ice physics, and ethics collide under Olympic lights.
Scientists hunting mammoth fossils found whales 400 km inland
A field team prospecting for Ice Age megafauna stumbled onto whale bones hundreds of kilometers from today’s shoreline—a discovery that points to ancient seas, migrating coastlines, and Earth’s ceaseless reshaping of the land.
The Simplest Android App for Scanning Documents—And Why That Matters
Tired of subscription-heavy scanner apps? An ultra-minimal, open-source Android scanner called FairScan offers a clean, private alternative—and a reminder that simple tools often serve us best.
How a Quiet London Commuter Town Landed on the Front Line of the AI Infrastructure Boom
Potters Bar sits on the edge of London’s protected countryside—and at the edge of a global contest to build ever more computing power. Locals are organizing. Developers are lobbying. The outcome will echo far beyond one Hertfordshire meadow.
The 99%-off MacBook caper: What a reported Best Buy exploit reveals about retail tech and insider risk
Police say a Best Buy employee used a manager’s override code to ring up MacBooks for pennies on the dollar over several months. Beyond the headline, the case spotlights how old-school retail workflows collide with modern attack surfaces—and why insider threats remain retail’s most persistent blind spot.
Apple sets March 4 “Special Experience” — what it could mean for new Macs and iPads
Apple has flagged a March 4 “Special Experience,” an unusual label that suggests curated demos and hands‑on time—likely for new Macs and iPads. Here’s the context, what to expect, and how to decide whether to wait before buying.
After 22 Years on the Same Digits, an Ohio Player Finally Lands a $3.5 Million Classic Lotto Jackpot
An Ohio lottery devotee who replayed one number combination for more than two decades just matched all six in Classic Lotto, claiming a $3.5 million jackpot. Here’s why persistence doesn’t change the odds—but can still make emotional sense—and what comes next for the winner.
Inflammation, Astrocytes, and the Strange Possibility of “Over-Controlled” Compulsions
A rat study finds that stirring up immune activity in a decision-making hub did not make behavior more reflexive—it made it more calculated and persistent. The culprit appears to be astrocytes, hinting that some compulsions might come from misdirected, overly forceful control rather than a failure of control.
Sony LinkBuds Clip Review: Solid Buds, Premium Price
Sony’s clip-on, open-ear LinkBuds are comfortable and capable, but their launch price makes them a tougher sell—especially with frequent deals in this category.
The Quantum Vacuum: How “Nothing” Teems With Possibility
In quantum physics, empty space is never truly empty. Zero-point energy and vacuum fluctuations make “nothing” a restless sea that shapes technology, cosmology, and the limits of measurement.
Kaolinite pebbles tip the scales: Early Mars looks more like a rainy Earth than a frozen world
A new analysis of kaolinite-rich pebbles on Mars points to long-lived rainfall and vigorous chemical weathering—strong evidence that early Mars was warm and wet.
After a Month at Partial Strength, the Space Station is Back to a Full Crew
Following a month of reduced staffing, the International Space Station has returned to its normal seven-person crew—resetting the tempo for science, maintenance, and operations after an unusually sparse period aloft.
Inside the Bigfoot subculture: What 130 in-depth interviews reveal about belief, evidence, and community
A new ethnographic study based on 130 interviews lifts the veil on Bigfoot hunters—their motivations, methods, and tangled relationship with mainstream science.
The Best Samsung Phones of 2026, Tested and Reviewed—What Matters Before You Buy
Samsung’s 2026 lineup spans premium slabs, pocketable clamshells, and value-first midrange models. Here’s the context you need to read WIRED’s guide like a pro—and pick the right Galaxy for you.
CurrentBody LED Hair Growth Helmet Review: Baby Hairs Abound (2026)
An in-depth look at CurrentBody’s FDA-cleared LED helmet for thinning hair. We test comfort, cadence, app features, and real-world regrowth—and where it fits among drugs, lasers, and lotions.
Planting ideas in dreams: How gentle sound cues during REM sleep nudged creativity
Neuroscientists at Northwestern University showed that softly cueing memories with sound during REM sleep can steer dream content toward an unsolved puzzle—raising the odds of cracking it the next day.
A Valentine’s Day homage to Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: Romance, wires, and the weight of destiny
Ang Lee’s 2000 wuxia epic is a love story threaded through bamboo leaves and steel, where practical stunt craft and poetic sound design turn gravity—and the heart—into pliable material. On this Valentine’s Day, we revisit the film’s romance, its cinematic technology, and why it still floats above imitators.
NASA’s next Artemis II countdown test hits a new snag—what it means and why it’s fixable
NASA’s second wet dress rehearsal for Artemis II showed progress on hydrogen leaks but revealed a fresh hardware issue that must be addressed before the next countdown trial. Here’s what happened, why cryogenic fueling is so hard, and what to watch as the agency tunes the Space Launch System and its ground equipment for crewed flight.