Polygraphs have major flaws. Are there better options?
A century after the polygraph, labs are chasing brain scans, eye metrics, and AI to spot deception. The science keeps running into the same wall: there may be no universal “lie signal.”
Pints, prop bets, and policy: Inside Polymarket’s “Situation Room” pop-up bar in Washington, DC
A crypto-native prediction market opened a Beltway bar for watch parties, live odds, and schmoozing. It’s part marketing stunt, part legitimacy play—and a test of how far event markets can edge into mainstream political culture without tripping U.S. rules.
Best Heart Rate Monitors in 2026: Why Polar, Coros, and Garmin Still Lead—and What That Means for You
Chest straps and armbands from Polar, Coros, and Garmin remain the go‑to for accurate training data in 2026. Here’s the context behind the rankings, how the tech works, and what to watch next.
Pixel 10 Cases and Accessories in 2026: A Deep Guide to Protection, Charging, and Smart Add‑Ons
From slim shells to rugged armor, Qi2 magnetic chargers to travel-ready battery packs, here’s how to pick the right protection and power gear for your Pixel 10, 10a, or 10 Pro XL—and what the latest standards actually mean.
How new fishing tech can reduce bycatch of turtles and other creatures
From illuminated nets to AI-guided escape hatches, a wave of practical gear upgrades promises fewer turtles, sharks, dolphins, and seabirds in fishing nets—without sinking fishermen’s livelihoods.
The Best Garmin Watch in 2026: How to Pick the Right One for Your Adventures
WIRED refreshed its guide to the best Garmin watches. Here’s the bigger picture—how Garmin’s sprawling lineup fits together in 2026, who each family is for, and how to buy the right model without overspending.
Getting formal about quantum mechanics' lack of causality
A new quantum experiment turns a philosophical puzzle—does the order of events exist?—into a lab test with pass/fail numbers, showing how to rigorously certify processes with no fixed causal order.
Rethinking giant Paleozoic insects: Oxygen wasn’t the whole story
A new analysis undermines the classic idea that ancient dragonflies were supersized only because the atmosphere was flush with oxygen. Insects’ breathing systems likely scale and ventilate well enough to keep big bodies flying, pushing scientists to look for other culprits behind the rise—and fall—of prehistoric giants.
Best 360 Cameras in 2026: How to Choose Between DJI, Insta360, and GoPro
Thinking about a 360 camera in 2026? Here’s what matters now—image quality, editing workflows, stabilization, and ecosystems from Insta360, GoPro, and DJI—plus practical picks by use case and what’s coming next.
Acer Promo Codes and Bundles Explained: How to Actually Save on Predator, Nitro, and Swift
Acer’s headline-grabbing “up to 40% off” bundles and verified discounts can be great—if you know how to evaluate stackability, timing, and specs. Here’s a clear, practical guide to squeezing the most value from Acer.com without buying the wrong laptop or monitor.
A one-handed return to Castle Old-School: What playing Wolfenstein 3D in 2026 teaches us about control, design, and accessibility
Ars Technica tried to play Wolfenstein 3D with one hand in 2026. The results are revealing—not just about a 1992 classic’s control quirks, but how far accessibility and input design have come, and what emulation and source ports can do to bridge the past with the present.
Zoom court fiasco: Defendant dials in while driving, denies it, and the judge erupts
A defendant joined a court hearing by Zoom while actively driving, then tried to deny it—prompting a furious judge and reigniting debate over remote-court etiquette, safety, and accountability.
He Bought 20 Identical Pick 4 Tickets—and Hit Them All: Inside a $100,000 Virginia Lottery Win
A Virginia Pick 4 player didn’t spread his bets—he stacked them. By purchasing 20 identical tickets for one drawing, he turned a single winning number into a $100,000 haul. Here’s how that works, why it’s legal, and what the odds and taxes look like.
Skip the TSA Line: Apps, Tactics, and Trends for Traveling by Bus, Train, and Boat
Flying isn’t your only option. Here’s how to discover and book buses, trains, and ferries with modern tools—plus region-by-region picks, money-saving tips, and pitfalls to avoid.
Garmin InReach Mini 3 Plus Review: Rugged hardware, relentless upsells
Garmin’s newest pocket satellite messenger is tough, tiny, and trustworthy—but its subscription ladder and add‑ons can feel like a toll road unless you’re truly off-grid often.
Layla Sleep’s March 2026 Deals, Decoded: How to Actually Save Up to $600—and What’s Worth Buying
A practical guide to the Spring Sale hype: what “up to $600 off” really means, how copper-infused foam and flippable builds work, and smart steps to lock in a genuine deal.
A Judge Just Hit Pause on the US “Supply‑Chain Risk” Label for Anthropic—Here’s What That Really Means
A federal judge temporarily blocked a planned US “supply‑chain risk” designation for Anthropic, averting immediate business fallout and signaling legal doubts about the process. The pause buys time—but not certainty—for AI governance, national security policy, and the broader enterprise AI market.
The shaky promise of “anonymous” tip lines: What a 93GB breach tells us about civic tech, policing, and privacy
A 93GB cache of crime tips allegedly taken from an “anonymous” reporting platform exposes a core weakness of modern policing tech: people, processes, and promises that don’t match the threat model of real-world informants.
Which E‑Readers Are Actually Worth Buying in Amazon’s Spring Sale
Amazon’s Spring Sale drops several e‑readers to some of their best prices of the year—including at least one model under $100. Here’s how to choose the right device, which models to target, and what pitfalls to avoid.
Using a VPN Could Put You in the NSA’s Sights — Here’s What That Actually Means
Lawmakers are demanding clarity from Tulsi Gabbard on whether connecting to a VPN server overseas can cause Americans to be treated as “foreign” for surveillance purposes. Here’s the context, the law, and how your VPN choices really affect your exposure.
Saatva HD Mattress Review: A Solution for Heavy-Bodied Sleepers
The Saatva HD is a purpose-built hybrid that blends dense foams, zoned latex, and heavy-gauge coils to support bigger bodies without the all-too-common sag. Here’s how it performs, who it’s for, and what the industry can learn from it.
HP’s March Mega-Discounts, Decoded: How to Actually Save Big—and When to Skip the Deal
HP is dangling huge March discounts—headline “up to 60%” offers plus extra stackable codes. Here’s what’s really going on, how to stack savings, and the traps to avoid.
A police drone that rides Starlink and brings Narcan: unpacking BRINC’s new “Guardian”
BRINC’s Guardian blends high-speed pursuit, satellite connectivity via Starlink, and a medical payload for naloxone—signaling where 911 “drone-as-first-responder” tech is headed and what it could mean for policing, public health, and civil liberties.
NASA’s audacious nuclear plan: turn Gateway into a test stand—then send the hardware to Mars
NASA has outlined a way to bring fission power back to spaceflight: dock a megawatt-class reactor and electric thrusters to the lunar Gateway, activate it safely far from Earth, wring out the system in cislunar space, and then dispatch the nuclear‑electric stage on a slow-burn journey to Mars.