"Star Trek" may be science fiction, but the technology depicted in its shows has often led to real-world equivalents being developed that we can use today.
3don MSNOpinion
Trump’s economic war on Black America
The president says he loves “my African Americans." His policies tell a different story ...
Discover San Diego's best immersive bars, tiki lounges and hidden speakeasies to visit during Comic-Con, from Mothership to ...
California’s The Integratron was inspired by extraterrestrials – now it’s promising out-of-this-world experiences ...
Lifestyle.INQ on MSN
Everything I’d wish for if I had a fashion fairy godmother
It’s officially fall in fashion, and though it’s still the rainy season here in tropical Manila, a girl can dream. In between ...
Soccer's format for deciding cup games that end in a tie is a flawed system. So what is an alternative to the current extra ...
Billed as the “world’s first museum of AI arts,” Dataland uses wearables and troves of material from the Amazon to merge ...
Farscape’s John Crichton and Aeryn Sun romance broke the usual TV formula, creating one of sci-fi’s most emotionally ...
When Rick and Morty have another massive fight, Rick gives Morty an alien parasite that allows him to better empathize with ...
The builder got up every morning long before dawn, left home to pick up his construction crew and then headed out to work on ...
Most people see the world as it is and ask how to live within its limits. A rare few imagine the world as it could become.
In M. John Harrison’s short story ‘The Crisis’, first published in 2017, the world has been invaded by aliens that look like ...
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