At the end of each year, the editors and staff of the MIT Technology Review select the top 10 new technologies that will breakthrough in the coming year.
The list is prepared and published to give the average person a glimpse of what is on the horizon and what might be incorporated into our daily lives, according to Amy Nordrum, executive editor.
Besides being executive editor, Nordrum also is a frequent guest on WNYC and NPR’s Science Friday with Ira Flatow.
The Review staff spends months discussing and analyzing what might be hot for the next 12 months. In addition, the Review allows readers to vote on an 11th addition to the list. That selection will be revealed in April.
To further educate the public, Nordrum added in December five things that were not put on the 2024 Breakthrough list but items that should be watched.
In this podcast episode, Nordrum breaks down each of the selections and explains its importance in understandable terms.
Some items she describes are:
· A-I for everything
· Apple Vision Pro
· 1st Gene Editing Treatment
· Weight Loss Drugs
· Twitter Killers
On the list of five items left out, she discusses:
· New drugs for Alzheimer’s disease
· Sustainable aviation fuel
· Male to male reproduction.
Listen to the podcast to hear her description of each breakthrough, and visit their website to see more:
https://www.technologyreview.com/2024/01/08/1085094/10-breakthrough-technologies-2024/
Non-Traditional College Students Often Face Hunger & Massive Debt for Degree
Foster Children Are A Special Group of Children To Be Adopted
Newest African Country S. Sudan, in Chaos, Loses Journalist to USA
Virtual Reality News is Here and More is Coming says VR Expert
NPR Serves the General Public and Millennials Says Reporter & Former Producer
Love It or Hate It: The Trump Presidency is Like No Other, Says USA Today Journo
Graham Nash: How To Be Socially Conscious in 2017
Cyber Attacks are Part of Putin’s Overall Arsenal says Russia Expert
Coal Mining Jobs Will Not Return Despite Pres. Trump’s Claims: Expert Says
Immigration Passions Run High as Trump Administration Addresses Issues
Trump’s Foreign Policy is “Chaotic, Amorphous and Unprofessional” Says Expert
Leaks & Anonymous Sources Dominate Coverage of Trump/Russia Investigations
Where Are We in Trump/Russia Investigations? NPR Security Editor Tells Us
Storytelling is the Backbone of Advertising Regardless the Delivery System
The US is Factionalized – Only Held Together by Geography says Linda Tirado
White House Is Often in Turmoil but It Reflects the Style of President Trump
Security Gaffes in the White House Cause Intelligence Expert Grave Concern
Syrian War Crime Cases Prepped by US Attorney David Crane
National Geographic Uses Maps and Graphics to Makes Stories Come-to-Life
NPR’s Bob Boilen Has Shaped a Whole New Generation of Music Lovers
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Jim & Bill (It‘s Another Day)
HauntingLive
The Tucker Carlson Show
The Ben Shapiro Show
The Daily