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  • LNG Prism Courage autonomous ship

    Hyundai says it's the first to pilot a large autonomous ship across the ocean

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    06.03.2022

    Hyundai says it completed the first cross-ocean voyage of a large autonomous ship — although there are a few catches.

  • Yara Birkeland autonomous electric cargo ship

    The first crewless electric cargo ship begins its maiden voyage this year

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    08.25.2021

    Yara plans to sail the first crewless electric cargo ship by the end of 2021.

  • Blackbird Interactive

    'Hardspace: Shipbreaker' is a PC game about salvaging space junk

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    02.20.2020

    Considering the huge variety of high-octane video games there are available, it's always something of a surprise when those involving fairly menial tasks --farming, for example -- perform so well. But what about menial tasks... in space? Surely that's just the right balance of excitement and the mundane? Blackbird Interactive -- the studio behind Homeworld: Deserts of Kharak – seems to think so.

  • SOPA Images via Getty Images

    SpaceX lost another Falcon booster to the sea

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    02.17.2020

    This morning, at 10:05AM ET, SpaceX successfully launched its fifth batch of Starlink internet satellites via a Falcon 9 rocket. Unfortunately, it did not manage to land the rocket's booster as planned.

  • Sinot

    Bill Gates is reportedly the first to buy a hydrogen-powered 'superyacht' (updated)

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    02.09.2020

    Bill Gates' investments in eco-friendly tech might include one of the more conspicuous symbols of his wealth. The Telegraph claims former Microsoft chief has tasked Feadship with building a vessel inspired by Sinot's Aqua, the world's first hydrogen fuel cell-based "superyacht." The roughly $644 million, 370-foot boat would have all the trappings of wealth, including five decks, space for 14 guests and 31 crew members and even a gym, but it would run on two 1MW motors fuelled by supercooled hydrogen tanks.

  • The Match Group

    Dating app Ship lets friends find your matches

    by 
    Amrita Khalid
    Amrita Khalid
    08.15.2019

    Dating apps are mostly a solitary effort, with users swiping on prospective soulmates from the comfort of their own couch. Ship, a dating app that lets single people involve friends in the matchmaking process, may change that. The Match Group and Betches Media have now released an Android version of Ship, which lets users swipe for their friends and discuss profiles in group messages. The iOS version, which debuted back in January, is now the fastest-growing dating app in the Match Group family, which also includes Tinder, Hinge, OkCupid and PlentyofFish.

  • Official US Navy Page, Flickr

    US Navy will scrap touchscreen controls on its destroyers

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    08.11.2019

    The US military normally embraces technology whenever possible. This time, however, it's taking a conspicuous step back. The Navy will ditch touchscreens on destroyers within the next 18 to 24 months, reverting instead to conventional helm controls and physical throttles. The decision came in response to feedback from the fleet after an investigation into the USS John S. McCain's collision in 2017, which killed 10 Navy sailors. The report found that the warship's complex touchscreen interface and poor training played a role in the crash with a Liberian-flagged vessel.

  • ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Watch SpaceX catch a piece of its rocket as it falls from space

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    08.07.2019

    Yesterday, SpaceX successfully launched a Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral. This was the third flight for this particular Falcon 9, and its mission was to carry the AMOS-17 satellite for Spacecom. While you can watch the full launch stream here, one of the most exciting parts of yesterday's event came as a tweet from Elon Musk. He shared a quick video of a SpaceX ship catching the rocket's fairing in a net as it fell from space.

  • Nreal

    Nreal's mixed reality glasses will cost $499 and ship this year

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    05.30.2019

    First unveiled at CES 2019, Nreal's Light mixed reality glasses are almost ready for their commercial debut. According to the Chinese startup behind the glasses, they'll cost $499 and a limited quantity will ship to customers sometime this year. They'll enter mass production in 2020, and starting today, developers can place orders for the $1,199 developer kit, which will ship in September. Nreal announced the news at the AWE 2019 conference.

  • Robert Coelius, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing

    Navy backs 'omniphobic' coatings to help ships travel farther

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    06.24.2018

    Researchers have already explored the idea of using water-repellent ship coatings that let ships travel faster and farther. The US Navy, however, is taking things a step further. It's backing University of Michigan work on an "omniphobic" coating that shrugs off virtually any liquid (it'll even fend off peanut butter) while lasting for a long time. Ships could theoretically glide through the water without nearly as much friction as ordinary vessels, consuming less fuel and traveling longer.

  • Getty Images

    Kohl's will now pack and ship Amazon returns for you

    by 
    Rob LeFebvre
    Rob LeFebvre
    09.19.2017

    A couple of weeks ago, Amazon and Kohl's announced a new partnership, which added spaces in Kohl's stores dedicated to selling hardware like the Echo and Dot smart speakers, called the Amazon Smart Home Experience. Now Kohl's is planning for 82 of its stores in Los Angeles and Chicago to offer free return service for Amazon customers. The Kohl's stores will pack and ship "eligible" Amazon return items for anything you buy from the online retailer, for free, starting this October.

  • Rolls-Royce plc, Flickr

    Rolls-Royce unveils plans for an autonomous patrol ship

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    09.12.2017

    Patrol ships are necessary to protect coastlines and fleets, but they're far from ideal right now. You need big, bulky vessels, and the human crews are either faced with the tedium of an uneventful trip (if they're lucky) or threats that a lone ship is ill-equipped to face. Rolls-Royce might have a better way: it just unveiled plans for an autonomous patrol ship that would eliminate many of these headaches, and would even be relatively eco-friendly.

  • Sovcomflot

    Tanker's speedy Arctic crossing is bad news for the planet

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    08.28.2017

    Normally, smashing a transportation record is something to celebrate. This time, however, it's not necessarily worth cheering. Sovcomflot's liquefied natural gas (LNG) tanker Christophe de Margerie has become the first merchant ship to cross the Northern Sea Route without an icebreaker clearing its path. The vessel, which can plow through ice up to 6.9 feet thick all by itself, completed the icy part of a trip from Norway to South Korea in a record-setting 6.5 days by keeping up speeds (an average of 14 knots) that would have been impractical with the usual escort. That's despite ice as thick as 3.9 feet. So what's so bad? Unfortunately, it's as much an indication of the effect of global warming as it is technological progress.

  • Paul G. Allen

    Microsoft co-founder's remote vehicles find a legendary WWII ship

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    08.20.2017

    The USS Indianapolis played an important role in WWII history, including the delivery of parts for the atomic bombs that would eventually drop on Japan. However, it met a grim fate: not only did a Japanese submarine sink it near the end of the war, but its wreck has remained elusive despite multiple expeditions over the past 72 years. Technology just provided some resolution, though. A team piloting Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen's research vessel, the R/V Petrel, has found the wreck of the Indianapolis at the bottom of the Philippine Sea. The discovery was helped by a mix of better information and the equipment aboard the Petrel itself.

  • US Navy's drone 'swarmboats' show off pack tactics

    by 
    David Lumb
    David Lumb
    12.15.2016

    While the US Navy's new state-of-the-art USS Zumwalt destroyer struggles to remain functional, the service branch's R&D department has been busy investigating cutting-edge tech at a much smaller scale. Back in October, the Office of Naval Research (OCR) demonstrated the harbor defense capabilities of a group of prototype small autonomous boats, aka "swarmbots," in Chesapeake Bay.

  • PO2 Timothy Schumaker/AFP/Getty Images

    US' new stealth destroyer may finally have affordable ammo

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    12.15.2016

    To put it mildly, the US screwed up when it decided to carry on with its Zumwalt-class stealth destroyers when they depended on smart ammo the Navy couldn't afford. However, it might have a clever workaround. Officials speaking to USNI News say the Navy is looking at Raytheon's Excalibur, a GPS-guided artillery round, as a substitute for the custom LRLAP (Long Range Land Attack Projectile) shells the Zumwalt's main guns were designed to use. Excalibur has roughly half the range at about 30 miles, but it costs much less -- about a quarter of the $800,000-plus cost per round of LRLAP. It can also hit moving targets where LRLAP couldn't.

  • Angel Villegas via AP

    Royal Caribbean uses fuel cells to power cleaner cruise ships

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    10.11.2016

    It's not just ground-based transportation that could stand to benefit from clean-running fuel cells. Cruise ship operator Royal Caribbean has revealed that it's developing a new class of ship, the Icon, that will run on liquified natural gas fuel cells. The move would dramatically reduce the harmful emissions from the vessels (the company hints they'd output nothing more than water) without compromising on reliability or safety. Boats wouldn't be stuck if they have to dock somewhere which can't offer natural gas, either, as they could rely on distillate gas in a pinch.

  • Upcoming 'No Man's Sky' patch will fix most issues

    by 
    Alex Gilyadov
    Alex Gilyadov
    08.12.2016

    No Man's Sky was released for PlayStation 4 last week, but not without its fair share of problems. Developer Hello Games is aware of the game's many bugs and glitches, and is working on a patch that will solve "the most critical issues" in the "near future."

  • Rolls Royce plc, Flickr

    Rolls-Royce expects remote-controlled cargo ships by 2020

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    06.26.2016

    Rolls-Royce isn't limiting its robotic transportation plans to luxury cars. The British transportation firm has outlined a strategy for deploying remote-controlled and autonomous cargo vessels. It's working on virtual decks where land-based crews could control every aspect of a ship, complete with VR camera views and monitoring drones to spot issues that no human ever could. Accordingly, Rolls is designing boats where humans wouldn't have to come aboard. In theory, one human would steer several boats -- crew shortages would disappear overnight.

  • Russia debuts the largest ever nuclear icebreaker

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    06.20.2016

    Russian cargo ships understandably have to wade through a lot of ice, and the country plans to deal with that frozen water in style. It recently floated out the Arktika, which it bills as the "largest and most powerful" nuclear-powered icebreaker in the world. At nearly 569 feet long and 112 feet wide, the twin-reactor boat can carve a gigantic path through some of the sea's toughest obstacles -- it can cut through ice roughly 10 feet thick. It can haul about 36,000 short tons, and there's a helicopter to scout for any upcoming floes.