News

AI for Recreational Boaters Market is projected to grow significantly, reaching USD 124.4 billion by 2034 from USD 5.5 ...
Requirements engineering (RE) is one of the most natural language-intensive fields within the software engineering area. Therefore, several works have been developed across the years to automate the ...
Taiwan is developing offshore wind to fuel its semiconductor factories. The island’s key role in the AI tech supply chain ...
In a new sign of toolmaking in marine mammals, orcas in the Pacific Northwest were recorded rubbing stalks of kelp against each other’s bodies, a study shows.
When a critical need for new tooling arose for the F-35 Lightning II combat aircraft, innovative thinking and forward-leaning ...
At APL, a team is developing portable tech to detect ocean species using eDNA. Their goal: real-time, low-cost monitoring to ...
Killer whales, known for their exceptional intelligence and complex social behaviors, have been observed using seaweed as tools. Researchers using drones in the Salish Sea documented the behavior, ...
US Navy delivers 2,000 3D printed tools. A team at FRCE transformed a six-month procurement into a two-week delivery using DLP.
In a rare and unexpected revelation, orcas in the Salish Sea have been observed using tools for purposes other than hunting.
DIMO–MTU Technical Forum 2025 was organized recently to educate its clientele in Marine and General Engineering sectors on these latest cutting-edge solutions while bringing together a ...
Orcas were spotted using kelp as a grooming tool on each other, the first known use of tools among cetaceans for something other than hunting prey.
KILLER WHALES HAVE been caught on video breaking off pieces of seaweed to rub and groom each other, scientists announced today, in what they said is the first evidence of marine mammals making ...