Matthew Kramer

The Boy With the Lego Hand

After wearing prosthetics all his life, 9-year-old Aidan Robinson has designed one that fits a Wii controller and screws on a Super Soaker.

Eric Whitmire/North Carolina State University

This Cyborg Cockroach Could Save Your Life Someday

Bugs backpacked with microphones could be deployed to disaster zones in the future.

Peyri Herrera/Flickr

Why It's Bad to Be a Robot on the Phone

A New York City Health Department employee was recently suspended for donning a computerized voice.

Somebody App

How to Talk Without Connecting

Miranda July's latest app rarely functions properly, and when it does, it fails to perform its stated goal: bringing people closer together.

pixelparticle/Shutterstock

Behold, the Soundtrack of Space

NASA has collected clips of some of the best moments in humans' exploration of the world beyond Earth.

Jake Swearingen/Shutterstock

The Imminent Death of the Internet Troll

A new Pew study confirms that online harassment is endemic. But human behavior—and the limits placed on it by both law and society—can change.

The New York Times

Tag a Retro Ad Today, Help Journalism Tomorrow

The New York Times' Madison archive has launched with advertisements, but could eventually expand to all kinds of projects.

CBS

First HBO, Then CBS: The Cable Bundle Is Slowly Coming Apart

The pay-TV package has unraveled more in the last 24 hours than in the previous 24 months.

Jason Lee/Reuters

Biometrics Can Be Cool Again

A new Google study suggests there's hope for the once-futuristic technology that's gotten a bit... boring.

All photos by Chris McPherson

Dudes With Drones

Meet the inventors, tinkerers, and entrepreneurs at the forefront of the flying-robot revolution.

Assembly Lines

The organizations, technologies, and people behind Google's autonomous vehicles

All illustrations by Kristian Hammerstad

The Adultery Arms Race

Technology has made cheating on your spouse, or catching a cheater, easier than ever. How digital tools are aiding the unfaithful and the untrusting—and may be mending some broken marriages.

All photos by Greg Kahn

Why Kids Sext

An inquiry into one recent scandal reveals how kids think about sexting—and what parents and police should do about it.

Google

The Secret History of the Robot Car

How self-driving vehicles took off

The View From the Valley

Are we in a tech bubble? Is Snowden a hero? And what's the hottest status symbol? In The Atlantic's first Silicon Valley Insiders Poll, a panel of 50 executives, innovators, and thinkers answer these questions and more.

Steve Cadman/Flickr

Big Data Can Guess Who You Are Based on Your Zip Code

Software company Esri's database files Americans into one of 67 consumer groups.

Governatorato dello Stato della Città del Vaticano via Osram

Let There Be Light Emitting Diodes: How to Illuminate the Sistine Chapel

With the help of strategically placed fixtures, Michelangelo's work is getting some mood lighting.

djromanj/Flickr
Second Site

The Woman With the Bionic Eye

What is it like to see again after years of blindness?

Guek Hock Ping/Zookeys

The Coming Age of the Internet Naturalist

Scientists are trying to figure out how to turn our cameras into species discovery engines.

Google

Inside Google's Secret Drone-Delivery Program

For two years, the company has been working to build flying robots that can deliver products across a city in a minute or two. An Atlantic exclusive.

Science Museum London/Flickr

How One Woman Deciphered Her Own Genetic Mutation

As access to medical information becomes more democratized, patients have new power to investigate their problems.

Sergei Karpukhin/Reuters

When Robots Write Songs

Bach, Coltrane, McCartney: New algorithms can produce original compositions in the style of the greats. But are those works actually art?