Feature Archive

  1. Elon Musk’s lawsuit over alleged X ad boycott “a very weak case,” professor says

    Law is unfavorable to X, but Musk filed suit in potentially friendly Texas court.

  2. The 2024 Honda Prologue—a dependable but somewhat dull EV

    Borrowing a GM platform means being stuck with some of GM's design decisions.

  3. All the possible ways to destroy Google’s monopoly in search

    What the future of search could look like as DOJ seeks to end Google's monopoly.

  4. Elon Musk says Tesla is an AI company now. Here’s how plausible that is.

    As Tesla's core business starts to falter, CEO Elon Musk has robot fever.

  5. Path to precision: Targeted cancer drugs go from table to trials to bedside

    What started in a scientist's dining room is now in tissue-agnostic combo trials.

  6. A few weeks with the Pocket 386, an early-‘90s-style, half-busted retro PC

    AliExpress retro laptop doesn't always live up to its promise.

  7. After years of leniency, ULA cracks down on hobbyist photographers

    "I'm just shocked they don't want more coverage of these things and not less."

  8. Hybrids between two species can produce “swarms” that flourish

    Humans may be part of a hybrid swarm. And we’re making more of them.

  9. Synology BeeStation review: A great way to start getting real about backups

    If you're not ready for full-on NAS gear, consider this clever little drive.

  10. The Summit 1 is not peak e-mountain bike, but it’s a great all-rounder

    Great price, a solid all-around bike, but not everything you might want from an MTB.

  11. Secure Boot is completely broken on 200+ models from 5 big device makers

    Keys were labeled "DO NOT TRUST." Nearly 500 device models use them anyway.

  12. SpaceX just stomped the competition for a new contract—that’s not great

    NASA wants a "robust" commercial space community. But it has a long way to go.

  13. We’re building nuclear spaceships again—this time for real 

    The military and NASA seem serious about building demonstration hardware.

  14. Gazelle Eclipse C380+ e-bike review: A smart, smooth ride at a halting price

    It's a powerful, comfortable, fun, and very smart ride. Is that enough?

  15. The Lucid Air Pure review: Lower weight, better steering, amazing efficiency

    Less power and less weight almost always makes for a better electric vehicle.

  16. The best summer Prime Day deals we could find for Ars readers

    On day two of Amazon's summer sale extravaganza, here are the deals we liked.

  17. Genetic cloaking of healthy cells opens door to universal blood cancer therapy

    Blood stem cells are being engineered to protect them from lethal therapies.

  18. Peer review is essential for science. Unfortunately, it’s broken.

    There's no incentive to fix the system, which was never designed to catch fraud anyway.

  19. Could AIs become conscious? Right now, we have no way to tell.

    Scientists struggle to define consciousness, AI or otherwise.

  20. We test the baffling hubless Verge TS Pro electric motorbike

    The Verge TS is anything but cheap, but it does feature cutting-edge technology.

  21. The Yellowstone supervolcano destroyed an ecosystem but saved it for us

    50 years of excavation unveiled the story of a catastrophic event and its aftermath.

  22. Tool preventing AI mimicry cracked; artists wonder what’s next

    Artists must wait weeks for Glaze defense against AI scraping amid TOS updates.

  23. Surface Pro 11 and Laptop 7 review: An Apple Silicon moment for Windows

    Superfluous AI features and compatibility issues don't detract from good PCs.

  24. 30 years later, FreeDOS is still keeping the dream of the command prompt alive

    Project's creator talks to Ars about where FreeDOS has been, where it's going.

  25. The world’s toughest race starts Saturday, and it’s delightfully hard to call this year

    Setting the stage for what could be a wild ride across France.

  26. T-Mobile users enraged as “Un-carrier” breaks promise to never raise prices

    FCC gets 1,600 complaints; users blast "deceptive advertising aimed at seniors."

  27. Star Wars behind the scenes: Creating the unique aesthetic of The Acolyte

    Ars chats with production designer Kevin Jenkins and cinematographer Chris Teague.

  28. Taking a closer look at AI’s supposed energy apocalypse

    AI is just one small part of data centers’ soaring energy use.

  29. Decades later, John Romero looks back at the birth of the first-person shooter

    Id Software co-founder talks to Ars about everything from Catacomb 3-D to "boomer shooters."

  30. Internet Archive forced to remove 500,000 books after publishers’ court win

    Internet Archive fans beg publishers to stop emptying the open library.

  31. From Infocom to 80 Days: An oral history of text games and interactive fiction

    MUDs, Usenet, and open source all play a part in 50 years of IF history.

  32. MacBook Air gets hosed, other models hold steady in macOS 15 as Intel support fades

    Sequoia is both more and less generous to Intel Macs, depending on the model.

  33. Hello sunshine: We test McLaren’s drop-top hybrid Artura Spider

    The addition of a retractable roof makes this Artura the one to pick.

  34. Mod Easy: A retro e-bike with a sidecar perfect for Indiana Jones cosplay

    It's not the most practical option for passengers, but my son had a blast.

  35. May contain nuts: Precautionary allergen labels lead to consumer confusion

    Some labels suggest allergen cross-contamination that might not exist.

  36. Neutrinos: The inscrutable “ghost particles” driving scientists crazy

    They hold the keys to new physics. If only we could understand them.

Long-Form Stories

Getting deep into the details of an online crime, spending real time with a gadget, explaining the finer points of a chipset—our feature stories give us the space to hunker down and get our geek on.

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