Scientific American

“Technology:  Where is Iran’s uranium?  AI was supposed to save coders time, it may be doing the opposite.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 03 March 2026, 2139 UTC.

Content and Source:  “Scientific American:  Technology.”

March 3—Hi, everyone. In the wake of the U.S. and Israel’s war of choice with Iran, one of the biggest unknowns is the fate of the country’s uranium stockpile—and what the world can actually verify in these early, chaotic days. We also look at how AI is reshaping software work—often not for the better—as well as a new sodium-ion battery that could help winterproof EVs even on the coldest days. That and more below, from humanoid-robot tests to smart goggles in the lab. Please enjoy.

And please reach out to me with all your technology questions and comments at eric.sullivan@sciam.com.

—Eric Sullivan, Senior Desk Editor, Technology & Engineering

 
Top Stories
U.S.’s and Israel’s war with Iran leaves uranium stockpiles uncertain

The Trump administration’s war with Iran over its nuclear ambitions raises new questions about the country’s uranium stockpile

AI was supposed to save coders time. It may be doing the opposite

Studies find AI helps developers release more software—while logging longer hours and fixing problems after the code goes live

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A salt battery could make EVs more winterproof—if it holds up on the road

CATL says its sodium-ion pack can keep charging and delivering power far below freezing. The real test is whether those lab numbers survive real winter driving

This musician built an AI clone of her voice so anyone can sing as her

Experimental composer Holly Herndon says this technology isn’t here to replace artists—and that the future of creativity belongs to collective intelligence

He built the ultimate test for humanoid robots, and they beat it in months

Roboticist Benjie Holson created the “Humanoid Olympic Games” thinking home robots were 15 years away. Then they started folding the laundry

AI-powered smart goggles are helping novice scientists perform like experts

A new wearable AI system watches your hands through smart glasses, guiding experiments and stopping mistakes before they happen

Katharine Burr Blodgett made a breakthrough when she discovered ‘invisible glass’

When Katharine Burr Blodgett discovered nonreflecting glass, the General Electric Company’s public relations machine made her a star

 
WHAT WE’RE READING
  • Data broker breaches fueled nearly $21 Billion in identity-theft losses | Wired
  • Trump announced a major deal on data centers. It’s still unclear what’s in it.  | Politico
  • The $3,000 minipig powering Europe’s drug pipeline | Bloomberg
 
From the Archive
Detecting Nuclear Smuggling

Radiation monitors at U.S. ports cannot reliably detect highly enriched uranium, which onshore terrorists could assemble into a nuclear bomb

Science X Newsletter

“Spotlight Stories Headlines:  Arabic documents from 17th century rubbish heap confirms existence of semi-legendary Nubian king.”

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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

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Wired Science

“Data centers have arrived at the edge of the Arctic Circle.”

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Accessed on 02 March 2026, 2100 UTC.

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Live Science Newsletter

“Human proto-writing, March northern lights, ‘Monogenic’ diseases.”

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Accessed on 02 March 2026, 1411 UTC.

Content and Source:  “Live Science Newsletter.”

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March 2, 2026
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Paleolithic humans invented an ‘early predecessor to writing’ at least 40,000 years ago, carved signs suggest
A statistical analysis of a series of signs carved into artifacts from around 40,000 years ago suggests humans developed proto-writing in the Stone Age.
Read More
History & Archaeology

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Stone Age boy in Sweden was buried in deerskin and a woodpecker headdress, archaeologists discover
A new method of studying the contents of soil samples has revealed Stone Age people in Sweden were buried in decorated fur-and-feather clothing.
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March could be the best month for the northern lights for nearly a decade — if the sun stays active
March 2026 could be the best month for the northern lights until the mid-2030s, as celestial mechanics and solar activity combine for potentially potent results.
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Inherited diseases don’t work like we thought they did
“Monogenic” diseases, triggered by mutations in just one gene, may actually be more complex than scientists thought.
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‘It doesn’t lie. So who are you?’: What happens when DNA tests show a woman is not the mother of the child she gave birth to?
“At first, I kind of laughed … But they were serious. I could just see the seriousness in their faces.” In this book excerpt, Lise Barnéoud explores the limitations of DNA testing.
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‘We’re starting to find a lot more weirdness’: These strange animals can control their body heat
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Acing this new AI exam — which its creators say is the toughest in the world — might point to the first signs of AGI
Humanity’s Last Exam is a PhD-level benchmark designed to test the limits of AI reasoning. Although Google’s Gemini 3 scored a staggering 48.4%, experts stress that this does not indicate the arrival of artificial general intelligence (AGI).
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Science News

“Venus has a massive lava tube” and “Meds like Ozempic could ease arthritis.”

Views expressed in this science, space, and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 01 March 2026, 2216 UTC.

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MIT Technology Review

“How America fumbled its lead in the hunt for extraterrestrial life.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.

Accessed on 01 March 2026, 1400 UTC.

Content and Source:  “MIT Technology Review.”

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