In response to a climate change denier’s recent challenge to debate him, UNLV professor Ben Leffel had one condition: The debate had to be held “in the form of a WWE professional wrestling match.”
Science and Technology
A robot manufacturer has moved its headquarters to Las Vegas, offering factory solutions and automations.
Your car is spying on you. That is one takeaway from the fast, detailed data that Tesla collected on the driver of one of its Cybertrucks that exploded in Las Vegas earlier this week.
The billionaire posted about the lawsuit on X on Tuesday, saying “now it is war” after two years of being nice and “getting nothing but empty words.”
Police say a man used an iPad to rob two bank branches on consecutive days last month in the south central Las Vegas Valley.
Kwikbit Internet has expanded its low-cost high-speed internet to a local mobile home community in Las Vegas.
Twitter experienced a bevy of glitches Monday as links stopped working, some users were unable to log in and images were not loading for others.
Fifteen years ago, the annual tech show CES welcomed one automaker. This year, it’s hosting more than 300 exhibitors from the auto industry.
Tech industry members are all about innovation, but some booths at CES this week can tout their creativity more than others thanks to their accolades earned during one of the trade show’s annual competitions.
The show will occupy 200,000 square feet at the Las Vegas Convention Center, and is organized by TCG World, an online virtual gaming experience, and Jigsaw Puzzle International Convention.
Axon, the company best known for developing the Taser, said Monday it was halting plans to develop a Taser-equipped drone.
Smart city technology helps cities tackle dangerous driving and extreme weather, but Las Vegas officials and tech firms have more ambitious plans of what the technology can do.
Expelled from hundreds of miles beneath the Earth’s surface by a volcanic blast, a diamond contained small specks of a previously unknown natural mineral now named “davemaoite.”
Honorees include technology that enhances or even replaces in-person visits with doctors.
The top U.S. public health agency said Monday that the coronavirus can spread more than 6 feet through the air, especially in poorly ventilated and enclosed spaces. But agency officials maintained that such spread is uncommon and current social distancing guidelines still make sense.
A “mind-control” fungus found in cicadas forces males to mimic female mating behavior and spread infection and has been seen in populations across the U.S.
The seismic zone along the California-Nevada border has a long history of unleashing powerful temblors in the Silver State.