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  • Illustration for “Biotech 2026: What Comes After a Breakthrough Year”January 2026

    Biotech 2026: What Comes After a Breakthrough Year

    2025 was not just another productive year for biotech. Multiple technologies reached new levels of practical impact. Here is what comes next.

    Read breakdown →
  • Illustration for “A Breakthrough in CRISPR Delivery”September 2025

    A Breakthrough in CRISPR Delivery

    The hardest part of gene editing isn't the editing; it's getting the tools into the right cells. A new method triples efficiency.

    Read breakdown →
  • Illustration for “When the Earth Tears: Capturing Fault Lines in Motion”September 2025

    When the Earth Tears: Capturing Fault Lines in Motion

    For the first time, researchers recorded high-speed video of the Earth's surface splitting apart during an earthquake. It's more than dramatic footage. It's data we've never had before.

    Read breakdown →
  • Illustration for “Neuralink's First Human Trial: A Mind-Controlled Future Begins”July 2025

    Neuralink's First Human Trial: A Mind-Controlled Future Begins

    A paralyzed man controlled a computer cursor with his thoughts. Real progress, and real questions about where brain-computer interfaces go from here.

    Read breakdown →
  • Illustration for “Gene Fix: Biotech's Quiet Revolution in Human DNA”May 2025

    Gene Fix: Biotech's Quiet Revolution in Human DNA

    CRISPR therapies are now editing genes in real patients. The FDA approved the first one. What actually changes and what doesn't.

    Read breakdown →

Timeline

  1. Biotech 2026: What Comes After a Breakthrough Year

    2025 was not just another productive year for biotech. Multiple technologies reached new levels of practical impact. Here is what comes next.

  2. A New Era: Starting Life From Skin Cells

    Scientists created embryos from ordinary skin cells. The science is real, but the ethical questions are just getting started.

  3. A Breakthrough in CRISPR Delivery

    The hardest part of gene editing isn't the editing; it's getting the tools into the right cells. A new method triples efficiency.

  4. When the Earth Tears: Capturing Fault Lines in Motion

    For the first time, researchers recorded high-speed video of the Earth's surface splitting apart during an earthquake. It's more than dramatic footage. It's data we've never had before.

  5. Neuralink's First Human Trial: A Mind-Controlled Future Begins

    A paralyzed man controlled a computer cursor with his thoughts. Real progress, and real questions about where brain-computer interfaces go from here.

  6. Gene Fix: Biotech's Quiet Revolution in Human DNA

    CRISPR therapies are now editing genes in real patients. The FDA approved the first one. What actually changes and what doesn't.

  7. Dire Wolves Return: Colossal's Next Big Leap After the Woolly Mice

    Three wolf pups engineered to resemble extinct dire wolves. The biotech is impressive, but the "de-extinction" label deserves scrutiny.

  8. The Return of the Woolly Mammoth

    Colossal Biosciences created mice with mammoth-like fur. It's a proof of concept for de-extinction, and it raises real questions about whether we should.