Back to home
Technology

11 Amazing Engineering Events in 2026

Source

IEEE Spectrum

Published

TL;DR

AI Generated

In 2026, several remarkable engineering events are set to unfold, including the introduction of robo-umps in sports and the development of a supercomputer as large as a city. These advancements promise to revolutionize various industries and push the boundaries of technological innovation. Stay tuned for these exciting engineering milestones that are expected to shape the future of technology in the coming year.

Read Full Article

Similar Articles

China announces CPU-only exascale supercomputer with 47,000 homemade processors, record 2 Exaflops of performance without GPUs — Lingshen super said to use Huawei Kunpeng servers and no foreign-made components

China announces CPU-only exascale supercomputer with 47,000 homemade processors, record 2 Exaflops of performance without GPUs — Lingshen super said to use Huawei Kunpeng servers and no foreign-made components

China's National Supercomputing Center in Shenzhen unveiled the Lingshen supercomputer project, aiming for over 2 ExaFLOPS performance using 47,000 homemade processors without GPUs or foreign components. The system, designed to surpass the current fastest supercomputer, El Capitan, would utilize Huawei Kunpeng servers and Arm-based Taishan cores. The project includes a pilot phase with 100 servers and a full production system with 1,580 blade servers. While China's claims of achieving 2+ ExaFLOPS are ambitious, questions remain about the feasibility of surpassing existing supercomputing benchmarks without GPUs or foreign-made CPUs.

Tom's Hardware
Decades-old pre-Stuxnet cyber sabotage tool breaks cover, NSA listed it as 'nothing to see here' — fast16 targeted nuclear reactors, dam design, and other high-precision civil engineering software years before Stuxnet broke cover

Decades-old pre-Stuxnet cyber sabotage tool breaks cover, NSA listed it as 'nothing to see here' — fast16 targeted nuclear reactors, dam design, and other high-precision civil engineering software years before Stuxnet broke cover

Security researchers have revealed a cyber-sabotage tool called fast16 that predates Stuxnet by at least five years. This state-level tool targets high-precision calculation software, introducing subtle inaccuracies in key calculations used in projects involving nuclear reactors, dam design, and physics simulations. The tool was identified based on an architectural hunch and was delivered through a carrier worm that targeted Windows 2000 and XP environments. Fast16 corrupts floating-point calculations in a predictable way, potentially leading to unexpected engineering project outcomes. The discovery of fast16 sheds light on the existence of state-grade cyber sabotage dating back to the mid-2000s.

Tom's Hardware
Your Walmart might be 3D printed — firm building more than a dozen 3D-printed Walmart expansions with concrete-printing robots

Your Walmart might be 3D printed — firm building more than a dozen 3D-printed Walmart expansions with concrete-printing robots

Alquist 3D is advancing 3D concrete printing technology with their A1X robotic arm printer, which can lay down layers at high speed. Partnering with construction firm FMGI, they plan to build over a dozen Walmart expansions using this technology. The company aims to scale up 3D printing for construction by collaborating with equipment distributors and contractors. The A1 Series printers are designed for various construction needs, with the A1X capable of constructing walls up to 20 feet high. Despite some limitations, like the inability to print roofs, 3D printed concrete offers faster construction times and can withstand challenging weather conditions.

Tom's Hardware
Engineering on Friday ‘toon: The Meowplifier v1.0

Engineering on Friday ‘toon: The Meowplifier v1.0

The article discusses a project called the Meowplifier v1.0, a visual representation of a cat sound amplification collar. The project was born out of the idea to amplify a cat's meows to be super loud. The creator, an engineer, faced "project paralysis" due to too many ideas and limited resources. The cartoon was hand-drawn, taking about 4 hours without the use of AI. The creator experimented with coloring techniques and expressed a desire to see the project come to life through a crowdfunding approach.

ElectronicDesign

We use cookies

We use cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. For more information on how we use cookies, please see our cookie policy.