Read the Beforeitsnews.com story here. Advertise at Before It's News here.
Profile image
Story Views
Now:
Last hour:
Last 24 hours:
Total:

MIT Technology Review’s best articles and pick of worst technology flops in 2024

% of readers think this story is Fact. Add your two cents.


The following are two articles published by MIT Technology Review.  The first is the most-read articles of 2024 and the second is the worst technology failures of 2024 which include vertical farms, woke AI and 23andMe.

By republishing these articles, we are not endorsing them nor agreeing with MIT’s stance. We are sharing them in case our readers missed something they may find interesting.

Here are MIT Technology Review’s best-performing stories of 2024

By MIT Technology Review, 24 December 2024

We published hundreds of stories in 2024, about AI, climate tech, biotech, robotics, space and more. There were six new issues of our magazine, on themes including foodplay and hidden worlds. We launched two newsletters, to share tech industry analysis from our editor-in-chief and to step people through the basics of AI. And we hosted 11 exclusive conversations with our editors and experts in our subscriber-only event series, Roundtables.

What did people enjoy most? Here’s a quick look at some of the stories that performed best with our audience:

10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2024

Every year as we compile this annual list, we look for promising technologies poised to have a real impact on the world. It represents the advances that we think matter most, and the 2024 edition included weight-loss drugs, chiplets and the first gene-editing treatment.

The 2025 list is dropping in early January. To find out what made the cut, join us for a special live Roundtables event, “Unveiling the 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2025,” on Friday, January 3, at 12:30 .m ET. This is a subscriber-only event. Register to attend or subscribe for access.)

What is AI?

Everyone thinks they know, but no one can agree. Senior editor Will Douglas Heaven explored the problem in this in-depth feature story – and explained why it matters for all of our futures. He covers the origins of modern AI and digs into the ongoing debate among experts about this technology’s capabilities and potential.

The AI Hype Index

There’s no denying AI moves fast, and it can be hard to know what’s worth your attention. That’s why we started plotting everything you need to know about the state of AI in a new matrix, along axes that run from “Hype” to “Real” and “Doom” to “Utopia.”

What Are AI Agents?

Major tech companies are now developing AI tools that can do more complex tasks, like sending emails or booking plane tickets, on your behalf. Here’s how they will work.

Super-Efficient Solar Cells: 10 Breakthrough Technologies 2024

Solar cells that combine traditional silicon with cutting-edge perovskites could push the efficiency of solar panels to new heights. That’s why we put them on our list of the 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2024.

Happy Birthday, Baby! What The Future Holds For Those Born Today

As part of our 125th-anniversary issue, contributor Kara Platoni spoke with a dozen experts to sketch out how technology might influence the life of someone born today over the next 125 years.

The Messy Quest To Replace Drugs With Electricity

In the 2010s, the field of “electroceuticals” was born, attracting much fanfare and investment. Contributor Sally Adee explored how the field fizzled and how it’s being revived as an effort to turn gene expression on and off with electric fields.

15 Climate Tech Companies to Watch

For the second annual edition of this list, our reporters and editors chose 15 companies from around the world that we think have the best shot at making a difference on climate change.

Weight-Loss Drugs: 10 Breakthrough Technologies 2024

Drugs like Wegovy and Mounjaro have quickly become embedded into American life. In 2024, they even earned a place on our 10 Breakthrough Technologies list. The long-term implications are unknown, but plenty of people are using semaglutides anyway and many lose around 15% of their body weight.

The 8 Worst Technology Failures of 2024

By MIT Technology Review, 17 December 2024

They say you learn more from failure than success. If so, this is the story for you: MIT Technology Review’s annual roll call of the biggest flops, flimflams and fiascos in all domains of technology.

Some of the foul-ups were funny, like the “woke” AI which got Google in trouble after it drew Black Nazis. Some caused lawsuits, like a computer error by CrowdStrike that left thousands of Delta passengers stranded. We also reaped failures among startups that raced to expand from 2020 to 2022, a period of ultra-low interest rates. But then the economic winds shifted. Money wasn’t free anymore. The result? Bankruptcy and dissolution for companies whose ambitious technological projects, from vertical farms to carbon credits, hadn’t yet turned a profit and might never do so.

Read on.

Woke AI blunder


Google Gemini via X.Com/End Wokeness

People worry about bias creeping into AI. But what if you add bias on purpose? Thanks to Google, we know where that leads: Black Vikings and female popes.

Google’s Gemini AI image feature, launched last February, had been tuned to zealously showcase diversity, damn the history books. Ask Google for a picture of German soldiers from World War II, and it would create a Benetton ad in Wehrmacht uniforms.

Critics pounced and Google beat an embarrassed retreat. It paused Gemini’s ability to draw people and agreed its well-intentioned effort to be inclusive had “missed the mark.”

The free version of Gemini still won’t create images of people. But paid versions will. When we asked for an image of 12 CEOs of public biotech companies, the software produced a photographic-quality image of middle-aged white men. Less than ideal. But closer to the truth.

More: Is Google’s Gemini chatbot woke by accident, or by design? (The Economist), Gemini image generation got it wrong. We’ll do better. (Google)

Boeing Starliner


The Boeing Company via NASA

Boeing, we have a problem. And it’s your long-delayed reusable spaceship, the Starliner, which stranded NASA astronauts Sunita “Suni” Williams and  Barry “Butch” Wilmore on the International Space Station.

The June mission was meant to be a quick eight-day round trip to test Starliner before it embarked on longer missions. But, plagued by helium leaks and thruster problems, it had to come back empty.

Now Butch and Suni won’t return to Earth until 2025 when a craft from Boeing competitor SpaceX is scheduled to bring them home.

Credit Boeing and NASA with putting safety first. But this wasn’t Boeing’s only malfunction during 2024. The company began the year with a door blowing off one of its planes midflight, faced a worker strike, agreed to a major fine for misleading the government about the safety of its 737 Max aeroplane (which made our 2019 list of worst technologies), and saw its CEO step down in March.

After the Starliner fiasco, Boeing fired the chief of its space and defence unit. “At this critical juncture, our priority is to restore the trust of our customers and meet the high standards they expect of us to enable their critical missions around the world,” Boeing’s new CEO, Kelly Ortberg, said in a memo.

More: Boeing’s beleaguered space capsule is heading back to Earth without two NASA astronauts (NY Post)Boeing’s space and defense chief exits in new CEO’s first executive move (Reuters), CST-100 Starliner (Boeing)

CrowdStrike Outage


Mittr / Envato

The motto of the cybersecurity company CrowdStrike is “We stop breaches.” And it’s true: No one can breach your computer if you can’t turn it on.

That’s exactly what happened to many people on 19 July, when thousands of Windows computers at airlines, TV stations and hospitals started displaying the “blue screen of death.”

The cause wasn’t hackers or ransomware. Instead, those computers were stuck in a boot loop because of a bad update shipped by CrowdStrike itself. CEO George Kurtz jumped on X to say the “issue” had been identified as a “defect” in a single computer file.

So, who is liable? CrowdStrike customer Delta Airlines, which cancelled 7,000 flights, is suing for $500 million. It alleges that the security firm caused a “global catastrophe” when it took “uncertified and untested shortcuts.”

CrowdStrike countersued. It says Delta’s management is to blame for its troubles and that the airline is due little more than a refund.

More: “Crowdstrike is working with customers(George Kurtz)How to fix a Windows PC affected by the global outage (MIT Technology Review)Delta Sues CrowdStrike Over July Operations Meltdown (WSJ)

Vertical Farms


Mittr / Envato

Grow lettuce in buildings using robots, hydroponics and LED lights. That’s what Bowery, a “vertical farming” startup, raised over $700 million to do. But in November, Bowery went bust, making it the biggest startup failure of the year, according to the business analytics firm CB Insights.

Bowery claimed that vertical farms were “100 times more productive” per square foot than traditional farms since racks of plants could be stacked 40 feet high. In reality, the company’s lettuce was more expensive, and when a stubborn plant infection spread through its East Coast facilities, Bowery had trouble delivering the green stuff at any price.

More: How a leaf-eating pathogen, failed deals brought down Bowery Farming (Pitchbook)Vertical farming “unicorn” Bowery to shut down (Axios)

Exploding Pagers


Mittr / Adobe Stock

They beeped, and then they blew up. Across Lebanon, fingers and faces were shredded in what was called Israel’s “surprise opening blow in an all-out war to try to cripple Hezbollah.”

The deadly attack was diabolically clever. Israel set up shell companies that sold thousands of pagers packed with explosives to the Islamic faction, which was already worried that its phones were being spied on.

A coup for Israel’s spies. But was it a war crime? A 1996 treaty prohibits intentionally manufacturing “apparently harmless objects” designed to explode. The New York Times says nine-year-old Fatima Abdullah died when her father’s booby-trapped beeper chimed and she raced to take it to him.

More: Israel conducted Lebanon pager attack… (Axios)A 9-Year-Old Girl Killed in Pager Attack Is Mourned in Lebanon (New York Times), Did Israel break international law? (Middle East Eye)

23andMe


Mittr / Adobe Stock

The company that pioneered direct-to-consumer gene testing is sinking fast. Its stock price is going toward zero, and a plan to create valuable drugs is kaput after that team got pink slips this November.

23andMe always had a celebrity aura, bathing in good press. Now, though, the press is all bad. It’s a troubled company in the grip of a controlling founder, Anne Wojcicki, after its independent directors resigned en masse this September. Customers are starting to worry about what’s going to happen to their DNA data if 23andMe goes under.

23andMe says it created “the world’s largest crowdsourced platform for genetic research.” That’s true. It just never figured out how to turn a profit.

More:  23andMe’s fall from $6 billion to nearly $0 (Wall Street Journal), How to…delete your 23andMe data (MIT Technology Review)23andMe Financial Report, November 2024 (23andMe)

AI Slop


Author Unknown via Wikimedia Commons

Slop is the scraps and leftovers that pigs eat. “AI slop” is what you and I are increasingly consuming online now that people are flooding the internet with computer-generated text and pictures.

AI slop is “dubious,” says the New York Times, and “dadaist,” according to Wired. It’s frequently weird, like Shrimp Jesus (don’t ask if you don’t know), or deceptive, like the picture of a shivering girl in a rowboat, supposedly showing the US government’s poor response to Hurricane Helene.

AI slop is often entertaining. AI slop is usually a waste of your time. AI slop is not fact-checked. AI slop exists mostly to get clicks. AI slop is that blue-check account on X posting 10-part threads on how great AI is – threads that were written by AI.

Bitchute: https://www.bitchut,e.com/channel/YBM3rvf5ydDM/

Gab: https://gab.com/hopegirl

Telegram: https://t.me/Hopegirl587

EMF Protection Products: www.ftwproject.com

QEG Clean Energy Academy: www.cleanenergyacademy.com

Forbidden Tech Book: www.forbiddentech.website

The post MIT Technology Review’s best articles and pick of worst technology flops in 2024 appeared first on HopeGirl Blog.


Source: https://www.hopegirlblog.com/2025/01/14/mit-technology-reviews-best-articles-and-pick-of-worst-technology-flops-in-2024/


Before It’s News® is a community of individuals who report on what’s going on around them, from all around the world.

Anyone can join.
Anyone can contribute.
Anyone can become informed about their world.

"United We Stand" Click Here To Create Your Personal Citizen Journalist Account Today, Be Sure To Invite Your Friends.

Before It’s News® is a community of individuals who report on what’s going on around them, from all around the world. Anyone can join. Anyone can contribute. Anyone can become informed about their world. "United We Stand" Click Here To Create Your Personal Citizen Journalist Account Today, Be Sure To Invite Your Friends.


LION'S MANE PRODUCT


Try Our Lion’s Mane WHOLE MIND Nootropic Blend 60 Capsules


Mushrooms are having a moment. One fabulous fungus in particular, lion’s mane, may help improve memory, depression and anxiety symptoms. They are also an excellent source of nutrients that show promise as a therapy for dementia, and other neurodegenerative diseases. If you’re living with anxiety or depression, you may be curious about all the therapy options out there — including the natural ones.Our Lion’s Mane WHOLE MIND Nootropic Blend has been formulated to utilize the potency of Lion’s mane but also include the benefits of four other Highly Beneficial Mushrooms. Synergistically, they work together to Build your health through improving cognitive function and immunity regardless of your age. Our Nootropic not only improves your Cognitive Function and Activates your Immune System, but it benefits growth of Essential Gut Flora, further enhancing your Vitality.



Our Formula includes: Lion’s Mane Mushrooms which Increase Brain Power through nerve growth, lessen anxiety, reduce depression, and improve concentration. Its an excellent adaptogen, promotes sleep and improves immunity. Shiitake Mushrooms which Fight cancer cells and infectious disease, boost the immune system, promotes brain function, and serves as a source of B vitamins. Maitake Mushrooms which regulate blood sugar levels of diabetics, reduce hypertension and boosts the immune system. Reishi Mushrooms which Fight inflammation, liver disease, fatigue, tumor growth and cancer. They Improve skin disorders and soothes digestive problems, stomach ulcers and leaky gut syndrome. Chaga Mushrooms which have anti-aging effects, boost immune function, improve stamina and athletic performance, even act as a natural aphrodisiac, fighting diabetes and improving liver function. Try Our Lion’s Mane WHOLE MIND Nootropic Blend 60 Capsules Today. Be 100% Satisfied or Receive a Full Money Back Guarantee. Order Yours Today by Following This Link.


Report abuse

Comments

Your Comments
Question   Razz  Sad   Evil  Exclaim  Smile  Redface  Biggrin  Surprised  Eek   Confused   Cool  LOL   Mad   Twisted  Rolleyes   Wink  Idea  Arrow  Neutral  Cry   Mr. Green

MOST RECENT
Load more ...

SignUp

Login

Newsletter

Email this story
Email this story

If you really want to ban this commenter, please write down the reason:

If you really want to disable all recommended stories, click on OK button. After that, you will be redirect to your options page.