Georgia Tech
How Technology Could Solve the Food Desert Crisis
While food deserts—areas where access to healthy foods is absent or limited—have existed for a long time, we're now using technology to identify and solve the problem. Here's how.
Welcome to uLoL: The Collegiate Esports Tournament Modeled after March Madness
Schools from around North America will compete for the University League of Legends (uLoL) Campus Series championship this weekend.
Does Censorship on Social Media Do More Harm Than Good?
When Instagram censored pro-eating-disorder terms, it resulted in a soaring increase of pro-ED activity. If bans encourage bad behavior, what's the better option?
A Look Inside the World’s Weirdest Musical Instrument Competition
From edible keyboards to robotic guitars, Georgia Tech's yearly tournament attracts artists and inventors worldwide.
We Talked to Bill Nye About the Solar Sail He’s Sending to Space
The former Science Guy believes LightSail 2 could lead to better space travel, debris cleanup, and solar weather monitoring.
Researchers Develop a New Algorithm That Helps Robots Brace Themselves in a Fall
Now humanoid bots can preserve some of their dignity.
Notre Dame's Drue Tranquill Breaks up TD Pass, Injures Knee Celebrating
Notre Dame safety Drue Tranquill appeared to injure his right knee after celebrating a pass break-up on a crucial third down play.
College Football Weekend Watch Party: Georgia Tech-Notre Dame Goes Neoclassical
A blast from the past featuring Georgia Tech's throwback triple-option offense and Notre Dame's long-mothballed glamour highlights this weekend's most fun college football games.
Back(s) To The Future: Georgia Tech And The Return Of Option Football
In a college football world ruled by pass-happy spread offenses, Georgia Tech's old-school option attack may prove downright disruptive.
This Is the Best 3D Animation of Putting on Pants Yet
Getting 3D animated characters to dress is surprisingly difficult, but researchers are making progress.
What Exactly Is a 'Flop,' Anyway?
President Obama's call for exaflop supercomputing is as good a time as any to talk about floating-point operations per second.