Engineeringness on MSN

The hidden power of magnets

Magnets hold objects, move motors, and guide data — all without touching anything. This video explains how magnetic fields work and why magnets are essential in so many devices. A clear and simple ...
Following the basic camera controls, one of the very first aspects of the tutorial is to start decorating your museum. It’s pretty bare bones (Ha!), but you can access a small handful of decorations ...
Image courtesy by QUE.com Artificial intelligence can feel like an abstract concept—something that happens inside massive ...
Imagine that you want to know the most efficient way to make a torus—a doughnut-shaped mathematical object—from origami paper. Instead of seeming almost perfectly smooth, the torus that you envision ...
A rain-soaked, muddy-paw reality check on whether the Audi Q5 is actually livable with big dogs—especially when you’ve chosen ...
When was the last time you had a tire rotation? If you had to think about it, then it's probably time for you to get one.
Across the country, states are passing new laws aimed at improving math teaching—mandating that schools intervene early to ...
According to manufacturer Nokian Tyres, it's best to get your tires rotated every 4,000 to 8,000 miles. Some dealerships do a ...
For at least a decade, the quadruple axel jump was figure skating’s white whale. “It’s been this unreachable thing, like the ...
LLMs have recently helped find solutions to a number of minor longstanding problems. But a new plan called First Proof is really putting them to the test ...
A mathematical trick speeds up seismic calculations for earthquake simulations and could revolutionize earthquake preparedness.
Half advice show. Half survival guide. Half absurdity-fest. (Wait, how does this work again? We're not numbers people.) Each episode, we answer all your burning questions, from how to survive a public ...