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WIRED

Oct 01 2022
Magazine

The Wired mission is to tell the world something they've never heard before in a way they've never seen before. It's about turning new ideas into everyday reality. It's about seeding our community of influencers with the ideas that will shape and transform our collective future. Wired readers want to know how technology is changing the world, and they're interested in big, relevant ideas, even if those ideas challenge their assumptions—or blow their minds.

SUBSCRIBERS GET UNLIMITED ACCESS TO WIRED.COM

Serving the Saudi Appetite for Ready Meals

I WANT MY iTV • When the internet and television merged in the aughts, it was exciting. Then Facebook took over.

VERSION IMMERSION • Retrocomputing is about more than nostalgic nerdery. It’s a way to keep your tech in perspective.

THE NEW JET SET • All-electric personal aircraft are prepared for vertical takeoff, but there may be some flight delays.

EXPANSION PACK: CALCULATING THE SPRAWL OF IN-GAME WORLDS

RAYS OF HOPE • My rooftop solar panels showed me that a world powered by renewables would be an overflowing horn of plenty.

Readout • The world, quantified.

Dear Cloud Support:

STUN GUNS • The EV revolution has already transformed the auto industry, but motorcycle makers are catching up. We’ve tested a range of new electric two-wheelers, from iconic brands and startups alike. These are our favorites.

SUBSCRIBERS GET UNLIMITED ACCESS TO WIRED.COM

FEATURES

ABANDON SHIP! • CIVILIZATIONS FALL APART. THE SOCIAL CONTRACT CANNOT HOLD. BUT BALAJI SRINIVASAN IS HERE TO LIFT YOU SAFELY OUT OF THE MAELSTROM TO A COUNTRY IN THE CLOUD. (WELL, MAYBE NOT ALL OF YOU.)

JUST ONE MORE • AS KABUL FELL LAST YEAR, THE US MILITARY ABANDONED THOUSANDS OF ITS AFGHAN ALLIES. FROM 7,000 MILES AWAY, A VETERAN-LED TEAM OF VOLUNTEERS ARMED WITH GROUP CHATS, QR CODES, AND SATELLITE MAPS LAUNCHED A MAD DASH TO RESCUE THEM.

LOVE & LARP • SWORDS AND ORC STUFF WERE NEVER MY FLAVOR OF GEEK. BUT PRETENDING TO BE A SAD SACK AT A GAY CONVERSION THERAPY CAMP? SURELY I COULD PLAY THAT GAME.

A PLANET OF HER OWN • SAYAKA MURATA has never felt at home on earth. IN HER NOVELS, SHE DEVISES WORLDS WHERE WOMEN REINVENT SEX, MARRIAGE, CHILDBIRTH—AND THE BOUNDARIES OF HUMAN EXISTENCE.

PATRIOT GAMES • The Freedom of Information Act helps Americans learn what their government is up to. One California company turned it into a moneymaker–—and became an unlikely defender of the public’s right to know.

COLOPHON • Family Matters That Helped Get This Issue Out:

SIX-WORD SCI-FI


Expand title description text
Frequency: Monthly Pages: 92 Publisher: Conde Nast US Edition: Oct 01 2022

OverDrive Magazine

  • Release date: September 20, 2022

Formats

OverDrive Magazine

Languages

English

The Wired mission is to tell the world something they've never heard before in a way they've never seen before. It's about turning new ideas into everyday reality. It's about seeding our community of influencers with the ideas that will shape and transform our collective future. Wired readers want to know how technology is changing the world, and they're interested in big, relevant ideas, even if those ideas challenge their assumptions—or blow their minds.

SUBSCRIBERS GET UNLIMITED ACCESS TO WIRED.COM

Serving the Saudi Appetite for Ready Meals

I WANT MY iTV • When the internet and television merged in the aughts, it was exciting. Then Facebook took over.

VERSION IMMERSION • Retrocomputing is about more than nostalgic nerdery. It’s a way to keep your tech in perspective.

THE NEW JET SET • All-electric personal aircraft are prepared for vertical takeoff, but there may be some flight delays.

EXPANSION PACK: CALCULATING THE SPRAWL OF IN-GAME WORLDS

RAYS OF HOPE • My rooftop solar panels showed me that a world powered by renewables would be an overflowing horn of plenty.

Readout • The world, quantified.

Dear Cloud Support:

STUN GUNS • The EV revolution has already transformed the auto industry, but motorcycle makers are catching up. We’ve tested a range of new electric two-wheelers, from iconic brands and startups alike. These are our favorites.

SUBSCRIBERS GET UNLIMITED ACCESS TO WIRED.COM

FEATURES

ABANDON SHIP! • CIVILIZATIONS FALL APART. THE SOCIAL CONTRACT CANNOT HOLD. BUT BALAJI SRINIVASAN IS HERE TO LIFT YOU SAFELY OUT OF THE MAELSTROM TO A COUNTRY IN THE CLOUD. (WELL, MAYBE NOT ALL OF YOU.)

JUST ONE MORE • AS KABUL FELL LAST YEAR, THE US MILITARY ABANDONED THOUSANDS OF ITS AFGHAN ALLIES. FROM 7,000 MILES AWAY, A VETERAN-LED TEAM OF VOLUNTEERS ARMED WITH GROUP CHATS, QR CODES, AND SATELLITE MAPS LAUNCHED A MAD DASH TO RESCUE THEM.

LOVE & LARP • SWORDS AND ORC STUFF WERE NEVER MY FLAVOR OF GEEK. BUT PRETENDING TO BE A SAD SACK AT A GAY CONVERSION THERAPY CAMP? SURELY I COULD PLAY THAT GAME.

A PLANET OF HER OWN • SAYAKA MURATA has never felt at home on earth. IN HER NOVELS, SHE DEVISES WORLDS WHERE WOMEN REINVENT SEX, MARRIAGE, CHILDBIRTH—AND THE BOUNDARIES OF HUMAN EXISTENCE.

PATRIOT GAMES • The Freedom of Information Act helps Americans learn what their government is up to. One California company turned it into a moneymaker–—and became an unlikely defender of the public’s right to know.

COLOPHON • Family Matters That Helped Get This Issue Out:

SIX-WORD SCI-FI


Expand title description text