Episode eight of the Works in Progress podcast is about the politics of the Abundance movement| www.worksinprogress.news
The greatest breakthroughs often come from outsiders who can take a fresh perspective| www.worksinprogress.news
Watch now | Scientists are using AI to hallucinate entirely novel proteins that could transform medicine, agriculture, and materials science| The Works in Progress Newsletter
His Nobel is a triumph for history and the importance of ideas| The Works in Progress Newsletter
Could desalination make them irrelevant?| The Works in Progress Newsletter
Safer transplants, new antibiotics, the rise of paper mills, long-term flu protection, slowing down ageing, and more.| The Works in Progress Newsletter
AlphaFold, ProteinMPNN and other tools are transforming drug design, but how do they work, and can we use them to create a strep A vaccine for the very first time?| The Works in Progress Newsletter
If antibodies were cheaper, they could prevent millions of deaths from rabies, malaria, and dengue.| The Works in Progress Newsletter
Episode seven of the Works in Progress podcast is about urban design| The Works in Progress Newsletter
Radiology combines digital images, clear benchmarks, and repeatable tasks. But demand for human radiologists is ay an all-time high.| The Works in Progress Newsletter
Germicidal ultraviolet could make airborne disease as rare as those carried by water.| The Works in Progress Newsletter
Plus: How to make antibodies, why rivers are now battlefields, and a clinical trial for cooling the plant| The Works in Progress Newsletter
A magazine worthy of our readers| The Works in Progress Newsletter
Episode three of Hard Drugs is about how our need to produce insulin kickstarted the modern biotech industry| The Works in Progress Newsletter
Gene therapy, narcolepsy drugs, parasite removal, protein nanoparticles, the 3D structure of genomes, and more.| The Works in Progress Newsletter
America's largest non-profit had a broken distribution system. University of Chicago economists fixed it.| The Works in Progress Newsletter
Systems thinkers fail because they ignore an important fact: systems fight back.| The Works in Progress Newsletter
Make our magazine look beautiful| The Works in Progress Newsletter
Episode six of the Works in Progress podcast is about dating, drinking and tax| The Works in Progress Newsletter
France built forty nuclear reactors in a decade. Here's what the world can learn from it.| The Works in Progress Newsletter
How Canada's largest city developed a 30 kilometer network of pedestrian tunnels| www.worksinprogress.news
New and underrated ideas to improve the world. Visit our website: worksinprogress.co. Click to read The Works in Progress Newsletter, a Substack publication with tens of thousands of subscribers.| www.worksinprogress.news
The merits of unified land ownership| www.worksinprogress.news
Journavx was approved this year. Why did it take so long to develop?| www.worksinprogress.news
When Britain actually made something| www.worksinprogress.news
Moving the needle on US homebuilding| www.worksinprogress.news
We’ve known about far-UVC’s promise for a decade. Why isn't it everywhere?| The Works in Progress Newsletter
Notes on Progress are pieces that are a bit too short to run on Works in Progress. You can opt out of Notes here.| www.worksinprogress.news
Not all radioactivity is risky or harmful| www.worksinprogress.news
Building more homes in the most productive cities could massively boost productivity| www.worksinprogress.news