Skip to main content

Special Announcement

Ingenium museums are closed until further notice. Learn more.
Ingenium Logo
Ingenium The Channel

Language

  • Français
Search Toggle

Quick Links Menu

  • Ingenium Locations
  • Shop
  • Donate
  • Join
Menu
  • Browse
    • Categories
    • Media Types
    • Boards
    • Featured Stories
  • About
    • About The Channel
    • Content Partners

Explorer

Engineering & Technology

Explore the ever-changing stories of manufacturing, security, robotics, artificial intelligence, and more.

Filters

Clear All

Media

  • (-) Article (3)
  • Video (1)

Publication

  • BBC - Homepage (1)
  • Business Insider UK (1)
  • Canada Aviation and Space Museum (1)
  • CBC.ca (1)
  • (-) Curiosity (1)
  • Discover Magazine Blogs (1)
  • Gazette (1)
  • Google Cultural Institute (1)
  • Innovation150 (1)
  • (-) Inside Science (1)
  • MIT Technology Review (3)
  • Natural Resources Canada (1)
  • Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) (1)
  • ScienceDaily (2)
  • Space.com (1)
  • (-) TED (1)
  • Toronto Sun (1)
  • Waterloo Chronicle (1)
  • WIRED (1)

Reading Duration

  • Short (2)
3 Results:
A page from the Harvard Mark II electromechanical computer's log, featuring a dead moth that was removed from the device.
3 m
Article
Computing
Share

Why do we call computer glitches “bugs”?

Profile picture for user Sonia Mendes
Sonia Mendes
Ingenium - Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Dec 12, 2018
The term “bug” is another way of saying something is wrong with our computer or software, but where did the term come from? While many attribute the reference to computer scientist Grace Hopper, this article from Curiosity explains that it dates back to Thomas Edison’s private journals.
pipeline
3 m
Article
Engineering & Technology
Share

Emerging tech: Bacteria-based sensors could detect pipeline leaks

Profile picture for user Sonia Mendes
Sonia Mendes
Ingenium - Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Jun 20, 2018
Petroleum pipeline leaks are costly – for business and for the environment. Researchers are now developing bacteria-based sensors to detect hydrocarbons released by a leak – and emit a wireless alert signal to technicians.
Kirsty Duncan, TED Talks 2018
Article
Engineering & Technology
Share

Scientists must be free to learn, to speak and to challenge

Profile picture for user William McRae
William McRae
Ingenium
May 18, 2018
"Science is humanity's best effort at uncovering the truth about our world, about our very existence." Kirsty Duncan, Canada's Minister of Science, makes the case that researchers must be free to present uncomfortable truths and challenge the thinking of the day -- and that we all have a duty to speak up when we see science being stifled or suppressed. #ScienceAroundMe

Footer

About The Channel

The Channel

Contact Us

Ingenium
P.O. Box 9724, Station T
Ottawa ON K1G 5A3
Canada

613-991-3044
1-866-442-4416
contact@IngeniumCanada.org
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Channel

    • Channel Home
    • About the Channel
    • Content Partners
  • Visit

    • Online Resources for Science at Home
    • Canada Agriculture and Food Museum
    • Canada Aviation and Space Museum
    • Canada Science and Technology Museum
    • Ingenium Centre
  • Ingenium

    • Ingenium Home
    • About Ingenium
    • The Foundation
  • For Media

    • Newsroom
    • Awards

Connect with us

Legal Bits

Ingenium Privacy Statement

© 2021 Ingenium

Symbol of the Government of Canada

  • Browse

    • Categories
    • Media Types
    • Boards
    • Featured Stories
  • About

    • About The Channel
    • Content Partners