I’ll be jammed: electronic warfare in Ukraine

I’ll be jammed: electronic warfare in Ukraine

Some of the most frenetic innovation of Ukraine’s war happens in the electromagnetic spectrum: detecting and denying signals to and from materiel. This invisible battle will play out elsewhere. Cycling is notorious for doping scandals, but the latest way to gain an edge will be hard to spot (7:40). And why speeches in Britain’s Parliament are getting shorter and less important (15:00).


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Episoder(1941)

Xiaomi the way: a Chinese tech giant gets bigger

Xiaomi the way: a Chinese tech giant gets bigger

The smartphone giant is now making strong inroads in the electric-vehicle market. But can its boss’s belovedness at home translate to success abroad? Britain and Argentina are putting past differences...

25 Jul 202523min

Anti-anti-corruption? A bill in Ukraine sparks protests

Anti-anti-corruption? A bill in Ukraine sparks protests

A new bill threatening the independence of anti-corruption agencies has brought Ukrainians onto the streets and rattled international observers. London’s electric bikes are making it ever more a cycli...

24 Jul 202523min

The smaller C: progress in beating cancer

The smaller C: progress in beating cancer

Overall, more people are dying from cancer. But a closer look at the numbers reveals just how much success modern medicine has had at making the disease less deadly. The spiraling fortunes of Kraft He...

23 Jul 202521min

Hawks v talks: barriers to peace in Gaza

Hawks v talks: barriers to peace in Gaza

Even as Western countries band together to condemn Israel’s actions, aid remains at a trickle and the war is expanding into a central-Gazan city. We ask how the horrors might end. As with many technol...

22 Jul 202524min

Land of the rising shun? Immigration and Japan’s politics

Land of the rising shun? Immigration and Japan’s politics

The Liberal Democratic Party, which has dominated the country’s politics for seven decades, just got a pasting at the polls—again. We ask why staid politics are getting swiftly messy. Iceland is a NAT...

21 Jul 202522min

The ships are down: Houthis resume strikes

The ships are down: Houthis resume strikes

Once again, commercial vessels sailing in the Red Sea are being attacked. Our correspondent explains why Houthi rebels, an Iranian-backed militia in Yemen, have regrouped. The islands of Tuvalu are si...

18 Jul 202526min

Gown and out: are British universities broke?

Gown and out: are British universities broke?

UK universities are internationally renowned, but their finances are in a mess. Our correspondent offers a lesson in how to fix them. Why an amateur football league is thriving in China. And what Supe...

17 Jul 202520min

The bomb (part 1): were nuclear weapons inevitable?

The bomb (part 1): were nuclear weapons inevitable?

Where did the world’s most devastating weapon come from? In a four-part series, we go behind the scenes at America's nuclear laboratories to understand how a scientific-mystery story about the ingredi...

16 Jul 202544min

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