The WIRED Weekender is an eclectic weekly digest containing highlights of the most important, interesting and unusual stories we've published during the previous seven days.
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The unlikely outsiders shooting for the Lunar X-Prize
Can a plucky team of Bangalore-based amateurs soft-land on the Moon and win the Google Lunar XPRIZE – and in doing so, invigorate India's space race?
The Three Laws of Robotics need to be overhauled
Driverless cars will pander to our every whim, predicts Audi's CEO – but none of that will be possible until the public trusts artificial intelligence.
Colour-changing T-shirts use cabbages to reveal the startling effects of climate change
This T-shirt changes colour to reflect pH water balance, which is used as a physical representation of climate change.
Introducing Gearhead – the new gadget podcast from WIRED and Ars Technica UK
Special guest Mark Ronson joins our first product-obsessed podcast to talk tech – and puts Amazon's Alexa through its paces.
These fish avoid being killed by venomous coral by 'kissing' them with slime-secreting lips
"It is like having a runny nose but having running lips instead." This is the eloquent description marine biologist David Bellwood has offered up of the curious reef-dwelling tubelip wrasse.
All the highlights from Apple's developer conference
From the stage at WWDC 2017, Tim Cook revealed the much anticipated HomePod, a new version of iOS and updates to the iMac, MacBook Pro, and iPad ranges.
I saw the world through Snapchat Spectacles for a day. Here's what I learned
Snap's Spectacles take ten- to 30-second clips of the view from your face. I wore them around London for a day and reported back.
WipEout Omega Collection reviewed
A trio of remastered WipEout rarities make for one of PS4's fastest and best-looking racers.
How Gary Gygax's Dungeons & Dragons changed fantasy forever
In the world of Dungeons & Dragons, Gary Gygax is king. The fantasy role-playing game he co-created in 1974 influenced a generation of film-makers, writers and game developers.
The ambitious, possibly dangerous plan to fight fake news with AI
UK startup Factmata is working on automated factchecking. But if the truth is out there, it's proving hard to find.
This article was originally published by WIRED UK

