First episode of BBC Click (Formerly Click Online)
Click trials the tech powering the Olympics.
Click revisits some of the team's favourite sustainability stories.
Click revisits some of the team's top transport innovations.
Spencer Kelly has the action from Cybathlon in Switzerland, where teams from around the world compete to develop assistive tech solutions for people with disabilities. Adrienne Murray visits the Arctic Circle to find out about the avalanche warning technology being developed to protect communities in Svalbard. And Paul Carter checks out the tech behind Formula E as the new season gets underway.
Interview with co-founders of The Pirate Bay broadcast.
With the latest from E3, the annual video games extravaganza taking place in Los Angeles. Plus, gaming legend Hideo Kojima, the creator of Metal Gear Solid series.
The team report from Hollywood on attempts by studios to embrace digital downloads of movies. Plus how decaying celluloid classics are being remastered for a 21st Century generation to enjoy. Includes news and web reviews.
The show visits Dallas to discover the new breed of broadband behind Internet 2.0. There's a look at the latest trend of smaller laptops, and in Webscape Kate Russell rounds up her best pick of websites.
Sites like eBay have revolutionised the market for second-hand goods, but who should be held responsible for the sale of counterfeits? Click travels to Paris to visit the fashion houses calling for tighter regulation of online auctions. Plus a review of powerful laptops and our pick of the most exciting games coming your way in 2009.
The tech team put the smallest robots on Earth under the microscope, to discover what the future holds for nanotechnology. Plus, students test their skills and technology in the Olympics of software development, the Imagine Cup.
The team celebrate the 50th anniversary of the microchip. Plus, many hands make light work when social networking combines with photography for truly three-dimensional results.
Guide to all the latest gadgets, websites, games and computer industry news, taking a look at the kind of tech we will be using in a few years time. Plus, Will Wright talks about his long awaited video game Spore.
A look at the tasks graphic cards are taking on, beyond painting pretty pixels. Plus, a visit to a museum with virtual displays dedicated to ancient Roman civilization.
There's plenty of stuff around to help blind or visually impaired computer users, we're in Africa to find out if those same solutions can work in the developing world.
Challenging Apple's iPhone, the team look at the first mobile phone featuring Google's operating system Android. Plus, governments and data storage, are they going too far?
Experts at a Web 2.0 convention show how current websites can be taken into the future. Plus, how security passes may not be quite so secure.
Guide to all the latest gadgets, websites, games and computer industry news. The team begin a two-part investigation into how our unique traits are being seen as reliable ways of identifying us - how foolproof are they? Plus an interview with the founder and CEO of YouTube.
The team is in Italy where Ferrari is test driving a Windows software for supercomputers, plus there's the second part of our look at biometric security. Also, just how secure your voice, fingerprint, or face is as your ID.
Click's gone videogames crazy and pays a visit to Little Big Planet. Plus the latest games come under the spotlight. Includes web reviews and tech reviews.
Companies join forces to open up a new front in the war on Spam. Plus, we talk to the man who's name is the best scrabble score in the industry - Steve Wozniak. He is also the man who co-founded Apple and personally developed the early Apple computers.
The weekly tech show. Dan Simmons witnesses the virtual rebirth of Berlin and London. Also includes how to record TV on your PC and technology to help you work from home.
The weekly technology show looks at the latest high resolution OLED TVs, and reviews some new gadgets ahead of Christmas. Includes Tech News and Webscape.
Click is in Russia to investigate the sophisticated way in which hackers can steal your bank details, and sell them on for organised crime.
Best of 2008 Part 1.
Best of 2008 Part 2.
The first show from Las Vegas featuring the latest in TVs, phones, and gadgets.
The second show from Las Vegas featuring the latest in TVs, phones, and gadgets.
Will President Obama be able to move America back to the top of the high tech league?
The programme for everyone interested in the internet and new media.
Click looks at the tools that will revolutionise business and personal life.
Click visits Mobile World Congress in Barcelona to look at the new phones and services.
The latest from Cebit in Germany, the world's largest technology expo.
Featuring an experiment to show what happens when cybercriminals take over your computer.
Guide to the latest gadgets, websites, games and computer industry news. The team gets friendly with Social TV, checks out the latest tiny video cameras and looks at big drives in small packages.
Keep your stuff online instead of at home, plus a service that asks for banking passwords and promises to keep money safe.
Click reports from South Korea to find out what is possible with superfast broadband. Plus the mobile handsets and apps that are making it big in the country, and Japanese healthcare gadgets.
Click examines how your smartphone can be at risk from hackers and malicious software; what are the latest attacks and what is being done to combat the threat? Plus, art goes digital as artist David Hockney swaps canvas for computer in Paris, and a review of Kinect - the new Xbox controller.
Click looks to the future of television and explores why the living room is set to be a more interesting place than ever before, and we hear from the father of Wikipedia on his continued plans for its world domination. Plus website and mobile app reviews in Webscape.
First part of Click's look back at the best technology of 2010. We look at a colour ereader that will hit the shelves in 2011and celebrate the reinvention of the tablet computer. We also revist the Worldcup and Wimbledon. Plus we test drive an electric car.
Second part of Click's review of 2010 - the year when 3D TV hit the living room and 3D cameras hit the high streets. We look at a way of playing a game without a console and control a game without the controller. Plus five hot ways to keep cool in Dubai.
The Click team reports on the latest developments from the Consumer Electronics show in Las Vegas, including near indestructible technology and the next generation of automotive tech.
Click looks at the latest moves to bring you 3D without the specs, and we ask Jeffrey Katzenberg, producer of Shrek, whether 3D has had its day. Plus tech news and web reviews.
Thousands gather in Brazil for a tech party with a difference, plus the new tech helping snappers cash in on their photos.
Click meets the hackers who can crack a mobile phone network. Plus a handy guide to buying the right TV, and a glimpse of holographic television.
A special show from World Mobile Congress in Barcelona reveals what's in store for handsets and tablets over the next year. Also includes tech news and Webscape.
Click meets the modders adapting games controllers to build search-and-rescue robots. Plus a look at how wine producers are using technology to authenticate bottles. Includes website and app reviews.
Click looks at the latest ideas coming out of the largest technology expo in the world - CeBit, in Germany. Plus a tour of the best places to get music online.
Can lending libraries and e-books possibly co-exist? Plus a look at how technology is transforming the music industry.
A special report on how technology is being used to help the survivors of Japan's recent earthquake. Plus a report from the SXSW festival in Texas.
Investigating where we will store our digital lives as we move from PCs to tablets and smartphones. And a trip to Texas hacker festival Dorkbot reveals some weird tech. Includes tech news and web reviews.
The programme asks if mobile phone roaming prices can be justified. Plus Nintendo's brand-new 3D handheld is tested.
The team looks at a mobile app that the protesters can use to evade the police. And they also look at the new internet-enabled televisions and the almost unlimited choice of programmes that they bring. Includes tech news and web reviews.
How do social networks make money? The team explore why we don't pay to update our online status. Also, the French town of Bordeaux gives its community a hi-tech twist. Plus technology news and web reviews.
Click explores the future of mobile devices. Plus a new game that can only be played on the London Underground. Includs tech news and Webscape.
The tech show asks whether robots are capable of being truly social. Plus an interview with the brains behind the Blackberry and games and computer industry news.
Click takes a close look at near field communication - the technology promising to open doors and pay the bills with a wave of your mobile. Plus how video stars are making money on YouTube, and a guide to free video-editing tools.
Click travels to Hungary to ask what technology will look like in ten years time, and interviews the man who invented the web. Includes tech news and Webscape.
Click is at the G8 summit in France where world leaders and the biggest players in technology are discussing if the Internet should be more regulated. Plus a roundup of the latest video games.
The programme looks at the new low-cost computer aimed to encourage schoolchildren to start programming. Plus, how to listen to music on the move with the latest in-car gadgets.
A special show from the world's biggest computer games expo in Los Angeles, showcasing new ideas from Sony, Microsoft, and Nintendo. Includes tech news and Webscape.
Google's brand new laptop aims to change the way we think of computing. Plus the gadgets that wake you up gently. Includes tech news and Webscape.
Click goes back to school, exploring lessons that use tech to keep students learning. Plus an app which adds a new dimension to video calling, tech news and website reviews.
Have 3D movies fallen flat? The Click team visit Hollywood to ask how the film industry is using the digital revolution to ensure a happy ending.
Click checks out very latest home tech, including stealthy screens and tablets. Plus tech news, and Click's guide to making millions - virtually, in webscape.
Click looks at how France is banning programmes from mentioning Facebook and Twitter on TV. Also, have the latest batch of video games become too predictable? Includes tech news and website reviews.
Click gets to grips with 3D printers, and tunes in to French IPTV.
Click marks the 20th anniversary of the web, asks if mobile phones are safe to use, and offers professional tips for making a podcast. Includes tech news and Webscape.
Click goes behind the technology that helped to organise this week's riots in the UK. How much were social media sites to blame for the trouble ? And is it possible to silence them?
How real can a simulation feel? The click team experience the extreme end of immersive gaming. Plus the new technology that fixes your photos after you've taken them.
Click explores how to 'tether' devices to the same mobile data plan and asks if customers are getting a fair deal. Includes tech news and Webscape.
How do you keep tabs on your kit? Click goes in search of the latest tracking tech. Plus religion goes mobile - with faith apps. Includes Tech news and web reviews.
Click visits Europe's largest tech show, IFA in Berlin, checking out the latest TV screens, the newest camera kit and the most exciting new tablet technology.
Click looks at the future of our television sets, and shows how to have a hit on the Web.
In a special programme Click examines the impact on the world of technology and the legacy of Apple supremo Steve Jobs. Plus this week's tech news and webscape.
The tech show travels to Japan to see the protoypes of what could be tomorrow's gadgets and reports from Heathrow Airport on a hi-tech personalised pod shuttle. Includes technology news and Webscape.
Click explores the latest in defence technology, from vanishing tanks to airborne spy bots. And just how helpful is Siri, the new iPhone's personal assistant? Includes Tech news and web reviews.
Can in-car technology help reduce the rise in insurance premiums and make us safer drivers? The Click team talks to the Home Secretary about cybercrime.
How many popular gadgets can the smartphone really replace? The biggest video games shoot it out, plus cheap calls abroad.
Click takes a look at the extra content that can be streamed while having one eye on the TV. There is a report from Japan on the changing face of technology and pop culture. Plus, the restaurant putting a high-tech spin on the notion of table service. Also tech news and web reviews.
Click is in Turkey checking out the new ways to pay using just your mobile phone. Are the Turkish government's attempts to offer a safer internet actually a step backwards for internet freedom? Includes web reviews and tech news.
Click looks at games that are good for you - but are they any good? Plus, the tech that helps preserve your memories for future generations. And a London bar has installed a video game - in the gents' toilets. Plus tech news and Website Reviews.
When analogue telly gets switched off, could that help to improve your internet connection? Plus how your old faded photos can get a facelift. Includes tech news and web reviews.
Marc Cieslak asks whether you should let your toddlers loose on your tech, or should they use kit strictly designed for kids? Plus tech news and web reviews.
Is 2012 the year of 4G? A trip to Cornwall and Sweden reveals what the next generation of mobile networks will deliver. Includes tech news and Webscape.
Click is in Las Vegas, at the Consumer Electronics Show, to look ahead to the brand new portable devices and internet connected TVs hitting the shops near you soon.
This week Click looks at the new wave of tablets, laptops and ultrabooks that mean you can take your entire digital world with you wherever you go. And the future of Movies and TV streamed over the web.
This week Click meets the authors who prefer to tell their stories across multiple platforms: book, web and mobile app. Plus we visit the hotel that is redesigned, rebuilt and melted down every year. Includes tech news and web reviews.
Guide to the latest gadgets, websites, games and computer industry news. How safe is it to carry out transactions over the internet? A special investigation looks at the latest threats to online banking.
Click looks at the brand new Playstation Vita, and asks whether the rise of the smartphone means it's game over for dedicated portables. Plus, tech that can be controlled with gestures, and one lucky film-maker gets a shot at the big time at the Mobile Film Festival in Paris. Includes tech news and web reviews
A look at the gadgets designed to look after your health. We also check out the next generation of wearable tech. Includes tech news and web reviews.
All the latest smartphones and tablet tech from the Mobile World Congress 2012 in Barcelona. Quad core phones, super high-res cameras, and super-fast internet connections. Plus the latest tech news and the best websites and apps of the week
A special edition to mark the anniversary of the earthquake and tsumani that struck Japan on 11th March 2011. Plus a look at the kitchen of the future, tech news, and Webscape.
Click visits the convention where Twitter first got noticed - finding out the latest standout tech trends at South By Southwest Interactive festival in Texas. Plus Tech news and website reviews.
Click: Looks at the growing role of technology companies in the classroom and the future of powering things without wires. Includes Webscape and tech news.
Just how good is the video camera on your smartphone? To find out, Click has made its own special effects action movie - using just a phone. Plus we go behind the scenes of high tech theatre. Includes tech news and web reviews.
What do you have to do to get a phone signal? Click finds out why your mobile cannot always connect to the network. Plus, the self-destructing USB stick.
Future cities - how will buildings adapt to humans and become more like us? Plus a look at the tech you can wear. Including tech news and Webscape.
The tech team visit a futuristic expo in Liverpool and explore to what extent we can be in two places at the same time. Includes tech news and Webscape.
Click looks at whether your influence online can affect how others treat you in the real world. Plus we look at how movie makers are turning to the web to make new kinds of cinematic experiences. Includes tech news and web reviews.
Click asks how much the websites we visit know about us, James May explains how he became a virtual presenter, and an answer to why tech sometimes just fails. Includes tech news and Webscape.
Can an internet connection be all you need to get an Ivy League education? Plus the team checks out the latest wireless printers. Includes tech news and web reviews.
Click travels to India to look at the tech that is trying to count its enormous population. Plus the cheap tablets hoping to take a bite out of the big apple.
An exploration of the Google way of working - free massages and dance classes for all, but is there more to it than meets the eye? Plus, the latest ways to get on-demand internet content and more on your telly.
Click looks at the gadgets designed to keep you safe and let your family know where you are. And the tech that captures wasted energy. Plus this week's tech news and webscape.
The team report on the latest gaming innovations from the E3 Electronic Entertainment Expo in Los Angeles. Includes technology news and web reviews.
Click is in southern California, meeting the robot that is saving lives in the Pacific. Plus, the hotel suite studio pumping out professional programmes straight to the internet.
Click checks out Microsoft's new challenger to the iPad, and asks is educating online a viable means of teaching young people? Plus the latest tech news and webscape.
The programme comes from Rio de Janeiro in Brazil where people are using Twitter to help change the world's environment. Includes a close look at Google's latest tablet Nexus 7. Plus a review of the latest video games.
Click inspects prototype flexible display technology that could spell the end of glossy magazines. Plus, will we ever work in a paperless office?
Click is at London's Silicon Roundabout, now dubbed TechCity, to check out some of the new ideas that are coming from the area. Plus the biggest names in the tech industry in their quest to invest.
This year's Olympics will see companies competing for coverage on social media sites. But is it worth all the effort? Plus technology news and website reviews.
Guide to the latest gadgets, websites, games and computer industry news.
Are gadgets taking over our lives? Click looks at the phenomenon of 'information overload'.
Tech talk getting your tongue in a twist? Click learns to code in a day. Plus, what is coming next for mobile mapping? Includes the latest tech news and webscape.
Click looks at the tech that helps your loved ones stay independent into their later years. Plus the latest tech news from around the world, and the best of the web and mobile apps in webscape.
Click examines a new kind of hybrid car engine, visits a virtual car showroom and looks at how small business owners make technology work for them.
Click is in Thailand looking at new technologies that will help future flood victims to deal with the effects of a disaster. Plus the latest mobile attachments that can take 360 photos. Includes tech news and website reviews.
The team visit IFA in Berlin and are hypnotised by the latest TVs on display at Europe's largest technology trade show. Plus, hands-on reviews of Windows 8 and the flexible kit ready to bend over backwards for it.
Scams and webcams - when flirtation turns to blackmail. We report on the online honeytrap that can have devastating consequences. And does the iPhone 5 live up to the hype?
Click reports from the Amazon rainforest on what the locals make of their first mobile data network. Plus, how tech is moving from touch to gesture control. Includes tech news and Webscape.
How close are we to being driven to work by our car? Click test drives autonomous car technology that could allow drivers to get on the road without touching the steering wheel.
Click looks at whether extended use of mobile devices could cause repetitive strain injury. Plus, a test drive of an electric car that can broadcast its availability and location to potential passengers.
Click is in Kenya, we are looking at how simple mobile technology can be used to save lives. Plus we are in the wilderness tracking elephants, we find out if satellite tech can help resolve animal, human conflict. Includes tech reviews and web reviews.
Click is in Japan, driving the self- parking car, checking out 4K TV screens and testing the tablet device controlled by looking at it.
A test drive of the new Windows 8 operating system and a look at the robots that could learn to look after us. Includes web reviews and tech news.
The tech show reports on next week's US elections, trendy tech startups in Kenya, and a hi-tech hotel in Thailand. Includes tech news and Webscape.
Click visits IBM Research labs in Zurich, Switzerland - featuring wet computing prototypes and a laboratory on a chip. Plus a look at two of the hottest gaming titles expected this Xmas.
How close are we to having 3D printers in our house? Plus rapper and technology fan Will.i.am shares his vision of the future of broadcasting.
On Click we meet the scientists who think that young children should be kept away from TV. Plus we put Nintendo's new gaming console Wii U through its paces. Includes tech news and web reviews.
Click goes in search of the ultimate TV set in Japan and discovers how tech has become the latest word in fashion. Includes the latest tech news and Webscape.
The tech team discover a motorbike that doesn't fall over and weigh up the latest crop of tablet computers. Includes technology news and Webscape.
Could computers beat humans at being creative? Plus, what really happens after you click 'buy' on a website? Includes tech news and web reviews.
From Swedish self-driving cars to internet in the Amazon rainforest, Click takes a look back at some of 2012's biggest tech stories.
The second part of Click's most memorable gadgets and tech from 2012. Featuring lifesaving Robots, filmmaking on your phone and kitchens of the future.
What will the 'internet of things' mean to us? Plus, how the world famous new year ball in New York gets brighter and more efficient every year. Includes tech news and web reviews.
Click comes from the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, where the biggest and smallest names in technology gather every year to flaunt their future wares.
Healthy gadgets, super hi-vis TVs and waterproofing phones feature in the second show from the world's largest consumer electronics show in Las Vegas. Including tech news and Webscape.
Click looks at how San Francisco residents are using online sharing sites to overcome the city's public transport woes. Plus we find out if baby gadgets are making parents' lives easier or giving them more to worry about?
Click investigates whether a new private file-storing site could encourage piracy and takes a first look at the new Blackberry handsets. Includes tech news and Webscape.
With Valentine's Day on the way, this edition looks at how social networking and mobile phones are changing the way people find love online. Plus, test driving the latest in car technology gearing up for the open road.
The team try DIY computing - how easy is it to build something useful? Plus, have we fallen out of love with 3DTV? Includes technology news and web reviews.
Click gets its first taste of the Playstation 4, examining the new specs, the new games and its new controller. Plus a close-up look at the kit used to take the world's largest photograph.
Click comes from the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. The team check out the latest kit on the show floor and ask what is being done to combat high international roaming charges. Includes tech news and web roundup.
Is the user manual dead? There is also a look at how soldiers on the battlefield and cyberspace defences are preparing for combat. Plus tech news and Webscape.
Click touches down at two big tech events. CeBIT in Germany to look at the weirder kit on show, and then over to the USA, to take the pulse of the social side of tech at SXSW.
Guide to the latest gadgets, websites, games and computer industry news. The team meets digitally generated actresses, watch interactive documentaries - and ditch the mouse in favour of waving.
A look at the future of Wi-Fi as the current system buckles under the strain of our increasing demands. Plus, how to use the internet for a uniquely tailored holiday. Including news and app reviews.
How voice controlled tech knows who you are and what you like. Plus we speak to the man who invented the mobile phone.
Click meets the people who can project themselves into the bodies of robots, there's a sneak peek at some upcoming video games and the machine that puts anti-aging creams to the test.
Is it a good idea to record everything we and those around us do? Click looks at the growing trend of life-logging.
Click takes a ride around a smarter city where all information from various transport networks is pulled together to provide a smoother journey for all. Plus, some of the latest tech that keeps England's finest on the ball.
Your user-friendly guide to the latest technology news, issues, gadgets and apps. Click asks if the big net names are clogging up the internet, and visits the cinema that monitors its audience.
Ever fancy a quieter life? Click looks at silent tech. Plus the technology atop the tallest building in Western Europe, the Shard. Includes tech news and webscape.
Click visits the birthplace of the world's first website to celebrate its 20th anniversary. Plus, projectors are being used in new ways to create truly immersive experiences.
With a report from the USA on Microsoft's new gaming console the Xbox One and a look at what makes the latest smart watches tick. Includes tech news and website reviews.
We are in Los Angeles at the world's biggest gaming expo, we take a closer look at the big rivals Playstation 4 and Xbox One. Plus we bring you the big announcements from Apple's new tech event in San Francisco.
Click meets the ethical hackers who break into systems with permission and takes a look at alternative gaming consoles. Includes tech news and web reviews.
Click discovers how important aesthetics are to Google. We sit down with the Web's creator. Plus, how to give your mobile the elixir of life. Includes tech news and web roundup.
This week Click looks at online safety as seen through the eyes of kids, to find out just how aware children are of the dangers of the web. London gets its chance to join the maker movement and Click explores what geeks can do with a bit of time on their hands.
Click explores the controversial advertising technology that uses facial recognition. Plus, 360-degree video recording, and how to pay for things - in space.
Click takes a look at a futuristic home, and reports on the rising trend of 'fixers' who repair tech items for their owners when they fail.
The indie games developers taking inspiration from real life, artistic collaboration via the internet and tech news and web reviews.
Why learn a language when you could just download one? Plus, unlocking your phone and home using your jewellery. Includes tech news and Webscape.
Click examines the rise of cyber warfare - which countries are on the attack, and why security experts believe we can't stop them. Includes tech news and website reviews.
Click rides into Vietnam and meets the motorbike that phones its owner. We ask James Cameron if 3D's gone flat. Plus how a dose of video gaming helps ill kids in California.
Sick of waiting for your delivery to arrive? This week Click turns to crowdsourced shopping that promises personal purchases at your door in under an hour. Plus, is it time for virtual reality to make a comeback?
Click looks at how the internet and 3D printing is changing the design industry. And we find out if becoming a crowd-worker can earn you enough cash. Plus we are on stage with the performers who rely on tech to get laughs.
Click tries out a 41 megapixel phone, the latest smart watches and unearths a few surprises at the IFA tech expo in Berlin. Plus news and webscape.
Click takes a look at the tech helping to preserve the past, plus homemade 3D scanning and a dive in to the criminal underworld. Includes news and webscape.
How nature's Nordic forces are changing Iceland's technology landscape and a visit to a university for six-year-olds. Includes tech news and web round-up.
As the battle for games console supremacy heats up, Click weighs up the new kid on the block. Plus, a look at the stunning screens of the latest 4K TVs and there's a visit to a dentist to inspect oral tech.
Click is at Japan's biggest tech show, where we try on a superhuman exoskeleton, eat sushi that serves itself, and lots more.
Featuring the latest works of digital art, and what happens when the tech behind the frame breaks down.
Singapore Special: Click takes a tour around this futuristic city. Plus how to turn any flat surface into a touch controller, and a toilet that converts waste into energy.
Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak on technology partnerships and smart watches. Plus behind the scenes at a 'hackathon'.
The creator of BitTorrent on the company's efforts to break its association with piracy.
Click gets hands-on with the Sony PS4 as it rolls-out across North America.
Click visits America's largest 3D printing factory and tries out the Xbox One.
Click looks at how we might interact with our computers in the future.
Could 3D printing be the next copyright battleground? Plus, a Christmas guide to tablets.
A look at tech aiming to keep cyclists safe, smartphone accessories and Webscape.
Learn the tech behind magic tricks, and get a helping hand from next-gen robots.
A look back at the biggest tech trends and gadgets that made headlines in 2013.
Click finds out how West Yorkshire CSI can tell what you've touched from your fingerprint.
The team look into how tech is being used to count and analyse the large-scale movement of people.
Click is at Japan's largest electronics expo CEATEC testing out the latest R&D and concept tech. Gyrating exoskeletons, smelly phones and pizza recognition..?!
In Click's second instalment for Japan Direct, Spencer Kelly and the team leave Tokyo to find out what technical innovations the rest of the country has to offer. First, a strange hotel run by robots.
Click asks whether hydrogen-powered cars could be the future and takes a closer look at the All Blacks rugby team.
Click is down under following the world's largest solar-fuelled race in Australia. Plus the Indian airport completely powered by the sun.
Inspired by James Bond, the team visits Berlin's new spy museum, takes photos underwater in a £1.5m personal submersible, and controls lasers with their minds.
The smartwatch gets serious, virtual reality skateboarding and connecting to the internet through your lights.
Click travels to Malawi and Japan to look at a project that hopes to use walking to create a new digital currency.
Click visits the famous Abbey Road Studios in London to discover how technology is changing the music industry.
Click is at the Big Bang Data exhibition to see the latst in data visualisation. Plus, a look at other uses for the technology behind Bitcoibn.
Click indulges in some high tech retail therapy, plots the pitfalls and perils of crowdfunding and checks out the smartest smartwatches.
It's the Click Xmas special. Around the festive table there's Daleks, cocktails, robot racing and a capella singing. Plus camera gadgets to take on Safari.
The first of two shows highlighting the best bits from 2015, including the robots that can build stuff, understand us and help us with daily tasks.
The second of two shows highlighting the best bits from 2015. Including reports from Africa, Asia and USA on new ideas for drones, phones, and rollercoasters.
Click is at the world's largest electronics show, CES in Las Vegas. The latest gadgets from the show include VR headsets, drones and fitness trackers.
Click visits Hyperloop Technologies in Nevada and LA -- is Elon Musk's futuristic transportation concept feasible? Includes world tech news and a robotic cat!
A comprehensive guide to all the latest gadgets, games and computer industry news. Click visits San Francisco and looks at how 3D printing could be about to change our lives.
Click looks at the possibilities of gadgets that biodegrade for use inside and outside the body and visits London's first drone film festival.
A comprehensive guide to all the latest gadgets, websites, games and computer industry news. Click tries out the world's tiniest printer, checks out high-tech home security and visits a holodeck (sort of).`
The team go behind the scenes of $100m crowd-funded game Star Citizen. Plus a look into what went into some complex Star Wars Episode VII movie scenes. Includes tech news.
Click goes deep underground in the tunnels of Cern to see how this colossal physics experiment could answer fundamental questions about our universe.
Click visits the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona to look at the latest from the world of smartphones.
Tyger Drew-Honey investigates whether Virtual Reality could change the way we form relationships. Includes global Tech News.
Another chance to see Click's 360 show, the world's first TV programme to be made entirely in 360 video. This special episode of Click takes you from the snow-covered research base high on the Swiss Alps to the depths of CERN.
We meet the Syrian refugees using innovative tech in Jordan's Zaatari camp and see how biometric data helps aid payments. Plus some very fast data and F1.
In a drone special, the team race drones and then take them down with the help of an eagle. Plus learning how to program a BBC Microbit.
A comprehensive guide to all the latest gadgets, websites, games and computer industry news. As part of the BBC World News Designed in China Season, Click visits Beijing. The team explores the latest surveillance tech, driverless cars and a badminton-playing robot, and takes a sledgehammer to a glass bridge.
Click comes from Zurich and reports from the very first Cybathlon. The Cybathlon is a sporting competition featuring only disabled participants who compete using advanced assistive devices including robotic prosthesis, brain-computer interfaces and powered exoskeletons. In essence it is an Olympics for bionic athletes.
India has a reputation for exploring space on a shoestring budget, but can one startup be the first to put a robot on the moon for the space equivalent of spare change? Click is in India to discover how the country is innovating for the future and solving problems of the past using technology. From the entrepreneurs tackling the country's pollution problems, to the apps changing the face of dating for a new generation of Indians, to new medical technology that could save lives; Click travels across India to find out what is driving the country's explosive growth.
Click is in Chicago where the police are using tech to predict the location and perpetrators of future crimes. And tough tech gets tested at the Arctic Circle.
Click visits Paris to check out the world's biggest startup space, political 'holograms' and super-flavoured strawberries in shipping containers.
Click investigates a company claiming to offer 'absolute security' and discovers all is not what it seems.
Click goes back to school with teaching tech. VR comes to pubs, plus scary sounds with Doctor Who.
Click looks at fusion energy and a potential limitless source of clean power. Plus the team follows the San Francisco Police Department who are trying to stop drivers driving under the influence of cannabis.
Click focuses on cyber security, with a look at biometric identification and whether it really is keeping the nation's bank accounts safe.
Tech to turn anybody into an artist, virtual reality art galleries, and the team becomes a VR Star Trek crew.
Click visits the Hay Festival and chats to some of the biggest names in technology. Plus a look at how social media is being used in the general election.
Click looks at how first responders deal with terror attacks with a new VR training tool. Plus a look at artificial muscle and turning urine into electricity.
Click flies over to the City of Angels to cover E3, the world's biggest gaming event, trying out the latest games, gadgets and consoles.
Click reports from LA on the 'future of fun' plus Uber's plans for self-driving cars, and from Tanzania on the $15 million XPrize that's replacing teachers with tablets.
Click looks at food glorious food - fake kippers and burgers, plus we're in the mood for pink lettuce and biodegradable motors almost good enough to eat!
Click investigates why consumers may soon have to pay more for internet access and the tech making our cities smarter.
Should robots pay tax or would that hurt their feelings? Click meets the robots of the future and the human eyeborg. Includes tech news.
What is the truth about virtual reality? Next big thing, or next big flop? Click checks out VR's future and takes out zombies in a VR version of the holodeck.
Click is at the hacker conventions in Las Vegas looking into cyber security and how best to protect ourselves.
Click looks at whether we might one day drive on solar roads and explores the hacker conventions in Las Vegas looking into cyber security.
Click goes shopping and chats to the inventor of the machine that 25 years ago revolutionised how we buy things - the self checkout machine. Plus, from robots to scanning customer data through facial recognition they look at what the shops of the future have in store for us. As the football season kicks off, the team looks at a new VR system that is being used by several Premier League clubs to try to help identify talent, improve skills and even help players recover from injuries. Finally, Kate Russell heads to Stuttgart to test out a special 'lift' that most closely resembles Willy Wonka's Glass Elevator.
A comprehensive guide to all the latest gadgets, websites, games and computer industry news. This week, a look at how technology is being used to look after the elderly.
Spencer asks why boys outnumber girls in tech. Dan explores IFA, the biggest tech expo in Europe. And Lara rediscovers augmented reality. Plus tech news.
Click is in the US, where the authorities are using video games to train teachers in ways to protect their pupils during a mass shooting.
This edition visits Berlin as facial recognition technology is being trialled by the German government. Plus a look at tech for monitoring air pollution.
Click looks at all things battery, from how to keep your smartphone charged to the mountain storing energy in lakes.
Click checks out the latest technology in Japan, from translation tools to virtual reality arcades, with robots in-between.
Japan Special: Inside Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant where robots are helping the clean-up after 2011's meltdown. Plus across the country, robots learn to sumo wrestle, play volleyball and act like humans.
The tech show takes a seat in the world's toughest yacht race, plus an exclusive look behind the scenes of the gaming outfit behind Halo and Destiny.
This week on Click, spotting fake news and debunking the people in power, and wandering the ruins of a nightclub. And fancy a virtual reality fright this halloween?
On Click, Spencer Kelly meets the king of performance capture, Andy Serkis. Dave Lee has been investigating how a US charity is using chatbots to help sex workers and the victims of human trafficking find support. Dan Simmons catches up with a former BBC weather man trying to improve the outlook for farmers in Africa, while Marc Cieslak has been getting hands on with Microsoft's new XBox One X, and Lara Lewington has been looking into the future of emojis.
Spencer is in China to see what a turtle can teach us about space travel. Also, Lara investigates some gadgets with good taste.
Spencer is back in China to get a behind the scenes look at a mobile phone factory where smartphones are tested for 'extreme tolerance'.
Click looks at an app which hopes to be the Uber for emergency services in Kenya.
From snowboarding prosthetic feet to a device that helps a blind man run, Click looks at what is being achieved when tech meets disability.
The tech show looks at Generation U for Universal, and asks how children are learning about technology and staying safer online.
Click investigates the weird world of quantum computing, Spencer meets arts legend Marina Abramovic and Dan reviews the leading 360 cameras.
It's a Merry Clickmas as the team comes together to indulge in 2017's most desirable gear and gizmos. Find out how to keep your cocoa warm via Bluetooth and snap your family picture in Augmented Reality.
The very best bits of the tech show from 2017 including tech for cats, a visit to Fukushima, the X-Prize in Africa, and elevators that go sideways.
Sumi Das has been to Stanford University to meet survivors of sexual abuse, and creators of Callisto - a new online chatroom where victims can talk openly and share their tragic experiences, giving them a voice and encouraging others to speak out. Plus, Click meets a man who believes the 1000 year old human could be alive today - He is the founder and CEO of a Silicon Valley start-up supposedly developing technologies to help people live for hundreds of years.
Click looks at the latest advances in drone technology. The team travel to California to see what's expected to be America's first commercial drone operation and to Spain where they're testing a new 'drone traffic control' system, and discover how drones are saving lives on the beaches of Australia.
Spencer Kelly visits an Ethereum mine in Iceland. Ethereum has risen in value by almost 1000% in the past year. We also look at how UNICEF is mining cryptocurrency to raise money for aid and look at how everyday internet sites are being used to mine cryptocurrencies - often unbeknownst to those using them.
Click looks at the digital tools that are being used to help authenticate works of art - as well as spot the fakes and forgeries. We also talk to the estate of David Bowie who tell us about a project the singer was working on before his death that would allow artists to authenticate digital art works. We go to the Google developer conference to find out what updates and new tech the company is planning and look at some of the tech that is helping people better deal with mental health issues.
This week Click looks back on a super summer of sport with a compilation of some of our favourite sporting features. From the Tour de France, to Formula 1 to the World Cup we look at how tech is being incorporated into various disciplines and changing the very nature of sport itself. With exclusive access to the Tour de France and the Austrian Grand Prix we examine how tech can make the difference between winning and losing and whether the sports we love are becoming too reliant on the digital world.
Another chance to see Click's Sustainability Special. We visit America's first sustainable solar-powered town, take a spin in a solar-powered autonomous shuttle, visit the world's leading hurricane and wind research lab at the University of Miami and go down under to see how technology is being used to protect the world's largest coral collection at the Great Barrier Reef.
Click travels to New Delhi, India to put on a very special live show in front of a packed audience of tech fans. We speak to the CEO of Flipkart - India's first billion dollar company, ask if self-driving cars will ever take to the country's roads and discover if India is ready to embrace artificial intelligence and become a rival to Silicon Valley.
As the fallout from the Cambridge analytica saga continues and companies generally are under far more scrutiny for the way they handle personal data, we look at calls including at Labour conference for a new way of handling data which treats it as a public good, wresting it away from private companies. We hear from leading economists and thinkers including Tim Berners-Lee about how this could work. Meanwhile, we sit down with Planet of the Apes actor Andy Serkis to discuss how technology is changing the profession of acting and his work with the new secretive augmented reality technology Magic Leap. And we get a look around Google's secretive Moonshot facility where they develop prototypes.
This week on Click we have a World Exclusive as we chat to Japanese billionaire and fashion tycoon Yusaku Maezawa. Yusaku recently signed a deal with Elon Musk and SpaceX to become its first private passenger in a flight to the Moon. It will be the first lunar journey by humans to the Moon since 1972. We also have an in-depth look at how mirrorless cameras are changing the camera and film market and talk to BBC Research and Development about a new technique that allows content creators to edit on the fly so that different audiences can see different cuts or a show according to their interests and their age.
To kick off the BBC's fake news season Click goes to Kosovo to see what effects Facebook's reforms have had on the fake news industry there. 18 months ago things were booming with a heady cocktail of connectivity, tech savvy young people, few traditional job opportunities and the prospect of earning megabucks - how have things changed? Also we revisit the topic of deepfakes to see how the techniques of face swapping pioneered by a niche pornographic community are finding legit uses. And we hang out with Lyrebird the Canadian company who claim to be able to synthesise anyone's voice from just a small amount of source material
Click looks at what can help firefighters tackle blazes in the future. Spencer Kelly takes a look at the latest techniques in firefighting at the International Fire Training Centre. Lara Lewington travels to Lancashire to look at drones with thermal imaging to help locate the deep seat of a fire, wildfire drones that swarm to sensors that detect fires in a field, and a lance that pierces metal to fight blazes. Paul Carter flies to Switzerland to check out the latest in firefighting suits, a helmet that uses augmented reality to see through smoke, and a firefighting train. And Kat Hawkins looks through the lenses of the latest virtual reality to help investigate crime scenes to help train firefighters and police.
Click will feature highlights from its recent 'live show' at The Radio Theatre in London's Broadcasting House. Click treated an audience of devoted fans to demonstrations of the very latest in technology including dancing robots, drones and augmented reality.
Click is travelling across Japan to find the technology that sets the country apart. From the virtual YouTube celebrities, who don't actually exist, but have millions of followers online, to the disaster prediction technology that is helping to making one of the world's most geologically active countries safe. Plus we see how they're preparing technologically for next year's Olympics with new AI-powered facial recognition technology being deployed across the event.
This week on Click we look at the darker side of the internet. In recent years a phenomenon has emerged of webcam sex tourism - with the UN reporting 3/4 million people are online looking for sex with kids. In some countries like the Philippines - it's become particularly acute. The UN's children's agency UNICEF has dubbed the South East Asian nation "The global epicentre of the live-stream sexual abuse trade". We sent Richard Taylor to investigate the problem, and see how technology is being turned against the perpetrators to help bring them to justice.
In California citizens can ask for their previous convictions for carrying marijuana expunged since it is now legal to use the substance. But, It is often a lengthy and expensive process which has resulted in affluent people managing to do it whilst people from impoverished backgrounds have to live with the record. Now an AI algorithm is hoping to correct this - Dave Lee investigates the software trying to help. Over in Japan, Spencer Kelly focusses on the country's latest Space Race efforts - and Lara Lewington tries out the wearables analysing gait to potentially spot disease. Plus a visual feast as we look beneath the surface of the latest visual effects behind the recent Dumbo movie.
They are one of the biggest and most powerful technology companies in the world, but can we trust the Chinese telecoms giant Huawei? They have the equipment to run the next generation telecoms network - which will power everything from the superfast phones to smart homes and driverless cars - but as we come more reliant on this type of technology, concerns have grown about Huawei allowing this network to be used to spy on us and even shutting the country down. As the government prepares to make the decision about who will build the network in the UK, Click investigates one of the most important and controversial companies in the world.
Police deployment of facial recognition is no longer the work of science fiction. Across the world police forces are rolling out the system, but the technology is fraught with issues: from civil liberty to racial bias. Privacy campaigners say that facial recognition in surveillance has advanced beyond any government legislation and is being used without any regulation. Serious questions are being asked: Where does the data come from? Who should be surveilled? Will these systems be abused?
This is the 1,000th episode of Click - so we’ve created a special show that gives you complete control over what you watch. Check it out at bbc.co.uk/click1000.
To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Moon landing, Click lifts off with technology which will take us back to the Moon as well as a little closer to Earth - from the private companies that are building their own spaceships, to NASA's own efforts to return to the lunar surface. The team looks at future methods of space travel and also debunks the myriad conspiracy theories that have sprung up around the landing, using science to prove that Astronauts landed on the Moon. And they find out why scientists are 3D printing geologically accurate moon rocks on terra firma and how they will help future space exploration.
Click has exclusive behind the scenes access at Microsoft, looking at some of their future research, plus a visit to the VFX house behind the new film, Abominable.
Click heads to Taiwan to find out what ‘Made in Taiwan’ really means in the 21st century, from healthcare artificial intelligence to solving the pollution crisis.
Click investigates whether 5G networks could damage our health as some fear, and whether 5G might take our weather forecasting ability back to the 1980s?
Will Google's entry into gaming mean the end of the console? Plus a British-designed hypercar and an artificial intelligence debate at Cambridge.
We look at social media innovation coming out of China, and how that’s making Silicon Valley nervous. Are the global power-dynamics of the internet changing?
This year we come from V&A Dundee where we hear about the region's pivotal role in video games, drink water from a pollution sucking car and have a visit from NASA who show us the latest robots they've been developing which will soon be exploring Mars.
The most anticipated video game of the last decade finally releases in March 2020, but it won't be playable on any of the games consoles. Half Life: Alyx is only playable using virtual reality kit, its developers Valve have created a unique experience, a full length blockbuster video game in VR. The Half Life franchise is one of the biggest and most influential in videogame history, releasing this latest edition as a VR only title will likely reinvigorate the virtual reality industry and for many act as a reason to buy a VR headset. We gained access to Valve's secretive studio in Seattle interviewing key development personnel as well as spending a considerable amount of time playing the game and experiencing the new technology that has been created to bring the title to life.
On this episode of Click, a company which is developing portable labs to test for Coronavirus, and a tech based community initiative to support vulnerable people during the COVID-19 crisis. We head to India and follow a platform which encourages people to give food to the poor, and talk to the visual effects team behind the blockbuster movie Avengers Endgame.
This week as the world tries to deal with the coronavirus pandemic Click is looking at the tech that could help to alleviate the shortage of ventilators. We also look at how robots are being enlisted to help fight the virus and how governments are using drones to try to disinfect the streets. And with about 3 billion people in some form of lockdown we look at how people can stay connected from home.
Click explores how religion has gone online during the coronavirus pandemic. Plus Norway's national telecom provider to shows how the government is monitoring if their social distancing rules are being obeyed. And Imogen Heap has teamed up with a UK AI researcher to make an entry for the first Eurovision AI generated music contest.
Click looks at how care homes around Europe are using technology to provide some contact for isolated and elderly people. We look at a new suite of volunteering apps for those wanting to contribute during the coronavirus pandemic. And in Australia we look at newly introduced smart traffic cams to combat the worst driver behaviour during lockdown.
The Covid-19 pandemic has led to a huge increase in bike sales with e-bikes also starting to gain popularity. Click looks at the latest e-bikes and shows how you can turn your own regular bike into one. We also look at how data captured by a special bike light is being used to transform our cities for the benefit of those travelling on two wheels.
Like many businesses, the pandemic has impacted social media influencers. With their incomes dwindling, many have taken to promoting knock-off goods to hundreds of millions of followers. In a special investigation, Click looks at how influencers are getting away with it and lifts the curtain on the shadowy figures making millions through them.
Like many businesses, the pandemic has impacted social media influencers. With their incomes dwindling, many have taken to promoting knock-off goods to hundreds of millions of followers. In a special investigation, Click looks at how influencers are getting away with it and lifts the curtain on the shadowy figures making millions through them.
Will fashion shows ever happen again? Top producers are looking to virtual fashion shows - more akin to pop videos than cat walks - to showcase their wares. As they wake up to the creative possibilities this approach offers, will fashion ever go back? Also we talk to the activists in Hong Kong hoping to stand firm against a new security law passed by China. We look at the trend for high tech hydroponics allowing you to grow your own food at home and take a virtual tour of Virgin Galactic’s spacecraft.
This week, Click looks at the tech rivalry between China and the west, finding out what has caused the ban on Huawei's 5G equipment, and discovering the latest developments in social media in China and the USA. We look at alternatives to TikTok, and visit the team at a mobility research lab in Edinburgh who turned their office into an apartment to help them develop better tech.
This year we come from V&A Dundee, where we hear about the region's role in video games, drink water from a pollution-sucking car and have a visit from Nasa who show us the latest robots they've been developing, which will soon be exploring Mars.
As schools and universities go back, we look at efforts made to set up virtual laboratories allowing science students to conduct experiments remotely, to continue their studies. Meanwhile, the emergency services are struggling to train new recruits or update the training of current staff. Click is given access to the police and fire services to see the virtual worlds which have been created to allow first responders to sharpen their skills.
Click looks at how tech can help us get back to work. A digital twin of St Pancras International station has been built to help protect commuters and offices are using computer vision alert systems to help employees keep their distance. Plus the latest developments from Silicon Valley. When all the world's an internet call, Marc Cieslak discovers whether technology can help bring theatre back to life.
Known as one of the toughest races in the world, the America’s Cup presents a unique challenge as the rules and specifications change each time it takes place. We talk to Team Principal and the world’s most successful Olympic sailor, Sir Ben Ainslie, and see how technology is helping to design not only the boat but also to prepare the crew for this arduous voyage. We also look at the latest hardware from Google and go underwater to explore the tech that is helping to protect coral reef in Australia.
In this edition, we look at the role of technology in domestic abuse. Increasingly survivors report being stalked through tracking apps on their phones, key loggers on their computers and their lives being controlled through smart devices in their homes. We are also in South Africa, where domestic abuse is a taboo subject, never talked about but faced by millions. Now a charity is using a chatbot to reach as many women as possible to offer a helping hand. And there's a look at the latest iPhone from Apple and a preview of the new Xbox Series X console.
Click talks to grime star Stormzy about his role in the forthcoming video game Watch Dogs: Legion. The Glastonbury headliner appears as a fictional version of himself in the game, which is set in a dystopian near-future London that has been taken over by a rogue government. He speaks about using the game to speak out against injustice.
Ahead of the US presidential election, we report from states that are trialling technology in order to help more people vote. And we take a view around the world to see if greater use of tech in the voting process could lead to increased turnout. In just over a week, sailor Pip Hare is to set off attempting to beat Dame Ellen MacArthur's record for circumnavigating the globe alone. To try to achieve this, she of course has a high-tech boat. It is decked out in kit designed to track her mental health throughout the voyage. We went to meet Pip before she sets sail.
Click scrubs up to meet the many-armed robot on wheels that's making keyhole surgery more available. We learn how a therapy app and electricity emitting headset could provide better at-home treatment for those living with depression. And we see one of the world’s first trials of an artificial intelligence algorithm to help doctors quickly distinguish between Covid-19 and cancer treatment toxicity on scans. These decisions could be a matter of life and death and are challenging for the human eye to detect.
This week on Click, how can we keep teenagers safe online? We look at a new AI system that monitors video content on the fly and blurs anything unsuitable before kids see it. But can tech really help solve the problems that tech creates? We speak to a mum whose daughter took her own life. She now campaigns for fundamental change, for tighter control of tech companies and online education for both parents and kids.
Click is taking to the road and looking at the future of electric vehicles. Spencer Kelly heads down to Cornwall to find out if it might hold the key to Europe's demand for lithium and Lara Lewington discovers a car which might be able to charge your house. Plus Chris Fox looks at the latest in phone technology.
A special episode celebrating women in technology. We assemble three senior female tech leaders in front of an audience of 100 young women just starting out on their tech careers. We also hear from Joanna Shields of UK-based BenevolentAI, whose artificial intelligence has developed a treatment for some categories of Covid-19 patient. And, a new AI which is helping improve the success for those trying to conceive using IVF.
To coincide with the International Day of Persons With Disabilities, Click explores the latest developments around accessibility and inclusion in tech. Blind reporter Lucy Edwards investigates how AI helps visually-impaired people identify people and objects with their phones, while Niamh Hughes looks at the strides made in gaming accessibility, through the prism of her own experiences. Click also speaks to Google's head of accessibility programs and disability inclusion, Christopher Patnoe, to discuss Google's priorities in this space, and what the technology industry as a whole is doing for disabled people.
As the trial of rental e-scooters begins in the UK, they are starting to flood the streets of cities around the country. But are some of these riders still breaking the law? Omar Mehtab takes another look at the rules surrounding the light electric vehicles, and what is being done to help make these safer for everyone.
Recorded in front of a live online audience of Click fans from around the world, Spencer Kelly and Lara Lewington invite Click reporters, old and new, to pick their favourite moments from the last twenty years of cutting-edge technology covered on the show. Featuring underwater drones, invisibility cloaks, electric cars and robots that walk where humans fear to tread. Every reporter has a story to tell but not all of their predictions about the future have come to fruition - yet.
Usually, CES, the world's biggest tech show, takes place in Las Vegas at the beginning of January. This year, the show has been forced to go online. We look at what this means for the tech industry and what trends and gadgets might emerge from the virtual show floor. From wearable tech to smart homes, we explore the latest gadgets and gizmos that will be 'virtually' on show and explore whether the conference of the future may be online
On Click this week we ask what will President Joe Biden mean for the future of social media? We speak to a number of key insiders who are helping to shape policy around this issue. We also speak to Facebook's oversight board on concerns for free speech and talk with Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales on what Wikipedia has to teach others in terms of the handling culture wars online.
As remote medicine becomes more commonplace, Click looks at easy-to-use, medical-grade, diagnostic devices that are becoming available so family physicians can provide a full consultation remotely. They also visit a hospital in Madrid where AI is helping Covid patients in the ICU, who are in a coma, with pain management. The teams also look at a new breed of whiskies that are mixed and aged by AI.
Click looks at the new audio app Clubhouse which has been getting a lot of buzz in Silicon Valley. Is it really the future of podcasts and audio more generally, or another overinflated fad which fizzles and dies? The show investigates. The team also looks at the start-up which is trying to revolutionise training within the ranks of Britain's military - creating a virtual landscape to create simulations in virtual reality. It is starting to get noticed at the highest levels and Click gets access to its final assessment session. And the BBC Micro turns 40 this year. The team looks at how The National Museum of Computing is dusting off the old machine to enthuse the next generation of computing pioneers.
The week, meet the striking digital models sporting 100% digital outfits. As London Fashion Week shifts online, we dive into the industry designing clothing that will never be physically worn. Leather alternatives are also busting out of the lab. We get hands-on with fungi materials and enter a lab growing real animal hides for luxury fashion. And to complete the look, we test out the latest beauty tech. Smart glasses and makeup matching apps are using artificial intelligence to help you look your best.
Click looks at a new way of buying and authenticating assets online. The team follow a million-dollar digital art sale at Christies and see if this way of transacting online can completely change how we buy, sell and own properties in the future. Also a look at how the tech could impact trading sports cards and embrace performance capture with the Royal Shakespeare Company.
Another chance to see Click in Arizona, the self-driving capital of the world. We dive deep into the technology to see how it works and how sometimes it fails with tragic consequences. We also meet the people whose livelihoods are potentially affected by the technology.
We explore how biases built into everyday technologies impact people's lives and how the tech industry is trying to address it. We go behind the scenes looking at how facial recognition algorithms work. And in a world where machines help recruiters find candidates for jobs, how do we make sure certain communities don't end up disadvantaged?
Click explores the future of transport. Companies are betting big on autonomous, electric and connected mobility, but innovation is rife across the board. Find out about the radical ways aeroplanes are being redesigned to become more sustainable and watch passenger pods being shot through tubes at the speed of an aircraft.
Click hits the racetrack to meet a motorsport team with a difference. Team Brit is made up of six disabled drivers using bespoke, specially adapted cars to compete in races against non-disabled drivers on a level playing field. And Spencer takes a high-speed ride with Sam Schmidt, a former Indycar racer, paralysed in a crash, who has developed technology which allows him to race again.
In the third of Click's special shows about the ways in which tech can help save the planet, we focus on construction - one of the biggest carbon emitters. We look at efforts to rethink building from the ground up. In Sweden, attempts are being made to manufacture CO2-free steel. In Finland, robots can help recycle building materials. And in Orkney, we witness the latest developments in making energy from sea waves.
Click discovers how VR could help parents decide whether to go through with potentially life-changing surgeries for their children, James Clayton looks at whether whistle-blowing in silicon valley may become more common, and Jen Copestake heads to Pompeii where image recognition AI is being used to help re-build mosaics.
We could not fit it all into one show! Click continues checking out the latest and greatest innovations coming out of CES 2022, including the self-driving cars taking part in the Indy Autonomous Challenge, a vehicle that can change colours, a car that you can livestream from, and a deep dive into the Omega Mart, where not everything is what it seems...
Click adopts virtual avatars and online offices as we explore the future of collaboration. Will Zoom be left for dead? We investigate end-to-end encryption to find out if enough is being done to keep your private communication secure. And we see the AI movies helping Hollywood actors appear bilingual - all with a side of kitchen tech for ice cream on-demand.
Click makes its way to this year's Mobile World Congress to check out the latest mobile tech coming out of Barcelona. But with so many big company releases being smartphones with slight improvements from the year before, is there a lack of innovation in the industry or are there some hidden gems? Click also explores how 5G networks are being utilised - by beaming real-time information from dogs in mountain rescue. And finally, the brains behind the stunning visual effects of The Matrix Resurrections.
The PS5 - the newest console in the latest generation of gaming. It's been highly sought after - but for more reasons than one. The pandemic has meant there's been a higher demand for electronics, and a chip shortage has caused a lower supply of consoles. So, in come the scalpers - people who use bots to monitor and buy up rare items, before reselling them at a higher price. Though completely legal in practice, it's very unpopular - but not everyone practices it for greed. Click explores the world of scalping - talking to people who want to make as much money as they can, but also those who rely on it to keep a roof over their heads.
Click travels to Washington to look at the latest tech being used to take down drones, and to Shetland to find out how 5G is being used to make things safer and smarter on a remote construction site. Plus, we explore if tech can make you a better rapper, and with the help of virtual reality, we take a trip back in time to experience a rave in 1989.
Click finds out how artificial intelligence is being used to catch people illegally dumping rubbish, and heads out to sea to check out the latest tech tracking puffins off the coast of Scotland. The team also go behind the scenes in Vancouver with Oscar-nominated director Neill Blomkamp, who is using his film-making skills to develop a new video game.
It's AI tennis, robot footballers and body-tracking tech as Click serves up a sports tech special. The team head to Wimbledon to try the latest apps for fans, and to the Netherlands where training for the RoboCup tournament is in full swing. And see the latest wearable fitness gadgets put to the test and image recognition that aims to make sports more accessible for disabled people.
Click looks at agriculture and the technology that might be helping to make it more sustainable, from AI-powered imaging sensors that can read the minds of plants, to satellite imagery to monitor how vineyards are reacting to climate change. The team also heads to the USA to see how agricultural waste can be used to capture carbon, and to Scotland to talk to farmers who are replacing their physical fences with virtual ones.
Click meets the comedians who are making the leap from being social media stars to the live stage at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. The team also takes to the seas to see how tech is being used to make the Sail GP more eco-friendly, and we find out how artificial intelligence is helping to cut hospital waiting lists.
Click is taken for a ride in one of the first-fare paying driverless cabs in San Francisco. Also, the augmented reality experience that uses the sense of smell to help museum visitors solve a historical mystery, how artificial intelligence is helping the perfume industry sniff out tomorrow's fragrances, and the teams test out the iPhone 14.
Click takes to the catwalk. The team look at how AI is helping fashion retailers give customers a more personalised shopping experience. Click also checks out the augmented reality software that allows you to dress up on your live social media feed from a virtual wardrobe. Plus, the technology that is helping to preserve Ukraine's historic monuments and artefacts.
Click celebrates the BBC's centenary by looking at some of the technology pioneered by the corporation that has transformed the world of broadcast. The team return to the birthplace of the BBC, Alexandra Palace in London, to share the stories behind the corporation's innovative work, from the BBC microphone to the famous 'pips'. And we look at some of the latest technology being developed, which could shape the next 100 years.
Could transplant organs one day be created in the lab and produced on a 3D printer? Click goes to Sweden to find out. The team also meet the man who's been chronicling the biggest ever global cryptocurrency scandal. And they test the technology that claims it can create an ultra-realistic human face avatar in just five minutes.
Click investigates the latest developments being made in the so-called metaverse – immersive, connected virtual worlds, where people can live, work and play. The team goes to the Netherlands to find out why people are buying real estate in virtual worlds. Click travels to New York to meet the Holocaust survivor who has reconnected with her childhood thanks to technology that can track elderly people via photos from their youth. And we find out if improvised comedy made by artificial intelligence can pass as human.
To coincide with the UN's climate change summit in Egypt, Click explores some of the latest climate-friendly innovations - from air-cleaning moss filters in Germany to new printing techniques in Sweden that are extending the life of clothes. The programme also gains rare access to a global household products manufacturer to find out how it's becoming more sustainable. And they find out how hydrogen fuel cell technology is set to transform Scotland's transport network.
Click travels to Edinburgh to visit the UK’s new National Robotarium and catches up with some old robotic friends at one of the world’s leading robot labs in Boston, USA. Also, a look at the technology helping to preserve the voices of people with Motor Neurone Disease, and a trip on the UK’s tallest thrill ride.
In the last Click episode of 2022, the team look back on some of the biggest news stories of the year in the world of tech. Nick Kwek catches up with the latest invention of flying Frenchmen Franky Zapata, a jet-powered 'flying racing car'. The team also review some of the latest technology to keep your cat entertained.
A Click special from the world's largest tech fair – the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. The team meets some of the thousands of international entrepreneurs hoping that their new gadget or idea will be the next big thing. Click also meets a visually impaired young woman who has invented a new aid to help people to navigate their lives, talks to the CEO of vaccine company Moderna, and tests out the latest virtual reality headsets.
Click takes a road trip around Las Vegas - underground in the Loop tunnel system created by Elon Musk's Boring Company, above ground with the latest car sharing app, and in the sky with the latest attempt to create a flying car. And we test out the latest fitness gadgets, including a smart punch bag and a puncture proof bike.
Click explores some of the latest health tech developments, including 3D-printed bones for cancer patients and the latest devices to help us get a better night's sleep. Plus, Shiona McCallum has a horse-riding lesson with a difference, and LJ Rich checks out the tech behind a new ride at one of Europe's largest theme parks.
Nick Kwek meets Hollywood legend William Shatner, who is on a mission to make sure stories live forever. Spencer Kelly catches up with the creators of hit YouTube Channel The Slow Mo Guys. And we chat to the team behind the award-winning visual effects of Avatar: The Way of Water. (Click returns this week after a 2-week/1-episode break)
Click is in the capital of South Korea, which has more robots per head of population than any other country. The team meets some of them and the man whose singing voice has been restored following a life-changing accident by an amazing piece of technology. Also there is an exclusive interview with the AI company at the centre of a media storm after its product was used to manipulate the voices of celebrities.
Can technology help to restore our oceans? Click is in Denmark to see how artificial reefs are being deployed to bring back marine life. And the team chat to the founder of Berlin's Greentech Festival and former racing driver, Nico Rosberg. Also, how artificial intelligence is being used to develop the latest robots.
Spencer Kelly goes behind the scenes at CERN - home to the Large Hadron Collider and one of the largest scientific research centres in the world. He explores how the centre's cutting-edge research may help treat cancer in the future, how the science here has inspired authors of science fiction, and visits the Antimatter Factory.
August is festival time in Edinburgh, so Alasdair Keane goes behind the scenes at the Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo to find out how tech makes this spectacular show sparkle. Spencer Kelly finds out how art and tech are working hand in hand to tell compelling stories. Nick Kwek checks out three Fringe shows where the audience takes control.
Shiona McCallum is in Berlin to meet a very different type of popstar. And the team hears from the creator of the world's first ballet inspired by artificial intelligence. Also, in the world of food and drink, Lara Lewington tests out lab grown cheese, while Nick Kwek finds out how whisky distilleries are using tech to be more environmentally friendly.
Nick Kwek visits Meta in Berlin to find out how immersive technology is breathing new life into the way events of the past can be seen and heard today. And Alasdair Keane takes a trip to the dentist to explore how new tech is being used to identify the early stages of decay before it becomes a problem.
Zoe Kleinman meets the founder of music streaming giant Spotify to talk AI, Apple and podcasts. Paul Carter is in Florence to see how new technology has allowed restorers to reveal a 17th century artwork as it hasn't been seen for hundreds of years. Spencer Kelly tests out a new AI visual effects tool. And Lara Lewington explores the latest tech to help you manage an injury at home.
Lara Lewington visits car manufacturer Bentley to find out how it is making the shift to electric. Alasdair Keane finds out how Nissan's Formula E team is trying to understand drivers' brains to improve performance. Plus, the BlackBerry phone may be gone, but it is not forgotten - we hear from the director of the movie about its creation.
To coincide with the world's first summit on artificial intelligence safety, Click reflects on stories it has covered this year in which AI has been used to find innovative solutions to pressing problems. In other words, this is a lazy clip-show episode with nothing more than old reports shown again. We also look at how artists are protecting their work from the growing power of AI and speak to a leading computer scientist about the dangers the technology could pose in the future.
Click hears from women at the forefront of the latest technology and innovation: the scientists exploring the idea of delaying the menopause, the founder of a new digital space built for women, the creator of a start-up using seaweed to fight climate change, and a fashion designer using AI to bring her collections to the catwalk.
Click visits a new project in Sweden to find out how it's using the latest smart technologies to build an energy-efficient residential community. And the team explores new tech being trialled in Scotland to bring wind power generation to homes and businesses. And we meet the start-up using seaweed to fight climate change.
Paul Carter is in California for a first-look at a revolutionary type of prosthetic arm, which is closing the gap between body and bionics. Alasdair Keane finds out about the new mouthguards being introduced by World Rugby to manage head injuries. Also, Spencer Kelly catches up with the Oscar-nominated visual effects team behind "The Creator".
Click is at the SXSW Festival in Austin, Texas to follow the story of Eli, a teenager with Duchenne muscular dystrophy who is performing thanks to a custom piece of kit. Also, the team find out about a 3D-printed living seawall in Miami, and meet the robots being used to dismantle a nuclear power station.
Click explores how tech is having an impact on lives in Kenya - from helping flower farmers deal with the challenges of climate change, to widening access to maternal healthcare, and the latest efforts to tackle electronic waste. NB: This is a clip show with only re-edited footage of the 10th Feb 2024 episode, "Kenya Calling" and new links introducing the cips.
Spencer Kelly visits the Royal College of Music to see how a new Performance Laboratory is putting musicians to the test. Alasdair Keane heads to a Miami Heat basketball match to find out how their technology is making a name for itself off the court. Plus, Lara Lewington explores how grain waste from beer production is being used to make alternative leather.
Spencer Kelly meets the team behind a stratospheric solar-powered plane to find out how it's being developed and what it's being used for. Laura Goodwin explores the latest technology helping mountain rescue teams. And Shiona McCallum checks out the tech being used by grassroots rugby referees to hone their skills.
Click re-visits some of the team's favourite health and accessibility stories from around the globe: Paul Carter explores a revolutionary type of prosthetic arm being developed in California, Alasdair Keane is in Barcelona to meet the scientists creating digital copies of the human heart, and Nick Kwek travels to Texas to see how tech is helping one teenager with Duchenne muscular dystrophy to live his musical dream.
Click re-visits some of the team's favourite stories from the worlds of art and music: Lara Lewington explores how art makes us feel, Paul Carter meets restorers in Florence using tech to reveal a 17th Century artwork, and Spencer Kelly visits the Royal College of Music to see how a Performance Laboratory is putting musicians to the test.
Lara Lewington travels to California to meet the scientists and experts researching our brain health, and investigating whether we can change how our brains age. On her journey, Lara also meets the residents of one of the world's so-called Blue Zones, and finds out about the latest experiments being trialled by tech entrepreneur Bryan Johnson. Clip show from 2023's "Forever Young?", with a tiny follow-up of new material.
Spencer Kelly meets a team of teenage engineers building a robot of their own design, as they compete in the First Tech Challenge - a project aimed at addressing a shortage in STEM skills. Elaine Chong investigates a scam involving criminals pretending to be Chinese police. And LJ Rich tests out a traditional music instrument that's been given an electronic makeover.
Adrienne Murray meets the scientists aiming to drill into an active volcano in Iceland to use as a potential energy source. Spencer Kelly checks out the latest robots being designed to help on space missions. And in health innovation, Lara Lewington explores the tech being used to tackle liver disease.
For episode 1-2-3-4, Click re-visits some of the team's favourite sustainability stories, including a stratospheric solar-powered plane, a 3D-printed living seawall in Miami, and how beer is being used to make alternative leather.
Click re-visits some of the team's top transport innovations, including a hybrid train which can switch between battery, electric and diesel power, and an electrified road system in Sweden. Also, a new scooter design made from a single sheet of steel and folded like origami.
Click re-visits some of the team's favourite robotics stories: Lara Lewington heads behind the scenes at the factory making advanced humanoid robots, Chris Vallance meets the robots being used to dismantle a nuclear power station, and Spencer Kelly explores what it takes to design a robot for space.
Another re-visit to some of the team's favourite sustainability tech stories. Alasdair Keane heads to Sweden to see how one of the world's biggest truck manufacturers is making the switch to electric, Nikhil Inamdar tests out a motorbike that runs on compressed natural gas, and Adrienne Murray meets the scientists aiming to drill into an active volcano in Iceland to use as potential energy source.
Adrienne Murray travels to the Arctic Circle to find out how the community of Longyearbyen in Svalbard is shifting to clean energy, and Paul Carter takes a train journey to see how hydrogen technology can help to clean up carbon emissions of diesel engines. Also, Joe Tidy investigates the world of AI models, and Lara Lewington tests out a device to measure cardiorespiratory fitness without the exercise.
Lara Lewington explores the latest robotics innovation at MIT's famous CSAIL research laboratory. Alasdair Keane finds out how satellite technology is being used to help with rescue boat missions back on Earth. And Spencer Kelly checks out a new mixed reality exhibition at London's Natural History Museum.
Nick Kwek heads behind the scenes of the Sydney Opera House to explore the tech powering the famous landmark. Alasdair Keane visits Disneyland Paris to see the innovation bringing drone shows to life. And Lara Lewington finds out how AI is supercharging the way illness and disease can be detected through the eyes.
Another chance to see how AI is shaping the world. Spencer Kelly explores the latest AI features available on our phone, Joe Tidy investigates the world of AI models and Lara Lewington's senses are put to the test as she finds out how AI is being used to create smells from the past.
Spencer Kelly has the action from Cybathlon in Switzerland, where teams from around the world compete to develop assistive tech solutions for people with disabilities. Adrienne Murray visits the Arctic Circle to find out about the avalanche warning technology being developed to protect communities in Svalbard. And Paul Carter checks out the tech behind Formula E as the new season gets underway.
Olympic cycling champion Sir Chris Hoy chats to Alasdair Keane about his passion for bike technology - and what it means for the future of the sport. Paralympic athlete Melanie Woods spearheads a new aerodynamics research project to improve wheelchair racing. And in gaming news, we catch up with Troy Baker, star of Indiana Jones and the Great Circle.
Another chance to see some of the top sport technology stories, in yet another clip show from what used to be a great programme before the BBC slashed the budget and announced its cancellation. Alasdair Keane heads to Italy to see the innovation powering the world's first all-electric racing boat championship. Spencer Kelly takes a look at the cars of the future. Plus, could new tech help mountain biking become part of the Paralympics? And, could this be the last ever episode of Click?
What happens if our most valuable data is lost? Or if the technology it's stored on becomes obsolete? Adrienne Murray heads to the Arctic to explore the underground vault aiming to protect our data for the future. And Nick Kwek investigates the tech innovations being trialled in Australia to preserve coral reefs.