About This Week in Engineering

Ever wondered what happens when a robot starts dating your keyboard? Or why Bees turned into spies?
Welcome to This Week in Engineering, where we present the gloriously weird, wonderfully complex, and occasionally explosive world of engineering innovations.

Launched in June 2024 by Adam (who probably should have been studying for finals instead), this independent publication lands in your inbox every Tuesday morning like a caffeinated engineering professor with too many cool stories to share.

What's in the box?

Engineering Breakthroughs That'll Make You Go "Wait, What?" - From robots that can cook shrimp better than most humans to energy storing concrete, we cover the innovations that make you question everything you thought you knew about physics.

News That Actually Matters - No fluff, no corporate buzzword bingo. Just the engineering developments that'll either change the world or at least make your next dinner party conversation infinitely more interesting.

Pop Engineering Puzzles - Fun Engineering puzzles that fetch prizes. These are custom stickers, exclusive games, and bragging rights that last at least until the next puzzle drops.

Job Board for the Professionally Curious - Whether you're ready to jump ship or just want to see what kind of wild projects other companies are working on, our job listings are curated for people who get excited about torque specifications.

Why Subscribe (Besides FOMO)

No Algorithm Overlords - Your inbox doesn't care about engagement metrics or what's trending. Just pure, unfiltered engineering goodness delivered with mathematical precision.

Tuesday Timing - Because Monday mornings are for coffee and existential dread, but Tuesday mornings are for learning why jack-knifing a 243-pound robot butler is apparently newsworthy.

Access to the Wikipedia of Engineering - Except, with more personality and fewer rabbit holes about medieval farming techniques.

Community of Fellow Engineering Nerds - Join subscribers who understand why you got genuinely excited about that new phosphor coating breakthrough and won't judge you for having strong opinions about thermal conductivity.

Your subscription keeps this beautifully chaotic corner of the internet alive and helps us continue asking the important questions, like "What if we made it smarter?" and "Have we tried turning it off and on again, but with lasers?"

Ready to make your Tuesday mornings 47% more interesting? (That's a scientifically calculated estimate. Probably.)