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We’re all going to die!

Before we get too far into an entire issue about how science and technology are extending, optimizing, and disrupting every stage of human life, let’s get the bad news out of the way: Despite the efforts of humanity’s greatest minds, we’ve yet to find a way of perpetuating physical vitality or individual consciousness indefinitely. As of this writing, it appears that each of us, sooner or later, will die.

It’s the sooner or later, though—the stuff between conception and death—that is a moving target. We’re continuously adapting to technology as technology is adapting to us. Geneticists and biotechnologists are reengineering our bodies. Ubiquitous screens, apps, VR devices, and social media are transforming how we experience the world. We are a species rewritten, so it’s time for us to chronicle how that’s playing out for each generation.

Here you’ll find miracle babies, Ethereum-mining teens, idealistic cyber-soldiers, middle-aged gamers, and swipe-happy seniors. You’ll find scientists, surgeons, and innovators who are creating body-enhancing (and mind-altering) technologies. And you’ll find people making unprecedented choices, showing what it means to live in an age of improvisation.

—The Editors


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The End of Infertility

In an era of artificial eggs and Crispr, anyone could become a biological parent to the healthiest baby.

by Jason Pontin

Delicate Instruments

Tools for fetal surgery

by Phuc Pham

Saving Baby Boy Green

His life is a test for how far neonatal medicine has come.

by Eva Holland

Play List

The year’s best tech playthings

by Michael Calore

Cashing in on Kiddie YouTube

Reality TV for tots

by Caitlin Harrington

Look. It’s #MiniMilah!

Sharing my daughter on social media.

by Jamilah Lemieux

So, About “Screen Time”

Psychologist Alison Gopnik on how kids can use tech to their advantage.

by Sarah Fallon

Screen Panic

A brief history of digital worries

by Blanca Myers

System Errors

How science and tech are solving health issues at all stages.

by Chelsea Leu

lifespan_toc_titles-01.svg

The End of Infertility

In an era of artificial eggs and Crispr, anyone could become a biological parent to the healthiest baby.

by Jason Pontin

Delicate Instruments

Tools for fetal surgery

by Phuc Pham

Saving Baby Boy Green

His life is a test for how far neonatal medicine has come.

by Eva Holland

Play List

The year’s best tech playthings

by Michael Calore

Cashing in on Kiddie YouTube

Reality TV for tots

by Caitlin Harrington

Look. It’s #MiniMilah!

Sharing my daughter on social media.

by Jamilah Lemieux

So, About “Screen Time”

Psychologist Alison Gopnik on how kids can use tech to their advantage.

by Sarah Fallon

Screen Panic

A brief history of digital worries

by Blanca Myers

System Errors

How sience and tech are solving health issues at all stages.

by Chelsea Leu



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Silicon Valley High

Meet the students of d.tech, where kids are inventing the future.

by Lauren Murrow

Call Me, Maybe

A preteen finds her voice.

by Elizabeth Weil

Army of 01101111

Troops are training to fight the endless war—through a computer screen.

by Matt Gallagher

Diversity in Comp Sci

By the numbers

by Blanca Myers

Teen Idols

New paths to early stardom

by Caitlin Harrington

Learning to Drive

By the numbers

by Andrea Powell

My One Other

A chronicle of romance and surveillance on Strava.

by Elizabeth Barber

Death of Middle School Romance

What it’s like to “hang out” in the age of the iPhone.

by Alex Baker-Whitcomb

lifespan_toc_titles-02.svg

Silicon Valley High

Meet the students of d.tech, where kids are inventing the future.

by Lauren Murrow

Call Me, Maybe

A preteen finds her voice.

by Elizabeth Weil

Army of 01101111

Troops are training to fight the endless war—through a computer screen.

by Matt Gallagher

Diversity in Comp Sci

By the numbers

by Blanca Myers

Teen Idols

New paths to early stardom

by Caitlin Harrington

Learning to Drive

By the numbers

by Andrea Powell

My One Other

A chronicle of romance and surveillance on Strava.

by Elizabeth Barber

Death of Middle School Romance

What it’s like to “hang out” in the age of the iPhone.

by Alex Baker-Whitcomb


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You May Now Kiss the Avatar

What a real wedding in a virtual space tells us about relationships.

by Peter Rubin

The Pursuit of Youth

Hope and hype for life extension

by Gregory Barber

People of the Screen

What might we see without the smartphone?

by Virginia Heffernan

Who’s Distracted Now?

Gen Xers are the true screen addicts.

by Clive Thompson

For the Love of Zelda

A Nintendo fanatic imagines his future beyond videogames.

by Justin Heckert

Frozen in Time

Rebooting the reproductive system

by Robin Marantz Henig

The Brotox Boom

Silicon Valley’s “youthful” men

by Lauren Murrow

The Next Steve Jobs

We’re looking for someone who can’t exist anymore.

by Jason Tanz

lifespan_toc_titles-03.svg

You May Now Kiss the Avatar

What a real wedding in a virtual space tells us about relationships.

by Peter Rubin

The Pursuit of Youth

Hope and hype for life extension

by Gregory Barber

People of the Screen

What might we see without the smartphone?

by Virginia Heffernan

Who’s Distracted Now?

Gen Xers are the true screen addicts.

by Clive Thompson

For the Love of Zelda

A Nintendo fanatic imagines his future beyond videogames.

by Justin Heckert

Frozen in Time

Rebooting the reproductive system

by Robin Marantz Henig

The Brotox Boom

Silicon Valley’s “youthful” men

by Lauren Murrow

The Next Steve Jobs

We’re looking for someone who can’t exist anymore.

by Jason Tanz


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