Vet to the Future
Exploring the intersection of tech, science, and veterinary medicine, Vet to the Future tracks the future of animals and those who care for them.
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AVMA launches its AI supplement, Texas A&M rolls out an AI assistant, and Colossal Biosciences eyes the dire wolf’s return.
What do moose migrations, thermal cameras, and medical marvels have in common? They’re all shaping the future of vet med.
A new AI playbook, custom 3D bone guides, streaming hematology cuffs, and bipedal robots aren’t sci-fi anymore—they’re shaping the next generation of veterinary care.
From AI that senses pain to robots that learn by watching — empathy is becoming the next frontier of intelligence.
Machines read pain, cells become eggs, and life rewires itself in ways that could reshape both medicine and empathy.
AI prints viruses, dogs learn words like toddlers, and chimps mirror our habits—science blurs lines between species and machines.
From rodents sniffing out land mines to implants that beam sight straight to the retina, this week’s breakthroughs show how animals, AI, and innovation are reshaping both veterinary and human medicine.
AI helps frogs find safer homes, predicts heart failure before it strikes, and turns jellyfish into explorers—biology and technology are converging fast.
This week, a worm gets a personality transplant, silent thoughts become spoken words, AI tracks untagged animals, and ancient sheep rewrite the story of the plague.
Meet AI tools transforming vet care, nanogels revolutionizing treatment—and a cockatoo stealing the show.
Hospital AI done right, telemetry you can act on, sensor-guided rechecks, and organoids built for translation.
Dogs sniff Parkinson’s years early, a remora-inspired patch grips the gut, and elephants reveal a secret sign language—discover how nature and AI are reshaping veterinary care.
From GIS-powered vet training to robot surgeons and gene-hacked mice, this week’s issue is about tools shaping veterinary care—plus, how one sharp-nosed cat helped discover a brand-new virus.
Spinal cords reboot through electric fields, bats vaccinate each other with gel, and therapy dogs reduce stress—virtually.
From brain organoids and parvo biologics to parrots with musical taste, this issue is packed with intelligence—artificial, biological, and economic.