By the late 1990s, the live studio demonstrations had been dropped in favour of purely pre-recorded items. The final series, presented by
Adam Hart-Davis,
Kate Humble and
Roger Black, attempted to revert to the original live format of the show, even using a remix of one of the theme tunes used during its more successful years. However, ratings continued to fall and with only three million viewers the BBC decided to axe the show. At the time they said that they would produce a number of science special editions under the ''Tomorrow's World'' brand from time to time. The "Tomorrow's World Roadshow" appeared in 2004, with
Gareth Jones (co-host of
CITV's
How 2) and
Katie Knapman taking the helm as the last presenters of a show bearing the ''Tomorrow's World'' name, before a partial return to television in 2007. For the 1000th episode, a commemorative CD was produced by Nimbus Records. It contained audio tracks of the four theme tunes that were used from 1965 to the early 1990s. 1,000 copies were made and given away in a competition. The CD was notable as being the first holographic audio compact disc ever made. On 14 September 2009, the BBC made some clips and episodes available online. In the United States, episodes of the series aired on the
cable channel TechTV between 2001 and 2003.
The Prince of Wales Award for Industrial Innovation and Production At the end of each series, the Prince of Wales gave an award or awards for superlative inventions.
Revival of the brand At the start of 2007, the
BBC announced that the ''Tomorrow's World'' brand would be used on science and technology news reports across the BBC's TV, radio and internet services, including a blog. The ''Tomorrow's World'' name returned to television screens on 8 January 2007 as part of the BBC's news coverage on
BBC Breakfast, hosted by
Maggie Philbin and as a blog on the BBC News website. In August 2007, it was reported that
Michael Mosley, director of development at the BBC's science wing, had pitched the concept of resurrecting the format to BBC commissioners. In May 2017, the BBC announced it was launching a year of science and technology under the ''Tomorrow's World'' banner. Its purpose is to "seek to address how science is changing peoples' lives, reshaping the world, and rewriting the future of healthcare".
BBC Four live edition ''Tomorrow's World'' returned for a one-off live special, with
Hannah Fry and four presenters from the show's original run: Maggie Philbin, Howard Stableford, Judith Hann, and Peter Snow. The 90-minute interactive show was broadcast at 9pm on BBC Four on 22 November 2018. == Science Channel reboot ==