A Chef's Knife Made From Plastic Wrap Proves Everything in Your Kitchen Is a Blade Waiting to Happen
A roll of regular food wrap can be hardened, sharpened, and used to slice and dice.
A roll of regular food wrap can be hardened, sharpened, and used to slice and dice.
Never again experience the excruciating pain of peeling a forgotten Lego brick from the sole of your foot.
A Twitter account that seems to belong to one of the hackers claimed they used a script to deface the videos, and that it was just for fun.
This cannon has a wonderful ‘banned science fair experiment’ aesthetic to it.
For fraud purposes, not gaming Instagram likes for photos of today's sandwich.
All you need is a door hinge, some hot glue, and a small mirror.
The most fun you can have with 1,500 yellow foam balls.
The original battery-powered ride-on can hit a top speed of 2.5 miles per hour, while this souped-up version tops out at a far more satisfying 30 MPH.
Watching videos of mad inventors building super-sized, flame-throwing lighters undoubtedly scratches a primitive itch.
This custom blaster prosthetic transforms a Nerf enthusiast into the foam-weapon equivalent of Mega Man.
The algorithm, developed by Google Brain, can tweak photos to really mess with your eyes/head.
The printer itself isn’t easy on the eyes, but there’s a lovely aesthetic to the pointillist images it creates.
"Most people in the security industry couldn’t hack their way out of a wet paper bag with a lightsaber.”
This piece of classic computer hardware can’t load 5¼-inch floppies anymore, but CDs, DVDs, and Blu-Ray discs easily fit into its original slot.
With the addition of a beefy electric motor, some reinforced wheels, and a set of handlebars, this bad boy can hit 40 in less than three seconds.
Now any room in your house can easily get a dance floor upgrade.