Google's Cube Lets You DJ Six Videos at Once
Music videos are wonderful, but you can only watch one at a time. No longer, though.
Music videos are wonderful, but you can only watch one at a time. No longer, though.
In this video, Minute Physics imagines the perfect pair of eyes to establish if physics could ever actually allow Legolas to see what's claimed in the book.
Samsung recently commissioned an independent inspection of 100 of its suppliers in China. Surprise: their working conditions are still dreadful.
Sony sold off its PC business earlier this year, but like a phoenix, Vaio is rising from the flames – looking exactly the same.
GE has decided to enter your smart home with a new LED bulb called Link, which promises to make intelligent lighting cheaper. Well, a bit cheaper at least.
This little superconducting magnet may look serene, but it in fact it's a record breaker, capable of creating three metric tonnes of force.
Pro Publica has put together this lovely chart which shows which of the agency's missions are most controversial.
It's only just started to roll out, but here's hoping something similar turns up here sooner rather than later.
The Blackphone is an Android handset that promises to keep your secrets safe, and they went on sale today for £369 – and promptly sold out.
This is Raoul Duke's stash, for a single weekend, in Hunter S. Thompson's Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. That is quite a weekend, right there. See the full image within.
Over the weekend, the internet exploded over the fact that Facebook had conducted psychological experiments on user news feeds.
Since acquiring Quickoffice, Google has made the application free, ensured it only worked with Drive, and then rolled all of its features into Drive. Now, it's being retired: from next week, you'll be unable to download or install it.
Got a GoPro video that's a few hours long? Fortunately you won't have to sift through all the boring stuff anymore.
The Amazon Appstore is currently offering up 30 apps, worth more than £100, for free. They include Plex, AccuWeather Platinum, games like Sonic the Hedgehog 2. Go get 'em.
Tip-tap-tip-tap-tippety-tap. We all spend our days bashing keys at our computer—so how much energy could we create if we could recover just a little of it?
YouTube is about to get smoother: Google has announced that its video site is getting support for videos running at 48-and-60 frames-per-second. Slick.