Watch the First Film Shot on a Quantum Dot Smartphone Camera
InVisage's QuantumFilm camera finally churns out its special footage – five years after it was announced.
InVisage's QuantumFilm camera finally churns out its special footage – five years after it was announced.
There's some powerful irony at play here.
Someone has crunched the numbers that formed that iconic double-helix twist.
Yet another iteration of the torrent-streaming site bites the dust.
Blacker than that pizza you left in the oven for two hours.
Putin's submarines and spy-ships are “aggressively operating” near the bulk of the world’s internet infrastructure.
This tiny 3D-printed device doesn’t look all that, but it manages to keep track of five different substances floating around in your blood and sling the results to a nearby tablet.
Dr Michel Valstar explains how a simple piece of analysis known as a Local Binary Pattern can help detect your expression.
He explained that he’d “rather have a smaller part of something big than a bigger part of something small.”
Good news for multi-taskers: Chrome for iOS now supports Apple’s split-screen feature.
Google has a long-held ambition to make full-disk encryption mandatory on Android. It didn’t quite work for Lollipop—so it’s taking another stab with Marshmallow.
Ferrofluids are cool. Glowsticks are cool. What happens when you combine them is pretty neat, too. Read More >>
Apple explains that it’s working with partners in China to roll out solar, wind and hydropower systems that will generate an incredible 2 gigawatts of power by 2020.
What’s that up your nose?
Aimed particularly at women and minorities, it’s designed to help youngsters find a trajectory into the world of tech—with the help of their parents.
In the worst case researchers found that, on some of Western Digital's My Passport drives, the encryption key required to access the drive is actually stored on the drive. In plain text.