SpaceX Plans to Land a Rocket on This Barge
If you can land a rocket, you can reuse a rocket. It's by no means an easy task, though.
If you can land a rocket, you can reuse a rocket. It's by no means an easy task, though.
Turning normals spectacles into something more akin to Google Glass.
For all its features, Twitter lacks location savvy. Hence the apparent move to team up with those with the knowledge.
This video from Minute Physics explains why you shouldn't feel dumb about it—because it's all down to physics working against you.
Taxi-booking app Uber has announced that its customer-tracking "God-view" tool will be scaled back and only used in exceptional circumstances, such as fraud prevention.
This great hart shows off more types of snowflake than you probably ever knew existed.
NASA's Super Guppy aircraft—the airplane that carries the space agency's biggest loads — sits overnight at NASA Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia. In fact, it had just carried the fuselage of another aircraft, due to be tested at the centre.
This set of bizzare images can fool even the best algorithms into thinking that they're real things.
The maker of high-end cars and powerful monster-machine engines believes pilotless shipping vessels will be in use by 2025.
Hacker group Guardians of Peace appears to offer lifeline to potential victims.
Researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles will be granted access to footage from between 50 and 100 officers next year.
Having tried its hand at crowd-funding the e-ink concept watch, it's now attempting to do the same with the Qrio Smart Lock.
Google is apparently to shut down its Russian engineering offices. It follows the announcement of new laws which will require websites to store user data about Russian citizens within the country's borders.
There's now a 'Top Tracks in Your Network' playlist under Top Lists in Spotify—so you can see what's most popular amongst your peers right now. [Spotify]
Can you guess the biggest Twitter event of the last twelve months?
A staggering 250,000 tonnes of the stuff now bobs in our seas.