Here's The Tech That Will Power The Next Generation Of Driverless Cars
Nvidia’s Drive PX2 is already being used by more than 80 different car manufacturers.
Nvidia’s Drive PX2 is already being used by more than 80 different car manufacturers.
Now you can get a closer look at that star system, courtesy of the robotic telescope service Slooh.
Was this proposal five years in the making? Not quite.
Trying to see all the art in all the museums in London in a single day looks like a lot of fun, and a lot of hard work. Read More >>
The company is known for its nearly indestructible cases, and now that it’s made a cooler, you’ll never have to worry about something happening to your drinks.
There’s no end to the impressive stuff handy YouTubers will make out of wood, metal, and plastic. Peter Brown, however, favours unorthodox building materials.
According to new research the robo-babies actually appear to have the opposite effect.
Given that Star-Lord is going to spend some part of the sequel searching for his father, it seems appropriate that he would pick his own dad out of a line-up.
If you try hard and believe in yourself, anything can be a knife—but turning rebar into a legit-as-hell kunai is a fresh take. Read More >>
Weird panhandles or salients, basically appendages of land that have been hastily slapped onto the main body of a country. How did these tiny stretches of land get added?
Finding a backpack designed to protect and carry all of your tech isn’t terribly hard these days. What sets the MOS Pack apart is that it can can also help keep all of your gear charged.
Because building your own fully-functional prop required skills you don’t have, and a tiny two-inch action figure leaves something to be desired.
Twitter has spent an entire year working on a common sense tool that would help users protect themselves from harassment and abuse, so where is it?
Skateboarding with a jet engine looks incredibly dangerous, and also incredibly fun. Read More >>
The dodo has been extinct for about 350 years, and it’s entirely our fault—so why not own a memento of man’s destructive tendencies in the form of a three-foot tall bird skeleton.
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