Hold the Door With Your Very Own Hodor Doorstop
Well, this was inevitable.
Well, this was inevitable.
It’s yet another reason to ban these awful materials and to limit the amount of plastic entering into our lakes and oceans.
Apparently four political parties have come to an agreement about making this a central component to the country’s energy plan.
As part of the New York Times Magazine’s New York-focused issue out this Sunday, there’s a splashy interactive feature that explores the city’s supertalls.
We love watching things get crushed by a hydraulic press, but how about a waterjet? Well, here's a waterjet cutting through a hydraulic press. Read More >>
With a little sugar, a handful of past-its-prime fruit, and about a week in the fridge, vinegar can transform into one of the most complex, mixologist-approved flavours to ever grace your cocktails.
Vanity Fair got its hands on a kind of insane first-hand account of working at Facebook, adapted from a book by a former employee. It makes working at Facebook sound a lot like a messianic sect circle-jerk.
The extension, designed to compile a list of people suspected of being Jewish, has now been banned from the Chrome store.
The Warcraft movie is nearly here, and if you don’t know your Gul’dans from your Garonas, everything in the trailers probably looks monstrously confusing. Don’t worry, we’re here to help!
At first, putting a piñata on a drone seemed like a very good idea... Read More >>
Desperate to play Super Mario Maker but can’t bring yourself to buying a Wii U for just a single game? There’s a cheaper solution.
Every time you do a voice search, Google records it. And if you’re an Android user, every time you say “Ok Google,” the company records that, too. Don’t freak out, though.
No need to panic, just because a frail human body is about to step into the vacuum of space, protected only by a reinforced bouncy castle. EVERYTHING IS FINE.
If you’ve ever held a high-quality camera lens, the first thing you notice is the weight. However, thanks to research being done at Harvard those giant glass-filled lenses might soon be obsolete.
This is one seriously trippy slide, and I wish I could ride it right this second. You could get on completely sober and emerge feeling like you went on the wildest acid trip ever. Read More >>
The new device, announced yesterday, is a “high-resolution, see-through head-up display embedded directly inside of a diving helmet.”