Rosetta’s Comet Looks Even Weirder When It’s Backlit By the Sun
In its ongoing exploration of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, the Rosetta spacecraft captured this stunning silhouette of the two-lobed mass from a distance of 200 miles. Read More >>
In its ongoing exploration of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, the Rosetta spacecraft captured this stunning silhouette of the two-lobed mass from a distance of 200 miles. Read More >>
It's not cold inside, either.
They’re fantastic to watch, but Jack Nugent of Now You See It, argues that their use really constrains the stories directors are trying to tell.
This is like something out of a nightmare: a chainsaw attached to a drone. What could possibly go wrong?
It’s worth looking through the Terms of Service, because there are some worrisome things included.
Melting crayons together can get pretty psychedelic at times. Read More >>
Just let that sink in folks.
After a practise drill, the CIA forgot to remove a 'putty-like' material from a bus that was then used to transport school children.
While the technology sounds interesting, the concept is laughable, especially when a £189 device is marketed as a glorified selfie stick.
That triple-solar view isn’t the only weird thing you’d see happen overhead. Not by a long shot.
All you fancy people with your Pebbles, Apple Watches and Samsung Gears and what have you. There’s still a heck of a lot of life left in the humble mechanical watch.
I know, it sounds like an April Fool’s prank. But apparently it’s real.
3D printing is alive and well, even if we’re not all manufacturing our own Warhammer figurines just yet.
There’s a passage in the Bible that suggests the Nile once turned to blood. But the red ribbon in this image isn’t quite so grizzly. Read More >>
These highly realistic skin patches could eventually be used to treat burn victims and replace animals in the testing of chemicals.
That would mean Tesla is moving away from its current supplier, TPK Holdings, who makes the displays for the S and X.