Windows 10, on a Mac
I’ve taken the Boot Camp plunge for you and here’s what I found.
I’ve taken the Boot Camp plunge for you and here’s what I found.
The taxi firm tries to quell a surge in consumer anger.
After years of teasing, Facebook has revealed an air-ready, solar-powered drone designed to beam internet to Earth’s surface. It looks like a really expensive boomerang. All it lacks is the data-delivering laser that will deliver websites to remote African villages. Facebook says that part’s almost ready. [Facebook]
A donkey saves the day.
1) Make sure you've convinced thousands of people to work secretly in a TV studio in the desert to fake your footage.
The fate of the show (and of one of its most beloved characters) seems to have been sealed.
Its remote may feature a TouchID fingerprint scanner, too.
Just 72 hours after launch, the OnePlus 2 has surpassed one million invite requests. Not bad for the self-styled David in the war against Goliath flagships. If you're keen and haven’t jumped on the invite train already, this is your reminder.
Sony Xperia Z3 users can give it a go right now.
The dream of 3D printing buildings is not a new one and, typically, it’s not a pretty one either. However, the visionaries at Branch Technology want to change that.
Who in their right mind would pay $50,000 to hunt some boring old lion when you could put the head of He-Man’s ferocious sidekick, Battle Cat, over your mantlepiece instead?
On a recent morning workout, the racehorse’s jockey strapped a 360-degree GoPro rig to their helmet—allowing the rest of us to come as close as we’ll ever get to riding the steed.
That includes rock climbing, running on the world’s tallest building, diving into a hole, holding an aeroplane while it takes off.
The Arc Light features a pair of glowing LED tubes that aren’t actually connected to the lamp. Instead, tucked out of sight is a compact Tesla coil that wirelessly powers the bulbs whenever they’re close enough. Read More >>
Lasers have been advancing science since the 1960s, but you may have noticed they always have a distinct colour. Now, a team of scientists has developed the world’s first white laser.
Unlike our own Northern Lights, this astronomical phenomenon can be found 18 light years away in the skies above the brown dwarf LSR J1835+3259.