When Twitter Q&As Backfire Disastrously
Things didn't go well for Fifty Shades' author EL James, nor for an American politician, this week on Twitter.
Things didn't go well for Fifty Shades' author EL James, nor for an American politician, this week on Twitter.
Prince is removing his back-catalogue from music streaming services, with tracks vanishing from Spotify and Rdio so far. They’re still up on Google Play, Deezer and Tidal, perhaps not for long.
Sound the 1950s siren.
Extreme once-a-century category A balls-up from its tagging algo.
Well this is awkward.
The screens, they are a’ changing. Facebook has tweaked its logo for the first time since 2005, and if we hadn’t pointed it out you, you probably wouldn’t have even noticed. Read more >>
Tuesday's ever-so-slightly-longer day explained, by British YouTuber Tom Scott.
But it looks like no amount of crowdfunding is going to help Greece's money woes right now.
Make sure your controller is charged up.
With one hand Apple giveth, and with the other, it rips a long-standing feature away with no warning.
We’re living in an age of extremely ambitious urban technology: Green parks that sit under cities, nourished by actual sunlight literally piped down from above.
The Terminator movies are fun, but all that time travel does confuse things a tad. Luckily this video is here to summarise the lot.
In fact it’s very easy to do—as it should be—thanks to an update in Android 5.1.
Microsoft really wants to blur the line between the digital and real worlds. It's developed a new program could eventually help robots and self-driving cars better “see” their surroundings. Read More >>
That includes the US, Russia, the UK, France and China. A few other countries have nukes too but are not represented.
In 1972, Paris approved a hulking 690-foot skyscraper that looked like it was designed by Darth Vader on the back of a napkin. It’s no wonder it’s taken the city 42 years to give tall buildings another shot.