Four Typefaces That Let You Write Like Einstein and Other Famous Thinkers
Type-designers have trawled through the archives to create digital copies of handwriting from history's greats.
Type-designers have trawled through the archives to create digital copies of handwriting from history's greats.
Official Collins dictionary updated and downgraded for modern youth speak.
That would be Doug Bowser. No relation.
Photographer Vincent LaForet took these amazing aerial shots of London. Seeing the city overhead like this reminds you why it is one of the world's leading capitals. Read more >>
Apart from the fact that most of them scrawl illegibly.
QR codes are being slapped on everything these days. That could soon include your sex cells.
Not that we'd ever suggest that you do this.
Rumour has it that Apple will be making San Francisco the default typeface on its devices. The font, which was designed specifically for the Apple Watch, will replace Helvetica Neue.
One OS to rule them all.
The extreme secrecy shrouding all three previous missions have fuelled plenty of conspiracy theories. But for once, we actually have some inkling of what the X-37B will do.
How many of us haven’t lamented the fact that a late night trip to the beach for an evening swim can never include a beach ball for fear of it going missing in the dark? Fear no more.
While increasingly advanced electronic telemetry tags can tell us a lot about animal behaviour, there’s just no substitute for seeing it on video. Here's an example, from when researchers strapped a camera to a shark. Read More >>
The tweets are wildly, flagrantly hateful. The kind of offensive language that Twitter just developed an algorithm to detect. Yet Twitter is getting paid to publish them, pushing abusive speech to a wide audience.
We’ve heard a lot about how our bodies will replace passwords. Now, a group of neuroscientists are adding another body part to that list: the brain.
If you haven’t ever had one, imagine someone threading a tube up through your urethra into your bladder and ... yes, yes they hurt. Mercifully, scientists are working out how to make the process less painful.
The robotic arm looks like it came from the future, a sleek cyborg limb. But for Les Baugh, it’s a way to feel “back to human.”