The Trillion Frame-Per-Second Camera That Will Visualise Atoms
The STAMP camera will help scientists observe objects moving at 28,000 miles-per-second.
The STAMP camera will help scientists observe objects moving at 28,000 miles-per-second.
Electrical grid technology, once hidden behind massive barbed wire fences, is now seeping slowly into our homes. It's a change that will see kids of the future freaking out over kilowatt hours, not terabytes of storage.
Uber upgrades its unfortunately necessary SOS button, the Apple Watch is cheaper than you think, and Google voice actions get much better. Your news round-up BitStream is here to top off your week.
The horror. The horror.
New estimations give the incredible heavenly bodies a relatively short life span, before they are no more.
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If you’re a parent worried about one day dealing with an empty nest, here’s your solution.
There was a time when people proudly wore pins and badges of notable space achievements on their clothes. Such badges were very popular in the Soviet Union.
Photographer Elizabeth Moss has decided to give us a behind-the-scenes look at the world’s high-end photograph retouching. In a series of time-lapse videos, she boils down hours of laborious retouching into mere seconds, and the results are pretty crazy. See more >>
How does it pull off such a violent chemical reaction without, well, damaging its insides?
Investigation into shady dealings on the sales-listing site shows bustling trade in illegal poaching trophies.
Social media’s ability to so easily capture and share environmental observations has inspired ISeeChange to try and document the evidence.
Polaroid's latest device attempts to recapture some of the old insta-print magic of cameras gone-by.
Changing the molecular form of non-O types could drastically improve the blood donation system.
Yesterday, NASA’s Messenger space probe slammed into the surface of Mercury at upwards of 8,000 mph. This is its parting message: an image of the planet’s surface captured shortly before it struck down. Read more >>
Here it is: a weird, futuristic visor with four visible cameras, two speakers and what looks like six buttons.