Why Stealth Speed Cameras Will Make Driving a Misery
Don't go thinking you can start to have fun out on the roads just because petrol's cheap now.
Don't go thinking you can start to have fun out on the roads just because petrol's cheap now.
12.2 inches of spreadsheet heaven! Erm...
Inspired by the naturally occurring mathematical Fibonacci sequences found in pine cones and sunflowers, a researcher designed and 3D-printed these sculptures that appear come to life—with bizarre undulating animations—when filmed spinning using a strobe light or video camera with a high-speed shutter.
Google's build-your-own smartphone looks great and still holds lots of promise. It's just a shame it's still not ready though.
May the modular ogling commence!
You have to wonder if BlackBerry would have secretly been quite chuffed with the rumoured offer though.
The universe of the very small is now a little closer thanks to a highly-automated, cell counting microscope-camera hybrid.
This short documentary explains how he did it.
How do you tell someone that they're seriously ill, or even dying? Chrissie Giles explores how doctors learn and how they deal with the stress and trauma, for both their patients and themselves.
The UK trailer for Chappie shows just how terrified the world is of a teenage robot.
Reuters is reporting that Samsung has approached BlackBerry with a takeover offer for as much as $7.5 billion, which would be about 38 percent more than the stock market says the Canadian company is even worth.
A glitter-coated surface, you see, is really just a plane of many, many tiny mirrors. And a shattered glitter-reflection can indeed be reconstructed into the face of Obama.
Not only does the Helicarrier actually fly, the model planes are equipped with built-in cameras linked to video goggles for better control.
The results are surprisingly funny, and somehow melancholic at the same time.
Google says that the super exciting Project Ara modular smartphone will launch in... Puerto Rico?
It's amazing how effective those thermal shields are on NASA's Orion spacecraft. With all of the panels removed for a viewing by Kennedy Space Center workers, you can hardly see any heat-related damage under the skin of the spacecraft, after its successful launch and re-entry that it performed late last year.