Turning Cans Into Liquid Metal Looks So Much Fun
I'm not going to give my aluminium cans to recycling centres anymore. Instead, I'm going to melt them down to liquid metal and create awesome metal objects with them.
I'm not going to give my aluminium cans to recycling centres anymore. Instead, I'm going to melt them down to liquid metal and create awesome metal objects with them.
Even more laughable is that it probably doesn't even need the gun to begin with.
From the car-battery-powered bricks, to the first flip-phone and introduction of the iPhone, it's amazing how this technology has developed over our life time.
According to the Wall Street Journal, fewer and fewer churches are investing in stained glass windows and membership in glass trade organisations is dwindling.
So what gives sparkling wines their sparkle? A fascinating process called secondary fermentation.
The bright ball that hovers over Times Square on New Year's Eve was a little bit reborn this year. This year the ball captivated the world with 288 new crystals. And, boy, is it pretty.
A giant, state-of-art balloon carrying a telescope to detect gamma rays was supposed to fly over Antarctica for 100 days. Instead, the balloon sprung a leak almost immediately
Attempts to study the rate at which these sheets move and melt have been hamstrung by conventional monitoring methods. That's why a team has gone ahead and connected one such ice sheet to the Internet of Things.
Hacker Ken Kawamoto shows us how with a technique called thermal projection mapping.
Check out this collection of cutaways of AK-47, Colt .45, tanks, Russian nuclear submarines, rocket launchers, grenades... a fascinating look into the guts of 12 iconic weapons.
This latest beast from Ecoxgear has boasts massive 50+ hours of battery life as well as a solar panel that'll keep it charged.
Vocativ put together a list of common permissions from popular Android apps, calling it a "barometer of what app makers think they can get away with."
Thankfully, the reactor controls were not infected.
After a bit of a shaky start to its career, the V-22 Osprey is finally coming into its own.
According to an official FBI bulletin obtained by The Intercept, the same hackers who broke into Sony Pictures and stole a devastating amount of data made threats against an American "news media organisation" as well.
This was Italian astronaut Sam Cristoforetti's view from the International Space Station on Monday. The textures on that spiral of clouds makes you want to reach right out and touch it, doesn't it? [Sam Cristoforetti]