Microsoft is Killing Clip Art Because Nobody Uses it Anymore
The company is pointing users to use Bing image search instead. Which is fine, because that's what everyone was doing anyway. Except maybe for the Bing part.
The company is pointing users to use Bing image search instead. Which is fine, because that's what everyone was doing anyway. Except maybe for the Bing part.
It's a system for your iPhone to detect when it's in free fall and to act accordingly to stop it from smashing.
Another reminder to not use shady ATMs in shady places.
For the first time in history, a theory of what doesn't exist is successfully predicting what does.
Some of these fan-made Star Wars posters are so good they could actually have been the real deal and we wouldn't have noticed.
Feeling intellectual? Then you'll delight in the fact that Nature has made all of its archived scientific papers free to read, though sadly you can't print them out.
Boeing, Japan's GS Yuasa Corp and even the US Federal Aviation Administration are all named and shamed.
There's a fairly complex series of computational processes going on behind every computer click.
The German-Finnish internet entrepreneur announces his intent to take his Internet Party stateside.
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Physicists at the University of Warwick created a new hard-to-eat pasta shape they call anelloni to demonstrate the complicated formations ring-shaped polymers can form when they intertwine.
Ideal for romantic liaisons with slave girls, this Chewbacca-skin rug can be yours for $99 (£65).
Apple loves sticking TouchID on its devices, but the Mac is yet to gain the fingerprint sensor. That's where new app FingerKey comes in.
Not even Ridley Scott has knowledge of the movie's typography like this guy.
The Bristol Interaction and Graphics group has used ultrasound to render floating 3D shapes in thin air, creating an object that can be seen and felt.
The Germans apparently look for meaning in their skylines, not just size and shininess.