£2.5m Cultural Video Game Centre Coming to Nottingham
"Culture" and "Nottingham" used in the same sentence, shock.
"Culture" and "Nottingham" used in the same sentence, shock.
November this year marks the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. In addition to the usual civic ceremonies, this anniversary will be commemorated by an art installation tracing the site of wall with illuminated helium balloons.
Throws cash at US YouTube phenomenon to attract 'young millennials'.
As smartphones continue to get larger but our hands don't, what kinds of design solutions can ensure mobile interactions remain comfortable?
Google's Fit app, its Android Wear-supporting Apple Health-a-like, makes a run for the Play Store, plonking all your fitness-tracking needs in one place.
The invite-only anti-Twitter reckons it will shun adverts for "society's benefit". Isn't that what we want from our social networks?
"Too bad the Post Office isn't as efficient as the weather service."
The newly introduced Apple SIM for iPads won't be making the leap to iPhone, says Apple VP Greg Joswiak.
Twitch, the popular video-game streaming service, has banned "sexually suggestive" streaming. It's not clear what sparked this dress-code clarification, but from now on, best keep your shirt on while busting virtual moves.
Google's ambitious development people aim to battle age-old diseases with futuristic technologies.
Apple Watch accessories are already out of control. The iPhone's wrist sidekick isn't even an actual, buyable thing yet, but there are a flood of straps and docks pitching for your dosh.
One problem that has been pointed out is that toxic wastewater is injected into wells that can leak and lubricate faults. We clearly need a better solution and that solution may involve satellite dishes.
This is fun and I don't care it was made by the car manufacturer. I care that someone was crazy enough to actually do it.
It's an impressive system, though it is far less like a real mother than it is like a genderless panoptic self-surveillance gadget. Which makes sense, because it is.
The corkscrew was borne out of necessity and as soon as the earliest glass bottles arrived in late seventeenth-century England, inventors began dreaming up instruments to ease the removal of corks.
This new model means that the turret's operator is finally out of the line of fire.