Hang These Polyhedrons Wherever You Need Some Colourful Geometry
This floating DIY sculpture by Swedish designer Clara von Zweigbergk will bring a bright burst of colour to a sunny room—after you've taken a refresher in geometry.
This floating DIY sculpture by Swedish designer Clara von Zweigbergk will bring a bright burst of colour to a sunny room—after you've taken a refresher in geometry.
It's a twist on the idea of the Panopticon prison, keeping an eye on everyone using an aerial infrared camera
Every time I see illustrations like this I long for immortality. Or at least a couple of hundred years in good health so I can see some stuff like this in real life.
The Empire Strikes Back: Uncut is a shot-for-shot remake of Episode V, composed entirely of 15-second clips filmed and submitted by (very) creative enthusiasts.
Yay, more leaks that might now show off a new part of a new iPad.
A new mind-controlled prosthetic hand from researchers at Case Western Reserve University is so advanced that amputees can feel detailed textures and handle delicate objects. And yes, it sort of looks like Luke Skywalker's hand.
Fede Alvaraz made a YouTube short on a small budget that landed him a Hollywood contract. Canon's ad is a remarkably similar tale, but changes the make of camera
This story shows that there's only one thing worse than an evil being: A total imbecile.
Terry Gou claims that the whole situation is just a "distorted view of reality", one that is "created by competitors".
There is a new iOS app called Vent devoted to letting people complain about their lives. It's a shitstorm in the making.
That's with EE, Vodafone, and Three. O2 still requires each request to be processed by a real person.
Until soldiers ride into battle on top of mechanical war wolves, they'll just have to settle for packing an entire nine-man squad into the nearly unstoppable DAGOR from Polaris.
It's almost like a scene from Star Wars
Most of us want to believe that our cities are unique, special snowflakes, unlike anywhere else in the world. But a new study analysing 131 different city grids has found that every city falls into one of four categories.
Space is expansive: looking up to the stars, it can sometimes feel like everything sits on a single, two-dimensional sheet held up above us. It doesn't, of course—so how do we measure how far away things are?
Here's a photo of the Sun looking like a Jack O'Lantern taken by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory on October 8, 2014, a blend of two light wavelengths (171 and 193 angstrom.)