A Real Space Battle Wouldn't Look Anything Like the Movies
An actual space battle would probably be very fast, very boring, and extremely quiet.
An actual space battle would probably be very fast, very boring, and extremely quiet.
This team created an optical setup that bends light waves around a small object.
The lengthy wait for a cancer diagnosis can be one of the most stressful periods of the illness. But what if you could diagnose yourself, without the need for a doctor, in an instant, with a smartphone camera? Research into mantis shrimp eyes could make that possible.
No one inside the country can access the image-sharing social media site.
A security flaw in iOS 8 discovered over the weekend has been identified as a false alarm.
Although the NES Power Glove found only limited use on that platform, modern day tinkers with access to cheap and simple microcontrollers can now turn these 25-year-old video game artefacts into futuristic wearables.larg
The GoPro leak machine just keeps on leaking: PetaPixel just revealed that GoPro will add a low-spec, budget model to the bottom of its action cam line. Meet the HERO.
It promises not to bend or warp—even under the load of a Sunday lunch-feast.
Vasily Klyukin is the Russian co-owner of Russian commercial bank Sovcombank. He is also, if these sketches of his latest architecture project are anything to go by, a little insane.
The folks at Carphone Warehouse decided to unbox the new Z3 in its natural habitat—completely submerged underwater. Click through to watch the video.
When they house 1.5 million people, and with 85% of residents owning mobile phones, it makes some sense to have them on side.
Better still they're small, discrete, and not that costly.
Soon you could be wearing your LG phone on your wrist!
The historic city of Bruge can't handle the number of tanker trucks needed to get the beer from the age-old inner-city breweries to the modern out-of-town bottling plants, so they're building a pipeline connecting the two, to fix the issue.
BitTorrent: It's how you get movies and music for free. But if the musicians and filmmakers who are losing to pirates want to survive, they're going to have to give BitTorrent a big hug.
Regulators have sent Google a six-page document with guidelines on how it should be treating user privacy.