This Canal in the Netherlands Will Soon Be a Water-Purifying Wave Pool
Rotterdam. Not quite the place you'd be expected to surf in is it?
Rotterdam. Not quite the place you'd be expected to surf in is it?
Chances are these will never fly, but they do look amazing.
Despite claims and shouting about the death of the PC it has yet to happen, and probably never will.
It's 50 per cent smaller, 30 per cent thinner, and far more efficient than its predecessor.
Overestimating the Soviet's power meant that the US were convinced they'd be able to take out missile silos. Then came the arduous task of trying to hide them in idiotic places.
Yogi won't be going after Farmer Karasungur's pic-a-nic baskets anytime soon.
Naval warfare may still occur, but technology is always improving -- so fast that some of us still can't believe what's available isn't in the pages of a science fiction book.
We have the first three for you to enjoy.
Cyber security is vital in our modern digital world, but it's not ruled entirely by traditional computing techniques.
McAfee has failed to realise that internet comments sections already have the whole moaning thing covered.
This is an extreme close up photograph of a living human brain. Looks gross. But it's an award winning shot, too.
Why bother having to learn HTML5, JavaScript, PHP, CSS and XML, when you could just learn one?
This Secret of Monkey Island-themed Lego set is up on Lego Ideas right now and it is adorable. It's a recreation of the infamous Scumm Bar, that den of iniquity on Melee Island.
She'll apparently be in her own window, rather than taking up the whole screen. Thank goodness for that.
These days, there's a connector for almost everything: if it's not MagSafe 2 it's that weird USB connector or RCA or who knows what else. Wouldn't it be amazing if there was a single converter box to interconnect them all?
In this wild world, there is love, and there is crazy love. And then there's just crazy. Tanaka Tatsuya is full of all three. This wildly passionate Japanese artist creates adorable dioramas with miniature figurines and everyday objects.