The Apple Magic Mouse of the Future May Wirelessly Charge
Apple's patent details how it could use near field magnetic resonance (NFMR) to send small amounts of electricity from a computer, laptop or tablet in a metre-wide radius.
Apple's patent details how it could use near field magnetic resonance (NFMR) to send small amounts of electricity from a computer, laptop or tablet in a metre-wide radius.
Google has implemented an unsubscribe option that pops up right next to the sender's address in certain types of mail.
Just because there's CGI involved doesn't mean it can't be a close as possible to the real thing.
This is The Cornershop is the brainchild of British artist Lucy Sparrow: A shop located in Bethnal Green, east London, in which every product is a hand-sewn felt version of its real life counterpart. From canned foods to ice cream to sweets to magazines, there are 4,000 products in total.
It'll stop pesky kids spending hundreds of ponds in Candy Crush if they have their own account with strict settings.
So you can be sure you aren't buying some cheap (or dangerous) knock-off.
You just need a dose of radiation/super soldier serum/billion pound inheritance to complete the get-up.
Scientists in South Korea have found a simple process to turn used cigarette filters into high-performing material that works better than graphene or carbon nanotubes in supercapacitors.
Buying things might be as simple as #buyshoes.
"Mark is lying on the operating table right in front of me, and it is obvious that his day has taken a turn for the worse. Which is too bad, because his day started out quite well". Dr. David Casarett discusses his work of bringing people back from the brink of death.
I mean, why bother with fieldwork if you can do it at your desk?
Apocalyptic science fiction has it wrong, these tunnels can outlast any rusted shell of a skyscraper.
Did you know that Facebook, YouTube, Google, or Apple don't know your passwords? But how can they match passwords when you log in, then?
This professional-grade drone not only looks cool. It also sort of works like a Transformer.
Part of a collaboration between Sharp and Kyoto University, the new material is used at the cathode to increase the longevity of batteries.
DARPA is working on technology to put smartphones in the hands of soldiers that would replace brick-sized radios and paper maps. The device? A Samsung Galaxy Note.