Ford is embracing new levels of laziness in a future model of its Kuga, which will let users kick the back bumper to open the boot.
It’s started; the Olympic branding of everything has commenced nice and early like Christmas decorations going up in July, and there won’t be any escape. Acer’s outed an “Olympic Games Edition” of its Tegra 3-packing Iconia Tab A510.
Adobe's latest version of Lightroom, the photo management and editing tool, was released as beta back in January. Now it's been officially released as Lightroom 4, and brings with it a big drop in price; the full version now costs around £110 instead of the £250-of-so.
A US judge has told Motorola to give Apple details concerning the development of Google's Android OS, along with more information covering the recently approved purchase of Motorola Mobility by the search giant.
The rumblings over the UK's Digital Economy Act are nearing the end game, with the Court of Appeal denying an attempt by some ISPs to edit the terms of the new internet policing laws.
Our European cousins over in Germany have just smashed a load of broadband records that could see absolutely, faster-than-blazing fibre headed our way. Deutsche Telekom’s T-Labs managed to pump data at a colossal 512Gbps down one channel of one single optical fibre across Germany in a 456-mile Berlin-Hannover-Berlin round-trip.
Old Maps Online is exactly that -- a searchable database of historical maps, giving users an idea of what a lovely place where they live used to be before 1960s planners got hold of it.
Ah, passwords. Regardless of what system you use, they're a pain in the arse to manage, remember or access. But maybe there's a solution. What about making a USB dongle that enters and creates new passwords every time you plug it in?
Meet the 505-million-year-old Pikaia gracilens. Everything we know of this prehistoric "fish-like worm" is discerned from its fossils, but a close investigation reveals that these wiggly little guys might be your oldest ancestors.