Hong Kong Subway Study Shows How Quickly Bacteria Travel Across a City
The findings are both fascinating and terrifying.
The findings are both fascinating and terrifying.
BRB, going to hide in a ground floor room forever.
With Paris Hilton, Kim Dotcom, and John McAfee all jumping into the ICO world in one way or another, it seems worth asking what the hell this whole thing is about.
Few cities represent the remarkable 20th century trend of skyscraper-filled, obscenely dense cities better than Hong Kong.
The world never looks cooler than when it does during the blue hours of dawn and dusk.
This stunning video lets us see Hong Kong flipped on top of itself. Read More >>
Hong Kong's beaches are suddenly covered in incredible amounts of rubbish, and nobody knows why. Read More >>
Finding the space to bury the dead is a huge ongoing problem in cities and new, unconventional projects are springing up to meet demand.
DealExtreme: free-shipping you the off-brand, off-world oddities you crave. Possibly.
Months of careful planning went into Hong Kong's first drone delivery, with the aim of getting a chocolate bar across the city.
Dozens of Hong Kong motorists and pedestrians rushed to grab handfuls of the money after an armoured truck's doors accidentally opened on a busy road.
No one inside the country can access the image-sharing social media site.
National Geographic's Photo of the Day—captured by Simon Kwan—shows Hong Kong in all its glorious urban madness. When I first saw it I thought it was a collage made with multiple shots and mirrored images. It's not. It's just the city photographed from Beacon Hill.
It's on time 99.9 per cent of the time, and it generates rather a lot of profit. It's all thanks to the AI overlord.
It's a time-lapse from Hong Kong's recent pro-democracy demonstration.