First-Person POV Video Recorded by a Wild Polar Bear
US Geological Survey's biologists attached cameras and radio collars to four free-ranging female Alaskan polar bears.
While the bread and butter of Gizmodo UK is in the bits and bytes of technology, we have a lot of fun in the off-topic areas, with many of the stories being filed in the WTF category. Bookmark this page for the sillier stories, from ridiculous examples of body-art, to... sausages made of skittles?
US Geological Survey's biologists attached cameras and radio collars to four free-ranging female Alaskan polar bears.
In the Soviet Union, western antibiotics couldn't make it past the Iron Curtain. So Eastern Bloc doctors figured out how to use viruses to kill the bacteria that caused infections.
Even before Spider-Man appeared in the world people have wanted to be able to climb up walls. Now, thanks to DARPA, that's looking like it might be a real possibility.
This is a star exploding 12.1 billion years ago
Researchers at the University of Michigan have just stumbled upon the most important development in laser research since the invention of the semiconductor diode in the 1950s. It promises to create a new class of lasers that use 250 times less energy than today's, and that's not even the craziest part.
Analysis of rock samples from the Moon contain traces of something slightly different from the rest of the satellite.
Climate change is no laughing matter—but maybe it should be.
Mobile phone networks were able to work out where you were long before phones came with GPS. This video explains how.
So what makes a returning boomerang come back?
That Exosuit we showed you back in February is about to embark on its first real mission.
Bad news everyone. It was suggested that the miracle 'blood + acid = stem cells' research might not have been true.
Well if this isn't cool and disgusting at the same time...
A team of Dutch engineers just published the details of a curious new invention: tiny robotic sperm that can be controlled with a weak magnetic field
Migraines are one of four types of primary headaches, and they come in two forms, those with an aura and those without. The other three primary headaches are tension headaches, cluster headaches and, the catch-all type known as, other primary headaches.
Applying mild electrical currents to your head could take away pain, help memory and improve attention – and the US military is very interested.
What better way to point out flaws in a film about space than to use a renowned astrophysicist?