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These 250-Year-Old Charts and Graphs Were the Very First Infographics
Oct 15, 1:24PM
The Enlightenment gave us many foundational ideas: Gravity! Democracy! Infographics! Wait, what? Yep. One of the age's lesser-known byproducts was the niche field of "graphical statistics," aka data visualization. And it's made more of an impact on our world that you might imagine.
Honeywell's Wi-Fi Thermostats Tell You When to Turn It Down and Save
Oct 15, 1:00PM
With people plugging more and more devices into the power grid, public utilities across the country are finding it increasingly difficult to effectively manage during peak demand. Honeywell's line of Wi-Fi-connected smart thermostats are now doing their part to help.
How Xbox Live's Cloud Computing Could Make Games That Last Forever
Oct 15, 1:00PM
At Microsoft's huge Xbox reveal last spring, the company made a big hubub about the 300,000 cloud servers it would be adding to help speed up GPU and CPU heavy tasks. But in an interview with Gizmodo, Xbox Live Lead Programmer John Bruno detailed how it could change the way we think about gaming in the future.
You Can Now 3D Print With This Spooky Glow-In-The-Dark Filament
Oct 15, 12:41PM
We've been 3D printing in metal, gold, and even sugar for years now—so it seems only natural that we'd also be able to print in glow-in-the-dark plastic. This week, MakerBot announced a limited-edition run of PLA filament that glows in the dark, just in time for Halloween.
Kindle Fire HDX Teardown: Blazing Guts (Just Pray It Doesn't Break)
Oct 15, 12:37PM
We're big fans of Amazon's new Kindle Fire HDX, but we've been waiting to see exactly what lurks within its sleek frame for a while. Fortunately, iFixit has now stripped it bare, and it's thumbs up all round—unless you wanna try and repair it.
Conan Screwed Up His iOS 7 Upgrade By Trying to Do It on an iPhone 3GS
Oct 15, 11:58AM
When iOS 7 launched, Conan showed us all how to go about installing it. But as one eagle-eyed viewer has since pointed out, he screwed up big time—by trying to install the OS on an iPhone 3GS, which doesn't even support it.
Introducing MAP: An Unbreakable, Private, Portable Navigation System
Oct 15, 11:41AM
Google Maps? Pfff. Nokia HERE? Get outta here. There's an alternative to all those navigation systems you use: it's made from 100 percent sustainable material, it's easy to share, it'll never break, you can fit it in your pocket, and it's completely private.
The World's First Computer Programmer Was a Victorian Mother-of-Three
Oct 15, 11:00AM
Does the name Ada Lovelace ring any bells? No? Seeing as you're reading this on a computer, tablet or smartphone, it should. The Victorian mother-of-three, born 1815, was the world's first ever computer programmer.
Twitter Now Lets Any Follower Send You Direct Messages If You Want
Oct 15, 10:09AM
Twitter is changing the way direct messages work. In the past, Twitter required two people to follow each other for direct messages to be exchanged in either direction; now, users have the option to change settings so that any of their followers can send them a direct message, without having to follow them back.
IBM's Watson Is Planning to Fix America's Healthcare System
Oct 15, 9:20AM
While Obama might be having a hell of a time trying to reform healthcare, we perhaps shouldn't worry too much—because IBM's supercomputer Watson is now being used to fix America's shortage of doctors.
Whales Don't Spray Water Out of Their Blowholes
Oct 15, 8:30AM
Contrary to what you may have seen in such movies as Pixar's otherwise extremely entertaining Finding Nemo, whales don't spray water out of their blowholes. Further, the whale's trachea doesn't connect to the esophagus of the whale; so when Dory and Marlin went down the whale's throat, in real life, they'd have simply been eaten.
Apple has hired Angela Ahrendts, the current CEO of Burberry, to head up its retail efforts.
Oct 15, 7:55AM
Apple has hired Angela Ahrendts, the current CEO of Burberry, to head up its retail efforts. Could Macs get any more fashionable?
Yahoo Mail Is Switching to HTTPS--Four Years After GMail
Oct 15, 7:37AM
From January 8th, Yahoo will be enabling encryption by default for all of its webmail users. That's great news—it just happens to be four years later than the likes of GMail.
Scientists Found a Compound That Keeps Marijuana From Getting You High
Oct 15, 4:57AM
Tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, is the dopamine-boosting compound in marijuana that, technically speaking, "induces euphoria" — science jargon for "gets you high." It also happens to work on the brain region involved in psychological addiction. Now, a team of researchers has identified a substance that blocks THC's dopamine effect. Why is that important? Let's have a grown-up discussion about weed.
The Weirdest Thing on the Internet Tonight: Grandma's Gift
Oct 15, 4:00AM
Just in case the opening theme song from 2006's Gift: Eternal Rainbow wasn't saccharine enough on its own, someone went ahead and created this seizure-inducing music video for it, replete with a dancing granny, infinite cookies, and a giant MacOS pointer. Because it's Japan, why the hell not.
Are These Avant-Garde Popsicles the Frozen Treats of the Future?
Oct 15, 3:00AM
Whether they're ice pops or flat Paletas, most icy treats aren't much of an adventure. But these faceted vegan delicacies up the ante: They're designed to have a smoother melt and better mouth feel and than anything you've tried before. That's right—highly engineered popsicle mouth feel. Welcome to the future. It's time to savor the flavor.
This Musical iPhone App Uses Your Phone's Camera to Remix Tunes
Oct 15, 2:00AM
Until now, augmented reality has been mostly used as a way of giving you more information about the world around you, but a new iPhone app uses your surroundings to remix the music you're listening to.
Doctor P and Adam F feat. Method Man: The Pit (NSFW)
Oct 15, 1:00AM
It was the perfect plan. First zombify a local populace, then force them into a battle to the death against chainsaw-wielding cyborg killers. And it would have worked too, if not for those meddling DJ's, Doctor P and Adam F. And who invited the M-E-T-H-O-D Man? Now everything is ruined!
Report: NSA Collects Millions of Email Address Books and Buddy Lists
Oct 15, 12:04AM
According to the latest revelation by the Washington Post, the NSA isn't just tracking what you're doing on the internet. It's also cataloging who you know, at a scope so expansive that it can barely find a way to store it all.
This Secure, Waterproof Box Is Like A Car Trunk For Your Bike
Oct 15, 12:00AM
Cycling is great, but transporting much more than your person from here to there means becoming a bit of a human pack mule. Buca Boot hopes to make the schlep a whole lot easier.
Did China Rip Off the Apache Helicopter?
Oct 14, 11:00PM
With fully integrated avionics, weapons, and communications systems, the AH-64D Apache is one of the most successful and deadly aerial assault platforms America's ever fielded, and the technology that powers it is a closely held secret. Imagine, then, the DoD's surprise when these images of what appears to be an intact AH-64D surfaced over the weekend. In China.
Tour 3 Unrealized Projects That Almost Gave Us A Very Different L.A.
Oct 14, 9:59PM
It would appear that, as a country, we're experiencing some serious regret (or relief?) in examining plans for our cities that never came to fruition. San Francisco looked at its Unbuilt SF, a similar show opened in Washington D.C.last year, and out here in L.A.—the land of broken promises and shattered dreams—there's Never Built Los Angeles.
The Plan to Conquer the Internet's Final Frontier: The Deep Sea
Oct 14, 9:40PM
Wireless internet is ubiquitous just about anywhere you can send radio waves, from airplanes to ski lifts. One place left conspicuously untouched by open wireless, though, is the ocean. Now, a team of scientists is developing a system of sensors that would connect one of the few remaining unconnected places on Earth.
Watch Felix Baumgartner's Space Jump from Every Angle Imaginable
Oct 14, 9:13PM
It's been just over a year since the nail-biter of a day when Felix Baumgartner jumped out of a shimmering weather balloon 127,852 feet in the air and reached a top speed of Mach 1.25. And now you can watch it from his point of view—and several others. Fair warning: it's still nerve-wracking. It feels like he's going to miss Earth. [Red Bull Stratos]
These Faceted Lamps Mimic the Molecular Structure of Crystals
Oct 14, 9:07PM
One of the best parts of chemistry—for a math-deficient person like myself—were the wood-and-wire molecular models that appeared in class from time to time. Those days clearly made an impression on Berlin designer Daniel Becker, too: His new collection of lamps double as molecular models.
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