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Nexus 5 Teardown: (Almost) No Glue For You
Nov 05, 2:25PM
The folks at iFixit got their hands on Google's new Nexus 5, and did what they do best — tore it apart. And they liked what they saw.
King Tut's Body Spontaneously Combusted Inside Its Sarcophagus
Nov 05, 2:12PM
The world's most famous mummy, King Tutankhamun, may not have had quite the civilized send off that we thought: researchers are now suggesting that a botched mummification process led to his body spontaneously combusting inside its sarcophagus.
This Quadcopter Turns Into a Self-Balancing Rolling Wheel
Nov 05, 1:50PM
Researchers at the University of Tokyo have managed to teach a quadcopter some impressive new tricks that vastly expand its capabilities past flying. Their Multi-field Universal Wheel for Air-land Vehicle—or MUWA for short—features variable pitch propellers so the thrust can be directed in opposite directions, allowing it to balance on edge like an autonomous bike wheel.
Flipp Delivers Circulars To Your Tablet Instead of Your Porch
Nov 05, 1:14PM
Smartphones and tablets may have replaced a daily newspaper for many of us, but saying goodbye to the morning gazette also meant losing those weekly circulars and a surefire way to keep track of when dish detergent's on sale. Thankfully, a new free app called Flipp, available for iOS today and Android early next year, promises to deliver all of those lost (but not forgotten) circulars directly to your smartphone or tablet.
I Bought an Apartment Just to Rent It Out on Airbnb
Nov 05, 12:50PM
In 2012 I bought an apartment specifically to rent out on airbnb. I've been managing it remotely for the past year. This post includes everything I learned as well as some revenue numbers.
The Weird Math Behind Paper Sizes
Nov 05, 12:00PM
Despite all the talk of the paperless office, for some reason most of us still seem to drown under piles of dead tree. But while we're all intimately familiar with the stuff, understanding where those weird sizing conventions came from never seems to get any easier.
Graphene Ink Will Let Us Print Circuits on Pretty Much Anything
Nov 05, 11:10AM
Modern miracle stuff graphene has been used by developers to print circuits on clothing, creating a genuinely wearable form of tech that doesn't rely on bulky watches, AR glasses or sewing computers into your flesh.
Good news, fitness freaks: Nike's Move app, which brings Fuelband functionality to the iPhone 5s usi
Nov 05, 10:54AM
Good news, fitness freaks: Nike's Move app, which brings Fuelband functionality to the iPhone 5s using its M7 motion-sensing co-processor, is now available in the App Store.
This Is What Climate Change Looks Like
Nov 05, 10:22AM
You're looking at the Upsala Glacier on the Argentine side of the North Patagonian Icefield—or at least, some of it. Because this photo shows that the glacier is rapidly retreating as a result of climate change.
Rumor: Nokia Is Readying an 8-Inch Lumia Tablet for 2014
Nov 05, 9:31AM
Two independent sources— Evleaks and Verge—are reporting that Nokia is in the process of preparing a second, smaller Windows-based Lumia tablet, which might be available next year.
Watch LG's G Flex Smartphone Bend an Alarming Amount
Nov 05, 8:46AM
LG recently launched the G Flex, a banana-shaped phone which makes use of a curved OLED screen, and it turns out that it's true to it's name: it seems to bend really rather a lot.
Good news if you're taking an American Airlines flight any time soon: it's just become the latest ai
Nov 05, 8:21AM
Good news if you're taking an American Airlines flight any time soon: it's just become the latest airline to allow personal electronics use throughout entire flights.
Google Helpouts Is Here to Help You With Basically Anything
Nov 05, 5:14AM
Have you ever been working on something, a special project or something outside the realm of normal day-to-day work stuff, and you find yourself totally stuck? As in, you have absolutely no idea what to do next? Google wants to help.
The Weirdest Thing on the Internet Tonight: Paper Plane
Nov 05, 5:00AM
A pint-sized Howard Hughes wannabe takes to the skies in his very own papercraft Spruce Goose in this adorable animated short from InkyMind.
Two planes crash in fiery mid-air collision, everyone survives
Nov 05, 4:21AM
This terrifying two-plane crash somehow miraculously resulted in no fatalities. It's insane that people could survive after two planes hit each other in mid-air. It's almost impossible that everyone could survive from the fireball and ensuing chaos after the crash. But they did. Thank God.
Nikon Df: A DSLR Monster With a Slimmed Down, Old-School Streak
Nov 05, 4:01AM
Even at the top echelons of professional photography, the lumbering DSLR is becoming a bore. Smaller shooters with big camera specs are the trend, and with that mandate in mind, Nikon's releasing the Df. The new DSLR—yes, DSLR, not the full-framed mirrorless monster of rumors—inherits its key guts from Nikon's flagship D4 in a package that's just over half the size and weight of that ogre. More than just a relatively compact full-frame camera, the Df looks like a relic from the glory days of film photography—and in a lot of ways, it shoots like one, too.
These wire sculptures actually look like people frozen in carbonite
Nov 05, 3:19AM
It's sort of unbelievable but these sculptures are all made from aluminum wire. When you look at the artwork up close, you can see each line of wire coming together to form the body of a human but when you're looking from far away it totally looks like people frozen in carbonite.
This composite photograph from WWI is better than most Photoshops
Nov 05, 2:16AM
This picture from World War I seems to perfectly capture the chaos of war. There are soldiers marching forward, there are airplanes flying above, there are bombs, there are clouds of smoke. But it's not 'real'.
An awesome guy made an insane Thor hammer that smashes everything
Nov 05, 1:35AM
This ridiculously awesome man made version of Thor's hammer Mjölnir is so impressive that even our most Thor-like human Chris Hemsworth would have trouble swinging it around. Though it's not quite the weight of 300 billion elephants, it's the closest thing to Mjölnir on Earth. That's because it's made from 10 separate pieces of steel alloyed with chromium and molybdenum. At its heaviest, it can weigh over 200 pounds.
Loving father built a prosthetic hand for his son with a 3D printer
Nov 05, 1:33AM
Kids are just the best. And dads who love their kids make them even better. Leon is a boy who was born without fingers on one of his hands. Instead of making him think he was different, his father Paul McCarthy made him believe he was special. In fact, McCarthy made a prosthetic hand with a 3D printer so his son could be excited to become a cyborg. And Leon totally is.
Gawker Dozens of Deadly Spiders Burst from Banana As Woman Prepares to Eat It | io9 Death Star Owner
Nov 04, 11:24PM
Gawker Dozens of Deadly Spiders Burst from Banana As Woman Prepares to Eat It | io9 Death Star Owner's Manual will help you get it Fully Operational | Jezebel Miss USA Dressed as Optimus Prime Because America | Lifehacker The Financial Moves You Should Make in November | Regressing The Terrifying Hell A Marathon Inflicts On The Human Body
The High Tech Movie Magic Behind Ender's Game's Zero-G Battle Room
Nov 04, 10:59PM
The on-screen adaptation of Ender's Game is already filled with enough gorgeous cinematography to get space nuts drooling, but no scene hits that space envy button quite as hard Ender's Zero-G stint in the battle school war room. Design FX for Wired talked to the film's graphic team to see what it took to make those near-operatic sequences match up to the physical constraints of space.
Scientists Think They Can Cure Alzheimer's with Lasers
Nov 04, 10:40PM
Finding a cure for Alzheimer's disease has defied medical researchers for decades now, but a team of scientists just gave us new reason to hope. They've discovered a way to zap away the bad proteins that cause diseases like Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and Creutzfeldt-Jakob (a.k.a. mad cow) disease—with lasers.
One in Five Sun-Like Stars Has Earth-Size Planets in Habitable Zone
Nov 04, 10:20PM
The odds of finding a habitable planet elsewhere in the universe just get better and better. A new study claims that one in five Sun-like stars has an Earth-size planet in the habitable zone. That adds up to about 20 billion Earth-size planets in the Milky Way alone.
This morphing table can create a virtual version of you in realtime
Nov 04, 10:15PM
Keiichi Matsuda is excited about this invention and I can't blame him: A solid table that reproduces a virtual version of anything that you put under its sensors—in realtime. You can see how it reproduces the hands moving in the clip above, but there's more:
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