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The Metals In Your Phone Aren't Just Rare; They're Irreplacable
Dec 06, 4:20PM
It takes a lot of different materials to make a modern day phone, and a fair number of them are of the rare earth metal variety. But a new study by researchers at Yale shows that there's another troubling detail about the supply of pre-phone components. Many of these metals aren't just rare; they're irreplaceable.
A First Look at Tomorrow's Super-Stadiums for Gamers
Dec 06, 4:00PM
The future of gaming? Huge stadiums, like those for football and soccer, with cavernous interiors and screaming fans. That's the vision of Kansas City-based architects Populous, designers of sports venues all over the world, including London's 2012 Olympic stadium.
Popular Android Flashlight App Straight-Up Lied About Selling Data
Dec 06, 3:41PM
Were you one of the 100 million Android users that downloaded the Brightest Flashlight Free app? Did you conscientiously click "no" when asked if you'd like to allow the app to track your location data? Well, too bad, suckers. Because not only has the FTC revealed that the popular, light-giving app was secretly selling data to third parties, but its "option" to refuse the data collection in the first place was one big, fat lie.
Mind-Boggling Spherical Gear Made from 3D-Printed Moving Parts
Dec 06, 3:24PM
New York-based Proxy Design Studio has given Gizmodo a first glimpse of its incredible, 3D-printed spherical gear called the Mechaneu, equal parts tactile toy and mechanical sculpture, a mind-bogglingly precise intermeshing of wheels within wheels.
Cthulhu as branding: Yesterday, the U.S.
Dec 06, 3:00PM
Cthulhu as branding: Yesterday, the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office launched a classified satellite called NROL-39, destined to carry out surveillance and security work in orbit. The official patch, above, paints a pretty vivid picture of its mission. [NASA Spaceflight; Quartz]
Gifts for Your Favorite Drone Enthusiast
Dec 06, 2:41PM
To a lot of people, drones are those scary things that kill people in Afghanistan. To others, though, they're a super-fun hobby and even a valuable tool.
21 Views Of Workers Struggling With Megastructures
Dec 06, 2:00PM
"To paint the Forth bridge" is a modern-day phrase equivalent to a "Sisyphean task": an endless job that can never truly be completed.* The gigantic struggle of maintaining—cleaning, painting, and repairing—the largest structures on earth is an awesome one, and it deserves recognition. That's the goal of our collection of photos below.
Someone's Been Siphoning Data Through a Huge Internet Security Hole
Dec 06, 1:54PM
Sometimes, something is so big that you don't notice it for a long time. You suddenly realize you're in a massive crater, say, or that a building is towering overheard. Or, in this case, a gaping security void in the internet. And someone's been siphoning massive amounts of data out of it.
Gawker Girlfriend 'Playfully' Shoots, Kills Boyfriend | io9 These Buildings Are Made with Skulls and
Dec 06, 1:53PM
Gawker Girlfriend 'Playfully' Shoots, Kills Boyfriend | io9 These Buildings Are Made with Skulls and Bones | Jalopnik The Playboy Statue That Pissed Off An Artsy Texas Town Is No More | Jezebel Study: Women Don't Like Sexually Explicit Ads for Cheap Crap | Valleywag Buy Tech Influence in NYC for Just $850
Antarctica Looks Like a Mystical Land Shrouded in Lenticular Cloud
Dec 06, 1:20PM
This might look like result of some pro-level CGI, or perhaps even a glimpse into your imagination, but in fact it's a photograph taken in Antarctica just this last week.
Report: Apple's iBeacon Location-Aware Shopping in Its Stores Today
Dec 06, 12:50PM
The Associated Press is reporting that Apple will switch on its new iBeacons service— which will provide location-aware services to your phone—across its 254 US stores today.
This Is What Deforestation Looks Like From Space
Dec 06, 12:15PM
The city of Boca do Acre is a beautiful place to live, almost completely covered by the Amazon Rainforest—for now. Because you shouldn't be fooled by the pretty colors in this image: it actually reveals the rapid rate of deforestation in the area.
Google Glass Is So Helpful It Could Reveal How Awful Your Life Is
Dec 06, 11:45AM
Google Glass has the potential to be the ultimate personal assistant: a little helper, always in the corner of your eye, keeping you abreast of your day-to-day life. Your humdrum, mediocre, monotonous, depressing life.
Verizon's LTE Just Got Three Times Faster in a Bunch of Big Cities
Dec 06, 11:11AM
Last year, Verizon bought $3.6 billion worth of spectrum, and now it's finally making use of it: its LTE coverage just got three times faster in some big cities.
Dream home: a floating glass house—or superhero headquarters
Dec 06, 11:00AM
Otto reports that "Dutch firm Paul de Ruiter Architects has won the ARC13 architecture prize for their project Villa Kogelhof," which is a great excuse to feature this awesome floating house, masterfully photographed by Jeroen Musch.
These Lamps Make Use of Your Camera Kit While It's Idle
Dec 06, 10:20AM
You love your camera kit. Of course you do, it's beautiful! But wouldn't it be great if you could make use of it—by which we mean, well, look at it—while it wasn't in use? That's where Phlite might just come in.
23andMe Has Stopped Performing Health-Related Genetic Testing
Dec 06, 9:30AM
Following demands issued by the Food and Drug Administration late last month, 23andMe has ceased all health-related genetic testing until further notice.
The World's Thinnest Condoms Are The Pinnacle Of Japanese Engineering
Dec 06, 9:00AM
I would say these condoms are razor thin, but it seems they are thinner than that. As CondomSizes.org explains, the average thickness of human hair is 0.06 millimeters. At 0.01 millimeters, these Japanese condoms are the thinnest in the world.
Twitter is teaming up with Singaporean start-up U2opia Mobile to make its feeds available to entry-l
Dec 06, 9:00AM
Twitter is teaming up with Singaporean start-up U2opia Mobile to make its feeds available to entry-level mobile phones without the Internet: you'll dial and listen to what people are saying. No, really.
WSJ: Spotify Is Planning to Introduce Free Mobile Music
Dec 06, 8:40AM
The Wall Street Journal is reporting that Spotify is planning to launch a free, ad-supported version of its streaming music service for mobile devices
Drums can sound completely different depending on where they're played
Dec 06, 6:03AM
Wow, this is really cool. Audio Zéro recently made a video called Wikidrummer that shows how the same song on drums can sound completely different depending on where the drums are played. Out in the field, on a road, underneath a highway, inside a garage, in the park and so on can change the overall feel of the drums and make it sound louder, heavier, punchier, lighter and so forth. The snare gets especially gnarly.
World's most powerful electric motorcycle looks like the future
Dec 06, 5:20AM
This brawny futuristic mini tank on two wheels is supposedly the world's most powerful electric motorcycle. The battery-powered beast can re-charge its 12.8kWh juice pack in 30 minutes and has the power of a 1000cc motorcycle. Called the Voxan Wattman, the bike can hit 0-60mph in less than 3.4 seconds and reach a top speed of over 100mph. Vroom freaking vroom.
The Weirdest Thing on the Internet Tonight: When Science Fails
Dec 06, 5:00AM
God, what I wouldn't give to be smeared out of a cannon right about now.
Real life Mario Kart is ridiculously fast and even more fun
Dec 06, 3:45AM
Mario Kart just might be the funnest video game in the entire world. Only the soulless can't find enjoyment in go kart racing with super fast Mushroom speed, red shells and Nintendo characters. So you can imagine the even more ridiculous levels of fun you can have if you turned Mario Kart into a real life race against your friends. That's basically what this is.
Seeing fog roll through a mountain is like seeing a horde of ghosts
Dec 06, 3:08AM
I'm supposed to know better. Fog is a phenomenon of weather. It's a low cloud hanging near the ground. It's shrouded moisture. It's not a haunting ghost. It's not from another planet. But why does this hypnotic time lapse of fog rolling through the Rocky Mountains from Richard Gottardo feel so supernatural? Or at least, from another world.
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