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Everyone You Should Unfollow and Unfriend for 2014
Jan 04, 5:00PM
There's no better time than the new year to start afresh, and today, we ask you to turn your attention not within but without. More specifically, it's your Twitter and Facebook friends we need to talk about. That's right—it's time to trim the fat.
Top 10 Apps and Services That Are More Than Meets the Eye
Jan 04, 4:00PM
Some apps do one thing, and they do it well. Others have a host of clever, hidden uses that you might have never thought of on your own. Here are our favorite clever uses for popular apps.
How to Trade Bitcoin (And If You Should)
Jan 04, 4:00PM
There's a digital gold rush sweeping the globe as investors try to cash in on Bitcoin, the notoriously volatile cryptocurrency. Getting involved yourself is easier—and riskier—than you think.
Witness the Real Life Apollo 13 Disaster As It Actually Happened
Jan 04, 3:00PM
YouTube's lunarmodule5, a treasure trove of jaw-dropping space videos, takes us onboard Apollo 13 to relive the harrowing hour when the doomed moon mission turned into a quest for survival. No Hollywood movie could ever muster the real-life drama and tension of this moment.
Labelmaking Enthusiasts, This Is Your Apollo 11
Jan 04, 2:00PM
Unless you're obsessively organized, or love the iconic aesthetics of the old-school manual models, it's really hard to muster much excitement for a labelmaker. But somehow Epson has managed to create the perfect tiny printer for the smartphone age. For the casual user it's finally an easy way to bring a little bit of order into their lives, and for the obsessive labeller it's pretty much the equivalent of landing on the moon.
The Weirdest Thing on the Internet Tonight: Symmetry
Jan 04, 5:00AM
This film written and directed by Yann Pineill is a palindromic investigation of memory and emotion. That is, the second verse is same as the first—but backwards.
What all the fancy code in movie computer sequences actually mean
Jan 04, 1:44AM
Hey look, it's an actor looking at some computer code in a movie. He must be really smart! He must be a computer hacker! He must be able to take over the world with just his keyboard! Not quite. The code used in movies is usually nothing but some mumbo jumbo on Wordpress or Wikipedia. No, seriously. That image above showing The Doctor looking at code is a SVG file of a light wave taken from Wikipedia.
That Time Mr Magoo Saved the Earth Using Incandescent Light Bulbs
Jan 04, 1:00AM
Conventional incandescent bulbs are increasingly illuminati non-grata in the US, but there was once a time when they played a vital role in not just lighting American homes, but also protecting the country itself from alien invasion.
The Blizzard-Fighting Monster Machine We Deserve But Never Got
Jan 04, 12:30AM
The Eastern seaboard is getting some serious snow, and even though we live here in 2014—the future—we're still reduced to shoveling. Ugh. This wasn't how it was supposed to be.
You'll Need a Doctor's Prescription to Download This App
Jan 04, 12:00AM
BlueStar is a smartphone app that helps diabetics track their glucose readings, analyzing patients' blood glucose readings and coaching them on medical and behavioral changes they can make to minimize the disease's impact. But good luck finding a download link on BlueStar's site—it's the world's first prescription-only smartphone app.
The goofiest skateboard is a full circle skateboard made with 9 boards
Jan 03, 11:46PM
A regular old skateboard isn't fun enough for you? What about nine skateboards attached to each other to form a complete circle skateboard? It's the goofiest way to move on wheels since your chance of falling off is infinitely more likely and well, just look at the damn thing.
Mmmm, Beer: Watch 12,400 Gallons of Barleywine Wort Ferment, Get Wild
Jan 03, 11:00PM
What you are about to watch is beer getting weird. Before California-based brewery Sierra Nevada bottles Bigfoot, its classic barleywine-style ale, the wort goes through a six-day fermentation process that sees a whopping 24,000 gallons of liquid appear to bake like bread, roil like a contaminated foam party in Ibiza, and overflow like a sentient creature from a 1950s horror film.
Gorilla Glass Will Be Coming Soon To a Curved Phone Near You
Jan 03, 10:50PM
Gorilla Glass, Corning's enormously sturdy scratch- and crack-resistant touchscreen glass, is pretty impressive, found on billions of devices worldwide. Now, the glass maker has announced a novel manufacturing technique to make 3D shapes out of Gorilla Glass.
Gawker This Police Video of George Zimmerman's Girlfriend Is Fucking Chilling | Jalopnik Guy On Crai
Jan 03, 10:50PM
Gawker This Police Video of George Zimmerman's Girlfriend Is Fucking Chilling | Jalopnik Guy On Craigslist Will Trade You His SUV For A Week With Your Wife | Jezebel 9 Things Wrong With This Disney Princess Lingerie | Kotaku And Here's Why The Average Person Shouldn't Try Parkour | Kinja Popular Posts
A Knife Holder That Looks More Dangerous Than the Blades
Jan 03, 10:40PM
Are you bored by the conventional ho-hum design of a traditional wooden knife block? If you like everything on your kitchen counter to be a conversation piece, you can't go wrong with this Spicy Magnum Knife Set, featuring six entwined knife holders that look like they're all holding each other up.
We Finally Found What's Blocking The World's Largest Tunneling Machine
Jan 03, 10:31PM
Ever since the colossal machine tunneling under Seattle, nicknamed Bertha, was stopped in its tracks, there's been a frenzied speculation about what mysterious "object" could possibly block such a powerful machine. The answer is, at least partially, a steel pipe.
Digital Music Sales Just Dropped for the First Time Since iTunes
Jan 03, 10:20PM
In 2013, digital music sales declined for the first time since Apple launched the iTunes Store 10 years ago. Are streaming music services like Rdio and Spotify to blame?
Magical tree appears to be invisibly hovering over its tree trunk
Jan 03, 10:16PM
What a fantastic mind trip. This tree appears to be magically hovering over its tree trunk. What kind of sorcery allows this? Art. Daniel Siering and Mario Shu wrapped a tree in a plastic sheet and then painted the sheet to look like the tree's background. The visual effect makes the background look perfectly seamless.
How To Build Your Own Carbonation Rig That Adds Bubbles to Anything
Jan 03, 10:00PM
Look, Sodastreams are great for their convenience and ubiquity, but there are some drawbacks. For starters, you can only use them to carbonate water. On top of that, the cost of the replacement CO2 cartridges (which you need to keep yourself "in bubbles") is higher than it needs to be. We've explored other systems that let you carbonate cocktails, but they're prohibitively expensive and very inconvenient. We knew there had to be a better way.
Let's Talk About Whatever You Want Right Now
Jan 03, 9:54PM
Happy Friday friends of Gizmodo! And happy New Year! We want to talk to you, so we're going to round out this very snowy Friday by hanging out in the comments below, gabbing about whatever y'all please. Join us!
Architect Sentenced to Year in Jail For Firefighter's Death
Jan 03, 9:40PM
There have been plenty of civil cases against architects over the years, for all manner of negligence. But, today, an extremely rare criminal case was decided: An architect was sentenced to a year in LA county jail after pleading no contest to the manslaughter of a firefighter who died while trying to contain a fire in a home the architect had designed for himself.
Da Vinci Ascent Review: A Jack of All Vapes
Jan 03, 9:20PM
The Pax and the Firefly are both fantastic vaporizers, but they suffer from the same shortfall: neither can handle anything other than loose-leaf material. Try to vape a concentrate or essential oil and you'll be spending the rest of your evening de-gooifying your equipment. Not so with Da Vinci's latest portable offering.
These obviously irregular rings are actually perfectly round circles
Jan 03, 9:11PM
Look at these grey circles. They look bent, right? Like somebody put a ring in a vice and squeezed it? Actually, it's just an incredible optical illusion courtesy of @SciencePorn. Both circles are perfectly round. Really. No really.
Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera Review: Small, Fussy, Beautiful
Jan 03, 9:06PM
The announcement of Blackmagic's $3000 RAW-shooting Cinema Camera in 2012 caused such a stir that not many could have anticipated a followup model, so soon, that was a fraction of the cost and a fraction of the size. The Pocket Cinema Camera continues forging the path of the upstart high-end video camera.
A Bezos-Funded Center for Innovation Explores Seattle's Tech Roots
Jan 03, 8:40PM
From Seattle's well-known corporate behemoths—Boeing, Microsoft, Amazon, Starbucks, Nordstrom, Costco—to its less-obvious innovators, like Nirvana and Dale Chihuly, a new permanent exhibition funded by Jeff Bezos explores the idea that innovation is a key part of the city's identity. The Bezos Center for Innovation at Seattle's Museum of History and Industry features 5,000 square feet of exhibits which tell a story of science, design, and technology through a sense of place.
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