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How-To Wiki

Use Tech to Track Your Health

4 hours ago
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Wired Enterprise

Intel Sees Exabucks in Supercomputing's Future

14 hours ago
keeping track(s)

One Database Could Save the Music Business

6 hours ago
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image gallery

Avengers Assemble (in Your Art Textbooks)!

21 hours ago
a critical eye

How to Identify Good Ideas

9 hours ago
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the legend speaks

An Evening With Dr. Demento

15 hours ago
sundance film festival

I Am Not a Hipster Shows Even Cool Kids Have Soul

7 hours ago
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ghost in the machine

When Will a Motion-Capture Actor Win an Oscar?

14 hours ago
  1. Time-Travel Comedy Safety Not Guaranteed Turns Internet Meme Into Romance

    Safety Not Guaranteed might just be the sweetest, quirkiest romantic comedy ever to be based on a random internet meme.

    01.24.12 From Underwire
  2. Printed Sensors Could Help Save You From Spoiled Food

    Whenever I pick up a package of frozen raw meat from the grocery store, I wonder, "How many times did it thaw and re-freeze?" There's currently no easy way to tell, but the ambiguity could be addressed with new temperature sensors from Thinfilm..

    01.24.12 From Gadget Lab
  3. Millions Upon Millions Sold: Apple’s Blowout Quarter Puts Android Partners to Shame

    There's no slowing the Apple sales train. The company released its first-quarter earnings results to shareholders on Tuesday, blowing away analyst expectations and beating sales records across multiple categories.

    01.24.12 From Gadget Lab
  4. Inside the Animatronic War Horse Used in Grisly Trench Scenes

    Most of the scenes in Steven Spielberg’s World War I epic War Horse use real horses, but a couple of particularly animal-unfriendly scenes required the use of animatronics. Wired.co.uk discovers how special effects company Neil Corbould SFX, which has created mind-blowing effects for movies such as Gladiator, The Day After Tomorrow, The Fifth Element and [...]

    01.24.12 From Underwire
  5. Why Rakuten’s Kobo Is Amazon’s Only Global Competition

    It's quite possible that soon Kobo will be the only company standing between Amazon, Apple and world domination of e-publishing. So if you haven't been paying attention, this is just the time to tune in.

    01.24.12 From Epicenter
  6. Google Streamlines Privacy Policy to Integrate its Products

    On Tuesday, Google announced that it would be streamlining the bulk of its products' privacy policies into a single document, effective March 1. Under the banner "One policy, one Google experience," the company's new Policies site says that it is "getting rid of over 60 different privacy policies across Google and replacing them with one that???s a lot shorter and easier to read."

    01.24.12 From Epicenter
  7. ‘State of the Union’ Secret Weapon: Osama Killer

    You probably don’t know what Adm. Bill McRaven looks like. That’s because the man who designed the raid that killed Osama bin Laden spent most of his life in the special-operations world, far below the radar. Even now that he’s the top officer in charge of the U.S.’ elite forces, he usually only shows up [...]

    01.24.12 From Danger Room
  8. Hands-On: Evi App Brings Siri-Like Smarts to iOS and Android

    If you're looking for a straightforward, legal way enjoy Siri-like functionality on Android hardware -- or any Apple gear other than the fanciest of iPhones -- you'll have to enlist a Siri copycat app. The latest of the bunch, released Monday, is called Evi, which we've been testing for the last 24 hours.

    01.24.12 From Gadget Lab
  9. Sen. Ron Wyden: PIPA/SOPA Is a Congressional Wake-Up Call

    Senator Ron Wyden led the opposition to Hollywood-centric legislation that riled the net last week, and in this op-ed, he urges D.C to use the protest as an opportunity to learn and adapt.

    01.24.12 From Epicenter
  10. DIY Space Capsule Uprighting Bags Emerging

    I have made several blog posts about the uprighting system needed for space capsule Tycho Deep Space. They can all be found further down on this page in the “previously”-section. So, if you are not familiar with the previous works and thoughts please take a closer look for more details here. But, in short the space [...]

    01.24.12 From Wired Science
  1. One Big Database Could Save the Music Business with Billions of Tiny Rivulets

    In 13-plus years of writing about digital music all day, one of my favorite pieces remains ???4 Reasons Music Needs One Big Database,??? which argues that all of these MP3 blogs, music subscriptions, tweets, videos, streaming radio services, and so on are talking about the same set of music: the one that exists on planet [...]

    01.24.12 From Epicenter
  2. Lego Minecraft is Coming

    It has just been announced. Minecraft Lego is coming. The whole episode began several months ago through the worldwide beta program of Lego Cuuso. Several inventive Minecraft and Lego fans uploaded builds and concepts of what Lego Minecraft would look like. The result was a flurry of internet activity within the Lego and Minecraft communities [...]

    01.24.12 From GeekDad
  3. Video: How Gore Verbinski Wrangles Squidmen, Animators and The Lone Ranger

    ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ???? ?? ?? ?? Filmmaking great Gore Verbinski is unassuming and soft-spoken, not what you’d expect from an A-list Hollywood director whose films can cost $300 million to make. His most recent creation, Rango, was nominated for an Oscar this year for best animated feature film, and he also directed [...]

    01.24.12 From Underwire
  4. Microsoft Crossbreeds Programming Kit With Fantasy Game

    In college, Matthijs Krempel played EverQuest eight hours a day. Those days are over. But they may be coming back, in an unexpected way. Krempel is now a software developer, and he's been testing a new extension Visual Studio -- Microsoft's software development kit -- that seeks to turn programming into a game.

    01.24.12 From Wired Enterprise
  5. Pentagon Denies Downing Russian Mars Probe

    The Russians think they know why their Mars probe crashed down to Earth last week: dastardly American radars. Alas, radar doesn't work that way -- even a super-powerful U.S. military radar system named after Ronald Reagan. Welcome to another edition of Tinfoil Tuesday, our exploration of the world's least likely conspiracy theories.

    01.24.12 From Danger Room
  6. “Beloved, not Beliked’: Why TV’s Live and Streaming Audiences Are Diverging

    With live television, we flip; with video on demand, we binge. This means that shows have to catch and hold our attention in very different ways ??? not just over the commercial, but from episode to episode, season to season, and from television to videogames, Facebook, or whatever else might capture our attention on a web-connected device.

    01.24.12 From Epicenter
  7. I Am Not a Hipster Shows Even Cool Kids Have Soul

    It might be easy to write off Destin Daniel Cretton's film I Am Not a Hipster as exactly the kind of too-cool-for-school creation that its title tries to distance the movie from. But in actuality, the honorific is designed to do the opposite -- to raise curiosity just enough that you want to see the film. When you do, you won't be disappointed.

    01.24.12 From Underwire
  8. Ubehebe Crater: Possibly Younger but No Imminent Danger of an Eruption

    Death Valley's Ubehebe crater erupted hundreds of years ago rather than thousands, according to a new study, but that doesn't mean it's likely to blow again anytime soon. Eruptions blogger and volcanologist Erik Klemetti explains why.

  9. Legends of Alcatraz Takes Fox’s New Series to The Rock

    Fox has teamed up with Ford to produce Legends of Alcatraz, an alternate reality game promoting the network’s newest show about the infamous prison. The experience is set to kick off this Friday, January 27th at Alcatraz Island. By Mildred I. Lewis, originally posted at ARGNet On Monday, January 16, Alcatraz premiered on Fox. The time travelling [...]

    01.24.12 From Magazine
  10. Hackers Breached Railway Network, Disrupted Service

    Hackers attacked computers at an an unidentified railway company last December, disrupting railway signals for two days, according to a leaked government memo.

    01.24.12 From Threat Level
  1. Mitt and Newt Play Admiral, Get Lost at Sea

    If Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich proved anything at Monday night's GOP debate, it's that they're deckchair admirals at best. Rushing to bash President Obama's ideas of seapower, they misunderstood basic facts about the Navy, overlooked inconvenient evidence or endorsed things Obama is already doing.

    01.24.12 From Danger Room
  2. Dork Tower Tuesday

    Read all the Dork Towers that have run on GeekDad. Find the Dork Tower webcomic archives, DT printed collections, more cool comics, awesome games and a whole lot more at the Dork Tower Website.

    01.24.12 From GeekDad
  3. Felix Salmon: How Sharing Disrupts Media

    I???m at??DLD??in Munich, where David Karp of Tumblr and Samir Arora of Glam Media helped me understand the way that media and publishing are evolving these days, and the way in which creating, editing, and publishing are increasingly separate things which interact with each other in fertile and unpredictable ways. There are lots of ways [...]

    01.24.12 From Epicenter
  4. Steam Power Conference Anything But Boilerplate

    More than 88 years after the last Stanley rolled off the assembly line, steam power devotees and developers gathered for the first annual Steam Automobile Club of America (SACA) conference last week. Although the event focused on the future, there was ample time devoted to preserving the past. The event was jointly hosted by SACA [...]

    01.24.12 From Autopia
  5. What Price for Getting PS Vita First?

    It took me a little while to realize that the First Edition Bundle of the PS Vita was available a week sooner (15th Feb) than the general PS Vita release (22nd Feb). I know, the clue’s in the name, I must just be a little slow. However, now I’ve caught up with everyone else pre-ordering [...]

    01.24.12 From GeekDad
  6. Interview: Daniele Bolelli, Author of 50 Things You’re Not Supposed to Know: Religion

    I recently received a copy of the book 50 Things You’re Not Supposed to Know: Religion??as a gift from a friend. It looked like a neat little book – actual size is about a 5″x5″ square – so I thought I would browse through it and put it on the table with the magazines. I [...]

    01.24.12 From GeekDad
  7. So What Happened to Lincoln Logs?

    My Dad was an engineer so I had lots of toys for which building was a part of the playing. We had an infinite number of Legos and Tinker Toys and an Erector Set that sort of scared me in its complexity. In fact, I don’t remember doing much with that one, although I remember [...]

    01.24.12 From GeekDad
  8. Thingamagoop, a DIY Electronic Instrument

    The Thingamagoop is a fun music maker, a self-contained synthesizer that creates beeps, squawks and howls and other electronic noises when you play with the buttons, switches, and knobs. One of the most unique aspects of the Thingamagoop is its LEDicle, an antenna-like wire with a LED on the end, which not only looks cool, [...]

    01.24.12 From GeekDad
  9. In-Depth Review – Eureka: 501 Adventure Plots to Inspire Game Masters

    Today I’m reviewing Eureka: 501 Adventure Plots to Inspire Game Masters, a book produced by the authors of the GnomeStew RPG blog. Dan Danahoo first mentioned Eureka here on GeekDad back in August of 2010, but I’ve decided it deserves an in-depth review. I am reviewing the PDF version of the book which comes in [...]

    01.24.12 From GeekDad
  10. DIY Lego Lunchbox

    Tom Heck published a detailed how-to for turning an old Lego storage container into a lunchbox for his son. Tom’s son took it to school for the first time on Monday and his friends (all of them Lego fanatics) loved it. This project makes me wonder what other geeky containers could be turned into lunchboxes [...]

    01.24.12 From GeekDad
  1. Strange Forgotten Space Station Concepts That Never Flew

    Astronauts living and working in space rely on the International Space Station as their port of call. The iconic ISS is a modern engineering triumph, zipping around the Earth every 90 minutes at a height of 200 miles above the surface.

    01.24.12 From Wired Science
  2. When Will a Motion-Capture Actor Win an Oscar?

    Andy Serkis remembers clearly his introduction to motion-capture technology. The actor arrived in New Zealand to take on the role of J.R.R. Tolkien’s gnarly Gollum in The Lord of the Rings trilogy, and faced an extreme proposition. “My very first scene was 5,000 feet on top of a real volcano,” he recalls. “I was standing [...]

    01.24.12 From Underwire
  3. Profit vs. Principle: The Neurobiology of Integrity

    Are the values we hold most dear truly sacred? Or are they merely cost-benefit analyses masquerading as noble intent? Let your better self rest assured: Sacred values truly are special, concludes a new study on the neurobiology of moral decision-making.

    01.24.12 From Wired Science
  4. Intel Sees Exabucks in Supercomputing’s Future

    On Monday, Intel shelled out $125 million to buy Infiniband from Qlogic, a little-known maker of data center networking switches and cards. It seems like an odd move. Infiniband is a networking fabric technology, similar to Ethernet, but not nearly as widely used. So why is Intel paying millions for technology that lost out in the business world? Because supercomputing systems are now turning into big business.

    01.24.12 From Wired Enterprise
  5. Meet the Air Skylanders: Sonic Boom and Whirlwind

    Today in our “Meet the Skylanders” series we look at the two Air element characters that are available: Sonic Boom and Whirlwind, two winged dragons that look quite similar but behave very differently in the game. With the other two Air element Skylanders not yet released (Zeus-styled Lightning Rod and turtle-powered Warnado) this is one [...]

    01.24.12 From GeekDad
  6. Jan. 24, 1848: Gold!

    Fortune seekers transform California but, as with the dot-com "gold rush" a century and a half later, most get nothing.

    01.24.12 From This Day In Tech
  7. Pentagon Looks to Sabotage Pakistan’s Bomb Supply

    The Pentagon's bomb squad has a new idea to thwart Afghan insurgents' weapon of choice: by adding chemicals that'd render its main ingredient non-explosive or even make it lethal to the bomb builders themselves.

    01.24.12 From Danger Room
  8. Tweaking Its Identity Stance, Google+ Now Allows Nicknames

    In the initial Google+ sign-up process, questionable profile names were flagged by Google's algorithmic recognition system, and users were prompted to try again. The same system will still recognize alternate names, but will begin to allow specific exceptions like nicknames, maiden names and names with alternative spelling.

    01.24.12 From Gadget Lab
  9. 10K Reasons to Worry About Critical Infrastructure

    A security researcher was able to locate and map more than 10,000 industrial control systems hooked up to the public internet, including water and sewage plants, and found that many could be open to easy hack attacks, due to lax security practices.

    01.24.12 From Threat Level
  10. Sputnik Launch Tower Be Gone

    Today the launch tower of launch platform Sputnik was removed. It was done because Sputnik needs to service missions where we need a free flat deck for the LES test of Tycho Deep Space and a new and smaller launch tower for rockets SMARAGD and SAPPHIRE. The new tower for the “minor” rockets will be removable [...]

    01.24.12 From Wired Science
  1. Creepy Animatronic Baby Is Creepy

    This video popped up on my robotics feed over the weekend. I realize it is a prop for a TV show, but I can’t help but be creeped out by it. I assume it will look better with some clothes and skin, but I wouldn’t put any money on it.

    01.24.12 From GeekDad
  2. The Disneyfication of Tech

    Users are caught between tech and media and neither is looking out for our interest.

    01.24.12 From Webmonkey
  3. An Evening With Dr. Demento

    The legendary DJ of geeky music takes a college crowd on a trip down memory lane.

    01.24.12 From GeekDad
  4. Digitize Film Movies With Your iPhone Using the LomoKino Adapter

    Man, this gadget has to be the niche-est of niche gear we’ve seen in a while, but it’s certainly neat enough to get a mention. It’s the LomoKino Adapter, and it helps you digitize film movies with your iPhone. That actually sounds pretty handy, until you realize that it requires you to have both an [...]

    01.24.12 From Gadget Lab
  5. New Sony Sensors for Cellphones Offer Low-Light Shooting and HDR Video

    Sony has come up with a new CMOS sensor design for use in cellphone cameras, and it should improve both low-light stills photos and give you better movies. It won’t be long now before anyone but super-serious photographers can ditch their regular cameras entirely. The sensors bring two new features: RGBW Coding and built-in HDR [...]

    01.24.12 From Gadget Lab
  6. Multi-Touch iPad E-Book Lets You Flip Pages Like a Deck of Cards

    It uses Apple’s private, undocumented programming APIs, so it’s unlikely ever to be seen in the App Store, but that doesn’t make this e-book page-flipping design any less amazing. The demo, from KAIST Institute of Information Technology Convergence, shows us just how lame our current e-books are. Most tablet-based e-readers have a fancy page-turn animation, [...]

    01.24.12 From Gadget Lab
  7. The Fifty-Dollar Follow Focus

    You may be able to guess exactly what the following product is, based solely on its name: The Fifty-Dollar Follow Focus. That’s right, it’s a way of cheaply adding a follow-focus lever to your video-shooting DSLR. Just one thing: it costs a minimum of $60, not $50, thanks to shipping fees. The Fifty-Dollar Follow Focus [...]

    01.24.12 From Gadget Lab
  8. A Google-a-Day Puzzle for Jan. 24

    Google's daily brainteaser helps hone your search skills.

    01.24.12 From GeekDad
  9. Gallery: Avengers Assemble (in Your Art Textbooks)!

    Marvel Comics splices its blockbuster supergroup The Avengers into art history's storied annals in its latest series of variant covers.

    01.23.12 From Underwire
  10. How Do We Identify Good Ideas?

    How can we sort our genius from our rubbish and become better at self-criticism? Frontal Cortex blogger Jonah Lehrer reports on a new study suggesting the surprising power of sleeping on it.

  1. With New Ad Roll-Outs to Come, Twitter Acquires Anti-Malware Start-up

    Losing no steam in its recent acquisition spree, Twitter announced Monday that it had bought anti-malware start-up Dasient, an acquisition aimed at boosting confidence in the safety and security of its burgeoning advertising network. Dasient is a leader in the prevention of “malvertising,” the practice of incorporating malicious code and links to harmful sites into [...]

    01.23.12 From Epicenter
  2. Shut Up and Play the Hits Documents LCD Soundsystem’s Final Days

    Shut Up and Play the Hits -- which premiered Sunday night at the Sundance Film Festival here, with Murphy and the filmmakers in attendance -- gives us a fly-on-the-wall look at the final hours of a band completely self-conscious of its destiny, yet still on the brink of the unknown.

    01.23.12 From Underwire
  3. Judge Orders Defendant to Decrypt Laptop

    A judge on Monday ordered a Colorado woman to decrypt her laptop computer so prosecutors can use the files against her in a criminal case. The defendant, accused of bank fraud, had unsuccessfully argued that being forced to do so violates the Fifth Amendment’s protection against compelled self-incrimination. “I conclude that the Fifth Amendment is [...]

    01.23.12 From Threat Level
  4. Why a Cheap iPad Won’t Threaten the Kindle Fire

    When it launched last November, Amazon's Kindle Fire was touted as the first tablet to seriously challenge Apple's iPad. Since then, the iPad and Kindle Fire have seemingly been embroiled in a zero-sum war of tablet market dominance. But perhaps that's not exactly what's going on.

    01.23.12 From Gadget Lab
  5. In Me @the Zoo, Web Celeb Chris Crocker Offers Window on Internet Generation

    In new the documentary Me @the Zoo, directors Chris Moukarbel and Valerie Veatch examine the lives of young people through the eyes of Chris Crocker, whose "Leave Britney Alone!" YouTube defense of pop star Britney Spears in 2007 made him the kind of internet famous that's only been possible in the last seven years.

    01.23.12 From Underwire
  6. Mind-Bending Science Fuels Red Lights

    How did you do that? That's the question always asked of magicians and Hollywood visual effects gurus, and it easily could be put to director Rodrigo Cort??s about his latest film, Red Lights.

    01.23.12 From Underwire
  7. Homeland Security Wants to Spy on 4 Square Miles at Once

    The Department of Homeland Security wants to take a cue from the military's experience with wartime surveillance. It's looking for a camera that can spy on four square miles -- entire neighborhoods -- at once, just like the military has. Only the people the military snoops on aren't protected by the Constitution.

    01.23.12 From Danger Room
  8. 2012: The Year of Hybrid Cloud?

    In early 2009, when I first started working with enterprises thinking about building private clouds and with communication service providers (CSPs) thinking about building public clouds, a lot of the clients??? technical focus was on what I would consider basic capabilities. It was typical to see self-service provisioning of instances based on a single virtual [...]

    01.23.12 From Cloudline
  9. Wild Whiskers Make Competitive Beard Growing a Follicle Folly

    Is beard-growing weird? Most definitely. Is it a sport? Well, I guess that depends upon your perspective. Do beardos think beard-growing is a sport? Yes. Yes they do.

    01.23.12 From Playbook
  10. Who Buys All Those Google Ads? An Infographic Breakdown

    Google cleared $37.9 billion in 2011 revenue, which equates to more than $3 billion a month, mostly from those little text ads next to your search results that neither you or anybody you know will admit to ever clicking on. Insurance and finance buys for Google Adsense words accounted for $4.2 billion of that total [...]

    01.23.12 From Epicenter
  1. Glow, Little Spewing Shrimp, Glow

    A little-known "fire-breathing shrimp" shoots out blue-glowing liquid when threatened. Laelaps Brian Switek reports on the crustacean's curious behavior.

  2. Iran Tensions Remain, Even as U.S. Aircraft Carrier Passes By

    Despite weeks of threats, Iran didn’t stop a U.S. aircraft carrier from sailing through a vital waterway just off its shores. But that doesn’t mean the Pentagon thinks the recent tension with Tehran has calmed. “I don’t know that you can take this one transit and establish a trend here,” said Navy Capt. John Kirby, [...]

    01.23.12 From Danger Room
  3. Warp, Alan Wake Dated For February

    The puzzle-stealth-action platformer Warp will kick off Microsoft’s Xbox Live House Party, an annual lineup of weekly downloadable games, the Xbox 360 maker said Monday. Warp will launch for Xbox Live on February 15 at 800 Microsoft Points ($10). Publisher Electronic Arts said it will be downloadable on the PlayStation 3 and PC on March [...]

    01.23.12 From Game|Life
  4. Google’s Chrome Browser Sprouts Programming Kit of the Future

    Among Silicon Valley developers, The Next Big Thing is Node. Node is short for Node.js, a new-age programming platform based on an engine at the heart of Google's Chrome browser. It's suited to building network applications that juggle scads of information streaming to and from other sources. In other words, it's suited to the modern internet.

    01.23.12 From Wired Enterprise
  5. Algorithmic Education (including the Mathematics of Cramming)

    The timing of some studying methods is more effective than others, but results vary from person to person. Mathematician and Social Dimension blogger Samuel Arbesman reports on a new study that boils the options down to a handful of "model student" algorithms.

  6. I Spy Your Company’s Boardroom

    Security researchers discover they can remotely infiltrate conference rooms in some of the top venture capital and law firms across the country by simply calling in to unsecured videoconferencing systems they found by doing a scan of the internet.

    01.23.12 From Threat Level
  7. Hack Swaps Google???s Search Plus Your World Results for the Wider Social Web

    Developers at Twitter, Facebook and MySpace have put together a demonstration of just how much relevancy Google sacrifices in order to push Google+. There's even a bookmarklet available that will swap the Google+-only results for a wider range of social network results.

    01.23.12 From Webmonkey
  8. Toyota 2000GT EV Conversion Is Solar-Powered Sacrilege

    We love electric vehicles, but even we think making a solar EV out of a mint-condition Toyota 2000GT is going too far.

    01.23.12 From Autopia
  9. Minecraft Mod Recreates Entire Zelda World

    You might think that after two years of non-stop Minecraft maps, mods and artful re-creations of everything from Mario statues to genitalia, nothing that modders do could be that impressive anymore. Well, you be the judge: YouTuber Benny Girard has re-created the entire overworld of The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time. As you can [...]

    01.23.12 From Game|Life
  10. Review: Celeste and Jesse Forever Makes Audience Laughcry at Sundance

    Andy Samberg and Rashida Jones play a longtime couple whose storybook marriage is slowly dissolving in this anti-romantic comedy, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival.

    01.23.12 From Underwire
  1. Expertsourcing (Or, How to Test a Product Without Losing It in a Bar)

    The race is all about finding and fixing bugs faster, cheaper and everywhere, in every condition, before an end-user even gets a chance to see them. If that means rounding up an ad hoc flash mob of experts to swarm countries from Turkey to Indonesia with smartphones in hand, so be it.

    01.23.12 From Epicenter
  2. Indie Game: The Movie Levels Up From Kickstarter to HBO Deal

    The success of Indie Game: The Movie, a documentary optioned by HBO for development into a TV series after its Sundance premiere Saturday, strangely mirrors the film's glimpse into the topsy-turvy world of videogame makers.

    01.23.12 From Underwire
  3. Shit Photojournalists Like Gains Steam in First Year

    The witty and bitingly honest blog Shit Photojournalists Like just celebrated one year of snark and insight into the photojournalist community. The blog is the brainchild of Taylor Glascock, 23, who for the past 12 months has been finding a way to force photojournalists to confront much of the eccentric, egotistical and straight-up weird shit [...]

    01.23.12 From Raw File
  4. Google Tweaks Search Results to Punish Ad-Heavy Websites

    Google has changed its search results algorithm to punish websites that bury their content under excess advertising. Oddly, in some cases, Google's own pages are prime offenders.

    01.23.12 From Webmonkey
  5. Curious Snow Leopard Cub Steals Camera Trap

    A camera trap set on the Afghan Border has captured images of elusive snow leopards, but also the moment when one of the cubs made off with a cameras.

    01.23.12 From Wired Science
  6. Supreme Court Court Rejects Willy-Nilly GPS Tracking

    The Supreme Court said Monday that law enforcement authorities might need a probable-cause warrant from a judge to affix a GPS device to a vehicle and monitor its every move — but the justices did not say that a warrant was needed in all cases. The convoluted??decision??(.pdf) in what is arguably the biggest Fourth Amendment [...]

    01.23.12 From Threat Level
  7. Two Restless Calderas: Santorini and Long Valley

    It is very easy to be distracted by Yellowstone as the only caldera in town, but there are plenty of other caldera systems worldwide — many of which have been much more active in geologically recent times (last 10,000 years) than Yellowstone. Two of these “restless calderas” include Santorini in the Aegean Sea off of [...]

  8. Are Expensive Batteries Worth the Extra Cost?

    You pay more for name brand batteries, but are they worth the cost? Dot Physics blogger Rhett Allain gets out a voltmeter in the name of your wallet.

  9. Livin’ at the Corner of Dad & Technology: The Influence of Music

    I’m starting to sound like an old man. I’m starting to sound like my father. That’s a tough concept to wrap one’s head around as we age as parents, but it’s there and there isn’t much we can do about it. So what brought on this lamentation of age? Was it wisdom? Was it some [...]

    01.23.12 From GeekDad
  10. 4 Quick Card Games

    As you can probably tell from my game reviews, I like a nice, hefty board game with some strategic depth and lots of bits. But I like quick games, too, ones that I can toss in my backpack or grab on the way out the door. Sometimes when I don’t have time to sit down [...]

    01.23.12 From GeekDad
  1. Through the Portal With ThinkGeek

    For Christmas I was lucky enough to receive several gift cards for our buddies over at ThinkGeek.com. What did I buy, you ask? Portal paraphernalia! Thinkgeek.com has the largest selection of my and my son’s favorite two-player action puzzle game I have yet to find anywhere. I picked up the Plush Portal 2 Turret and [...]

    01.23.12 From GeekDad
  2. Bodum Bistro Drip Coffee Maker: It’s Not Bitter

    Danish kitchenware supremo Bodum has granted itself a do-over on the worst machine in your kitchen: the coffee-embittering drip machine. The new Bistro is a cross between old-school percolator and currently-fashionable pour-over coffee. And for convenience, it looks hard to beat. When you wake up, you head–like any rational human–to the kitchen to make coffee. [...]

    01.23.12 From Gadget Lab
  3. BodyMedia Gives the Raw Data

    Last week I??reviewed??the Striiv, and this week I’ll look at the BodyMedia FIT system. Full disclosure: I was provided with a review unit of the CORE system for this evaluation. The BodyMedia FIT CORE????is available from Amazon and other stores starting at $143 for the basic device, but it’s worth it for the slight upgrade [...]

    01.23.12 From GeekDad
  4. GeekDad Puzzle of the Week: Anagram Headlines

    Max Porter, the Roving Reporter, was just reprimanded by his editor for having too many spelling mistakes in his stories. While they weren’t technically misspelled words, Max fell prey to the most insidious of “spellcheck” errors — mistyping one word in a way that actually makes another word! His punishment for this misdeed is that [...]

    01.23.12 From GeekDad
  5. Past Reviews: How’d Stuff Hold Up?

    I’ve been reviewing gadgets, electronics, games, and geeky products in general for GeekDad since May of 2007. Looking back through it all, that’s a lot of stuff. And the plan is to keep going. But one of the things I’m often asked by people is how products hold up after the initial testing. I can’t [...]

    01.23.12 From GeekDad
  6. How to Picture a Black Hole

    This month, researchers are inaugurating the Event Horizon Telescope, a project that will try to take the first detailed pictures of the supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy.

    01.23.12 From Wired Science
  7. MIT Genius Stuffs 100 Processors Into Single Chip

    Tilera squeezes cores onto chips -- lots of cores. A core is a processor, the part of a computer chip that runs software and crunches data. Today's high-end computer chips have as many as 16 cores. But Tilera's top-of-the-line chip has 100.

    01.23.12 From Wired Enterprise
  8. Jan. 23, 1911: Science Academy Tells Marie Curie, ‘Non’

    From the point of view of the French Academy of Sciences, Marie Curie didn't have what it takes to be a scientist.

    01.23.12 From This Day In Tech
  9. Newt’s Plan to Overthrow Iran: Bombs, Hackers, Popes and Oil

    A look at the Republican frontrunner's zany, zany program for Iran.

    01.23.12 From Danger Room
  10. Learn About Half Notes With GarageBand Music Theory

    Last week, we covered the idea of Note Duration and Whole Notes. This week we move onto Half Notes. Half Notes are literally half the value of a Whole Note. A Whole Note is held for four beats, therefore a Half Note receives two beats. The Half Note looks like a Whole Note with an [...]

    01.23.12 From GeekDad
  1. Alt Text: Give Gamers the Ignorance They Crave

    Kotaku recently launched Kotaku Core, a sort of newsfeed subsite that strips out all the stories about pointless topics like videogame politics, videogame culture, sexism in videogames and the tendency of videogame fanatics to avoid thinking about anything outside their tiny little world of achievements and death matches. With Kotaku Core, you get access to [...]

    01.23.12 From Underwire
  2. How an Olympic Runner Is Making an F1 Team Faster

    A once-great Formula 1 team hires a former Olympian to shave time from its pit stops.

    01.23.12 From Playbook
  3. Boeing’s Biggest 747 To Fly With Empty Tail Tanks

    Boeing will deliver its newest, biggest airplane soon, but the behemoth won’t fly quite as far as the company hoped. The new 747-8 Intercontinental is the passenger version of Boeing’s biggest jumbo jet, and a problem discovered in testing means customers can’t use the fuel tanks in the horizontal stabilizers ??? at least not yet. [...]

    01.23.12 From Autopia
  4. Where Are the Educational Apps for Adults?

    A good friend and I often get together to learn new things, have discussions, and work on projects. We sometimes talk about learning things through decent educational apps designed for kids, but this prompted my friend to ask, “Why don’t they make good educational apps for adults?” He had a good point. My hasty reply [...]

    01.23.12 From GeekDad
  5. RIM Reboots: New CEO, New Board, New Plan to License QNX Software

    Blackberry maker Research In Motion had an awful 2011, losing three-quarters of its market value and further ground to competitors on Google, Apple and even Microsoft’s platform. But after founder/CEO Mike Lazaridis and co-CEO Jim Balsillie resisted public calls to change course or resign their posts for so long, now that they’ve done both, it’s [...]

    01.22.12 From Epicenter
  6. Robot and Frank Shows Softer Side of Robo-Helpers at Sundance

    PARK CITY, Utah — Not every robot helper ultimately turns into a vengeful Cylon. That’s the message of Robot and Frank, a touching and futuristic film from first-time director Jake Schreier about a gruff old man whose grown son gives him a caretaker robot. Frank, played by the ever-endearing Frank Langella (Frost/Nixon), may be an [...]

    01.22.12 From Underwire
  7. Anonymous Documentary We Are Legion Peels Back Hacktivist Group’s History

    PARK CITY, Utah — New documentary We Are Legion puts an actual human face on Anonymous, the hacktivist group whose members usually are seen wearing Guy Fawkes masks — if they are seen at all. Considering Anonymous’ retaliatory acts against websites run by the Department of Justice and the entertainment industry just last week in [...]

    01.22.12 From Underwire
  8. Tim and Eric Unleash Filthy Billion Dollar Movie at Sundance

    Arguably the filthiest comedy of the decade so far, Billion Dollar Movie's R-rated blend of arch parody and gross-out slapstick builds on a high/low formula that earned its Webby Award-winning creators an avid cult following thanks to their bizarre cable TV series Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! and other projects.

    01.21.12 From Underwire
  9. Leaving the Wired Science Blog Network

    After much thought I’ve decided to leave this wonderful science blog network here at Wired. It wasn’t an easy decision that’s for sure. I’ve been pondering for several months how transitioning from a job as a research scientist in industry to a tenure-track professor would affect this blog. It takes time to blog. And it [...]

  10. Exclusive Clips: Horror Satire Reanimates Mary Shelley’s Frankenhole

    Trendy vampires and zombies are much too limiting for the Frankensteinian fun of stop-motion spoof Mary Shelley’s Frankenhole. In fact, the horror genre has so many cool creatures to offer that they could easily fill the bill of a killer talent show, as seen in the clips above and below for the show’s Season 2 [...]

    01.20.12 From Underwire
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