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Dear Oracle: The Java APIs Are Not a Work of Art

18 hours ago
  1. A Google-a-Day Puzzle for June 5

    Google's daily brainteaser helps hone your search skills.

    06.05.12 From GeekDad
  2. Sony Goes Beyond, Partners With J.K. Rowling at E3

    Live blog coverage of Sony's 2012 E3 press conference, featuring the latest news about PlayStation 3 and Vita.

    06.04.12 From Game|Life
  3. Food Trade Too Complex To Track Food Safety

    The data-dense graphic above may be too reduced to read (here’s the really big version), but its intricacy masks a simple and fairly dire message: The global trade in food has become so complex that we have almost lost the ability to trace the path of any food sold into the network. And, as a [...]

  4. 11 Web Series to Heat Up Your Summer (Plus a Few to Avoid)

    Now that summer is here and most TV shows have wrapped for the year, it would seem that the season is upon us to go into that big beautiful place known as "outside" -- or at least stroll through it long enough to get to a movie theater. But guess what? This is the internet age! You can stay inside all year long and always have something to look at on your boob tube (or laptop, or smartphone). A surging wave of original web programming should keep couch potatoes safely ensconced until fall.

    06.04.12 From Underwire
  5. Live Blog: Assassin’s Creed III Tops Ubisoft’s E3 Conference

    Live blog of Ubisoft's 2012 E3 press conference features Assassin's Creed III, Far Cry 3 and more.

    06.04.12 From Game|Life
  6. Game of Thrones: Fantastically Creepy Finale With One Huge Disappointment

    In this week's episode of Game of Thrones, Theon Greyjoy gives a stirring speech in the face of certain doom, Daenerys Targaryen gate-crashes the House of the Undying Ones, and the Night's Watch encampment at the Fist of the First Men gets some unexpected dinner guests. Which one of those developments proves the most disappointing for fans of George R. R. Martin's books?

    06.04.12 From Underwire
  7. The Buttons Are Back on Ford’s Most Popular Model

    Ford has taken the wraps off the 2013 F-Series pickup and there's something familiar inside: buttons and knobs. Rather than outfit the new (and optional) MyFord Touch-equipped center stack with the same capacitive controls fitted to the Edge and Explorer, Ford opted for standard switchgear. But why?

    06.04.12 From Autopia
  8. Video: First Test Flight for Military’s Mega-Drone

    Up, up, and very far away. At least, that's the U.S. military's eventual goal for Phantom Eye -- a ginormous, hydrogen-powered uber-drone. The vehicle, manufactured by Boeing and designed as a huge surveillance tool, performed its first test flight at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center last week.

    06.04.12 From Danger Room
  9. Hands-On: Who Put This Dudebro Shooter in My Dead Space 3?

    Towards the end of the E3 demo for Dead Space 3, I thought to myself: Who got all this Gears of War in my Dead Space?

    06.04.12 From Game|Life
  10. E3 Struggles to Keep Up With a Transforming Game Industry

    As gaming goes digital, what's the future of a show like E3?

    06.04.12 From Game|Life
  1. Flame Hijacks Microsoft Update to Spread Malware Disguised As Legit Code

    It's a scenario that security researchers have long worried about — a man-in-the-middle attack that allows someone to impersonate Microsoft Update to deliver malware to machines disguised as legitimate Microsoft code. And now it's one of the tactics that researchers have discovered that the Flame cyberespionage tool was using to spread itself to machines on a local network.

    06.04.12 From Threat Level
  2. BP Demands Scientist Emails in Gulf Oil Spill Lawsuit

    BP has subpoenaed the private emails of scientists who studied the Deepwater Horizon oil catastrophe, stoking fears of misinformation campaigns and researcher intimidation.

    06.04.12 From Wired Science
  3. Windows 8 Tablets and All-in-One PCs Revealed in Detail at Computex

    After months of curiosity, speculation and spec leaks, the first honest-to-goodness Windows 8 devices have finally been announced. At the Computex trade show in Taipei Monday, Acer and Asus introduced a large suite of Windows 8 tablets, all-in-one PCs, and hybrid ultrabooks.

    06.04.12 From Gadget Lab
  4. EA Shows New Dead Space, Crysis, Medal of Honor at E3

    Live blog of Electronic Arts' press conference at E3 2012, expected to highlight Dead Space 3 and other new games.

    06.04.12 From Game|Life
  5. The Cardboard Internet and Other Curios by Bartek Elsner

    German artist Bartek Elsner's cardboard replicas.

    06.04.12 From Wired Design
  6. Facebook Reportedly Developing Tech to ‘Friend’ Kids Under 13

    Citing unnamed sources that have spoken with Facebook executives, The Wall Street Journal reported on Monday that the social networking giant is building mechanisms that would connect children's accounts to their parents', letting parents decide who their kids can "friend" and what applications they can use.

    06.04.12 From Wired Enterprise
  7. Homeless and Overweight: Obesity Is the New Malnutrition

    Not long ago, malnourishment was embodied by emaciation. Now it's far more likely to be hidden in folds of fat.

    06.04.12 From Wired Science
  8. Exclusive Video: Life Aboard a Stealth Sub

    Before Danger Room spent a few days aboard the Navy's newest fast-attack submarine, we didn't know what to expect. Would it be claustrophobic? Would there be any privacy? Would the U.S.S. Mississippi's crew go stir-crazy? As it turned out, all these questions had the same answer: No, as this exclusive video explains.

    06.04.12 From Danger Room
  9. Samsung Galaxy S III, Without Quad-Core CPU, Slated for 5 U.S. Carriers

    Samsung's Galaxy S III is launching across five wireless carriers, beginning this month, without its highly touted quad-core CPU.

    06.04.12 From Gadget Lab
  10. Salesforce Stink-Eyes Oracle With Buddy Media Buy

    Just weeks after Oracle bought the social marketing firm Vitrue, Salesforce.com said Monday it was buying Buddy Media -- for a cool $689 million. Is this all about chasing the chief marketing office (CMO) market with its Salesforce Marketing Cloud, or more about billionaire tech titans and a brewing battle?

    06.04.12 From Cloudline
  1. Cloud Adoption Hurdles: Maturing, But Not Grown Up Yet

    I have been speaking recently with cloud executives from HP, Dell, and other cloud providers. I have been asking what they see as the hurdles to cloud expansion. These are the hurdles that each of them feels they must leap to achieve the market share they want.

    06.04.12 From Cloudline
  2. New Firefox Developer Tools Help You Build Responsive Websites

    It took a while for the mainstream web to catch on, but these days even Google suggests web developers use responsive design to build websites that work on any screen. Now Firefox is showing off some new developer tools designed to help web developers do just that.

    06.04.12 From Webmonkey
  3. How Larry Ellison’s Jury Box Email Could Cost HP Billions

    Oracle CEO Larry Ellison had a 15-minute break with nothing else to do, so he typed up a few sentences that would end up costing HP billions of dollars. Never one to shy away from from the courts, Ellison was on jury duty in March of last year, hearing a case about a woman who slipped on a patch of diesel fuel at a car dealership in Half Moon Bay, California. One afternoon, during a break in the trial, he drafted a press release announcing that Oracle would pull the plug on all software it offered for HP servers based on the Itanium chip, a big, beefy microprocessor that HP had nurtured alongside Intel for more than a decade.

    06.04.12 From Wired Enterprise
  4. Navy, Marines Bet Big on Carrier for Troubled Stealth Jets

    The U.S. Navy just dropped another $2.4 billion on a class of new light aircraft carriers specifically designed to carry the U.S. Marines' F-35B stealth jump jet. Just one small problem: the F-35B is still plagued by design problems -- and there's no guarantee if or when they'll be resolved.

    06.04.12 From Danger Room
  5. Live Blog: Microsoft Debuts Device-Spanning Xbox SmartGlass at E3

    Live blog coverage of Microsoft's E3 2012 press conference includes new info on the latest Halo and Gears of War games.

    06.04.12 From Game|Life
  6. Nintendo Gets Direct About Wii U

    Those too engrossed in weekend parental duties to spend a dedicated half-hour engaged in pre-E3 console hype may have missed yesterday's Nintendo Direct video reveal highlighting some of the finer points of the Wii U's controller and user interface. Therein Nintendo Global President Satoru Iwata showed off the newly dubbed Wii U Gamepad, complete with its integrated second screen, and discussed its evolution from the prototype revealed last year to final production design.

    06.04.12 From GeekDad
  7. Commonwealth Celebrates Queen Elizabeth II’s Diamond Jubilee

    This week Great Britain and the other Commonwealth nations around the world are celebrating Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee. The celebrations include parades, concerts and community get-together's on all scales, from small community picnics to enormous events for thousands of people.

    06.04.12 From GeekMom
  8. A Massive Web of Fake Identities and Websites Controlled Flame Malware

    The attackers behind the complex Flame cyberespionage toolkit, believed to be a state-sponsored operation, used an extensive list of fake identities to register at least 86 domains as part of their command-and-control center, and were particularly interested in stealing AutoCAD documents from infected machines. They also appear to have updated their malware even after it was publicly exposed last week.

    06.04.12 From Threat Level
  9. GeekMom Book Club: Let’s Pretend This Never Happened – Week 1

    For June, the GeekMom Book Club will be reading Let's Pretend This Never Happened (A Mostly True Memoir by Jenny Lawson (AKA The Bloggess). This book is a little different from the previous book club picks but should have lots of opportunities for interesting discussion.

    06.04.12 From GeekMom
  10. Win Some Geeky T-Shirts From We Love Fine

    If you've never had a chance to check out all the cool and ridiculously geeky shirts at We Love Fine Tees then you don't know what you've been missing. They've got everything from The Avengers to Star Wars to Hello Kitty. I wouldn't be surprised if they've got one shirt that combines all three of those things.

    06.04.12 From GeekMom
  1. The Effect of Wind on the Stratos Space Jump

    How much will wind affect the Red Bull Stratos Jump? Dot Physics blogger Rhett Allain dissects the physics of Felix Baumgartner's upcoming stunt.

  2. Eruption Update for June 4, 2012: Popocatépetl, Nevado del Ruiz, Kilauea and more

    There is a big anniversary this week (well, other than our first wedding anniversary) – but I’ll have more on that on Wednesday. Today, I thought I’d update a few bits of volcanic news from the past week or so. If you’re looking for even more details on the week’s volcanic events, check out the [...]

  3. A Jazzy Day – Preschool Music Education on iOS

    A Jazzy Day is an iOS app aimed at preschoolers with the intention of teaching them about the different instruments that make up a jazz orchestra; the way they look, how they sound and how they all work together.

    06.04.12 From GeekMom
  4. Book Review: P.S. I Still Hate It Here: More Kids’ Letters From Camp

    Diane Falanga has gathered some of the funniest letters from camp that you will ever read. This is actually her second book of camp letters and was compiled from thousands of submissions. It's not just a re-written compilation of the letters, either. The pages of this book are full of copies of the actual letters kids wrote, complete with grammar errors that would make an English teacher cringe and an abundance of hearts and sloppy kid handwriting.

    06.04.12 From GeekMom
  5. Step Right Up to Recess Monkey’s In Tents

    Recess Monkey sings about popcorn, a human cannonball, the tilt-a-whirl, and more with an irresistible energy that delights children and adults alike.

    06.04.12 From GeekMom
  6. Dear Oracle: The Java APIs Are Not a Work of Art

    Oracle said the Java APIs were like a beautiful painting. Google said they were more like a file cabinet. And in the end, Judge William Alsup came closest to agreeing with Google, comparing an API to a library that organizes the Java programming language.

    06.04.12 From Wired Enterprise
  7. Skydiver Aims to Smash Record, Sound Barrier in 23-Mile Jump

    When Felix Baumgartner jumps from 120,000 feet later this summer, the one question everyone has is what happens when he breaks the speed of sound. No one knows, which is the point of the jump.

    06.04.12 From Playbook
  8. Teen Solves Quantum Entanglement Problem for Fun

    Ari Dyckovsky was 15 when some Bose-Einstein condensate hit him right between the eyes. It didn't really hit him between the eyes. That's just a metaphor. But metaphors are thoroughly appropriate when you're discussing a trip from the suburbs of Washington, D.C., into that alternate universe known as quantum mechanics.

    06.04.12 From Wired Enterprise
  9. June 4, 1783: Balloons That Carry Passengers? It’s More Than Hot Air

    The Montgolfier brothers develop a balloon that will soon be all the rage in Paris.

    06.04.12 From This Day In Tech
  10. Special Ops Wants Weapons to Stop Ships, Paralyze People

    U.S. Special Operations and Command (SOCOM) is looking to make a few upgrades. Among them: new weapons with adjustable intensity levels -- from non-lethal to lethal -- that are capable of doing everything from thwarting enemy ships to paralyzing, disorienting or barricading individuals.

    06.04.12 From Danger Room
  1. Like Mother Like Daughter: Laurie Simmons Passes Reality-Bending Legacy to Girls Star

    Laurie Simmons' daughter, Lena Dunham, has recently been thrown into the spotlight with the success of her new HBO series, Girls, but Simmons herself has been a well-known New York photographer for over 30 years. Both women seem to enjoy blurring fact and fiction, with viewers of Simmons' work wondering if what they're seeing is real or simulated, and viewers of Girls questioning how much of the show is from Dunham's own biography.

    06.04.12 From Raw File
  2. Alt Text: In Space, No One Can Hear You Haul

    Last week was a big deal for fans of both space travel and capitalism, as the spacecraft Dragon visited the International Space Station and, like its fantastical namesake, delivered food and computers to astronauts. The reason this is big news is not because the unmanned spacecraft is huge or advanced or armed with photon torpedoes; it's because it's a privately built and privately funded vehicle that will usher us into a shining new era in which space travel becomes banal and tedious.

    06.04.12 From Underwire
  3. Olympic Venues Stress Practicality, Adaptability, Recyclability

    From the start, London organizers wanted Olympic venues that could be reused, repurposed or removed after the Games.

    06.04.12 From Playbook
  4. Audi Goes Digital With New Rearview Mirror Replacement

    Year after year, show season after show season, automakers debut one high-style concept car after another, most of which have something in common: the lack of side mirrors. Desperate to throw off the shackles of production car baubles and legislative requirements, automotive designers all seem intent on nixing “wing” mirrors in favor of minuscule cameras [...]

    06.04.12 From Autopia
  5. Kickstarter Alert: Goblins Drool, Fairies Rule

    Some goblins have popped into our world through a fairy ring, and you need to send them back - using rhymes! Goblins Drool, Fairies Rule is a kid-friendly card game with some fantastic illustrations of goblins and fairies and a cute rhyme-based mechanic. The game is currently funding on Kickstarter (and has already shot past its original goal) so you've got about two weeks to get in on the fun.

    06.04.12 From GeekDad
  6. A Start Up Trek – Creative Commons

    So in summary creative time is good. Here I was able to work out the interactions of the different aspects of MindGear, and develop my drawing skills a little. I have to put off doing a better sketch because financial and budgeting and marketing tasks are still sitting on my desk. And finally I realize I'm about to embark on an experiment. I'm creating conflict by disagreeing with my girlfriend in public in a blog article. Next week will show how well that goes.

    06.04.12 From GeekDad
  7. Where’s My Water? Winner!

    Congrats to Chris from Franklin, Tennessee, winner of the Where's My Water? Giveaway pack. Chris will soon be sporting a Swampy the alligator iPhone case, iPad case, a T-shirt, and a set of backpack clips. Thanks to everyone who entered!

    06.04.12 From GeekDad
  8. Reminder: Celebrate Father’s Day With Geek & Sundry’s Tabletop

    Last week, we let you know about a great opportunity for you and your family to appear alongside Wil Wheaton and a gallery of geek celebrities on Geek & Sundry's Tabletop. The deadline is approaching at the end of this week, so be sure to get your entry in soon.

    06.04.12 From GeekDad
  9. Crossed Genres Magazine on Kickstarter

    Back in 2008, Geek Dad contributor Bart Leib and his wife (and GeekMom contributor) Kay Holt started up a science-fiction and fantasy magazine called Crossed Genres, which eventually grew into a full small publishing operation dedicated to bringing genre-bending novels to readers everywhere. The business lost money — as most startups do at first — which Bart and Kay were willing to absorb until both of them lost their jobs. (Update: Kay found a new job last Wednesday!) They've set up a Kickstarter drive to keep Crossed Genres Publications going, and they need your help.

    06.04.12 From GeekDad
  10. M-Edge SuperShell Cover Adds Some Bounce to Your iPhone

    Most of the iPhone cases I receive are intended to offer a combination of protection and style. Adequate protection to minimize damage if the iPhone is inadvertently dropped, while minimizing bulk so the device still retains some of it stylish sleekness. The more effective ones tend to be higher priced, often $50 and up. The latest review unit to arrive at my door throws most of these conventions out the door.

    06.04.12 From GeekDad
  1. GeekDad Puzzle of the Week: Bolder Boulder

    Here's a proud dad moment: my six-year-old, Leif, just walked or ran every step of the 10k Bolder Boulder race. Sure we had to hustle a couple hundred yards to get ahead of the cutoff van, and ended up finishing just a couple steps ahead of the elite female winner, who started about an hour and forty minutes later than we did. But running a race of 50k people to finish in the packed stadium of CU Boulder was awesome.

    06.04.12 From GeekDad
  2. Turn Your Pictures Into Plastic: 10 iPhone Tools for Creative Types

    The iPhone is a Swiss Army Knife for makers. It looks like a brick of metal and glass, but with the touch of a button, instantly becomes almost any tool required.

    06.04.12 From Wired Design
  3. Get Ready for This Week’s Transit of Venus

    Tips on how to view Tuesday's Transit of Venus, the last one in this century.

    06.04.12 From GeekDad
  4. Find the Best in SF Literature Whenever You Need It

    Adam Doppelt is something of a Science Fiction geek. He loves to read Science Fiction, especially really good Science Fiction. He also created some silly app you might have heard of, called Urban Spoon, but that’s not important right now. What is important is that Adam wanted to be able to find all the best [...]

    06.04.12 From GeekDad
  5. GeekDad Puzzle of the Week Solution: Waffle Cuts

    This week's puzzle, while delicious, caused quiet a bit of confusion and a few rather interesting answers. Here is the puzzle as presented: This morning as I was making both Max and Nora breakfast, I noticed that while their meals were rather similar in content and form, they were quite different in their divisibility. Max’s French Toast (or "pain perdu," as he prefers to call it) can be cut an infinite number of ways, as I could vary the cuts both in width/height, as well as angle. Nora’s waffle, with its rigid lines at right angles, can only be cut a finite number of different ways. So this week's GeekDad Puzzle of the Week came to me in a flash: just how many different ways could Nora's waffle be cut?

    06.04.12 From GeekDad
  6. A Google-a-Day Puzzle for June 4

    Google's daily brainteaser helps hone your search skills.

    06.04.12 From GeekDad
  7. Host of Family Feud Richard Dawson Dies at 79

    Perhaps best known for hosting the game-show Family Feud, game show host extraordinaire Richard Dawson died today at age 79 from the complications of esophageal cancer.

    06.03.12 From GeekMom
  8. One Time at Space Camp

    The summer hasn't even really started, but I'm already declaring it to be the best summer, ever. This year I was invited to attend a parent and child weekend at Space Camp. Yes, this is the same Space Camp that, if you were like me, you dreamed about attending when you were a kid. I'm happy to report it's every bit as awesome as you'd imagined it would be as a child, except for the part where a series of mishaps mean campers must go on a real space mission to save the planet from impending doom.

    06.03.12 From GeekMom
  9. Manned DIY Space Capsule Chute Jump — Step by Step Updates

    To test a parachute for a do-it-yourself space capsule, a skydiver jumped out of an airplane and pulled the ripcord. Rocket Shop blogger Kristian von Bengtson shows how the test went using photos and video.

  10. GeekMom Puzzle of the Week – #8

    Welcome to the Geek Mom puzzle of the week!

    06.03.12 From GeekMom
  1. Geode Digital Wallet: What Do You Think?

    Geode by iCache is the latest in digital wallet technology. After watching the video, I was convinced that it was something I could use. We are, after all, becoming a society of the smaller, the better. From computers starting to fit in the palm of our hand to Bluetooth devices that fit inside your ear, this device seems to fit in with our society's fast paced future.

    06.03.12 From GeekMom
  2. Top 10 Dads in Science Fiction and Fantasy (GeekDad Wayback Machine)

    It really is kind of amazing how few good dads there are in geek fiction. In so many stories fathers are absent for one reason or another (death being fairly common), and in so many others the fathers are so emotionally distant they might as well not be there. And occasionally there are the stories where the father turns out to be one of the villains. So where are the Cliff Huxtables of science fiction and fantasy? The Atticus Finches? You do happen upon dads of those stripes, or roughly equivalent ones, every now and then. Here's our list of the top 10. (Warning: Possible spoilers ahead!)

    06.03.12 From GeekDad
  3. How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love 3-D (GeekDad Weekly Rewind)

    I am not afraid to admit it: I'm a fan of 3-D movies. At its best, 3-D can add a texture and layering to the visual narrative that a skilled director and editor can spin into magic. At its worst, though, 3-D is annoying and painful. I admit that I have seen some horridly bad 3-D movies recently, but the technology is still growing, and getting better all the time. After a recent tour of 3-D cinema equipment manufacturer 3ality Technica’s headquarters and an interview with their CEO Steve Schklair, I've seen where that future of 3-D is headed, and it's looking very bright.

    06.03.12 From GeekDad
  4. Amazing Time-Lapse Movie of Disneyland Shows Off the Frenetic Beauty

    A wonderful tour of the Happiest Place on Earth, utilizing over 30,000 photgraphs.

    06.03.12 From GeekDad
  5. GeekDad HipTrax #89 (GeekDad Weekly Rewind)

    This week's theme is musical adventure, and we include a record four tracks from three amazingly geeky artists!

    06.03.12 From GeekDad
  6. A Google-a-Day Puzzle for June 3

    Google's daily brainteaser helps hone your search skills.

    06.03.12 From GeekDad
  7. Twitter Quitters Give Up Social Media Before Intense Competition

    Olympic freestyle swimmer Rebecca Adlington’s decision to cut ties with the Twitterverse during the Summer Olympic Games so she can avoid morons and trolls is an increasingly common decision by elite athletes who find it necessary to unplug during high-level competition. The 23-year-old Briton, who won two gold medals in Beijing and is expected to [...]

    06.02.12 From Playbook
  8. Adafruit Industries’ Ladyada’s Workshop Lego – A Lego Cuusoo Project

    Recently, Lego has been specifically targeting young girls in a variety of marketing campaigns, and with the addition of a Lego Friends line. This has resulted in a lot of heated debate. Enter Limor Fried -- founder of Adafruit and featured on the magazine cover of Wired in April 2011 – and the Ladyada's Workshop Lego set.

    06.02.12 From GeekMom
  9. GeekMom Puzzle of the Week #7 – Solution and Winner

    As usual on Saturday's I get to announce our Puzzle of The Week winner who was selected at random from all the correct entries.

    06.02.12 From GeekMom
  10. The Imagination Movers Get Ready for National GeekDad Day With a Soda Fountain

    The Imagination Movers started as just a bunch of dads, getting together after their kids went to bed, to make music. 9 years later, they're an international phenomenon, with a TV show on Disney Junior, and a live touring show.

    06.02.12 From GeekDad
  1. Book Review: The True Adventures of The World’s Greatest Stuntman

    Vic has been doing stunts in movies and on television since the 60's and the list of projects he's been involved with is impressive. He's been Indiana Jones, James Bond and even Superman. He gets to play all the best characters, even though no one knows it's him. Reading his stories about his time on various sets and the challenges of being a stuntman is a behind-the-scenes of some of the biggest movies ever made.

    06.02.12 From GeekMom
  2. Book Review: John Scalzi’s Redshirts (GeekDad Weekly Rewind)

    A review of John Scalzi's excellent new novel, "Redshirts."

    06.02.12 From GeekDad
  3. 2012 Venus Transit Special #3: Robot Probes for Piloted Venus Flybys (1967)

    On June 5/6, Venus will transit the disk of the Sun for the last time until 2117. To commemorate this astronomical rarity, Beyond Apollo blogger David S. F. Portree is highlighting Venus missions that were, are, and might-have-been. In the third and final installment in this special series, he describes robot probes that have actually explored Venus and unfulfilled plans for robot probes launched from piloted Venus flyby spacecraft.

  4. TableTop with Wil Wheaton: Munchkin

    Who needs television when there are YouTube channels like Geek & Sundry? One of my favorite shows on Geek & Sundry is TableTop with Wil Wheaton. TableTop is a reality table-top gaming (board games, card games, pencil-and-paper role-playing games) show where Wil invites other geek-celebrities to play new or popular board games.

    06.01.12 From GeekMom
  5. Google Blockly Lets You Hack With No Keyboard

    Google has released a completely visual programming language that lets you build software without typing a single character. Now available on Google Code -- the company's site for hosting open source software -- the new language is called Google Blockly, and it's reminiscent of Scratch, a platform developed at MIT that seeks to turn even young children into programmers.

    06.01.12 From Wired Enterprise
  6. Google Schedules a Special Maps Event — Set Five Days Before Apple’s WWDC

    Google is hosting an event to share the future and vision of Google Maps -- five days before Apple's WWDC conference and about three weeks before Google's I/O developer conference.

    06.01.12 From Gadget Lab
  7. How Fresh Blood Will Invigorate Game of Thrones

    The large number of new characters reportedly coming to Game of Thrones next season should give fans hope that the television series will hew more closely to its vaunted source material. Here's a breakdown of what the casting news portends.

    06.01.12 From Underwire
  8. Review: With Moonrise Kingdom, Wes Anderson Crafts a Living Instagram Photo

    In Moonrise Kingdom, Wes Anderson's latest movie, two 12-year-olds fall madly in love with each other on an island off the New England coast in the summer of 1965. Sam sports a raccoon cap, geeky glasses and a scout uniform; Suzy wears lurid blue eye makeup that never seems to come off, and earrings made of fishhooks. Their young love is doomed, of course, and so they run off into the wilderness together, drawing the ire of the adults around them.

    06.01.12 From Underwire
  9. Game|Life Podcast: We Predict E3′s Big News

    Wired senior editors Chris Baker and Peter Rubin, Wired managing editor Marty Cortinas and I have made it our jobs to predict what we think we'll see at the E3 Expo next week.

    06.01.12 From Game|Life
  10. Court Wary of Overturning Warrantless Spy Case Victory, But Might Have To

    PASADENA, California -- A federal appeals court appeared troubled Friday by the Obama administration's arguments that the government could break domestic spying laws without fear of being sued. A two-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals heard an hour of oral arguments here by the government and a lawyer for two attorneys whom a federal judge concluded had there telephone calls monitored illegally without warrants.

    06.01.12 From Threat Level
  1. Microsoft Goes Social With Bing Search Overhaul

    Microsoft's Bing search engine gets a makeover with social search results from Facebook stepping into the spotlight.

    06.01.12 From Webmonkey
  2. The Ikea TV Is Coming — and We Should All Take It Seriously

    Ikea media centers and bookshelves have long housed our electronics, but starting this summer, Ikea will become a full-fledged electronics manufacturer. Although it initially garnered protests and confusion among gadget enthusiasts, Ikea's upcoming television is actually a smart move -- and an indicator of the television market's maturity as a whole.

    06.01.12 From Gadget Lab
  3. Is Arsenic the Worst Chemical in the World?

    Is arsenic the worst chemical in the world? Elemental blogger Deborah Blum investigates the effects of lethal high doses, as well as chronic low doses of arsenic and reveals the frightening fact that even in this country, millions of people may be drinking arsenic-contaminated water and could be suffering health consequences because of it.

  4. Privacy Group Voices Concerns Over Google-Backed Autonomous Vehicle Legislation

    The advocacy group Consumer Watchdog is raising concerns about Google's altruistic motives when it comes to autonomous vehicles. The group sees The Big G's efforts less as a way to reduce crashes and save lives, and more as a ploy to mine and monetize even more personal data. And it wants to block a bill that would clear the way for Google’s self-driving cars to legally cruise California roads unless privacy protections are in place.

    06.01.12 From Autopia
  5. Video: Lord of the Rings, DC Heroes Get Lego-fied

    Lego is expanding into even more beloved nerd universes. At E3, Warner Bros. will show two major new entries in the cooperative action game franchise: Lego Batman 2 and Lego Lord of the Rings.

    06.01.12 From Game|Life
  6. The World’s Largest Boeing Takes Flight

    Boeing's largest airplane began passenger service today as Lufthansa enlisted the service of the new 747-8 Intercontinental on a flight from Frankfurt, Germany, to Washington, D.C. The newest 747 is a bigger, quieter and more efficient version of the iconic jumbo jet that first flew passengers under the Pan Am banner back in 1970. The 747-8I uses much of the same technology found on the 787 Dreamliner, along with an all-new wing and engines.

    06.01.12 From Autopia
  7. New Chromebooks: Has the Post PC-Era Arrived?

    With news of the latest souped-up Google Chromebooks, as well as a capitulation by Google that its cloud/web-centric Chrome OS needs to act more like a traditional OS and ditch the browser-only model, it's time to ask if we could be looking at the first post-PC era machines.

    06.01.12 From Cloudline
  8. Acer, Toshiba to Debut Windows 8 Tablets Next Week, Reports Says

    Several major PC manufacturers, including Toshiba, Acer and Asus, are set to unveil new Windows 8 tablets at next week's Computex show in Taipei, according to a report from Bloomberg.

    06.01.12 From Gadget Lab
  9. Exclusive Download: Amon Tobin Box Set Assembles Ephemeral Electronica

    Few artists have pushed electronic music's sonic envelope as ambitiously as cosmopolitan composer Amon Tobin. A new limited-edition box set, crammed with early audio experiments, film and television scores, dubplates, live bootleg recordings and other rarities offer an intriguing window into the musician's evolving creative methods. Hear Wired's exclusive preview of the track "Angels & Demons" now.

    06.01.12 From Underwire
  10. Calendars in the Cloud: No More Copy and Paste

    The humble example of a church supper -- recorded in Google Calendar or Hotmail Calendar, published on a website, and syndicated to other sites -- illustrates a general idea about personal (and organizational) clouds, writes Jon Udell.

    06.01.12 From Cloudline
  1. Surface Tension’s Watery Art Will Hit You Like a Rogue Wave

    Water is one of the chief concerns of our time: It's scarce, necessary, polluted and sacred. It's also been defined by the United Nations as a basic human right, while at the same time rapidly becoming a commodity. These tensions and contradictions form the underlying principles behind new art exhibit Surface Tension: The Future of Water, now showing in New York.

    06.01.12 From Underwire
  2. Review: Test Driving the 2012 McLaren MP4-12C

    Supercars should look like sex. This is what the voice inside my head has been insisting since I was 14 years old, when the very same (if slightly less mature) spirit guide led me to hang a Lamborghini Countach poster above my bed and doodle Ferrari Testarossas all over my Pee Chee folders. But somehow, [...]

    06.01.12 From Autopia
  3. Report: Obama Ordered Stuxnet to Continue After Bug Caused It to Spread Wildly

    Despite an error in the Stuxnet worm that attacked Iran's uranium enrichment program, which caused the malware to spread wildly out of control and attack computers outside of Iran in 2010, President Barack Obama ordered U.S. officials who were behind the attack to continue the operation.

    06.01.12 From Threat Level
  4. Gacha Watch: Player Spending Still Steady on Japan Social Games

    Even though the lucrative "complete gacha" sales technique will soon be illegal, game makers insist they are here to stay.

    06.01.12 From Game|Life
  5. Social Networks Over Time and the Invariants of Interaction

    We're all embedded within social networks, and studying those networks can help researchers quantify human behavior. Mathematician and Social Dimension blogger Samuel Arbesman describes a new study that probes the limits of our finite social attention.

  6. Why Antivirus Companies Like Mine Failed to Catch Flame and Stuxnet

    All antivirus companies, including F-Secure, missed detecting the Flame malware for two years, or more. That's a spectacular failure for our company, and for the antivirus industry in general, says Mikko Hypponen, chief security officer for Finnish security firm F-Secure.

    06.01.12 From Threat Level
  7. Internet Explorer 10 Metro: Now With Adobe Flash

    As part of the Windows 8 Release Preview, Microsoft has dropped another preview version of its coming Internet Explorer 10. As rumored, this release includes support for Adobe Flash on Windows 8 tablets.

    06.01.12 From Webmonkey
  8. Geeky Bucket List

    Recently, we proposed 50 geeky things kids should do before they're 12. But why should kids get all the fun? I asked the GeekMoms what geeky items were on their bucket lists.

    06.01.12 From GeekMom
  9. Logitech Ultrathin Keyboard Cover for iPad

    It had me at "Hello." IPad 2 and iPad 3 compatible, this keyboard is one of my new favorite toys. At first glance, it was already showing up my current iPad keyboard. Not only is the new Logitech keyboard shiny, it also looks great on my iPad and it’s slim enough to fit in my current Mickey Mouse iPad sleeve.My previous keyboard was bulky and added a lot of weight to my device. This keyboard feels lighter and easier to take with me.

    06.01.12 From GeekMom
  10. Manned DIY Parachute Jump Test Sunday

    This coming Sunday, a do-it-yourself space program will test a parachute for its space capsule by strapping it to a person. Rocket Shop blogger and Copenhagen Suborbitals co-founder Kristian von Bengtson reports.

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