spending quality time
spending quality time

Your #GeekDadDay Instagram Photos

16 hours ago
artificial intelligence

Why the Turing Test Is a Flawed Benchmark

15 hours ago
  1. Pok??mon Conquest Takes No Prisoners

    Nobunaga's Ambition stands out in my mind as a true anomaly; it was the video game I didn't like. Sure, I'd played bad games before, flawed and un-enjoyable affairs ??? E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial on the 2600, for example ??? but it was the first title I'd encountered since Nintendo's resurrection of the home console market that I simply didn't get. I remember grainy textures and mountains of blocky, on-screen text. I remember arduous resource management in tinny, repetitive music. Moreover, I remember being utterly perplexed at finding absolutely no joy in it. Not having fun with a video game seemed, to my younger self, to be a deeply perplexing experience.

    06.20.12 From GeekDad
  2. MoonBots Competition Now Open for Registration

    Are your kids interested in robotics, science, or space exploration? Or maybe they'd just like the chance to win a free trip to Hawaii? All are on the table in this year's version of the incredibly popular (and fun) MoonBots Challenge. The contest, now in its third year, pits teams of kids against each other as they learn about space and develop solutions to problems that actual space explorers face.

    06.20.12 From GeekDad
  3. Space Opera Without Explosions: Nathan Lowell’s Solar Clipper Series

    Lowell is a master of getting us to care about his characters without having to resort to melodrama, and in science fiction that is a rare feat indeed.

    06.20.12 From GeekDad
  4. Win Pearl Hex Skylander With FGTV

    I decided that rather than hogging all the special Skylanders for ourselves we should give them away. After all it feels like we already have an unnatural number of figures in the house. This month we are giving away our Pearl Hex.

    06.20.12 From GeekDad
  5. FireFly Controller Board Simplifies Rocket Science

    Recently, my friend Mike Doornbos from Evadot got together with the small-satellite crew down at the non-profit Kentucky Space to try to fix an annoying problem. They wanted a standard "mission command" board that could serve as the basis for the brains, power and voice for different space applications without having to make it from scratch every time. They liked their solution so much, they decided to share!

    06.20.12 From GeekDad
  6. GeekDad Puzzle of the Week: Potato Hamster at Large

    Potato Hamster is at large. On Sunday morning, GeekDad Day, we found the top exercise wheel portion of her cage on the floor, leaving a hole, and the hamster was nowhere to be found. The folks at the pet store recommend placing cookie sheets with a light coating of flour and a peanut-buttered apple in each room to discover her general whereabouts and then a small trashcan with another peanut-buttered apple in the bottom, stairs of books leading to its lip to catch Potato. My Facebook friends recommend getting a cat.

    06.20.12 From GeekDad
  7. The FPS Is Dead: The Unfinished Swan Is a First Person Painter

    There's an intriguing story lurking behind one game I saw at E3 this year, The Unfinished Swan. Beyond the emotive tale of the game itself, that of an orphaned boy losing an unfinished painting his mother left him, is the story of how Sony is looking to repeat their success with thatgamecompany.

    06.20.12 From GeekDad
  8. The GeekDads Episode #116: Tom Lehrer Karaoke

    Ken, Matt, and Jonathan look back at GeekDad Day, the WWDC announcements, and upcoming geeky summer movies. Enjoy!

    06.20.12 From GeekDad
  9. Abort from Mars & Venus Missions (1970)

    In the middle of the Apollo 13 crisis of April 1970, a mathematician at Bellcomm, NASA's planning contractor, calculated the length of time astronauts would need to abort to Earth following a malfunction during the outbound phase of a Mars or Venus orbiter mission. What he found was in no way reassuring.

  10. A Google-a-Day Puzzle for June 20

    Google's daily brainteaser helps hone your search skills.

    06.20.12 From GeekDad
  1. Nvidia Responds To F-Bomb From Linus Torvalds

    Linux creator Linus Torvalds may call Nvidia “the single worst company” the Linux community has ever dealt with. But the chipmaker makes no apologies for its approach to the open source operating system. Late last week, during an event in his native Finland, Torvalds went so far as to hurl an expletive at the chipmaker [...]

    06.19.12 From Wired Enterprise
  2. Hoodie or T-Shirt? App Provides Fashion Advice Based on the Weather

    The only weather app I've ever wanted is one that tells me what I should wear each day based on the conditions outside. That app is finally here -- and it didn't start out as a weather app at all. Starting Wednesday, the Cloth app will include integration with Wunderground for real-time, location-based weather stats, so you can easily dress for the weather outside.

    06.19.12 From Gadget Lab
  3. Imagine: Lego and Portal 2 Together

    Imagine bringing two geeky obsessions together as one. That's just what a group of four TFOLs (Teen Fan of Lego) recently did. My 16 year old son's MOCathlon team enjoyed working together so much that they decided to work on a bigger project: a Lego Cuusoo submission that would bring the popular Portal 2 game to the Lego world.

    06.19.12 From GeekMom
  4. Stunning Blade Runner Animation, Made With 3,000 Watercolors

    See Swedish artist Anders Ramsell's exacting, frame-by-frame re-creation of a beginning sequence from Ridley Scott's neo-noir sci-fi film.

    06.19.12 From Underwire
  5. Eucalyptus Chooses GitHub for Stairway to Amazon

    Eucalyptus is just one of many efforts to create an open source software platform that mimics Amazon’s massively popular Elastic Compute Cloud, a web service that offers instant access to virtual servers. But the southern California company believes it’s in a unique position. For one, it has a partnership with Amazon. And two, it just [...]

    06.19.12 From Wired Enterprise
  6. Haute Health Care: Seven Products to Help You Live Longer and Look Better

    Americans spend a fortune on health care, about $2.5 trillion each year. This covers everything from surgical tools to weight loss plans, But despite all the money spent, the aesthetics of these products are on life support.

    06.19.12 From Wired Design
  7. iPhone App Scans Your Music Collection, Identifies All the Samples

    WhoSampled.com's vast database has long been a source for music geeks to identify where their favorite samples came from, but now it's coming to your smartphone too.

    06.19.12 From Underwire
  8. Bane Makes Batman Very Angry in New Dark Knight Rises Trailer

    Trailers for The Dark Knight Rises have heretofore been -- how to put this? -- kinda moody. Populated by slow, sweeping shots, doom-and-gloom dialog and plinking piano notes, they looked awesome, focused more on the drama and less on the butt-kicking. But the latest trailer for the final installment of Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy (above) is much different.

    06.19.12 From Underwire
  9. Face.com App Allowed Facebook, Twitter Account Hijacking

    Israel-based facial recognition maker Face.com was the internet???s flavor for a day Monday when it announced it was acquired by Facebook. But what was not widely known was that Face.com???s mobile app, KLIK, which allows real-time face-tagging of Facebook pictures, recently suffered a giant vulnerability.

    06.19.12 From Threat Level
  10. Report: US and Israel Behind Flame Espionage Tool

    The United States and Israel are responsible for developing the sophisticated espionage rootkit known as Flame, according to a news report, which says it was part of the same 'Olympic Games' project that produced Stuxnet.

    06.19.12 From Threat Level
  1. HP Hitches Ride With Intel on Server ‘Moonshot’

    In the ongoing crusade to build servers from low-power chips originally designed for smartphones, HP is putting its weight behind a new incarnation of Intel's Atom processor, saying it will start selling a server based on the chip by the end of the year.

    06.19.12 From Wired Enterprise
  2. Proposed Japanese Law Could Throw Downloaders in Jail

    Unauthorized downloads of copyrighted material and creating backup copies of a DVD or Blu-ray disc could soon carry criminal penalties in Japan if proposed amendments to the nation's copyright code become law.

    06.19.12 From Game|Life
  3. A is for Arsenic (pesticides, if you please)

      In the early 20th century – enthusiastically supported by the U.S. government – the most popular pesticides were arsenic compounds. How popular? In the year 1929, almost 30 million pounds of lead arsenate and calcium arsenate were spread across this country’s fields and orchards. And how enthusiastic was the government? Well, in 1935, on [...]

  4. WikiLeaks’ Assange Flees to Ecuadorian Embassy

    With just a week to go before he may be extradited to Sweden, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has applied for political asylum with Ecuador, according to a news report.

    06.19.12 From Threat Level
  5. House Committee Approves Sweeping, Warrantless Electronic Spy Powers

    A House committee on Tuesday approved broad electronic eavesdropping powers that largely legalized the Bush administration's warrantless wiretapping program.

    06.19.12 From Threat Level
  6. Video: Sci-Fi Rockers Sing the Praises of Neil deGrasse Tyson

    Astrophysicists rarely (if ever) get new-wave punk songs dedicated to them. But then again, very few astrophysicists are as cool as Neil deGrasse Tyson. Which is why "I'm With Neil" is such a treat. Chock full of the scientist's best media appearances, the video for the track, by California band the Phenomenauts, is meant to be as much of an homage to Tyson ??? the Frederick P. Rose Director of Hayden Planetarium ??? as the track itself.

    06.19.12 From Underwire
  7. Open Letter to Internet Companies: Tell Us How Much We Are Being Surveilled

    Google just unveiled numbers showing an alarming jump in the number of government demands for private user data. We took the technology giant to task for its report's shortcomings. But at least Google is moving toward transparency. Too many companies, like Apple, Microsoft, Yahoo, and the carriers decline to divulge the number of times the government seeks private data on its users, and now is the time they do.

    06.19.12 From Threat Level
  8. Cloud Downtime’s Cost: $70M Since 2007, Give or Take…

    The International Working Group on Cloud Computing Resiliency found and reported on Monday that a total of 568 hours of downtime at 13 cloud service biggies had since 2007 caused an economic impact of more than $71.7 million, reports said today. The big takeaway from the report: With the cloud’s average cloud outages of 7.5 [...]

    06.19.12 From Cloudline
  9. Retina Display Teardown Reveals Ingenuity and Surprises

    Last week, iFixit tore apart the MacBook Pro with Retina Display and found it was virtually impossible to repair or upgrade after the time of purchase. But the Retina display itself was left un-dissected -- until now.

    06.19.12 From Gadget Lab
  10. The Bat Character That Just Won’t Die (It’s Not Who You Think It Is)

    Stephanie Brown is the ultimate unsinkable Bat-character. That's the only conclusion I can draw after it was announced by Smallville Season 11 writer Bryan Q. Miller in a TV Guide interview that Batman will finally be making his first appearance in the Smallville universe, in issue #5, accompanied by a female sidekick revealed to be none other than Stephanie Brown as Nightwing.

    06.19.12 From GeekMom
  1. Hands-On With Microsoft Surface Tablet for Windows RT

    Microsoft Surface for Windows RT is a well-built, bright, and impressive tablet. We go hands-on, and explain its surprising, tactile user experience.

    06.19.12 From Gadget Lab
  2. Q&A;: For Papo & Yo Creator, Game Business Is Personal

    LOS ANGELES -- Tucked into an out-of-the-way corner in Sony's E3 booth was one of the best game demos I played at the show: Papo & Yo ("Dad and Me").

    06.19.12 From Game|Life
  3. Why the Turing Test Is a Flawed Benchmark

    Some of today's computer systems are displaying intelligence far beyond the capability of a human, so it's time to ask: Should a machine demonstrate intelligence by emulating a human?

    06.19.12 From Wired Science
  4. How to Pass the Turing Artificial Intelligence Test

    Are you human or a machine? Prove it, by passing the Turing Test -- a test of the ability of a machine to exhibit intelligent behavior.

    06.19.12 From Wired Science
  5. JavaScript Decoder Brings High-Quality Audio to the Web

    HTML5 offers web developers some, but not all, of the tools they need to build awesome online audio apps to rival GarageBand. The new FLAC.js from Official.fm Labs picks up some of the slack, providing a way to decode lossless FLAC audio in the browser.

    06.19.12 From Webmonkey
  6. CloudStack vs. OpenStack: Smackdown On, Who Wins?

    Get your ringside seats, says Jonathan Feldman, a contributing editor at InformationWeek and director of IT services in a North Carolina city. “OpenStack versus CloudStack is a battle akin to the one around Linux distros,” he writes. In one corner: CloudStack, “an open source project that was acquired by Citrix (with the Apache license and [...]

    06.19.12 From Cloudline
  7. Russian Ship, Loaded With Attack Helos, Turns Away From Syria

    A transport ship the U.S. believes is carrying attack helicopters to Syria is now heading back to Russia, ostensibly after its insurance was pulled. But the ship's return coincides with a meeting between Obama and Vladimir Putin -- a sign the two leaders may be starting to cooperate on what to do about Syria's deadly war.

    06.19.12 From Danger Room
  8. Your #GeekDadDay Instagram Photos

    Sunday, June 17 was our first ever National GeekDad Day. Over 180,000 people in 50 states and 22 countries took our challenge to turn Father's Day into a GeekDad Day extravaganza. And, boy, did you and your families rise to the challenge! Judging by the tweets, images and general activity we saw fly by on the web, a fun day was had for many.

    06.19.12 From GeekDad
  9. Tim Kring and AT&T; Bring the Truth to Light in Daybreak 2012

    Fans of Fox's television series Touch won't have to wait until next year to learn more about the power of numbers featured in the drama. Showrunner Tim Kring has paired up with AT&T to produce Daybreak 2012, a transmedia webseries designed to delve deeper into the show's mythos.

    06.19.12 From Wired Magazine
  10. Female Passenger Groped by TSA Gropes Back, Charged with Battery

    An airline passenger alleges she was inappropriately groped by a TSA worker doing a security patdown, and after groping a TSA supervisor to demonstrate how she was treated, she was arrested and charged with misdemeanor battery.

    06.19.12 From Threat Level
  1. Interior-Decorating Androids, Coming to a Living Room Near You

    Science fiction robots tend to come from one of two production lines: helpful protocol droids like C-3PO or cyborg Terminators hell-bent on destroying humanity. Few sci-fi storytellers imagined a future where robots would be programmed to master the art of interior decorating. Fortunately for the design-challenged, present-day roboticists have.

    06.19.12 From Wired Design
  2. DarwinTunes ‘Evolves’ Music From Noise

    A new computer program called DarwinTunes is showing how music listeners drive music to evolve in a certain way out of noise.

    06.19.12 From Wired Science
  3. Adam Savage Talks About Being a GeekDad

    Adam Savage is working on an as-yet untitled video podcast project, and this new episode hits right at the heart of what he calls the “GeekDad Movement.” His attitude towards encouraging his kids’ interests is wonderful, and hopefully infectious for anyone who watches this.

    06.19.12 From GeekDad
  4. Flash Update Causing Problems for Firefox Fans

    If you've been having problems with the latest version of Flash for Firefox, you're not alone. Mozilla says its working with Adobe to solve the problem, but in the mean time suggests you downgrade to the previous version of Flash.

    06.19.12 From Webmonkey
  5. Werewolf at Summer Camp: Jacob and Me

    Buying a Jacob Black life size cardboard cut-out became much more than educational for my summer camp.

    06.19.12 From GeekMom
  6. Eruption Update for June 19, 2012: Nevado del Ruiz and Popocat??petl

    I thought I’d post a brief update on the action at two Latin American volcanoes as a break from working on this lovely NSF proposal. Nevado del Ruiz, Colombia Quite a few reports have come out of Colombia talking of the continued ash emissions from Ruiz. However, the activity is mostly on the same level [...]

  7. Pixar Week: Finding Nemo: The Musical is a Hidden Gem

    Finding Nemo: The Musical is a forty minute show that is currently only performed in Disney???s Animal Kingdom Theme Park in Orlando, Florida. It is a permanent attraction that replaced Tarzan Rocks! at the Theatre in The Wild and uses puppets to tell the story which is, naturally, heavily condensed from the original feature film.

    06.19.12 From GeekMom
  8. Is the Best Android Tablet Available Made for Kids?

    If you've been considering investing in a tablet for your child, you've got lots of options these days. Just do a Google search on tablets for kids and you'll find plenty of comparisons and reviews of the various brands that are currently available.

    06.19.12 From GeekDad
  9. Kids’ Custom Cupcakes for Class

    I saw a terrific rainbow doodle cake idea on Pinterest that I kept coming back to. It wasn't so much the layers of different colored cakes, though that was cool, it was the blank canvas surface of fondant colored on by kids with food coloring markers. As it happened, we had a ton of fondant left over from our Skylanders birthday cake, so I decided to adapt the idea for cupcakes and let the birthday girl do all of the work.

    06.19.12 From GeekMom
  10. Dragons Love Tacos – A New Children’s Book

    In literature, dragons are fierce beasts that don't seem to be very picky about what or who they eat. But in the new book, Dragons Love Tacos, written by Adam Rubin, we find that dragons actually have some specific tastes when it comes to food.

    06.19.12 From GeekMom
  1. ‘Kony 2012′ Threatens Lawsuit Against Online Parody

    The activists behind the Kony 2012 viral campaign for justice in Uganda is plainly sick of all the online mockery it's received. That's what a group of NYU grad students found out after designing a fake Kickstarter site aping the Kony 2012 campaign as a parody. It was all fun and games -- until Kony 2012 sent them a cease and desist order.

    06.19.12 From Danger Room
  2. AbyssBox Displays Deep-Sea Animals Under Pressure

    Unless you're James Cameron, you've probably never seen the animals that live in the hydrothermal vents at the bottom of the ocean. That's because these deep-sea species can't survive in a standard aquarium. Normal atmospheric pressure will kill them. Luckily, one of Europe's largest aquariums has developed a solution: a unique high-pressure viewing cabinet called the AbyssBox

    06.19.12 From Wired Science
  3. This Giant CNC Mill Will Build Your House

    Meet HSM-Modal. This modular and customizable milling machine can expand into a 41-foot-wide, 14-foot-tall, and 495-foot-long giant. In other words, it???s not a tool you put in your garage; it???s a tool that will build it.

    06.19.12 From Wired Design
  4. Recommendation Engine: The Rubik’s Cube and Its Many Offspring

    The Rubik's Cube was one of the best-selling toys ever. Revisit the classic, then see if you can conquer some of its offspring.

    06.19.12 From Game|Life
  5. Pixar Week: Toy Story And Joss Whedon

    When you think about Joss Whedon, your mind might think of Firefly, The Avengers or Buffy the Vampire Slayer. But did you know that he was one of the writers on the Disney / Pixar classic, Toy Story?

    06.19.12 From GeekMom
  6. 8 Awesome Gadgets — For When You’re Living in a Van, Down by the River

    Have you looked at what can be plugged into your car???s cigarette lighter lately? The options are amazing -- you can now take a full inventory of lifestyle accessories on a camping trip. Or, in a pinch, you could use your vehicle???s cigarette lighter to power the amenities of a happy, mobile home.

    06.19.12 From Gadget Lab
  7. June 19, 240 B.C.: The Earth Is Round, and It’s This Big

    Greek astronomer, geographer, mathematician and librarian Eratosthenes calculates the Earth's circumference. His data was rough, but he wasn't far off.

    06.19.12 From This Day In Tech
  8. Hands-On With the Latest Siri Competitor For Android

    We've seen a spate of Android apps that aim to compete with Siri, and like their Apple counterpart, they often fail to deliver on the promise of being an always-connected virtual assistant. The latest entrant into the Android market is Robin, which takes a similar tact to Siri, but puts the focus on searching points of interest while you're behind the wheel.

    06.19.12 From Autopia
  9. Peterbilt Crowdsourcing Future Big-Rig Designs

    Big rigs may move the bulk of freight and rule the roads of the US, but their blocky designs aren't exactly aerodynamic, sucking up lots of fuel as they shuttle cross-country. Plus, they're just plain boring. So semi manufacturer Peterbilt is looking for more fuel-efficient tractor-trailers by holding a competition in conjunction with open source car company Local Motors to develop innovative aerodynamic designs.

    06.19.12 From Autopia
  10. Reimagining the Marvel Universe

    When I was a kid the only thing I loved more than comics were comic book resources, and in the absence of Wikipedia ??? not to mention, if you can believe it, the commercial internet ??? I was largely limited to encyclopedic collections like the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe. These massive volumes featured information on characters' powers, origins and often lengthy missives regarding their elaborate histories alongside detailed illustrations.

    06.19.12 From GeekDad
  1. SpyParty Is a Shooting Game to Share With Your Kids

    I've been fascinated by SpyParty since I first stumbled upon it at the GameCity festival. I wrote recently that SpyParty is the only shooting game I'm 100% happy for my kids to play.

    06.19.12 From GeekDad
  2. Hip-Hop 101 With MC Edgar Allan Poe

    MC Lars has been espousing his love of classic literature in hip-hop verse for practically his entire career. With ample nods to Melville and Shakespeare already under his belt, his newest video single again centers on one of his favorite wordsmiths, Poe.

    06.19.12 From GeekDad
  3. The Sparkfun Proto-Snap Minibot Kit

    Robots are cool. I know that's a given but I just had to say it. There are plenty of easy kits out there that can get you started in robotics. The problem with many beginner robot kits is that they are limited in the amount of space you have to experiment and expand on the basic kit. The team over at SparkFun Electronics has put together a kit that overcomes the limitations of some beginner robotics systems.

    06.19.12 From GeekDad
  4. Star Wars Comes to Scalextric This Fall

    Scalextric is one of the oldest, best-known slot car makers out there. Their tracks and cars have supplied hobbyists with fodder for decades and their devotion to detail has made even the most meticulous modelmaker mirthful.

    06.19.12 From GeekDad
  5. Walt Disney World Wins at Making Magic for One Young Man

    The setup is this: the "Snow White's Scary Adventure" (aka SWSA) is shutting down after 40-odd years at Walt Disney World (WDW), to make way for new stuff. Ron's son Ben, who is Autistic, found an incredible joy on the ride, to the point that he rode it, quite literally, thousands of times. With the closure of the ride pending, his family decided to help him try and reach a milestone number of rides. And when the staff at WDW got involved on the ride's last day, Ben's life became a little bit magical.

    06.19.12 From GeekDad
  6. A Google-a-Day Puzzle for June 19

    Google's daily brainteaser helps hone your search skills.

    06.19.12 From GeekDad
  7. Microsoft Dives Head-First Into Mobile Hardware With Two 10.6-Inch Tablets

    Microsoft is now a full-fledged, no-excuses mobile computing manufacturer. On Monday a team of excited executives showed off Microsoft Surface -- a pair of Windows tablets accompanied by clever keyboard covers that aspire to true innovation in the mobile space.

    06.18.12 From Gadget Lab
  8. Big Tech: Microsoft Dives Head-First Into Mobile Hardware With Two Tablets

    Microsoft took the wraps off its best effort to take on Apple's iPad, dubbed Surface. Can Windows 8 and Windows RT models plus slick accessories like these keyboard/covers make a dent in Apple's total dominance of the market?

    06.18.12 From Wired Business
  9. Directions From our Dreams: Imagining a More Amazing iOS 6 Maps App

    Apple's announcement that iOS 6's new maps app will turn over transit routing duties to 3rd parties has prompted a lot of wailing and gnashing of teeth. Commenters fear that by relying on 3rd parties, Apple is taking a step backwards for transit riders. Andy Baio helpfully stepped in to dispell some of the myths surrounding iOS 6's transit API, and opened up some exciting possibilities in the process.

    06.18.12 From Wired Design
  10. NSA: It Would Violate Your Privacy to Say If We Spied on You

    The NSA says the agency would violate Americans' privacy even more than it already has if it provided statistics on how many citizens it's spying on via a loophole in a 2008 law.

    06.18.12 From Threat Level
  1. NSA: It Would Violate Your Privacy to Say if We Spied on You

    The surveillance experts at the National Security Agency won't tell two powerful United States Senators how many Americans have had their communications picked up by the agency as part of its sweeping new counterterrorism powers. The reason: it would violate your privacy to say so. That claim comes in a short letter sent Monday to civil libertarian Senators Ron Wyden and Mark Udall, which Danger Room acquired.

    06.18.12 From Danger Room
  2. Musical Chairs World Championship Is a Real-Life Game of Thrones

    Fred Smith, the founder and commissioner of the World Musical Chairs Federation, has set an ambitious goal for himself, and his sport. Smith, a short, balding and -- he says -- ???beautiful,??? man, recently left a career as a corrections officer to make the childhood game of musical chairs a worldwide sport. ???This is what I plan to do with the rest of my life,??? he said in all seriousness. As if that weren???t ambitious enough, he hoped to draw 8,000 people to the World Musical Chairs Championship. Why? Well, why not?

    06.18.12 From Playbook
  3. Toys on the Edge: Playthings That Straddle the Digital/Physical Divide

    If the dot-com boom a decade ago was about putting the world on the Internet, the twenty-teens are about bringing the Internet to the world. With cheaper sensors and 3-D printing, more and more people have access to tools that bridge the digital/physical divide. Of course, the new instruments are responsible for lots of serious innovation, but there???s some fun to be had, too. The era of mass customization means that we can export even our avatars from the pixilated screen to our plywood desk. Here???s a collection of those toys ready for tweaking.

    06.18.12 From Wired Design
  4. Liveblog: Meet ‘Surface,’ Microsoft’s New Windows 8 Tablet

    Today Microsoft will be hosting a super-secret product announcement at Milk Studios -- and Wired will be live-blogging the event in real-time. Stay tuned to this URL.

    06.18.12 From Gadget Lab
  5. Review: Pocket Planes‘ Airy Gameplay Doesn’t Fly

    Pocket Planes wants you to believe that you're driving a car, but in reality, it only wants you to press the gas pedal. There's no steering wheel with which to make mistakes or improve your skills. Playing the game pushes its systems forward, and not playing allows it to languish. It's no more complicated than that.

    06.18.12 From Game|Life
  6. US Demands for Google User Data Growing, But Full Picture Remains Murky

    Government agencies across the United States sought user data from Google 6,321 times for the six months ending December 2011, up from 5,950 the six months prior, according to a new Google report.

    06.18.12 From Threat Level
  7. Alan Turing’s Extraordinary, Tragically Short Life: A Timeline

    A simple timeline of the achievements of Alan Turing, the great mathematician, World War II hero, computer scientist and visionary.

    06.18.12 From Wired Science
  8. Patterns, Expert Integrated Systems and Cloud: Deploying a Web Application

    When people talk about cloud computing, what comes to mind??? First people think about the value they want out of clouds, like speedy deployment, self-service, elastic resources and pay-as-you-go cost models. Second, people start to think about the technology of cloud, like virtualization, image libraries, storage and network configuration. But when you step back, what [...]

    06.18.12 From Cloudline
  9. The Rich Legacy of Alan Turing

    Alan Turing achieved more in the space of a few decades than anyone could hope to achieve in a lifetime. Here, Wired breaks down some of the most significant contributions Turing made to modern science.

    06.18.12 From Wired Science
  10. Digital Content: Why Los Angeles for Microsoft’s Big Event?

    Launching in Hollywood ??? as opposed to Silicon Valley or Redmond ??? hints that Microsoft might be working closely with the entertainment industry on its rumored tablet.

    06.18.12 From Wired Business
  1. Big Tech: Microsoft May Be Late to Tablet Fight, But Has the Cash to Keep Sparring

    Microsoft may be more than two years late to the tablet fight, but Windows and Office still spew so many billions every year that the world's third-largest company can still afford not to be great.

    06.18.12 From Wired Business
  2. Iranian Missile Engineer Oversees Chavez’s Drones

    One of the top supervisors over Venezuela's drone program is an engineer who helped build ballistic missiles for Iran. He's also part of a mystery involving drones shipped from Iran to Venezuela while hidden in secret cargo containing possibly more military hardware than just drones.

    06.18.12 From Danger Room
  3. Linus Torvalds Gives Nvidia the Finger. Literally

    Linux creator Linus Torvalds isn't happy with Nvidia. And he wants you to know it. Late last week, at a hacker meetup in Finland, Torvalds laid into Nvidia, calling it "the single worst company" the Linux developer community has ever dealt with, complaining that the chipmaker doesn't do as much as it could to ensure that its hardware plays nicely with his open source operating system. He even turned to the camera filming the event, flipped the company the proverbial bird, and dropped the proverbial F bomb.

    06.18.12 From Wired Enterprise
  4. DIY Capsule Drop Test Evaluations

    Over the weekend, the Copenhagen Suborbitals do-it-yourself spaceflight program drop-tested their "Beautiful Betty" capsule in water. Rocket Shop blogger Kristian von Bengtson shows that, while the capsule didn't sink, its inflatable uprighting system failed.

  5. Hybrids Dominate the 2012 24 Hours of Le Mans

    The 80th running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans happened in France this past weekend, and with it came the introduction of new technology, a new top-tier competitor and one radical concept that's been heralded as the future of Le Mans Prototype racing.

    06.18.12 From Autopia
  6. Theory Explains the Quantum Weirdness of Exotic Materials

    Physicists have developed a theory to help explain the weird collective behavior that arises when many individual atoms work as one, leading to bizarre materials such as superfluids, Bose-Einsten condensates, and neutron star matter.

    06.18.12 From Wired Science
  7. Google Backs Green-Cloud Claims, Touts Apps

    The cloud is more green than traditional on-premises setups, according to a recent Carbon Disclosure Project survey. But that survey did not sit well with Cloudline readers in March. Now Google is championing the Carbon Disclosure Project, and touting the energy efficiency of the cloud as well as the green cred of Google Apps.

    06.18.12 From Cloudline
  8. Pixar Week: Seriously, Pixar, Brave Better Be Good

    Woody. Buzz. Nemo. Mike. Sully. Lightning McQueen. Wall-E. Mr. Incredible. Remy. Flik. Russell. Hmm. What do they all have in common? All beloved major characters for Pixar movies? Yes, of course, but you might have noticed something else about this list. All of the major Pixar characters are male. But with the release of Brave, we'll be adding Merida to that list.

    06.18.12 From GeekMom
  9. Microsoft’s Secret Product Event: What to Expect From Today’s Liveblog

    Microsoft surprised the tech world when it announced an event with only four days notice. The invitation, like the reason for the event, was laced with mystery and produced more questions that answers.

    06.18.12 From Gadget Lab
  10. Conferences Get Creative: An Art and Tech Festival Wins Over Kickstarter

    Last Friday, XOXO, an art and technology conference scheduled to take place in Portland, Oregon, in September, became the highest-funded project of its type in Kickstarter history. Over the course of the campaign, organizers raised a whopping $175,000. XOXO???s 400 available tickets ??? procured by funding the project at the $400 level ??? sold out in only 50 hours. With speakers like Makerbot's Bre Pettis, the web comic creator R. Stevens, Star Wars Uncut co-creator Jamie Wilkinson, and the founders of tech-savvy creative communities like Etsy, Metafilter, and Kickstarter???all that fall in the realm of what the conference founders call "disruptive creativity" ??? it???s no wonder. The organizers pulled together a host of makers working at that sweet spot where art and technology meet and then invited the public to join in.

    06.18.12 From Wired Design
  1. White House, Citing Public’s Right to Know, Stonewalls on Yemen War

    The center of the US drone war has shifted to Yemen, where 23 American strikes have killed as estimated 155 people so far this year. But you wouldn't know about it -- or about the cruise missile attacks, or about the US commando teams in Yemen -- by reading the report the White House sent to Congress about US military activities around the globe.

    06.18.12 From Danger Room
  2. Repost: It’s a kangaroo… It’s a llama… No, it’s Palorchestes!

    [This essay was originally posted on October 6, 2010.] In his 1931 account of fieldwork in Patagonia, Attending Marvels, the 20th century paleontologist George Gaylord Simpson considered the appropriateness of the phrase “fossil hunting” to his profession: Fossil hunting is far the most fascinating of all sports. I speak for myself, although I do not [...]

  3. Dork Tower Monday

    Dork Tower is an online comic created, written and drawn by John Kovalic. It chronicles the lives of a group of geeks living in the fictional town of Mud Bay, Wisconsin.

    06.18.12 From GeekDad
  4. Big Tech: China’s Biggest Challenge Is Aerospace

    Aerospace has long been an American bulwark. In most years Boeing is the nation???s leading exporter. America has more airports, builds more airplanes, trains more pilots, and arranges more of its economy around aviation than any other country, by far. China would very much like a piece of this???to have Boeings, NASAs, Cessnas, and fully fledged GPS systems of its own.

    06.18.12 From Wired Business
  5. Mozilla ‘Junior’ Brings Firefox to Your iPad

    Mozilla is hard at work on Firefox for the iPad, but don't expect this to be your father's Firefox. Instead the company is hoping to "reinvent the browser for a new form factor."

    06.18.12 From Webmonkey
  6. On Bubbles, Facebook, and Playing for Keeps: 10 Questions With Clay Shirky

    Ten questions with Clay Shirky, the startup guru, NYU professor and author, touching on the rise of GitHub, Facebook's weak spot, the regression of online politics, his mistaken trust in large tech companies, and his all-time favorite email service.

    06.18.12 From Wired Business
  7. Satellite Spots Lockheed’s Mystery Drone

    A commercial satellite has spotted a mysterious unmanned aerial vehicle parked at Lockheed Martin's legendary Skunk Works facility. Aviation geeks are scrambling to figure out what the drone might be.

    06.18.12 From Danger Room
  8. GeekMom Book Club: Let???s Pretend This Never Happened ??? Week 3

    The GeekMom Book Club continues their discussion of Let???s Pretend This Never Happened (A Mostly True Memoir) by Jenny Lawson (AKA The Bloggess).

    06.18.12 From GeekMom
  9. Growing Up on Zoloft – Talking Drugs, Depression, and Identity With Katherine Sharpe

    The new book "Coming of Age on Zoloft" explores the running debate about overmedication for depression and what it means to come of age -- and of identity -- while on these meds. Neuron Culture blogger David Dobbs interviews the author, Katherine Sharpe.

  10. Pixar Week: Themed Tours Show the Brave Side of Scotland

    Six driving itineraries and a guided tour show the Brave side of Scotland.

    06.18.12 From GeekMom
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