1. HMDX Jam Portable Wireless Bluetooth Speaker

    Connect wirelessly via Bluetooth from up to 30 feet away with any Bluetooth enabled smartphone or tablet and most laptops. Connection is simple, with a passcode right on the bottom of the device next to the on/off switch and volume and fast forward buttons on the side of the speaker. There's a micro USB port for charging (USB to micro USB cable included) and an audio in jack.

    07.04.12 From GeekMom
  2. From Ferrari to Fiat, a Look Back at Pininfarina’s Masterful Designs

    The auto world is mourning the loss of Sergio Pininfarina, one of Italy's greatest and most prolific automotive designers. Here's a look back on what Pininfarina bestowed on the motoring world before his passing at age 85.

    07.04.12 From Autopia
  3. Polyphemus Moth Metamorphosis in Photos

    Like any good parent I've read my kids The Very Hungry Caterpillar (in English ???and??? Chinese) countless times, and it's a fun book both for its subtle anti-junk food propaganda as well as the fun depiction of one of nature's most impressive magic tricks: the metamorphosis from a this crawly worm-like thing into a beautiful fluttering creature. However, it's not one that we often get to see ourselves.

    07.04.12 From GeekDad
  4. Android Director: ‘We Have the First Natural-Sounding Synthesized Voice in the World’

    Google's Hugo Barra, the product manager for Android, talks with Wired about what's new for the world's most popular mobile operating system: Google's voice, Google Now, Jelly Bean and the Asus Nexus 7 tablet.

    07.04.12 From Gadget Lab
  5. Conditions Simulator Gives Sailors a Competitive Edge

    A new simulation tool allows sailors and naval architects to better model waves and wind, something its creator says could revolutionize competitive sailing.

    07.04.12 From Playbook
  6. July 4, 1054: Crab Nebula Makes a Spectacular Debut in the Heavens

    Chinese astronomers mark the beginning of Supernova 1054, heralding the birth of what will become known as the Crab Nebula.

    07.04.12 From This Day In Tech
  7. Big Tech: Fiber Is the Key to U.S. Telecom Diet

    As a country, we've made a historical commitment to ensuring that virtually every American has access to reasonably priced, standard, high-quality communications. Our national phone system was the envy of the world when it was first built. Now we're moving to a time of deep communications inequality.

    07.04.12 From Wired: Business
  8. Social: Twitter Crackdown Would Make Steve Jobs Proud

    Users and developers may be howling over Twitter's crackdown on third-party apps, but the intent is clear: Twitter wants to gain more Apple-like control over the Twitter user experience.

    07.04.12 From Wired: Business
  9. Big Tech: Clive Thompson on the Perils of Winnowing Windows

    The cognitive perils of having lots of open windows have been somewhat overblown. It's not always bad for us—and sometimes it can be very good.

    07.04.12 From Wired: Business
  10. Wiki Inventor Sticks a Fork in His Baby

    Ward Cunningham, the creator of the wiki, is proud of his invention. But there is one thing he regrets. The central idea of a wiki -- whether it's driving Wikipedia or C2 -- is that anyone can add or edit a page, but those pages all live on servers that someone else owns and controls. Cunningham now believes that no one should have that sort of central control, so he has built something called the federated wiki.

    07.04.12 From Wired Enterprise
  1. Scary Movies Can Cure Kids of Boredom

    Grown-ups are experts at unwinding. We stuff our faces with name-brand farm animals, argue for hours about 20-year-old music, and guzzle cognac-and-espresso speedballs to stay up for karaoke. But won't someone please think of the children?

    07.04.12 From Underwire
  2. The Diabolical Corvette ZR1 Wants to Eat You Alive

    High-octane fuel. Ear-bleeding noise. Neck-snapping acceleration. Potential dismemberment. That’s what you get when you drive the 638-horsepower Chevrolet Corvette ZR1. Death is also an option. Also in this issue How I Accidentally Kickstarted the Domestic Drone Boom One One-Hundredth of a Second Faster: Building Better Olympic Athletes New Videogame Lets Amateur Researchers Mess with RNA [...]

    07.04.12 From Autopia
  3. Imagine Cup Alumni Spotlight: Making Better Drivers With CleverMiles

    Our cars collect a lot of data about itself. Sensors can tell us how well our engine is performing, detect problems and adjust itself to help keep us on the road and in control. But what if we could put that data to use in order to make us better and more active drivers, both in terms of immediate feedback and reporting about our habits? What if we could use this system to get lower car insurance premiums or to work with our kids on being better drivers when they first hit the roads? Those were some of the questions that Ireland-based Team Hermes asked themselves as they competed in the 2011 Imagine Cup in New York City. And success at the cup has led to the launch of their startup, CleverMiles.

    07.04.12 From GeekDad
  4. Not Your Usual Holiday-Danger Warning: Don’t Eat the Grill Brush

    It’s kind of a tradition, on Independence Day, for health journalists to relay warnings from public-health authorities. Wear sunscreen, watch the alcohol, don’t leave kids alone in pools, don’t stick sparklers in your eye — that kind of thing. They are important to say, because they might actually prevent someone getting injured, but they are [...]

  5. What Finding the Higgs Boson Doesn’t Mean

    The upcoming announcement of the results of the search for the Higgs Boson are promising to be ground breaking from a scientific point-of-view. There is a lot of information that may be confusing to some and will be misinterpreted by many. The practical application of being that closer to understanding the secrets of the Universe won't be realized for some time. It was decades from the discovery of radiation to the point where we could harness the power of the atom for power. As I sit here and write this post, I am still awaiting my Mr. Fusion device promised in 1985.

    07.04.12 From GeekDad
  6. Newly Discovered Particle Appears to Be Long-Awaited Higgs Boson

    Prepare the fireworks: The discovery of the Higgs boson is finally here. Early in the morning on July 4, physicists with the Large Hadron Collider at CERN announced they have found a new particle that behaves similarly to what is expected from the Higgs.

    07.04.12 From Wired Science
  7. Beasts of Burden: GeekDad Interviews Battle Beasts‘ Bobby Curnow

    I recently described IDW Publishing as "the anti-George Lucas." It's a loaded statement, for sure, but hear me out.

    07.04.12 From GeekDad
  8. Deadlight and Wreckateer Headline Xbox 360 Summer of Arcade

    One of the many pleasures of stalking the show floor at E3 was bumping into some of the smaller developers. Two such encounters were with Dave Lang of Iron Galaxy whose new game Wreckateer was featured in the Xbox keynote and is coming later this year, and Tequila Works CEO Ra??l Rubio Mun??rriz whose game Deadlight is also due out soon.

    07.04.12 From GeekDad
  9. Explosive Independence Day Safety Tips

    This Independence Day, make sure you are taking the appropriate precautions to avoid a disaster while still having fun.

    07.04.12 From GeekDad
  10. These Lego Flowers Won’t Need Your Water

    Australia is famous for a lot of things: amazing landscapes, endless beaches, laid-back surfers, kangaroos, wine and many more... including Lego. And it seems that the Australian Lego community has been fairly spoiled lately!

    07.04.12 From GeekDad
  1. 5 reasons Why Independence Day is the Geekiest Holiday of Them All

    Independence Day is secretly a great geek holiday. Underneath all that grilling and baseball and apple pie is a holiday dedicated to those inventors and makers who dedicated themselves to the proposition that all men are created equal. So while you're at the beach, or the stadium, or while flying your awesome 3D Star Wars Starfighter Kites, pour a cold one in honor of these five* geeky reasons to celebrate the 4th of July:

    07.04.12 From GeekDad
  2. Watch Live: Higgs Boson Announcement

    Watch a live feed as CERN spokespeople announce their latest results in the search for the Higgs boson. What will they discover? The Higgs? New physics? Tune in to find out.

    07.04.12 From Wired Science
  3. A Google-a-Day Puzzle for July 4

    Google's daily brainteaser helps hone your search skills.

    07.04.12 From GeekDad
  4. Pterosaurs Done Wrong

    Take a glance at the photo above. It’s a snapshot of a life-size Pteranodon model on display at the San Diego Natural History Museum. The flying reptile – restored life size – looks like the standard image of Pteranodon I have seen in museums and books since I was a kid. The large pterosaur is [...]

  5. Review: Google’s Nexus 7 Tablet

    If you've been on the fence about Android, or tablets in general, this is the tablet you've been waiting for.

    07.03.12 From Gadget Lab
  6. Review: Parrot Zik Noise-Canceling Wireless Headphones

    These wireless, noise-canceling headphones from Parrot are packed with multiple sensors: capacitive surfaces, microphones and an NFC chip.

    07.03.12 From Gadget Lab
  7. After U.S. Says Sorry, Pakistan Reopens Border

    For seven months, Pakistan has blocked ground convoys from resupplying troops based in Afghanistan. Pakistan wanted an apology for the death of 24 Pakistani soldiers -- killed in U.S. airstrikes last November -- and a new fee for every shipping container transiting the country. Until Pakistan got its apology, the border would remain closed, forcing the U.S. into a costly aerial resupply route through Kyrgyzstan.

    07.03.12 From Danger Room
  8. What Finding the Higgs Boson Means

    There has been a rise in speculation from the international physics community about the contents of a press conference that has been called by scientists at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), to be held at 9am Geneva time (3am EST) on July 4, 2012. Physicists expect that the announcement will be positive proof of the Higgs boson particle and a successful mission for the team. The anticipation reached a frenzied state yesterday when scientists from the Tevatron at Fermilab in Illinois announced that they had found significant supporting evidence for the existence of the Higgs boson.

    07.03.12 From GeekMom
  9. Dell Ramps Up its Cloud

    I recently spoke with a couple VPs that head up the cloud initiatives at Dell. I have been watching Dell closely, because I think they have one of the best platforms and bundle of products and services in which to launch a full-scale cloud solution.??But I have to wonder if it will pan out for [...]

    07.03.12 From Cloudline
  10. Watch a Livestream of the Higgs Boson Announcement Tonight

    Watch a live feed from Europe of the possible announcement of the Higgs boson discovery on Wired.com starting at 11 p.m PT tonight (2 a.m. ET). The announcement of results is expected to begin at midnight PT.

    07.03.12 From Wired Science
  1. Ratio of PC to Mac Sales Narrowing to Lowest Level in Over a Decade

    Apple must be doing something right in the PC space -- or PC makers or doing something wrong. The ratio of PC sales to Mac sales has dropped to the lowest point in about 15 years.

    07.03.12 From Gadget Lab
  2. Buh-Bye MobileMe — iCloud Rules Now

    While folks like to talk about Google’s many failed properties, one that stands out for Apple is MobileMe. Well, Apple’s troubled child is no more as of Monday — Apple’s new golden boy, iCloud, is all things cloud at Apple now, and includes many of MobileMe’s features. Gadget Lab’s Christina Bonnington writes of MobileMe’s checkered [...]

    07.03.12 From Cloudline
  3. Amazon Blames Generators for Blackout That Crushed Netflix

    Amazon has published a more detailed explanation about the Outage that knocked out a number of popular websites on Friday night, including Netflix, Instagram, and Pintrest. The culprit: a twenty minute power outage at a single Northern Virginia data center.

    07.03.12 From Wired Enterprise
  4. Study Shows Electronic Driver Aids Mostly Help, Occasionally Hurt

    The Highway Loss Data Institute, a division within the automaker-supported Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS), released findings on how active safety systems help drivers when their vehicles are fitted with crash avoidance technology and adaptive headlamps. But interestingly, lane departure warning systems aren't living up to their claimed potential. And in some cases, the tech may be increasing the number of crashes.

    07.03.12 From Autopia
  5. Leaked Video Appears to Accidentally Announce Higgs Boson Discovery

    An accidentally published video appears to leak the long-awaited discovery of the Higgs boson that is rumored to be officially announced by CERN early tomorrow morning.

    07.03.12 From Wired Science
  6. How Breaking Bad Resurrects Its Antihero Again and Again

    Vince Gilligan and his writers' finely tuned plot machine deftly keeps the chemistry-teacher-turned-meth-cooker hitting rock bottom -- and bouncing back for more madness.

    07.03.12 From Underwire
  7. Spectacularly Preserved Fossil Suggests Most Dinosaurs Were Feathered

    The discovery of a fantastically preserved, bushy-tailed fossil theropod has cloaked the dinosaur world in feathers. Other feathered dinosaurs have been found before, but none so close to the trunk of their evolutionary tree.

    07.03.12 From Wired Science
  8. Man Lives Off Craigslist for One Crazy Month in Craigslist Joe

    Produced by Zach Galifianakis, the new documentary shows a man attempting to survive for 31 days and nights using nothing but Craigslist.

    07.03.12 From Underwire
  9. Judge Upholds Sales Ban on Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1

    A federal judge has decided to uphold her decision to place a temporary sales ban on the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 in a patent fight between Apple and Samsung.

    07.03.12 From Gadget Lab
  10. Take That, Google Glass: Apple Granted Patent for Head-Mounted Display

    Google's been flaunting their Google Glass prototype left and right, but it may not be the only company getting into the heads-up-display business. Apple was granted a patent for a head-mounted display apparatus on Tuesday.

    07.03.12 From Gadget Lab
  1. Report: iPad Mini to Feature Sharp IGZO Display, Cost $250

    We've said it before and we'll say it again: The iPad Mini is the Apple rumor that refuses to die. The latest in the long twisted history of the fabled miniature tablet is that it will feature a 330 ppi resolution, 7.85-inch IGZO display made by Sharp.

    07.03.12 From Gadget Lab
  2. Video: Eating Heads, Fighting Undead Armies in Skulls of the Shogun

    Jake Kazdal, CEO of indie game developer 17-Bit, tells us about his upcoming game Skulls of the Shogun on this week's Game|Life video.

    07.03.12 From Game|Life
  3. Urinal Cake Delivers PSA on Drunk Driving

    The Detroit News reports the state of Michigan distributed 400 talking urinal cakes to some 200 establishments before the 4th of July holiday. The cakes issue a clever public service announcement, reminding the intoxicated to solicit safe rides home.

    07.03.12 From Gadget Lab
  4. Video: Joffrey Gets Slapped Silly in Game of Thrones RPG

    From Daenerys' dragons to the epic Battle of Blackwater, this goofball video from College Humor boils down major plot points from Game of Thrones' second season and serves them up in classic RPG style.

    07.03.12 From Underwire
  5. Competitive Eaters Gobble Hot Dogs for Spots at Nathan’s Table

    We brave flying crumbs and bits of hot dog to see firsthand what it takes to make it to Nathan's Famous Fourth of July International Hot Dog Eating Contest. Be careful. It's messy.

    07.03.12 From Playbook
  6. To Cloud or Not to Cloud?

    By??Jon Walsh Several weeks ago I had the opportunity to attend a Cloud Computing Redbooks Residency at IBM in Raleigh, North Carolina, in the office with the longest corridors I have ever seen. IBMers in Raleigh must be the fittest on the planet because it is a mile walk for a coffee.As part of the [...]

    07.03.12 From Cloudline
  7. Google Shaman Explains Mysteries of ‘Compute Engine’

    Google pioneered the art of the "cloud" infrastructure. But Amazon beat it to the idea of sharing such an infrastructure with the rest of the world. Six years after Amazon first offered its web services to outside developers and businesses, Google is still playing catchup. But it's intent on making up that lost ground.

    07.03.12 From Wired Enterprise
  8. Nexus 7 Teardown: Harder to Repair Than Kindle Fire, Easier Than iPad

    Less than a week after Google announced the Nexus 7 at Google I/O, the iFixit team disassembled the device. And what they found is a tablet that's a breeze to open up and repair, but not quite as easy as Amazon's Kindle Fire.

    07.03.12 From Gadget Lab
  9. Leaked BlackBerry Roadmap Details Handsets, Points to Larger PlayBook

    RIM's upgrade to BlackBerry 10 hit a serious snag on Thursday when the company announced that it would be delaying the release of the BlackBerry 10 platform until the first quarter of 2013. The statement called into question whether RIM has any future at all, but now a leaked presentation document details RIM's roadmap to redemption.

    07.03.12 From Gadget Lab
  10. Defunct Copyright Troll Seeks Resurrection

    Copyright troll Righthaven, which famously went defunct last year after a epic failure in trying to make money for newspapers by suing sites that reposted even parts of news stories, is seeking a second life.

    07.03.12 From Threat Level
  1. More on Eden TV’s Meteor Event

    The last video from Eden TV showed the result of a large meteor impacting a taxi in London. This meme correctly captures my response. Clearly, they were trying to promote science with their Science Month. My only course of action was to make a quick calculation of the energy for such a large meteorite. Let [...]

  2. Japanese Teen Arrested for Wii-Modding Software

    Japanese police have arrested a 19-year-old Kyoto college student for allegedly distributing software online that illegally circumvented the copy protection on Nintendo Wii game consoles, the Saitama Prefectural Police said on Tuesday.

    07.03.12 From Game|Life
  3. Tiny Fireworks

    “Is that thunder?” I asked my husband on Saturday night. I hoped it was, actually. It hasn’t rained here for so long that our lawn crunches like burnt toast. But, no. “That’s the big fireworks show,” he answered. “Oh, right.” I always forget that show because our July 4th family tradition is one of tiny [...]

  4. Simulating Fireworks

    The first screensaver I ever used was Pyro! A screensaver that simulated fireworks for the Macintosh in the 1980′s (it predated After Dark‘s Flying Toasters), it was rather simple: Fireworks, whether rendered in a very basic way, or in a much more complicated format, are beautiful. They are essentially anthropic thunderstorms–our little attempts to paint [...]

  5. The GeekDads Podcast Cancelled This Week

    As both Ken and Matt are on vacation this week, we must cancel this week’s GeekDads podcast, which we would ordinarily record tonight. HipTrax will be back next week on schedule, though, and the GeekDads podcast will record again on the night of July 17th. We hope you can join us in the chatroom then! [...]

    07.03.12 From GeekDad
  6. Better Than College

    Success without college. It's the new non-track career path.

    07.03.12 From GeekMom
  7. Travel Week: Universal Studios Cinematic Spectacular — 100 Years of Movie Memories

    Recently, I was given the opportunity to check out Universal Orlando's latest nighttime show. I've never seen an evening show at the park before, so I was looking forward to the experience. My past experience with nighttime shows at Disney, prepared me to fight the crowd and wait for over an hour for a good seat. To my surprise, that wasn't necessary at all. Unlike the shows at other Orlando theme parks, there are multiple locations along the water front that you can view the show and still have a front row experience.

    07.03.12 From GeekMom
  8. A Day at Drayton Manor and Thomas Land

    Drayton Manor is billed as a family park and is the UK home of Thomas Land (another Thomas themed park is located in Japan). With a train-obsessed two-year-old boy in our house this was obviously the park to go for this time.

    07.03.12 From GeekMom
  9. Exposure to Dogs Could Protect Kids From Asthma

    Babies exposed to certain microbes carried by dogs may build up immunity against asthma, according to research by a team of biologists from the University of California.

    07.03.12 From Wired Science
  10. Travel Week: Tips for a Stress-Free Road Trip With Small Kids

    The idea of taking a long car trip with young kids might make some parents nervous. But some of these tips from GeekMom Chaos Mandy might help make your road trips with small children more manageable.

    07.03.12 From GeekMom
  1. What Is a Vector?

    Alternate title: You Khan’t Divide a Vector by a Vector. Get it? Maybe you don’t, but that is ok. Really, I was going to make this a video critique of Sal Khan’s video critique of my video critique. If I made this a video, I could use this meme. But that would be wrong to [...]

  2. Alpha Colony Kickstarter Footnote Hints At Transphobia

    A recent article at Border House highlights the transgender issues of a current Kickstarter campaign for Alpha Colony. Meant as a tribute to the late Danielle Bunten Berry, a video grame pioneer formely known as Dan Bunten, the new video game license was granted by Dani's family comes with the footnote "*Dan Bunten was the creator of the original M.U.L.E. game in 1983 and the family would prefer that we refer to him as Dan instead of Dani."

    07.03.12 From GeekMom
  3. tINDIE: Like Etsy For Electronic Tinkerers

    Etsy-like site for electronics tinkerers is here!

    07.03.12 From GeekMom
  4. Gold and DNA Could Create New Dark Matter Detector

    A combined team of physicists and biologists aim to build a directional dark matter detector using strands of DNA and gold.

    07.03.12 From Wired Science
  5. Hex Laptop Tote Carries Your Tech in Style

    Hex is a division of August Accessories who has been designing fashion accessory products for over 20 years. This newer division of the company aims to use their design experience to develop functional and attractive solutions for taking your tech with you, wherever you need to go. I tried out the Hex Fleet 15" Laptop Tote and found that it did exactly what was promised.

    07.03.12 From GeekMom
  6. The Amazing Spider-Man: The Game

    In my experience most movie-based games fall flat, but once in a while one comes along that makes me think there is hope. The Amazing Spider-Man is one such game.

    07.03.12 From GeekDad
  7. Pentagon’s Brain-Powered Videogames Might Treat PTSD

    Soldiers and veterans looking to alleviate the devastating symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder might soon have a new way to help themselves. Strangely, it involves using their gray matter to control a videogame.

    07.03.12 From Danger Room
  8. How Anonymous Picks Targets, Launches Attacks, and Takes Powerful Organizations Down

    The success of Anonymous without leaders is pretty easy to understand???if you forget everything you think you know about how organizations work. Anonymous is a classic ???do-ocracy,??? to use a phrase that???s popular in the open source movement. As the term implies, that means rule by sheer doing: Individuals propose actions, others join in (or not), and then the Anonymous flag is flown over the result.

    07.03.12 From Threat Level
  9. Feds Look to Fight Leaks With ‘Fog of Disinformation’

    Pentagon-funded researchers have come up with a new plan for busting leakers: spot them by how they search, and then entice the secret-spillers with decoy documents that will give them away.

    07.03.12 From Danger Room
  10. A Start Up Trek – Rules of Thumb, the Revenge

    I see all of these benchmarks as knobs to turn and adjust to maximize the effectiveness of MindGear. In reality though I don't know ahead of time where these knobs should be set. The data I've collected gives me some comfort that I know generally where to set things, but for instance I won't know whether I need an employee for every four, five or six customers until I start operating and see how things go. Hopefully I'll be in the right operating range on all my knobs, that way my engine won't explode in my face when I first crank it.

    07.03.12 From GeekDad
  1. Camera Bag Delivers WWII Style and Modern Day Function

    Elegant is not the first word that comes to mind when photographers think of most camera bags. Boring is more like it. The Kickstarter-funded bags offered by Langly change all that.

    07.03.12 From Raw File
  2. How Instant-Streaming Games Could Change PlayStation’s Destiny

    Sony Computer Entertainment's $380 million acquisition of a game-streaming service is a bold, decisive move into cloud gaming for the PlayStation maker.

    07.03.12 From Game|Life
  3. Skater Recreates Iconic Skateboards of Yesteryear

    John Greeley wanted an original Powell Peralta Mike McGill F-14 Jet Fighter skateboard. When he couldn't find one, he did the next best thing: He made one.

    07.03.12 From Playbook
  4. After Ted, Seth MacFarlane Reboots Science Series Cosmos

    The Family Guy creator is putting a fresh spin on Carl Sagan's classic science show.

    07.03.12 From Underwire
  5. Author Claims Electric Vehicles Are a Green Illusion

    To hear automakers and environmentalists tell it, electric vehicles (EVs) are the greenest and cleanest solution to personal mobility. But in his book Green Illusions: The Dirty Secrets of Clean Energy and the Future of Environmentalism, author Ozzie Zehner argues that EVs are more symbolism and marketing than environmental and fossil-fuel saviors.

    07.03.12 From Autopia
  6. Take It or Leave It: Family-Friendly Press-Your-Luck Game

    Take It or Leave It is a new press-your-luck dice game from Gamewright, a company that GeekDad is quite fond of. If your family is fond of Zombie Dice but you want a little variety in your games of chance, here's one worth trying.

    07.03.12 From GeekDad
  7. Supreme Sound and Price with Skullcandy Hesh 2 Headphones

    The Skullcandy Hesh 2 headphones are another competent and coherent offering in Skullcandy's continuing line-up of music enjoyment devices.

    07.03.12 From GeekDad
  8. Contest Deadline: Star Wars Celebration VI Ticket Giveaway

    If you want to enter GeekDad's random drawing for a pair of four-day Celebration VI passes, generously provided by our friends at Lucasfilm, you've only got until midnight tonight - July 3 - Eastern Daylight Time. (You can also find the entry form at this link.) We'll be announcing the winner July 5.

    07.03.12 From GeekDad
  9. The Email Charter (NNTR)

    Back in June of 2011, TED Curator Chris Anderson (no relation to our Wired head honcho) and TED Scribe Jane Wulf wrote a blog post about the ridiculous amount of time that email takes ??? and a large part of the problem is that email is so easy and quick to send that it often requires more time from the recipient than it did from the sender: particularly if it's been copied to a huge list of people. Their call for help and list of suggestions resulted in the Email Charter: 10 Rules to Reverse the Email Spiral.

    07.03.12 From GeekDad
  10. Video Review: Xploderz Blaster Guns Fall Short for Summer Fun

    On a hot summer day, there's nothing like a big blast of water to cool you off. That means a summer around our house isn't complete until we've had at least one huge water gun battle. So when I saw the new Xploderz blasters, I just had to try them out.

    07.03.12 From GeekDad
  1. GeekDad Puzzle of the Week Solution: Planetary Paths

    This past week's puzzle was an interesting study in math and human nature. While we did not have nearly as many solutions offered as we do most weeks, *all* of the solutions offered were correct! Here is the puzzle as presented...

    07.03.12 From GeekDad
  2. The Chemistry of Fireworks

    My family loves going to watch fireworks on the Fourth of July. Who doesn't? And our friends at ByteSize Science have a new video explaining how all those different colors are produced. (Did you know they put in extra stuff to make the boom?) The video features a demonstration by fireworks expert John A. Conkling, of Washington College in Maryland, who literally wrote the book on The Chemistry of Pyrotechnics. ByteSize Science is produced by the American Chemical Society.

    07.03.12 From GeekDad
  3. A Google-a-Day Puzzle for July 3

    Google's daily brainteaser helps hone your search skills.

    07.03.12 From GeekDad
  4. The Inside Story of the Extra Second That Crashed the Web

    The "leap second" crash -- which hit several web operations on Saturday evening -- can be traced to a single glitch in the Linux operating system. Here's the inside story on what happened.

    07.02.12 From Wired Enterprise
  5. Big Tech: New Patent Office Fighting Tech Giants for Talent

    Einstein may have worked in the patent office, but Switzerland at the turn of the 20th century didn't have Google, Facebook and and other Silicon Valley giants stalking the earth in search of top science and engineering talent.

    07.02.12 From Wired: Business
  6. Physicist Adds ‘Mathematical Glitter’ to Amazing Spider-Man

    When the creators of The Amazing Spider-Man needed to devise an equation called a "decay rate algorithm" for the movie, they asked physicists for help.

    07.02.12 From Underwire
  7. Government Demands Growing for Twitter User Data

    Twitter reported Monday that the United States leads the pack when it comes to government demands for user data, with 679 requests for the first half of the year. Worldwide, Twitter said it has received more government demands for data for the first six months of the year than all of last year.

    07.02.12 From Threat Level
  8. News Round-Up: Meat, Superbugs, Denmark And Big Food

    I was off-line for a week with family issues, and while I was gone, news broke out. (It senses your absence, news does. This is the real reason why coups and major foodborne outbreaks happen in August.) So while I dive into the bigger stories that seem to be happening — and get some fun [...]

  9. Belarus Dictator Says He’s Totally Not Building a Dynasty

    Dictatorship is a hereditary business, because in a dictatorship, it's all about you. By extension, this includes your kinfolk, which can work out pretty great for them. Now Belarus' authoritarian president wants you to know he's totally not serious about handing over power to his 7-year-old son Nikolai.

    07.02.12 From Danger Room
  10. It’s Time to Build a Twitter-Free Twitter

    Twitter has once again put third-party developers on notice, hinting that unofficial Twitter clients may soon be a thing of the past. That's bad for developers, but it may have a silver lining if it wakes us up from our Twitter API slumber. It was fun, but it's time we stopped relying on a centralized messaging service and used the open web to create a twitter without Twitter.

    07.02.12 From Webmonkey
  1. Twitter Ordered to Cough Up Occupy User Data

    A New York judge has ordered Twitter to divulge the tweets and account information allegedly connected to an Occupy protester. The case, which the judge called one of "first impression," concerns Malcolm Harris, who was among hundreds arrested Oct. 1 in an Occupy movement march along the Brooklyn Bridge.

    07.02.12 From Threat Level
  2. When Nature Strikes, Cloud Failures Cause Storm

    Can Amazon handle its fast-growing cloud? That the questionWired Enterprise‘s Robert McMillan asked Saturday. Hurricane-like storms knocked an Amazon data center in Ashburn, Virginia, offline last night, and a chunk of the internet felt it. The six-hour incident temporarily cut off a number of popular internet services, including Netflix,??Pinterest,??Heroku, and??Instagram. The outage was the??second for [...]

    07.02.12 From Cloudline
  3. Wiretap Stats Decrease, But Don’t Go Celebrating Yet

    The number of criminal wiretaps authorized by federal and state judges in 2011 decreased 14 percent from the year prior to 2,732, according to the latest figures available.

    07.02.12 From Threat Level
  4. Unsung Color Photographer Saul Leiter Is In No Great Hurry

    A new documentary about photographer and painter, Saul Leiter, is a reflection not only on the artist but on life and art in general. Best known for his quiet, and often abstract, color street photography, the trailer above shows Leiter in a cluttered apartment taking a modest view of his decades of influence. At age [...]

    07.02.12 From Raw File
  5. Stunt Drivers Survive ‘Hot Wheels’ Double Dare Loop, Cars Less Fortunate

    In a blend of precise speed, rogue physics and downright insanity, stunt drivers Tanner Foust and Greg Tracy have done what plastic track-obsessed kids have dreamed of for years: the Double Dare Loop.

    07.02.12 From Autopia
  6. No Coin Toss, No Run-Off in Olympic Trial After Sprinter Withdraws

    EUGENE, Oregon — There won’t be a coin toss or run-off to determine the third and final spot on the women’s 100-meter U.S. Olympic team after all. Jeneba Tarmoh, who finished in a dead heat against Allyson Felix in the 100 meters trial here, has withdrawn from the team. Tarmoh and Felix were to face [...]

    07.02.12 From Playbook
  7. Higgs Hunt Heats Up With Final Tevatron Data

    As scientists await the latest results from the LHC, the final data from the Tevatron helps confirm the mass of the Higgs boson.

    07.02.12 From Wired Science
  8. Review: How Andrew Garfield Spins Amazing Spider-Man Forward

    With a winning mix of angst, athleticism and witty wisecracks, the Brit actor proves to be a perfect pick to play Marvel's geeky wall-crawler.

    07.02.12 From Underwire
  9. The Fast and the Fearless: Athletes Go for the Gold in the X Games

    The X Games double back-flipped through its 18th year of extreme sports, providing no shortage of awesomeness from famous, and infamous, athletes. Records were set, rivalries were reignited and the crashes that come with pushing the limits stunned audiences as some of the world's most fearless athletes competed in downtown Los Angeles.

    07.02.12 From Playbook
  10. Dell Continues Quest for Software Domination

    Dell has agreed to purchase Quest Software -- a San Francisco-based outfit offering tools for managing a wide range of business software -- as it continues to shift its operation toward the world of software.

    07.02.12 From Wired Enterprise
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