CATEGORIES

Bowers & Wilkins Formation Wedge: Beautiful And Pricey
PC Magazine

Bowers & Wilkins Formation Wedge: Beautiful And Pricey

Much has changed since Bowers & Wilkins released the iconic Zeppelin Wireless speaker in 2015—most notably, the company has come under new ownership. With its new Formation line of wireless speakers, B&W is still on top of its game. At $899.99, the Formation Wedge is even more expensive than the $700 Zeppelin was at launch. But like the Zeppelin, it pushes boundaries in the style department while putting out powerful, room-filling audio with some serious bass presence and excellent high-frequency clarity. Whether it’s worth the sky-high price, however, depends on how much you’re willing to pay for innovative design.

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4 mins  |
July 2019
Wacom Intuos Pro Creative Pen Tablet: For Both Pros And Amateurs
PC Magazine

Wacom Intuos Pro Creative Pen Tablet: For Both Pros And Amateurs

The Wacom Intuos Pro Creative Pen Tablet is a graphics tablet with a writing surface but no screen. It’s responsive to an included pen stylus and to gesture-based finger commands.

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6 mins  |
July 2019
50 Years Later, The Moon Is Still Great For Business
AppleMagazine

50 Years Later, The Moon Is Still Great For Business

Fifty years after humans first visited, businesses are still trying to make a buck off the moon.

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3 mins  |
June 28, 2019
2 Russians Venture Into Open Space From Space Station
AppleMagazine

2 Russians Venture Into Open Space From Space Station

Two Russian crewmembers on the International Space Station ventured into open space Wednesday to conduct scientific research and help maintain the orbiting outpost.

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1 min  |
May 31, 2019
Your Amazing Body!
Reader's Digest US

Your Amazing Body!

Your fingerprints can predict some health issues. Looking at the sun can make you sneeze. You grow a new skeleton every ten years. Science hasn’t uncovered every mystery, but what it has discovered will blow your mind.

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10+ mins  |
June 2019
NASA: Budget Boost ‘Good Start' To Put Astronauts On Moon
AppleMagazine

NASA: Budget Boost ‘Good Start' To Put Astronauts On Moon

NASA’s chief said that the Trump administration’s proposed $1.6 billion budget boost is a “good start” for getting astronauts back on the moon within five years.

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2 mins  |
May 17, 2019
An Ecologist Maps Trees From 7,000 Feet
Popular Science

An Ecologist Maps Trees From 7,000 Feet

On the big island of Hawaii, a fungus called ceratocystis is murdering ‘ohii‘a trees—at least 1 million in the past eight years.

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3 mins  |
Summer 2019
Popular Science

Rise Of The Plastic Eaters

Scientists have new hope that nature might hold a solution for our most problematic polymers

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10+ mins  |
Summer 2019
What You Take With You
Popular Science

What You Take With You

Death might be life’s natural and unavoidable conclusion, but humans have ensured that what happens to our bodies afterward is anything but.

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2 mins  |
Summer 2019
Where The Buffalo No Longer
Popular Science

Where The Buffalo No Longer

DESPITE WHAT SEEMS LIKE A CONSERVATION SUCCESS STORY, OUR NATIONAL MAMMAL MIGHT STILL BE AT RISK.

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10+ mins  |
Summer 2019
Marie Tharp - The Woman Who Mapped the Ocean Floor
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

Marie Tharp - The Woman Who Mapped the Ocean Floor

The woman who mapped the ocean floor

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5 mins  |
May - June 2019
A Live Map Of Everywhere On Earth: Creepy Or Cool?
Muse Science Magazine for Kids

A Live Map Of Everywhere On Earth: Creepy Or Cool?

Imagine turning on the GPS and seeing an image of your car from above.

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2 mins  |
May - June 2019
Mars Lander Picks Up What's Likely 1st Detected Marsquake
AppleMagazine

Mars Lander Picks Up What's Likely 1st Detected Marsquake

NASA’s InSight lander has picked up a gentle rumble at Mars, believed to be the first marsquake ever detected.

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1 min  |
AppleMagazine #391
How Synbio Will Save The World
Inc.

How Synbio Will Save The World

Reprogramming microbes so they eat toxins and CO2? t’s not science fiction. It’s happening right now.

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10+ mins  |
May 2019
Science Says Light Brighter!
Metropolis Magazine

Science Says Light Brighter!

In Troy, New York, a leading research center studies the connection between light, color, and well-being.

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4 mins  |
April 2019
Connection Between Light, Color, And Well-being
Metropolis Magazine

Connection Between Light, Color, And Well-being

In Troy, New York, a leading research center studies the connection between light, color, and well-being.

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4 mins  |
April 2019
Nasa's Plan To Scoop Up Dirt From Asteroid Hits A Snag
AppleMagazine

Nasa's Plan To Scoop Up Dirt From Asteroid Hits A Snag

NASA’s plan to scoop up dirt and gravel from an asteroid has hit a snag, but scientists say they can overcome it.

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2 mins  |
March 22, 2019
Ocean Mission's  Emergency Ascent Caused By Motor Burning Out
AppleMagazine

Ocean Mission's Emergency Ascent Caused By Motor Burning Out

A drama in which a submersible made an emergency ascent from 250 meters (820 feet) below the Indian Ocean was caused by condensation burning out a small motor in the cockpit, the director of the British-led Nekton Mission said.

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1 min  |
March 22, 2019
NASA's New Rocket Won't Be Ready For Moon Shot Next Year
Techlife News

NASA's New Rocket Won't Be Ready For Moon Shot Next Year

NASA’s top official says the space agency’s new rocket won’t be ready for a moon shot next year.

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1 min  |
March 16, 2019
Israeli Spacecraft Snaps Ultimate Selfie On Way To Moon
Techlife News

Israeli Spacecraft Snaps Ultimate Selfie On Way To Moon

An Israeli spacecraft has taken the ultimate selfie on its roundabout journey to the moon.

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1 min  |
Techlife News #384
The Race To Put The Internet In Orbit
Bloomberg Businessweek

The Race To Put The Internet In Orbit

OneWeb has sent the first of its small signal-beaming satellites into space

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7 mins  |
March 11, 2019
China Drafts Rules On Biotech After Gene-Editing Scandal
AppleMagazine

China Drafts Rules On Biotech After Gene-Editing Scandal

China has unveiled draft regulations on gene editing and other potentially risky biomedical technologies after a Chinese scientist’s claim of helping to create gene-edited babies roiled the global science community.

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2 mins  |
March 01, 2019
UAE Says Its First Astronaut Going Into Space In September
AppleMagazine

UAE Says Its First Astronaut Going Into Space In September

The first astronaut from the United Arab Emirates will blast off into space on Sept. 25 on a trip to the International Space Station, authorities announced this week.

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2 mins  |
March 01, 2019
And Nowfor The Weather On Mars, Courtesy Of New NASA Lander
Techlife News

And Nowfor The Weather On Mars, Courtesy Of New NASA Lander

And now for the weather on Mars: NASA’s newest lander is offering daily reports on the red planet’s frigid winter.

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1 min  |
Techlife News #382
Snaking Transit Through Ancient History
Popular Science

Snaking Transit Through Ancient History

In Profile / Rossella Rea.

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3 mins  |
Spring 2019
The Masterpiece On A Slate Gray Day In
Popular Science

The Masterpiece On A Slate Gray Day In

In 1970, Bruce Kirby created the perfect single-person sailboat. What made the laser so unbeatable?

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10+ mins  |
Spring 2019
Save Your Soles
Popular Science

Save Your Soles

YOU PROBABLY DON’T WANT TO WEAR THAT PAIR OF BLOWN out Converse All-Stars to amble anywhere farther than the corner store. For long treks, the proper footwear will support your dogs and grip the ground to prevent sore soles, painful blisters, and mangled ankles. These four choices will carry you for many miles over different types of terra firma.

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1 min  |
Spring 2019
Getting There
Popular Science

Getting There

Public transportation is great—if you have access to it. Now cities are starting to think about how to help people with the first and last miles of their travels.

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10+ mins  |
Spring 2019
NASA's Faraway Space Snowman Has Flat, Not Round, Behind
Techlife News

NASA's Faraway Space Snowman Has Flat, Not Round, Behind

The faraway space snowman visited by NASA last month has a surprisingly flat — not round — behind.

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1 min  |
Techlife News #381
Antarctica Is Losing Ice 6 Times Faster Today Than In 1980s
AppleMagazine

Antarctica Is Losing Ice 6 Times Faster Today Than In 1980s

Antarctica is melting more than six times faster than it did in the 1980s, a new study shows.

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1 min  |
January 18, 2019