Technology News
EFF Tells Court That the NSA Knowingly and Illegally Destroyed Evidence
Slashdot - 5 Jun 2014 02:25
An anonymous reader writes in with this latest bit of EFF vs NSA news. 'We followed the back and forth situation earlier this year, in which there were some legal questions over whether or not the NSA needed to hang onto...
Musical mason jar lets you unbottle your beats
CNET - 5 Jun 2014 23:53Revealed: All the sneaky tricks King and Rovio use to get you addicted to their games
BGR - 5 Jun 2014 04:15
Do you find yourself playing mobile games like Angry Birds and Candy Crush Saga long after you know you should have stopped? If so, then there may be real scientific explanations for your addiction. The Guardian has an i...
This photo of the ISS looks like a scene from a space horror movie
Gizmodo - 5 Jun 2014 06:14
If you told me this was a frame from Alien 5*--with some dude about to get into the dark corridor in which the xenomorph hides, waiting to kill him--I would totally believe you. In reality, it's another cool image by ast...
Radio Shack Teams Up With PCH International To Create A Retail Pipeline For Hardware Startups
TechCrunch - 5 Jun 2014 05:45
Electronics retailer Radio Shack is teaming up with hardware manufacturer and accelerator PCH International to bring 6 square-foot “Powered by PCH” retail spaces to stores in the United States. This area will featu...
'Slenderman' Creator Eric Knudsen Speaks Out On Wisconsin Stabbing
The Huffington Post - 5 Jun 2014 04:23Tetris Creators Talk About Staying Relevant in a Candy-Crushed World (Q&A)
Re/code - 5 Jun 2014 01:27
The classic puzzle game is 30 years old, but it's still changing (or not) with the times.
Mechanism that forms cell-to-cell catch bonds found by researchers
Science Daily - 5 Jun 2014 21:57
Strong cell-to-cell bonds are important to heart health and fighting cancer. The bonds connecting heart cells have to withstand constant forces caused by continuous pumping. And, in some cancers, bonds no longer resist f...
Intel: Where we're going, we don't need cables
Engadget - 5 Jun 2014 16:30
If you ask us, Intel's "Llama Mountain" design -- a PC even thinner than the iPad -- is already pretty futuristic. "Futuristic" might be an inaccurate word, though, considering that thing (or devices like it) will arrive...
Parasitic Wasp Turns Roaches into Zombie Slaves using Neurotoxic Cocktail (Op-Ed)
Live Science - 5 Jun 2014 09:01
For decades, scientists have tried to understand the complex and gruesome relationship between the parasitic emerald wasp Ampulex compressa and its much larger victim, the common household cockroach Periplaneta americana...
Hands on with the super-thin Asus Transformer Book T300 Chi
PC World - 5 Jun 2014 07:30
It was the briefest of chances to pick up the new Asus Transformer Book T300 Chi, a laptop and tablet hybrid that looks to rival the Macbook Air for thinness, but it was the only all week to examine one of the hottest pr...
SPGBK White Party 2.0
The Gadget Flow - 5 Jun 2014 07:00
Price: $85 With the classic maple wood SPGBK White Party 2.0 on your wrists, having a check on time will not be a mundane task for you anymore. The white dial together with gold markings makes this entire timepiece a sty...
WhatsApp Co-Founder Brian Acton Talks About Not Getting "Swallowed By The Borg" At StartX
TechCrunch - 5 Jun 2014 06:08
In his first speaking engagement at tonight’s StartX event since Facebook acquired WhatsApp for $19 billion, the messaging service’s co-founder Brian Acton talked about WhatsApp’s big “F” word (focus), how pe...
Snowden sounds call to action for Reset the Net web protest
CNET - 5 Jun 2014 04:06Truvia sweetener not so sweet for fruit flies as it kills them dead
Tech Times - 5 Jun 2014 22:09
An ingredient found in the artificial sweetener Truvia is shown to be a safe insecticide while nontoxic to humans. Fruit flies that consume Truvia die within a day, researchers say.
Short nanotubes target pancreatic cancer
Science Daily - 5 Jun 2014 21:58
Short, customized carbon nanotubes have the potential to deliver drugs to pancreatic cancer cells and destroy them from within, according to researchers. Pristine nanotubes produced through a new process can be modified ...
Mobile DNA test for HIV under development
Science Daily - 5 Jun 2014 21:57
Bioengineers are developing an efficient test to detect signs of HIV and its progress in patients in low-resource settings. The current gold standard to diagnose HIV in infants and to monitor viral load depends on lab eq...
Exploring legal, ethical gray area for people with dementia
Science Daily - 5 Jun 2014 21:57
Many of the legal and ethical options for refusing unwanted interventions are not available to people with dementia because they lack decision-making capacity. But one way for these people to ensure that they do not live...
Why are older women more vulnerable to breast cancer? New clues
Science Daily - 5 Jun 2014 21:57
More insights into why older women are more susceptible to breast cancer has been gained by researchers. They found that as women age, the cells responsible for maintaining healthy breast tissue stop responding to their ...
New evidence links air pollution to autism, schizophrenia
Science Daily - 5 Jun 2014 21:57
A new study describes how exposure to air pollution early in life produces harmful changes in the brains of mice, including an enlargement of part of the brain that is seen in humans who have autism and schizophrenia. Th...
Extreme evolution: How snakes became the über-eater
New Scientist - 5 Jun 2014 21:00
Losing legs was just the start of snakes' bizarre journey - to switch from barely being alive to eating an antelope takes re-engineering at the molecular level (full text available to subscribers)
[GadgeTell] Smartphone sales climb by 43% in southeast Asia
Technology Tell - 5 Jun 2014 19:29
[From GadgeTell] The Southeast Asian smartphone market is continuing to grow and sales in that market have grown by 43 percent in the past year.