World’s Most Wired Toymaker
• http://www.wired.com, By Geeta DayalTo get to Jaimie Mantzel’s home you’ll need your hiking shoes.
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To get to Jaimie Mantzel’s home you’ll need your hiking shoes.
A tribute to Steve Jobs and the legacy he has left the world.
By this point, prototyping machines like 3-D printers have taken their place alongside hammers, sewing machines and screwdrivers on the DIYer’s tool bench.
Better technology and high battery costs have revived interest in hydrogen-guzzling vehicles.
Gwynne Shotwell breaks down the mission from lift-off to rendezvous with the Space Station.
This type of system has the potential to allow users to design or download a specific wire-based project and precisely create its individual components. And it creates the possibility to create skeletal frameworks for 3-D printers to build on
Sun spots might appear small and innocent, but they hint at powerful forces at work on the surface of the Sun, forces that can wreak havoc on our electronic devices when they cause solar flares and coronal mass ejections.
From a capsule suspended 23 miles (36.6 kilometers) above Roswell, N.M., daredevil Felix Baumgartner will skydive in an attempt to set a new altitude record.
Conspiratorial Evil in Government - Sometimes only movies tell the truth / Back Off, Turkey, Stop firing on Syria, says Eric Margolis / Government Killed the American Dream - Gerald Celente / Google Crushed My Dreams
It has long been possible to make a gun at home. But what happens when it no longer takes knowledge and skill to build one?
Pictures of Zip Guns and FP-45 Liberator Guns on Google Image...
It's time to familiarize yourself with this activist tool again... It's about to get a SAFE upgrade www.SAFEgunowners.org
It's estimated that, for defense and national security, the U.S. spends about one trillion dollars a year -- which amounts to more than 80 percent of this year's expected deficit. Candidates promising to spend even more ?
A Pennsylvania lawmaker’s refusal to lead the Pledge of Allegiance sparked an onslaught of controversy.
If you plan on visiting Detroit any time soon, the police have a message for you: “Enter Detroit at your own risk”.
Tucked into the U.S. Supreme Court’s agenda this fall is a little-known case that could upend your ability to resell everything from your grandmother’s antique furniture to your iPhone 4.
One of the great benefits of being in charge of a magazine like Popular Science is that a lot of doors are open to me.
On Monday, Baumgartner will attempt a record-breaking skydive from 23 miles up. Can he pull it off? And is it just a stunt, or does it stand to benefit science?
Not only that, but John Downer also creates replicas of birds and fires them into the sky to capture real birds. The results are incredible.
There was a time when the Department of Homeland Security wasn’t enthusiastic about its drone fleet.
Iran’s offshore oil and gas platforms were the targets of the cyber attacks aimed at crippling the country.
NATO forces “are fleeing Afghanistan” in “humiliation and disgrace”, proclaims the Taliban as the US-led war in the country enters its twelfth year.
The first-ever private supply mission to the International Space Station is underway.
Apple has been pretty good lately about admitting when it is wrong.
Earlier today, the World Bank slashed its outlook for growth in China to 7.7 percent in 2012 and 8.1 percent in 2013, down from 8.2 percent and 8.6 percent, respectively.
California's gas prices have been surging in the last week thanks to supply disruptions and regulatory requirements.
Both national and swing-state polls are beginning to tighten in the presidential race between President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney.
UPDATE: The AP is reporting that President Hugo Chavez has been proclaimed victor in the Venezuelan elections, according to the country's National Electoral Council.
Markets are falling early in the European trading session.
Strange black objects seen from 200 miles above the surface of Mars are generating interest and speculation that the unidentified objects could be anything from geysers to sunbathing colonies of microorganisms.