One of the biggest problems in 3D printing is anticipating the kind of equipment you'll need; if you suddenly have to print in ceramics, you may have to buy another machine.
3D printers are everywhere! They've been around for a little while now, of course, with favorites from MakerBot, Formlabs, and others for home use, but now they're also popping up from established manufacturers of inkjet printers — like HP —
In the past few years the Christmas shopping season moved from the "Black Friday" the day after Thanksgiving, to earlier and earlier starts on Thanksgiving, then to the day before Thanksgiving.
The 2022 Olympics (i.e., the Winter Games) is now down to only two applicant nations: China and Kazakhstan. This follows the withdrawal of Norway after the taxpayers of Norway balked on ponying up the cash necessary to make the Olympics a playground
In June 2011, Julian Assange received an unusual visitor: the chairman of Google, Eric Schmidt, arrived from America at Ellingham Hall, the country house in Norfolk, England where Assange was living under house arrest.
Last year we reported on 2by4 Architects' Recreational Island House, a particularly appealing vacation home constructed on a small island in Loosdrecht, the Netherlands.
Gold is mined in amounts ten time greater than Platinum, yet they trade at around the same price. Gold's monetary status throughout the ages has helped keep its value not its scarcity.
Suppose auto dealers in a neighboring state pressured their DoT to make Tesla Motors stop giving test drives of its Model S electric car--the same kind it now offers in more than a dozen other states.
Though there is some debate over the exact income a middle class household brings in, we do have an idea of who the middle class are — most working class people.
When it was announced earlier this month that a 1976 Apple 1 motherboard would be up for grabs at the Bonhams' History of Science auction in New York, we wondered whether the sale prices such artifacts have attracted in the past adequately reflects t
If you think retirement communities are populated by brainwashed old farts in golf carts who go to church twice a week to assure themselves a place in an imagined hereafter, prepare yourself for a new perspective.
Alex Jones looks at the trending slump in McDonalds sales and how the franchise hopes to revive their sub-food business model with their LeBron James led casino gulag styled Monopoly Game.
Alevo Inc. will use the former Philip Morris plant in Concord to manufacture an innovative battery technology, which sources say will "help solve some of the world's biggest energy problems."
If innovation in the automotive industry had kept apace with innovation in the computer industry, the joke goes, we would all be driving $25 cars that got 1,000 miles to the gallon but, for no reason at all, crashed twice a day.