The Internet doesn't want you to think about it too much, but you never really know what you're looking for. Evoking the presence of 17th-century savant John Dee, Scryberspace cracks open the search experience.
Read More »Makes the Man: Serialized Scifi on Twitter
A shameless plug for an upcoming science fiction epic: it will feature narwhals, neural hacking, uncanny wearable computers, and mayhem on the ice. And it will be told in tweets.
Read More »The Last Stand of the Autonomous Self
Julian Smith: don't you ever interrupt me while I'm reading a book. Video after the jump.
Read More »Ecce Homo
The godlike vision granted by our far-flung sensors.
Read More »The Internet and Politics: It’s All Good (Except When It’s Not)
In a stirring piece for The Atlantic, Alexis Madrigal reports on Tunisian authorities' attempts to steal the passwords of Facebook users�and comments on what such a move means for the Internet's role as a means of fomenting political change.
Read More »Pope: Internet Isn’t the End of the (Good) News
Pope Benedict says the Internet is okay�as long as you don't post under a pseudonym.
Read More »The Music of the Things
Musically, our gadgets and everyday objects are like secret household gods. Video after the jump.
Read More »Unevenly Distributed: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The @
I start this column with only one aim. I would like to try to impart my love for one of the oldest, and most impenetrable, and aesthetically unattractive, and sociopathic and schizophrenic genres of computer game to a reader who will doubtlessly hate it for all of those exact reasons. I'm talking about rogue-likes, so called because of their ancestry in a progenitor called Rogue. Let's see how I do.
Read More »Precorder App is a Highlighter for Reality
Precorder provides a buffer interface for iPhone video, letting you choose your shots after they've happened. Or seen another way, it's a reticle for aiming special effects at points in space and time.
Read More »Bruce Sterling’s Master Class
Want to know what the future of Vimeo is? Look at the Dick Van Dyke show. Bruce Sterling shows how to think about the future: start with the past. He's not the first to say it, but he puts it together with as much brio and precision as anybody.
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