Some of the earliest examples of scientific imagery have proven the most durable.
Read More »Destination: Mattress
Allan Grant's evocative photos document Destination Moon, the trendsetting 1950 film about space travel.
Read More »Atari, the letterpress of art-game design
Ian Bogost's retrofuturist art game A Slow Year explores the traditions and aesthetic possibilities of the medium.
Read More »The coming nanosatellite swarm
NASA's latest nanosatellites seek answers to questions about the place of life in the universe�at a very small scale.
Read More »Lab rat fun: Pepsi beats Coke
Acid or base? When you're a coke can, it doesn't matter�you sizzle either way.
Read More »To solve TSA screening issues, look to the slaughterhouse
In an inspired take on the ongoing spate of airport screening controversies, Popular Mechanics� Erin McCarthy interviews cattle behavior expert Temple Grandin.
Read More »USB shaver: “dual cutter, perfect upgrade” for your desktop
I�m sure that any personal-care product featuring �102� deeply touch, shaving area increased� isn�t the least bit sketchy.
Read More »Han Solo carbonite coffee table casts a fanboy pall
Your friends with their puny carbonite ice-cube molds will envy you.
Read More »Undergarden trailer sends grunts on moonflower-pollinating suicide mission
Thrash metal and testosterone-raked commands give way to twee chimes and happy laughs in the latest trailer for Atari's whimsical casual game, The Undergarden.
Read More »Unevenly distributed: love on the phone, yesterday and today
"We speak on the phone, but where is your body?" Suzanne Fellini sings in "Love On the Phone." You can't push on a string; you can't embrace over a wire. But can the wire embrace us?
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