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An Apple insider told Wired today that the company’s new ultraportable, expected to be seen in public for the first time tomorrow, has an extremely thin profile and is shaped like a teardrop when closed — thicker at the top behind the screen, tapering at the bottom behind the keyboard. "It’s unbelievably thin," said the […] An Apple insider told Wired today that the company's new ultraportable, ex
What’s it like to work alongside the god of gaming? Yoshiaki Koizumi could tell you. As the director of Nintendo’s biggest Wii game yet, Super Mario Galaxy, Koizumi reports directly to Shigeru Miyamoto, the creator of Mario, the head of Nintendo’s game development group, and the greatest game designer the world has ever known. It’s […] What's it like to work alongside the god of gaming? Yoshiaki K
Raytheon, the giant defense contractor, recently bought up Utah technology firm Sarcos‘ robotics business. And it wasn’t because of Sarcos’ work on the Bellagio’s fountains, I suspect. For years, Sarcos has been working for the military on real-life exoskeletons, to radically boost soldiers’ strength. Here’s a video of a Sarcos exoskeleton in action. (High five: CA) ALSO :
“Oh! The Wii’s sales are dropping!If it keeps going like this, I can win!” If you think the videogame message boards in your country are going crazy over the fact that Xbox 360 sales briefly eclipsed the PlayStation 3’s in the Media Create rankings, imagine what it’s like in Japan. One poster on 2ch managed […] "Oh! The Wii's sales are dropping! If it keeps going like this, I can win!" If you thin
Courtesy of Floridian Gadget Lab reader Rob V. Burr. His friend picked up a load of extra iPhones, apparently, having gone to the store with his kids so as to have plenty to experiment with. Mildly NSFW due to some sailor talk. Courtesy of Floridian Gadget Lab reader Rob V. Burr. His friend picked up a load of extra iPhones, apparently, having gone to the store with his kids so as to have plenty t
Wired News Benchmarks Show Safari 3 Is Slower Than IE 7, Firefox By Michael Calore June 12, 2007 | 7:15:57 PMCategories: browsers, Windows By guest reviewer Dylan Tweney Apple CEO Steve Jobs touted Safari 3's speed as one of its most appealing features. But in tests by Wired News, the first public beta of Safari for Windows is actually slower than both Internet Explorer 7 and Firefox 2 when acce
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Google's new Street View, a new Google Maps feature that uses vehicle-cameras to take 360-degree street level views of major urban areas, captured all sorts of urban ephemera in the process from tabbies in windows to red light runners. Help Wired News capture the best inadvertent urban snapshots. Submit and vote on your favorite urban scenes – be they citizens flaunting the laws or hot dog vendors
A Digg.com user is claiming he got the boot from Digg for posting the HD DVD AACS Processing Key number to the popular news aggrigation and filtering site. The processing key, a string of numbers only a hacker could love, is key to unlocking copy-protected High Def movies. In other words: it's a DMCA no-no for you to know, citizen consumer. The number was initially published a couple of months ago
Pushing through extremes of heat and cold, surviving massive blood loss, and supercharging the body's metabolism – that was just the start. The military isn't only looking to radically boost the physical performance of American troops. Its trying to improve mental abilities, as well. The first step: computers than can scan your mind and adapt to what you're thinking. Since 2000, Darpa, the Pentago
It's been almost half a century since the first computer mouse squeaked out of a Stanford lab in the '60s. Here's a gallery of some of the good, the bad and the truly awful from the last 45 years. Left: Douglas Engelbart and Bill English invented the mouse -- then named the "Bug" -- in 1964, and created this chunky, beautiful wooden device to demonstrate the concept. Pictured here is a replica at
Price said she could not disclose what their investigation might entail, or what "appropriate action" might be. “We’ve just learned of this claim today and are checking into it,” said Andy Parsons, chair of the Blu-ray Disc Association and senior V.P. of product development at Pioneer Electronics, in an email. The new crack follows that from earlier this year, when a hacker by the name of muslix64
The world's most ubiquitous operating system was not always so. The evolution of Windows was often uncertain and precarious. Its success was symbiotic with advancements in processor speed and memory capacity, and Microsoft relied heavily on third-party software to bridge the gap between concept and consumer. Tour the 23-year history of the Windows OS through these screenshots. Left: Microsoft's f
Microsoft’s Vista hits store shelves on Tuesday and although it's got mixed reviews, there's one group that actually seems quite excited about it – Mac users. At Macworld, the most crowded booths belonged to Parallels Inc. and VMWare, two software companies that help run Windows a Mac. It was quite remarkable: both were mobbed. Funnily enough, Macs are great machines for running Vista. They're new
For decades Japan's love hotels have provided a place for couples to enjoy anonymous, uninterrupted sex. Politician and secretary, teacher and student, husband and hooker -- all are welcome, as long as they pay in cash and leave when the time limit is up. But 2006 spawned a new type of love hotel. Decorated with theme park interiors and equipped with game consoles, karaoke boxes and sex machines -
The wheel. The plow. The gun. The electric light. The radio. The chip. The untidy march of human ingenuity and innovation has led you here, to our list of the 10 most life-altering devices of the modern era. Also, check out the entire holiday Test issue online for today's world-changing gadgets. Left: (1946) When soldiers returned home from World War II, they could finally kick back and watch TV.
If you're a Windows user, open Notepad and type in this phrase, without the quote marks and with no carriage return: "Bush hid the facts". Now save it and open it again. The subversive text is probably gone, replaced by a line of white boxes, or Chinese characters if you have the font. Weeeird. It's not the massive right-wing conspiracy it might seem, though. The folks at WinCustomize.com discove
By Wired Blogs May 25, 2006 | 6:58:22 PMCategories: Web 2.0 Amazon.com has launched a new feature. It's an Ajax-powered book reader that lets customers flip through the excerpted pages of books in Amazon's store. The page viewer features a tabbed interface for easy browsing, and there's even a search field within the tool so you can view excerpts from multiple books without having to leave the r
UPDATE: As reader Eric pointed out below, this is, indeed a recurring event that just happens to be falling the day after everybody is expecting to see the MacBook drop. I knew Apple wasn't going to do let a third party slip up and announce one of its products... A Manhattan CompUSA location has apparently further let the cat out of the bag about Apple's impending announcement of an iBook replacem
You may have to adjust your lifestyle around this paint job, but it'd be worth it. Dell's $10,000 collector's edition PC was announced shortly after it acquired Alienware this week. This is the first PC to include four nVIDIA graphics cards in SLI, though Alienware now offers it on their site. Left: You may have to adjust your lifestyle around this paint job, but it'd be worth it. Dell's $10,000 c
While the exact cause of the deadly sinking of the Bayesian superyacht remains unknown, dangerous waterspouts were spotted in the area. Scientists say they may become far more common.
The Web Developer's ResourceA Wired.com user account lets you create, edit and comment on Webmonkey articles. You will also be able to contribute to the Wired How-To Wiki and comment on news stories at Wired.com. It's fast and free.
The absolute must-have MoonSwatch has arrived, complete with a moon-phase function. Its all-white look is spot-on for NASA fans.
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