Comment dire MDR en 13 langues différentes
Si vous voyez quelque chose d'hilarant en russe sur Facebook, vous saurez exactement quoi dire.
Si vous voyez quelque chose d'hilarant en russe sur Facebook, vous saurez exactement quoi dire.
It's the Velvet Underground of tech: just a few users, but a boatload of imitators.
After Google's panic-inducing earnings report, both Facebook and Amazon took a tumble too. Microsoft is having a pretty bad day too.
It all hinges on the Lam Quotient: the cost of a gadget, divided by the number of hours you'll use it over its lifetime. That's good news for smartphones and bad news for tablets — and in the case of a laptop, you're often better off upgrading components.
When a question is too hard for Google and Wikipedia, Quora has to pick up the slack. For instance, Why is Life So Great?
It's a literal series of tubes. Google gave us a new look inside their data centers this morning, and they're surprisingly low-tech. In fact, they kind of just look like factories. Could this have something to do with that long, angry Times piece a few weeks back? Nah, probably not.
Remember that weird Facebook ad from a while ago? With this parody site, anything can be like Facebook! Our ideas so far: wombats, planets and dead people. Add yours in the comments.
Mathematician Paul Bourke collects satellite photos that look like fractals. It turns out, Earth looks kind of crazy.
This $85,000 camera takes pictures that show the passage of time, from left to right.
It's the only known English-Language copy of Final Fantasy 2. In honor of the craziness, Boing Boing takes a dive into the strange world of rare console games, from the prototype Zelda cartridge (which sold for $55,000) to the notorious "Swedish Erotica" Atari game, Custer's Revenge.