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CES 2019: Get Custom Layouts with Nemeio E Ink Keyboard

You can get custom keyboard layouts to solve annoying layout choices of mobile keyboards with the Nemeio E Ink keyboard shown at CES 2019.

By Laura Tucker – Jan 10, 2019

CES 2019: Lapscreen Paper-Thin USB-C Monitor that Travels Easily

CES 2019 debuted the Lapscreen, a paper-thin USB-C monitor that travels easily because of its thinness but doesn’t offer a lot of space.

By Laura Tucker – Jan 10, 2019

CES 2019: Blue Introduces Blue Ember XLR Microphone That Costs Only $100

Buying a good XLR mic can be expensive, but Blue microphones introduced a budget mic at CES 2019 that has what it takes to do the job at just $100.

By Laura Tucker – Jan 9, 2019

CES 2019 Takes You Back 2 Decades to PDA Era with Cosmo Communicator

At CES 2019 Planet Computers introduced a prototype of the Cosmo Communicator, a more modern PDA that utilizes today’s technology.

By Laura Tucker – Jan 9, 2019

CES 2019 Brings Plenty of Choices in Laptops and Notebooks

There are many different laptops being announced at CES 2019, including notebooks and special gaming laptops, from Samsung, Lenovo, and Razer.

By Laura Tucker – Jan 8, 2019

Apple Touts “What Happens on Your iPhone, Stays on Your iPhone” in CES

Apple hung a billboard with a play on the famous Las Vegas slogan, touting “What happens on your iPhone, stays on your iPhone” near the CES location.

By Laura Tucker – Jan 7, 2019

Chromebooks Will Soon Be Able to Dual-Boot with Windows 10

Chromebooks don’t naturally support Windows, but that could change after Google announced they will support dual-booting Windows 10 on their Chromebooks.

By Simon Batt – Jan 5, 2019

Tool That Can Mass-Hijack Google Chromecast Was Uploaded to Github

The Crashcast hacking tool was published on Github as a warning to Chromecast owners that they should not leave the devices connected to the Internet.

By Laura Tucker – Jan 4, 2019

New Plans for USB-C Will Add Authentication System and Be More Secure

The USB Implementers Forum has come up with a plan to add an authenticatino system that it believes will make USB-C connections more secure.

By Laura Tucker – Jan 3, 2019

New Apple Patent Shows Company Is Looking to Expand into Smart Clothing

A new patent filing for “smart clothing” shows that Apple is looking to get back into the innovation game. They have also filed patents for a ride-sharing system and a multiplayer gaming system.

By Laura Tucker – Jan 2, 2019

Stick to Your New Year’s Resolution to Stay Fit with Google Fit 30-Day Challenge

If you want to make sure you stick to your New Year’s resolution for 2019 to get fit, you can join the Google Fit 30-Day Challenge and create healthy habits.

By Laura Tucker – Jan 1, 2019

Microsoft Reportedly Working on 4K Webcams for Windows and Xbox

Microsoft is rumoured to be releasing their own 4K webcam products soon. These will be specifically designed to help with Windows Hello logins.

By Simon Batt – Dec 31, 2018

AR Implemented into Fish Tanks to Trick Sensing Organs of Fish

Researchers created in AR fish take that fooled the electric sensing organs of the glass knifefish into thinking it was dealing with a real environment.

By Laura Tucker – Dec 27, 2018

New Malware Uses Twitter Memes as Command Center

A new malware was discovered that uses Twitter and meme as its command center. Here’s how it works and how to protect yourself.

By Simon Batt – Dec 24, 2018

Apple Admits Some iPad Pros Are Slightly Bent But Claim that’s Normal

After user complaints, Apple has confirmed that a slightly bent iPad Pro is normal and that it’s a side effect of the manufacturing process.

By Laura Tucker – Dec 20, 2018

Complaint Lodged with FTC Over Google Play Store Allowing “Inappropriate” Kids Apps

A group of consumer advocations filed a complaint with the FTC alleging parents were misled by “inappropriate” kids apps on the Google Play Store.

By Laura Tucker – Dec 19, 2018

22 Malware-Infected Android Apps with 2 Million Downloads Pulled from Play Store

One strain of malware was found on 22 apps with over 2 million downloads before it was taken off of the market. This has caused some concern over how Google vets their apps.

By Simon Batt – Dec 17, 2018

Apple News Could Launch Subscription Service Next Spring

Regardless of the lack of support fro news outlets and users, Apple is planning on launching the new Apple News subscription service next spring.

By Laura Tucker – Dec 13, 2018

Molotov Will Allow French TV Viewers to Join a VR Coffee Shop and Watch TV with Friends

Do you sometimes binge-watch your favorite show and wish you could watch it with a friend? You can with Molotov Together, a VR café.

By Laura Tucker – Dec 12, 2018

Surprising News that Popular Apps Use Location Data for Advertising

Popular third-party apps use your location data, even when they don’t disclose that, and the data can detect where you are within a couple of yards.

By Laura Tucker – Dec 11, 2018

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When Sony shipped the first Walkman in 1979, chairman Akio Morita insisted on a second headphone jack and a “hotline” talk button, convinced it would be rude for one person to listen to music alone — and within a few years buyers had ignored the sociable features so completely that Sony quietly dropped them

Jun 15, 2026

Russia still custom-builds the Soyuz return seats for ISS crew members using plaster casts taken weeks before launch, because astronauts grow as much as five centimetres taller during a long-duration stay and a seat moulded to their Earth-shaped spine would no longer fit the body that comes home

Jun 12, 2026

Mycorrhizal fungi colonised plant roots roughly 450 million years ago and biologists now suspect plants could never have moved out of the oceans onto bare rock without them, meaning every forest on Earth — including the redwoods, the Amazon, and the boreal belt — is still running on a partnership older than trees themselves

Jun 11, 2026

Close-up of a young adult using a smartphone outdoors, highlighting modern technology and connectivity.

The “CrackBerry” nickname stuck for a reason — and the variable-reward psychology that hooked early-2000s executives on their BlackBerrys is the exact same machinery now running every push notification on every smartphone in your pocket

Jun 11, 2026

Intricate network of tree roots and moss on a forest hillside, showcasing nature's resilience.

Suzanne Simard sealed paper birch and Douglas fir seedlings inside plastic bags, fed them carbon-14 and carbon-13 dioxide, and nine days later found carbon had crossed between species through fungal threads in the British Columbia soil beneath her boots

Jun 10, 2026

Close-up of glowing jellyfish swimming gracefully in deep green ocean waters.

A species of jellyfish called Turritopsis dohrnii can revert its adult cells back to a juvenile polyp stage when injured or starving, effectively restarting its life cycle, and biologists have so far failed to identify any natural limit to how many times it can do this.

Jun 10, 2026

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