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Molecular Hardware: The Promise And The Challenges

Molecular Hardware: The Promise and the Challenges

As the race for smaller hardware continues, let’s dive into what this means and what challenges manufacturers face in making molecular hardware a reality.

By Miguel Leiva-Gomez – Jun 24, 2016

5 Tech Gadgets to Help People With Disabilities

5 Tech Gadgets to Help People with Disabilities

There are many types of assistive tech gadgets that are made specifically for people with disabilities to make thing easier for them. Here are five of them.

By Karrar Haider – May 18, 2016

Is Technology Killing Our Languages?

Is internet slang going to mark the death of an objective standard for language?

By Miguel Leiva-Gomez – Aug 27, 2015

MTE Explains: Everything About Image Stabilization

Manufacturers like Apple and Samsung have recently introduced image stabilizers into their cameras. Find out everything about image stabilization here.

By Miguel Leiva-Gomez – Apr 27, 2015

awesometech-featuredimage

Awesome Technologies and Gadgets to Make Your Tech Life Easier in 2015 and Beyond

There’s so much in store for tech enthusiasts this year with all thee new toys for big boys and girls – it’s difficult not to gloat over them on screen. Let’s check them out.

By Maria Krisette Capati – Jan 17, 2015

Is It Wise to Control Everything From Your Phone?

Smartphones are now becoming an integral parts of our lives. Is this necessarily a bad thing? It’s time we explored this!

By Miguel Leiva-Gomez – Aug 25, 2014

New Year, New Horizons: What We Can Expect From Mobile Technology in 2014

The year 2013 has come to an end, and 2014 is upon us. It is now time to look forward and see what kinds of new gadgets and gizmos we’ll see in our near future.

By Miguel Leiva-Gomez – Jan 3, 2014

7 Technology Myths That Cost You Money

Technology myths are everywhere. On occasions, it costs you money and make you poorer. Let’s take a look at some of the technology myths that cost you money.

By Damien Oh – Oct 18, 2013

Using Your Brainwaves to Trigger the “Do-Not-Disturb” Feature: Helpful or Intruding?

Apple’s iOS rolled out a feature last year called Do Not Disturb that allows you to set it up to prevent calls during certain times of the day. It might not stop there. Neuroscientist Ruggero Scorcioni debuted a new automatic do-not-disturb technology via a smartphone app at an AT&T event this week. Is this going to be helpful or intruding?

By Laura Tucker – Apr 5, 2013

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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

Octopuses possess roughly 500 million neurons distributed across their body, with two-thirds located in their arms rather than their central brain, meaning each arm can taste, problem-solve, and react to stimuli independently of whatever the octopus is otherwise paying attention to.

Jun 10, 2026

Explore the historic Roman bridge in lush Salamanca, Spain captured beautifully in daylight.

The Roman aqueduct at Segovia, built around the first century AD without mortar, still carried water into the 1970s, its 167 granite arches held together by nothing but the precise weight distribution of stones cut to fit each other within fractions of a millimeter.

Jun 10, 2026

In 1843, Ada Lovelace described a brass-and-punched-card engine that could act on symbols as well as numbers, even composing music if harmony could be reduced to rules, inside seven translator’s notes three times longer than the paper itself

Jun 10, 2026

Bright modern laboratory with computers and technical equipment for research and analysis.

ARPANET sent its first message on 29 October 1969 from a lab at UCLA to a machine at Stanford, and the message was supposed to read ‘LOGIN’ — but the system crashed after the L and the O, meaning the first word ever transmitted over the network that became the internet was, by accident, ‘LO’.

Jun 9, 2026

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Uncomplicating the complicated, making life easier

Make Tech Easier provides tech tutorials, reviews, tips and tricks to help you navigate the complicated world of technology. We aim to uncomplicate the complicated, making your life easier.

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