English: EUVL tool, that deposits virtually defect-free, ultra-thin films on integrated circuits. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - MARCH 20: Artwork is projected onto the Sydney Opera House during the finale of the YouTube Symphony Orchestra on March 20, 2011 in Sydney, Australia. Musicians from over thirty countries were selected to perform as part of the YouTube Symphony Orchestra after submitting a video audition to YouTube that was voted on by the public. The amatuer and professional participants, ranging from age 14 to age 49, were flown to Sydney for one week to particpate in free public concerts and a sold-out finale performance at the Sydney Opera House. The entire performance was projected on the iconic Opera House sails and streamed live online via Youtube. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)FOREST CITY, NC - APRIL 19: An employee walks past servers in one of four server rooms at the new Facebook Data Center on April 19, 2012 in Forest City, North Carolina. The company began construction on the facility in November 2010 and went live today, serving the 845 million Facebook users worldwide. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)ARIZONA BORDERS AND CITIZEN SAFETY... (Photo credit: roberthuffstutter)English: An aerial view of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Syrian Rebels Use YouTube, Facebook for Weapons Trainingopen original article
Dell Launches Flying Data Center at War Fightersopen original article
The Government's Mass Migration to the Cloudopen original article
Record-Breaking Laser Hits 500 Trillion Wattsopen original article
Mahdi, the Messiah, Found Infecting Systems in Iran, Israelopen original article
It's Official: Social Media Users Happier With Google+ Than With Facebookopen original article
Facebook Vows to Speed Web With Tech From ... Googleopen original article
The Ultimate Googler Is Yahoo's Ideal CEOopen original article
NSA Mimics Google, Pisses Off Senateopen original article
How the Navy's Incompetence Sank the 'Green Fleet'open original article
Air Force to Mil-Tweeters: You're All Clueless N00bsopen original article
America's Army Comic: Bad Recruiting Tool, Worse Storyopen original article
Video: How to Destroy a Building With Lightopen original article
Frack the Border: Cartels Using Oil Boom to Move Drugsopen original article
TSA Fails to Comply With Year-Old 'Nude' Body-Scanner Court Orderopen original article
Panda 2.0 Lands: Right Time for Antivirus via Cloud?open original article
Oil Companies Spring a Leak, Courtesy of Anonymousopen original article
Syria's Collapse Could Be a Chem Weapon Nightmareopen original article
Geoengineering Could Backfire, Make Climate Change Worseopen original article
When Galaxies Collide: Beautiful Images of Cosmic Impactsopen original article
Video: Solar Eruption Caught on Cameraopen original article
Alt Text: Don't Be a Data Hoarderopen original article
First Footage of Neill Blomkamp's Elysium Shows Earth as Sci-Fi Landfillopen original article
Can a $10 Robot Save African Education?open original article
Par:AnoIA: Anonymous Launches WikiLeaks-esque Site for Data Dumpsopen original article
NASA Tests Robotic Gas Station Attendant for Outer Spaceopen original article
Explosion, Fire Cause Data Meltdown in Calgaryopen original article
Become Your Own LOLcat With Brainwave-Controlled Kitty Earsopen original article
Chicken Vaccines Combine to Produce Deadly Virusopen original article
Tue Jul 17, 2012 16:09 from Wired Top Stories
Rebels fighting against Bashar Assad in Syria's civil war are outgunned, outmanned and largely aren't professional soldiers. So they're turning to social media for tutorials in how to use their weapons.Dell Launches Flying Data Center at War Fightersopen original article
Tue Jul 17, 2012 15:59 from Wired Top Stories
We're still waiting for Google's Data Center Navy. But Dell is doing its best to feed the Data Center Air Force. On Tuesday, the Texas computing giant took the wraps off what it calls the Dell Tactical Mobile Data Center -- a kind of data-center-in-a-box that's specifically designed for military outfits looking to air-lift temporary computing power into emergency situations.The Government's Mass Migration to the Cloudopen original article
Tue Jul 17, 2012 07:54 from Wired Top Stories
Ideally, we?ll all benefit not only from better and more efficient agencies, but also from the cloud's $12 billion worth of annual savings in the federal deficit, writes Rob Vandenberg.Record-Breaking Laser Hits 500 Trillion Wattsopen original article
Tue Jul 17, 2012 07:30 from Wired Top Stories
Laser physicists at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory have broken the record for the highest-power laser shot with a collection of beams delivering more than 500 trillion watts of peak power.Mahdi, the Messiah, Found Infecting Systems in Iran, Israelopen original article
Tue Jul 17, 2012 07:00 from Wired Top Stories
Mahdi, a new piece of spyware found targeting more than 800 victims in Iran and elsewhere, has been stealing documents and recording conversations since last December.Who knew that when the Messiah arrived to herald the Day of Judgment he'd first root through computers to steal documents and record conversations?It's Official: Social Media Users Happier With Google+ Than With Facebookopen original article
Tue Jul 17, 2012 04:30 from Wired Top Stories
As much as Facebook is a part of people's day-to-day lives, a lot of people don't actually like using the social network giant. Google+ on the other hand is getting a warm reception in comparison, according to a new ACSI report.Facebook Vows to Speed Web With Tech From ... Googleopen original article
Mon Jul 16, 2012 18:07 from Wired Top Stories
In a rare case of agreement between the two internet giants, Facebook has announced that it?s adopting the new protocol Google developed to speed the delivery of webpages across the net. The Ultimate Googler Is Yahoo's Ideal CEOopen original article
Tue Jul 17, 2012 04:30 from Wired Top Stories
If you were to tick off the ideal leader for Yahoo, you?d wind up with a description that sounds a lot like Marissa Mayer: Highly technical, product-oriented, as Internet-savvy as anyone in the world, and charismatic enough to energize followers.NSA Mimics Google, Pisses Off Senateopen original article
Tue Jul 17, 2012 04:30 from Wired Top Stories
In 2008, a small team of coders inside the National Security Agency started reverse-engineering the database that ran Google. They closely followed the Google research paper describing BigTable -- the sweeping database that underpinned many of the Google's online services, running across tens of thousands of computer servers -- but they also went a little further. In rebuilding this massive database, they beefed up the security. After all, this was the NSA.How the Navy's Incompetence Sank the 'Green Fleet'open original article
Mon Jul 16, 2012 22:01 from Wired Top Stories
On Wednesday, the Navy will sail its eco-friendly "Great Green Fleet" for the first time -- and maybe the last. The Navy has screwed up its once-promising biofuel plan with a blend of bad politics and questionable analysis, alienating Congress and Pentagon insiders alike. And that's before they get socked with a $1.8 billion annual bill for all that green fuel.Air Force to Mil-Tweeters: You're All Clueless N00bsopen original article
Mon Jul 16, 2012 16:43 from Wired Top Stories
Captain Obvious, report for duty. The Air Force wants you to know that "eye-catching" pictures on Facebook are good and that comment trolls are bad ? so don't feed them. America's Army Comic: Bad Recruiting Tool, Worse Storyopen original article
Sat Jul 14, 2012 01:42 from Wired Top Stories
America's newest comics publisher has a $200-billion-a-year budget, more than a million employees and just one title in its catalog. At Comic-Con International, the U.S. Army -- yes, that U.S. Army -- announced the release Friday of America's Army No. 1, a partially animated digital comic for the iPad and Android tablets.Video: How to Destroy a Building With Lightopen original article
Mon Jul 16, 2012 18:30 from Wired Top Stories
On July 4, onlookers in Atlantic City watched with awe as Boardwalk Hall cracked, shuddered, then crumbled to the ground. Then, somehow, the hall erupted in rainbow-colored bricks that appeared to move. It was all an illusion! The historic building remained intact. Frack the Border: Cartels Using Oil Boom to Move Drugsopen original article
Mon Jul 16, 2012 13:13 from Wired Top Stories
Ignore its proximity to the border, and the Texas fracking boom is like many others around America. Trucks hauling construction supplies barrel down country highways. Boom towns, sprawling networks of new private roads and hundreds of drilling sites have popped up. But the boom for Texas tea -- oil and gas, that is -- has inadvertently torn a giant hole in the Border Patrol's defenses.TSA Fails to Comply With Year-Old 'Nude' Body-Scanner Court Orderopen original article
Mon Jul 16, 2012 13:13 from Wired Top Stories
It's been a year following a federal appeals court decision setting aside a constitutional challenge trying to stop the government from using intrusive body scanners across U.S. airports.Panda 2.0 Lands: Right Time for Antivirus via Cloud?open original article
Mon Jul 16, 2012 13:09 from Wired Top Stories
Panda, which says it was the first to deliver antivirus from the cloud (in 2009), on Monday released Panda Cloud Antivirus 2.0, which its says adds a news disinfection engine, a "community-based firewall", and 50% faster scans. Panda's free cloud-based antivirus has offered what it calls Collective Intelligence technology (see video on how it works), ...Oil Companies Spring a Leak, Courtesy of Anonymousopen original article
Mon Jul 16, 2012 11:14 from Wired Top Stories
Five top multinational oil companies have been targeted by members of Anonymous, who published about 1,000 email credentials taken from accounts belonging to the companies, as well as hashed and unencrypted passwords. Syria's Collapse Could Be a Chem Weapon Nightmareopen original article
Mon Jul 16, 2012 09:00 from Wired Top Stories
What's worse than a power-mad dictator with weapons of mass destruction? A power-mad dictator who may be about to lose them. This is the situation the world may soon be forced to face in Syria as the Assad regime begins to crack. It is a potential nightmare that ultimately might lead to the use and proliferation of WMD across the region. Geoengineering Could Backfire, Make Climate Change Worseopen original article
Mon Jul 16, 2012 09:00 from Wired Top Stories
Deploying giant space mirrors and spraying particles from stadium-sized balloons may sound like an engineer's wild fantasy, but climate models suggest that the potential of geoengineering to offset rising atmospheric carbon dioxide may be significantly overstated.When Galaxies Collide: Beautiful Images of Cosmic Impactsopen original article
Mon Jul 16, 2012 04:30 from Wired Top Stories
Galactic collisions are one of the most ferocious and most stunning events in our universe. In this gallery, Wired takes a look at some of the most amazing images ever taken of these cosmic pile-ups.Video: Solar Eruption Caught on Cameraopen original article
Fri Jul 13, 2012 11:40 from Wired Top Stories
When a solar flare erupted yesterday, scattering a billion atomic bombs' worth of energy into space, NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory was staring at the sun. They recorded this video, which NASA released Friday morning. Alt Text: Don't Be a Data Hoarderopen original article
Mon Jul 16, 2012 04:30 from Wired Top Stories
Follow these guidelines to make your data more storable, more searchable, and more sensible. First Footage of Neill Blomkamp's Elysium Shows Earth as Sci-Fi Landfillopen original article
Sat Jul 14, 2012 01:10 from Wired Top Stories
Matt Damon found himself covered in "fecal matter" while filming Elysium's action scenes at the world's second-largest garbage dump in Mexico City, but he's not complaining. The actor simply wanted to satisfy the in-your-face realism demanded by sci-fi auteur Neill Blomkamp. Can a $10 Robot Save African Education?open original article
Fri Jul 13, 2012 14:32 from Wired Top Stories
Ten dollars doesn't get you a lot of parts. Then again, $35 for a computer seemed pretty outrageous not too long ago. The success of that Raspberry Pi Micro-Computer prompted professors Ken Goldberg and Ayorkor Korsah to stage a contest: Design a $10 robot. Conceived as a teaching tool for use in African classrooms, such a low-cost machine could prove to be revolutionary for education in poorer countries around the world.Par:AnoIA: Anonymous Launches WikiLeaks-esque Site for Data Dumpsopen original article
Fri Jul 13, 2012 14:20 from Wired Top Stories
Anonymous has launched its own version of WikiLeaks. It's looking to rely less on the secret-spilling site and to actually get people to make sense of the gigabytes of data Anonymous dumps on the world. But that's easier said than done. NASA Tests Robotic Gas Station Attendant for Outer Spaceopen original article
Fri Jul 13, 2012 10:30 from Wired Top Stories
Satellites use solar energy to power their electronics, but they rely on gas to maintain orbit or change position. Once tapped out, dead satellites become space junk, which threatens new orbital ventures. To prevent this, NASA is testing the feasibility of using robots to fuel and repair satellites on the fly or tow them to a new job site. Explosion, Fire Cause Data Meltdown in Calgaryopen original article
Fri Jul 13, 2012 13:49 from Wired Top Stories
Downtown Calgary, Alberta, is going into its second day without complete use of government services, after some sort of explosion knocked out internet service provider Shaw Communications and a host of other nearby businesses.Become Your Own LOLcat With Brainwave-Controlled Kitty Earsopen original article
Fri Jul 13, 2012 11:47 from Wired Top Stories
You can learn a lot about what's going on inside a cat's mind by paying attention to its ear movements. If kitty is angry or tired, her ears may tilt away from her face or droop. And if your cat is on high alert, her ears will stick straight up in the air like twin sentinels. These telling ear movements inspire Necomimi's Brainwave Controlled Cat Ears, an impossibly cute headset that theoretically puts all your mind's machinations on display Chicken Vaccines Combine to Produce Deadly Virusopen original article
Fri Jul 13, 2012 08:30 from Wired Top Stories
Scientists have found that two virus strains used to vaccinate chickens may have recombined to form a virus that is sickening and killing the animals.
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