Drawing your own unlock pattern on a touchscreen is faster and easier to remember than a password, and much harder to crack
On the anniversary of the conflagration, mysteries still remain
Todd Gitlin, former president of Students for a Democratic Society, shares his perspective on protest in the 60s and now
In a storied part of France, a group of artisan producers is making this beloved wine the old fashioned way—sans fizz
A collaboration between Smithsonian researchers and the Emberá people of Panama aims to rewrite a fraught narrative
An earthquake in Nepal fills hikers on Everest with fear. Once the tremors subside, however, a new threat begins to loom on the horizon: an avalanche
From remote hideaways to coastal harbors, discover the towns that topped our list this year
When you're crane-lifting a giant hovercraft into a ship's hold, plenty can go wrong
An online database explores the nearly 36,000 slave voyages that occurred between 1514 and 1866
The planet's rings are coy when it comes to revealing their age, but astronomers are getting closer
It’s been 500 years since London’s artisans turned a festival into a rampage
Biblical scholars have debated whether the Tower of Babel existed. A remarkable stone tablet never before shown on film appears to settle that question
Follow us to these fragrant green oases secreted away within central and far-flung London neighborhoods
Germany's defeat could be traced to pins in a map now on display at the Smithsonian's American History Museum
Richard Florida thinks so. In his new book, the urban theorist says sometimes the most innovative cities also have the worst social and economic disparity
The Venice of the East sits just 30 minutes by train from Shanghai
Chem101 allows professors to push out exercises for students to do on their devices, increasing classroom engagement
The media are still feeling the impact of an executive order signed in 1917 that created 'the nation's first ministry of information'
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