Using videos of thirsty customers lining up for bar-side drinks, they created algorithm equivalents for "I want a drink" body language
Mathematic and musical detectives have discovered that perhaps Beethoven's tempo was so strange because his metronome was broken
Watch this time lapse trip all the way around the Moon
Flies, for example, can perceive visual stimuli four times faster than we can
Acid rain is "dissolving the surface of the Earth," making streams more alkaline in the process
The idea of there being one genetic "you" is up in the air
Two cups of flour, a nice zinfandel, a pinch of sun-dried tomatoes, and 3 chopped squirrels
Of the 67 mass shootings in the US over the past three decades, more than three-quarters of the 143 guns used were obtained legally
Google has teemed with the Halo Trust, a non-profit that works to remove land mines and other unexploded ordinances that often linger after a conflict ends
We all know the symptoms: the red sports car, the leather jacket, the journey to "find oneself," the tattoos
In New York City you are never more than six feet away from a rat and its diseases
China has been the focus of much of the attention surrounding sex selection at birth, but recent numbers have shown that it's not a problem unique to Asia
A three minute video shows 1000 years of European conquest
The mysterious man claims to have never attended school, received any vaccinations and to have met only a few people throughout his life
This time lapse video shows the assembly of NASA's next Mars orbiter, MAVEN
It turns out the process of making high end globes is both fascinating and beautiful
One river system, called the Irharhar, appears to have been a particularly popular travel route, corroborated by both model simulations and artifacts
Most architects want everybody to see their buildings. But in South Korea, designers are working to achieve exactly the opposite: an invisible skyscraper
As much as researchers themselves want to believe that breakfast helps people lose weight or keep it off, the evidence is far from conclusive
The idea behind Danielle, who is based on a real person, is "that something is happening but you can't see it but you can feel it, like aging itself"
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