Bad reviews of national parks, food you can’t eat and food you shouldn’t eat. New Samsung tablets and phones along with phones that are insecure. The great lunchlady caper? Where did money come from? An old Mustang and old buildings memorialized. There are a lot of really great stories this week so make sure to click on the headlines and catch up.
- What the Facebook Crypto team could build
- Microsoft Edge has a dark mode. Here’s how to turn it on
- This Los Angeles Grocery Store Has 31,000 Items — and You Can’t Eat Any of Them
- Your wholesome breakfast of oats may include weedkiller
- Sony’s 10″ Digital Paper Tablet is an ultra-light reading companion that needs to do more
- Too Hot, Too Crowded, Needs More Vending Machines
- These Android phones have security defects out of the box, researchers say
- Samsung Galaxy Tab S4 review
- Samsung Galaxy Note 9 review
- Galaxy Note 9 ongoing review: The good and bad so far
- Samsung Galaxy Note 9 review
- Meet the 15-year-old who’s the Microsoft Excel world champion (which is a real thing)
- Defcon hacking challenge swings a sledgehammer at unlucky computers
- Conflict reigns over the history and origins of money
- Lunch Lady Larceny? Cafeteria Workers Allegedly Stole Half A Million Dollars
- Notes from the Underground: A Photographer on Public Access to Caves
- Coober Pedy: The mining town where people live under the earth
- 12 Olympians Who Don’t Keep Their Medals in a Sock Drawer
- Cool, There’s Water on Mars. But Does It Make Good Pickles?
- Sleep Deprivation May Cause Infectious Loneliness
- Emoji are replacing flags as the most important regional symbol of the digital era
- Making Miniatures to Preserve Local Memories
- Here’s where to sign up to get Fortnite for Android
- Nvidia’s new Turing architecture is all about real-time tracing and AI
- Intel steals Nvidia’s thunder with sneak peek at its first discrete GPU in years
- What would Amazon do with Landmark Theatres? Here are 5 ideas
- The first Ford Mustang owner kept the car. It’s now worth $350,000
- People Around the World Hardly Ever Say “Thank You” and That’s Good News
If you see some important tech news that you feel we should share with our readers, please let us know and we’ll consider including it in our next post.
0 Comments