Nook E-Reader Promises, But Doesn’t Deliver
You can imagine that Barnes & Noble, with 774 stores scattered across suburban strip-mall America, finally got fed up with […]
Articles by Dylan Tweney published in WIRED
You can imagine that Barnes & Noble, with 774 stores scattered across suburban strip-mall America, finally got fed up with […]
When the zombie apocalypse hits, you’ll want to have a copy of Wikipedia with you. And you’ll want to make
I’ve been testing the Verizon Droid for the past few days, and it’s an awesome phone. But even though I’m
Sept. 24, 1979: First Online Service for Consumers Debuts The company known as Compu-Serve, and later CompuServe, opened its doors
FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski’s unsurprising affirmation of support for network neutrality is a victory for the high-minded principle of open,
Before the Nikes, before the breathable, antimicrobial running shorts, before the personal fitness coaches, heart rate monitors, wrist-mounted GPS and
This is one of the most fun interviews I’ve done in a long time. Wired.com Video: High-Tech Cellist Fuses Music,
Mini bio of Claude Shannon, founder of modern information theory: April 30, 1916: Information Theory, Who’s Your Daddy? | This
Dell pushes the upper echelons of netbookitude with the Mini 10. It’s a little laptop whose Atom processor marks it
A new language from MIT’s Media Lab makes it easy for kids to develop programs that interact with things in the real world: Pencils, paper, water, and even vegetables.