Siphon coffee machines have been around for 200 years, but KitchenAid's new model may take them mainstream.
Those spackled galaxies are actually kitchen ingredients like olive oil and cinnamon, sprinkled across a scanner.
Moore’s Law, which holds that processor advancement is derived from transistor scaling, is commonly believed to be dying as semiconductor design bumps up against the limits of physics.
In the early ‘90s, I could tell what someone thought about the Internet’s prospects for transforming higher education by listening to their vocabulary.
Apple's new haptic trackpad suggests a future in which we won't just see interfaces but feel them, too.
Despite a code of transparency and trust, companies like Uber aren't encouraging honest feedback, so all experiences are five-star. This is an alarming notion. The post The Big Hidden Problem With Uber?
TouchTone lets you solve puzzles and snoop on emails, like an NSA worker.
At the surface, DevOps might be easier defined by looking at what DevOps is not. DevOps isn’t tools or services that you download from the cloud, the title you give a newly hired engineer, or something you can purchase or find on a balance sheet.
Hardly a week goes by without media reports of a well-known business or agency having its data center hacked and sensitive information being stolen or damaged.
We need to insist on free designs when we fabricate objects ourselves. The post Hardware Designs Should Be Free.
Misha Gerhard & Lewis LLC is International Strategic Consulting Firm with an extensive presence in the most rapidly developing regions of the world.