Autopia
Indispensable Vehicles That Got Their Start in WWI
Well That Didn't Work: The Plane That Flapped Like a Bird and the Fraud Who Built It
Google's Self-Driving Car Hits Roads Next Month—Without a Wheel or Pedals
Gadget Lab
15 Essential Apps to Install on Your New iPad
So You Got an Apple TV. Here Are Some Handy Tips and Tricks
How to Get Your New Fire TV Device Up and Running
Reviews
Science
The Craziest Sci-Fi Fantasies That Got Closer to Reality This Year
The Chemical Reactions That Make Hand Warmers Heat Up
NASA's Best Images of Earth From Space in 2014
Science Blogs
Holiday Travel? Get Vaccinated First, or Bring Home Something Unexpected
How Many G's Did the Millennium Falcon Pull in Empire Strikes Back?
How Butterflies Get Their Shine
Game|Life
The Best Games of 2014, From Mario Kart to Sunset Overdrive
Microsoft Can't Fix Its Halo: Master Chief Collection Fail
Sunset Overdrive's Expansion Pack Is Lots of Fun, But Very Short
Playbook
This Wristband Tracks Your B-Ball Skills and Suggests Shooting Drills
How This Guy Is Training to Do 50 Ultradistance Triathlons in 50 Days
How the Man Who Wired Facebook Helped Build the NFL Stadium of the Future
Underwire
We Pick the Year's 5 Most Intriguing Documentaries
Cape Watch: The Avengers Get a Pouty Teen and Suicide Squad Gets More Villains
Cult Edit of It's a Wonderful Life Is the Best Holiday Movie You've Never Seen
Business
Sony Threatens to Sue Twitter Over Tweets Containing Leaked Emails
Oracle Buys the Company Facebook Uses to Track Your Offline Purchases
How One Guy Got Kickstarters to Give Their Profits to Other Campaigns
Enterprise
WIRED's 10 Most Hardcore Tech Stories of the Year
Tech Time Warp of the Week: In the '90s, Apple Celebrated Christmas by Bashing Microsoft
Apple-Microsoft Alliance Disarms Its Patent Warheads
Innovation Insights
Have Online Payments Become Safer Than Offline?
Go Home: The Business Case for Work-Life Balance
Can Android Wear Hit Critical Mass Ahead of the Apple Watch Launch?
Danger Room
The Navy's New Robot Looks and Swims Just Like a Shark
America's Toughest, Ugliest Warplane Is Going Back Into Battle
How the World's First Computer Was Rescued From the Scrap Heap
Threat Level
8 Free Privacy Programs Worth Your Year-End Donations
How Laws Restricting Tech Actually Expose Us to Greater Harm
Experts Are Still Divided on Whether North Korea Is Behind Sony Attack
Design
Light Sculptures That Challenge Your Sense of Reality
A High-Tech Dance Performance Melds Human Bodies With Code
27 of the Most Inspiring Designs From 2014
Raw File
Burgers That Look Like Asteroids and Margaret Thatcher, Because Why Not
Disorienting Photos Turn a Volcanic Glacier Into Alien Terrain
What if Drones Stopped Going to War and Started Taking Selfies?
Opinion
The Best WIRED Stories of 2014
If North Korea Did Hack Sony, It's a Whole New Kind of Cyberterrorism
Mr. Know-It-All: Star Trek Teaches Us How Not to Confront Idiots With Loud Earbuds
Current Issue
The Chemical Reactions That Make Hand Warmers Heat Up
All the Gear You Need to Make Your Flight Actually Bearable
Mr. Know-It-All: Star Trek Teaches Us How Not to Confront Idiots With Loud Earbuds
Most documentaries go back and piece together history after the fact. Citizenfour chronicles history as it happened. Director Laura Poitras was one of the handful of people NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden contacted to help him reveal the information he wanted the public to know, so she was there filming as the leaks happened. courtesy Laura Poitras
Citizenfour
Why We Loved It: Most documentaries go back and piece together history after the fact. Citizenfour chronicles history as it happened. Director Laura Poitras was one of the handful of people NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden contacted to help him reveal the information he wanted the public to know, so she was there filming as the leaks happened. That means watching Citizenfour feels like being a witness to one of the biggest news events of 2013 in real time. —Angela Watercutter
The worst part about this movie is that after you finish watching it, you’ll be so angry we never got to see Alejandro Jodorowsky’s vision of Dune come to life. Watch it and you won't get FOMO, just some hardcore SFPWMOOT: So Fracking Pissed We Missed Out On This. Sony Pictures Classics
Jodorowsky's Dune
Why We Loved It: The worst part about this movie is that after you finish watching it, you’ll be so angry we never got to see Alejandro Jodorowsky’s vision of Dune come to life. Mick Jagger as a glam-rock alien Feyd-Rautha answering to a rotund Orson Welles as Baron Harkonnen?! Our FOMO just gave way to some hardcore SFPWMOOT: So Fracking Pissed We Missed Out On This. At least we have this documentary, wherein the mad genius himself explains his intentions for the daring endeavor and shows off some of the remarkable storyboards and concept art drawn by French artist Moebius, with contributions from surrealist and Creepiest Person H.R. Giger. Thanks for nothing, spineless Hollywood studio executives. —Jordan Crucchiola
Particle Fever was one of the most heartwarming films of 2014. Which is strange, given its subject matter. It’s a documentary focused on the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland, and the two enormous research teams competing to be the first to find the Higgs boson (known as the "God Particle," to the subjects’ annoyance) and, hopefully, answer some fundamental questions about the universe. PF Productions
Particle Fever
Why We Loved It: Particle Fever was one of the most heartwarming films of 2014. Which is strange, given its subject matter. It’s a documentary focused on the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland, and the two enormous research teams competing to be the first to find the Higgs boson (colloquially known as the "God Particle," to the subjects’ annoyance) and, hopefully, answer some fundamental questions about the universe. It does an incredible job at making very complex science approachable, but the real story is in the people it follows. Particle Fever is about some of the smartest scientists in the world chasing their life’s work, and succeeding. It’s inspiring, exhilarating, and infectious, and it’s on Netflix right now. —Brendan Klinkenberg
Everyone loves George Takei and having a glimpse into his life as a gay rights activist and comics convention omni-presence in To Be Takei is just awesome. Seriously, tune in for the reminiscing about the Star Trek days and stay for the moments Takei spends at home with his husband, Brad. Starz Digital Media
Why We Loved It:
Because
we love George Takei
. Because everyone loves George Takei and having a glimpse into his life as a gay rights activist and comics convention omni-presence is just awesome. Seriously, tune in for the reminiscing about the
Star Trek
days and stay for the moments Takei spends at home with his husband, Brad. It's also incredibly heartwarming and funny—espeicially when William Shatner shows up.
—Angela Watercutter
When Aaron Swartz committed suicide in 2013 it was a huge loss for the internet activist community, and the world. Director Brian Knappenberger's documentary The Internet's Own Boy gets at the heart of just how big that loss is. FilmBuff, Participant Media
The Internet's Own Boy
Why We Loved It: When Aaron Swartz committed suicide in 2013 it was a huge loss for the internet activist community, and the world. Director Brian Knappenberger's documentary gets at the heart of just how big that loss is, from Swartz's work with Creative Commons to his activism with Demand Progress. A lot more intimate than his Anonymous doc We Are Legion, Kappenberger's look at Swartz's life is as heartbreaking as it is important. —Angela Watercutter
If you care about technology and movies, which is to say if you’re a reader of this here website, then you were probably pretty excited about Citizenfour. That documentary pulled the curtain back on what happened with whistleblower Edward Snowden’s NSA leak in a big way. But that was just one of a few great documentaries that hit theaters this year. There were also docs on the life of Aaron Swartz, director Alejandro Jodorowsky’s attempt to adapt Dune, and the quest to find the “God Particle.” Here are a few of our personal favorite docs of the last year.
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