Autopia
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Chevy Could Beat Tesla to Building the First Mainstream Electric Car
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Porsche Gives Us a Sexier, Faster 911 Targa—For a Price
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How Lasers Will Help Us Make Planes Quieter and More Fuel-Efficient
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Gadget Lab
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How Intel Gave Stephen Hawking a Voice
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4K TVs Are Forked. You Should Wait Before You Buy One
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And the Winner of Gadget Lab's Off-the-Grid CES Competition Is...
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Reviews
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Review: UE Megaboom
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Review: OXO Cold Brew Coffee Maker
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The Ultimate Electric Sports Car Is Only 4 Feet Long
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Science
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Donde No Existen Redes Celulares, La Gente Está Construyendo las Suyas
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Where Cellular Networks Don't Exist, People Are Building Their Own
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Fantastically Wrong: Why So Many People Think They've Seen Ghost Dogs With Glowing Eyes
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Science Blogs
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Ash Plume from Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai Strands Tourists
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How Do You Model This Coin Flip Bet?
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Cartographic Arts: Beautiful Maps From the Atlas of Design
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Game|Life
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Get Yours Today: Awesome Prints of Classic Nintendo Boss Fights
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New Documentary Follows YouTube's Biggest Minecraft Superstars
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The Highest Bidder on This Super-Rare Videogame Probably Won't Pay
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Playbook
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Meet the Big Kahunas of Surfboard Design
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The Physics of a Flawless Triple Cork 1620 Snowboard Flip
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This Wristband Tracks Your B-Ball Skills and Suggests Shooting Drills
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Underwire
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We Asked Psychiatrists to Analyze Gotham's Unhinged Bad Guys
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Exclusive Titles Are Helping the Audiobook Business Boom
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What Michael Mann Did to Get the Hackers in Blackhat Right
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Business
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How Facebook Knows You Better Than Your Friends Do
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Why on Earth Is IBM Still Making Mainframes?
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Publishers Are Lining Up Behind 'Netflix for Books' Services. But Why?
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Enterprise
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Why on Earth Is IBM Still Making Mainframes?
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Microsoft Turns to Verizon to Speed Up Its Video Delivery
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How Intel Gave Stephen Hawking a Voice
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Innovation Insights
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Much Ado About Cord Cutting
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Not Just for Coders: Hackathons for Hardware Innovation
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How Nanobiophysics Can Stop Ebola and Other Global Pandemics
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Danger Room
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The Flying Hospital That Rushes Wounded Soldiers to Safety
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Indispensable Vehicles That Got Their Start in WWI
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The Navy's New Robot Looks and Swims Just Like a Shark
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Threat Level
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The Free Encryption App That Wants to Replace Gmail, Dropbox, and HipChat
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No, the NSA Isn't Like the Stasi—And Comparing Them Is Treacherous
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Silk Road Defense Says Ulbricht Was Framed by the 'Real' Dread Pirate Roberts
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Design
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A Trippy Helmet That Tricks You Into Meditating
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The Clutter-Free Curved TV of Your Dreams, Designed by Yves Behár
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A Lamp Whose Light Comes From Bioluminescent Bacteria
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Raw File
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Take a Stroll Down China's Strange and Captivating Coastline
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Eerie Yet Gorgeous Scenes Make Taxidermy Spring to Life
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What It's Like Living in the Coldest Town on Earth
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Opinion
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It Doesn't Really Matter if ISIS Sympathizers Hacked Central Command's Twitter
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Some Idiot Will Probably Try to Trademark #JeSuisCharlie. It Won't Work
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The Feds Got the Sony Hack Right, But the Way They're Framing It Is Dangerous
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Current Issue
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No, the NSA Isn't Like the Stasi—And Comparing Them Is Treacherous
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What Michael Mann Did to Get the Hackers in Blackhat Right
-
The Musician Who's Gaming Search Engines to Actually Make Money
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Design
Design is in flux. Where its practitioners were once expected to produce chairs, lamps, logos and letterheads, today their work is often less visible. Increasingly, design is concerned with interactions and experiences—it’s about software and the vast systems that power it. We asked nine top designers to talk about their craft and what it means today. Here’s what they said.
A World of Invisible Solutions
Building Experiences and Interactions, Not Artifacts
From Books to Service to Algorithms
Wired design
- Editor
- Cliff Kuang
- Staff Writers
- Joseph Flaherty
- Margaret Rhodes
- Liz Stinson
- Kyle VanHemert
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