keyboard_arrow_up

This Toy Can Open Any Garage

AdultsCybersecurityData ScienceTechnology
Or almost any garage - it's particularly good with fixed code gates and garages. Samy proposes other weaknesses with rolling codes.

What is the universe expanding into?

AdultsData ScienceScienceSpace
The universe began in a Big Bang nearly fourteen billion years ago, and has been expanding ever since. But how does the universe expand and what is it expanding into?

Can Math Explain How Animals Get Their Patterns?

AdultsData ScienceMathNature...
How Alan Turing's Reaction-Diffusion Model Simulates Patterns in Nature.

The Best Hearing on Earth | Because Science Live

AdultsData ScienceScienceWorld
Do humans have the best hearing on earth?

How Small Is An Atom? Spoiler: Very Small.

AdultsBiologyData ScienceScience
Atoms are very weird. Wrapping your head around exactly how weird, is close to impossible - how can you describe something that is SO removed from humans experience? But then again, they kind of make up everything, so let us try anyways.

What's The Hottest Hot and Coldest Cold?

AdultsData ScienceScienceSpace
The hottest and coldest temperatures in our universe are rarely witnessed, but in these rare spots, our understanding of physics is challenged. Weird things happen at extreme hot and absolute cold.

Why we really really really like repetition in music

AdultsData ScienceMusicSoftware Engineering...
It slays all day.

How to spot a misleading graph - Lea Gaslowitz

AdultsVisual DesignWorkData Science...
When they're used well, graphs can help us intuitively grasp complex data. But as visual software has enabled more usage of graphs throughout all media, it has also made them easier to use in a careless or dishonest way - and as it turns out, there are plenty of ways graphs can mislead and outright manipulate. Lea Gaslowitz shares some things to look out for.

We Could Back Up The Entire Internet On A Gram Of DNA

AdultsGeneticsInternet CultureTechnology...
Nature's code for life is stored in DNA, but what if we could code anything we wanted into DNA? Scientists are figuring out how.

Google Timelapse Walks You Through Decades of Change in Seconds

AdultsHistoryTechnologyWorld...
Three decades of change in five seconds.

How Will You Die?

AdultsData ScienceLifeScience...
Science, statistics and lifestyle can help predict how you will die!

Why you shouldn't drive slowly in the left lane

AdultsData ScienceHealthTransportation...
Can we all agree that the left lane is for passing, please?

Is Most Published Research Wrong?

AdultsSocietyData ScienceScience...
Mounting evidence suggests a lot of published research is false.

Where Do Your Texts Go?

AdultsData ScienceTechnologyInternet Culture
How the hell does cellphone technology work?

Why Anecdotes Trump Data

AdultsData SciencePsychologyEducation
A story is worth a thousand data points.

Is Big Data Getting Too Big?

AdultsData ScienceSoftware EngineeringTechnology...
Big Data: A Revolution That Will Transform How We Live, Work, and Think

Why are some people left-handed?

AdultsData ScienceHistorySociety...
Today, about one-tenth of the world's population are southpaws. Why are such a small proportion of people left-handed -- and why does the trait exist in the first place? Daniel M. Abrams investigates how the uneven ratio of lefties and righties gives insight into a balance between competitive and cooperative pressures on human evolution.

Why Are Some People Left-Handed?

AdultsData ScienceScienceSociety...
We've got two perfectly good hands attached to two perfectly good arms, so why do most people prefer to use one over the other for common tasks?

These Amazing Energy Facts Will Blow Your Mind

AdultsData SciencePhysicsEnergy...
1 calorie = 4.2 joules, wait what?!

13 Misconceptions About Global Warming

AdultsData ScienceGlobal WarmingScience...
Watch this if you're willing to accept some shocking facts about climate change.

Louie Schwartzberg: Hidden miracles of the natural world

AdultsData ScienceWorldNature...
We live in a world of unseeable beauty, so subtle and delicate that it is imperceptible to the human eye. To bring this invisible world to light, filmmaker Louie Schwartzberg bends the boundaries of time and space with high-speed cameras, time lapses and microscopes. At TED2014, he shares highlights from his latest project, a 3D film titled "Mysteries of the Unseen World," which slows down, speeds up, and magnifies the astonishing wonders of nature.