The latest entry in the genre is here with John Carpenter’s Toxic Commando from Saber Interactive, which clearly drew ...
Scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory have created a new aluminum alloy called RidgeAlloy that can turn contaminated car-body scrap into strong structural vehicle parts. Normally, impurities ...
Measuring 44 miles across at its widest, there’s no shortage of things to do in Los Angeles – the tricky part is finding the time to fit them all in. There are the perennial f ...
Telling everyone about these finds will bring you copious amounts of joy. View Entire Post › ...
From Wolfenstein 3D to Call of Duty and Battlefield, first person shooters are both fun and addictive. Here are the game-changing titles I'll never forget.
Welcome to one of South Carolina’s best-kept secrets! Botany Bay Heritage Preserve is like finding a hidden treasure chest, except instead of gold, it’s filled with natural beauty. This place sits on ...
No One’s Light documents a 12-month HFF München student production: story reduction, alien environment design, Blender Geometry Nodes, CloudRig character rigs, manual keyframe animation, and Nuke ...
Elgato is bringing Voicemod’s creative voice and audio tools directly to its platforms. Gamers can apply professional voice ...
A new study revisits a century-old question about how turbulence starts. The findings could potentially influence not only aircraft engineering but even the design of mechanical heart valves, and ...
Former elementary school teacher Matt Shurtleff — known to many students as “Matt the Mad Scientist” — demonstrated how sound waves move using water and lasers.
What governs the speed at which raindrops fall, sediment settles in river estuaries, and matter is ejected during a supernova? These questions circle around one, deceitfully simple factor: the rate at ...
Ocean rip currents have been called silent killers. Simulators can help swimmers learn how to survive.