Plus, turn it off and on again? Here’s why sometimes a reboot is the best fix for your tech. Let your creativity flow with personalized emoji creations. Director-approved TV setting, and professional wiffle ball is a homerun online.
Cyberscams unleashed, Amazon Echo celeb exodus & Georgia's nude ID shocker
Creating fine art using Microsoft Excel
Tatsuo Horiuchi is a fantastic artist. But you’d never guess his medium — it’s Microsoft Excel. Using the program’s vector tools, he creates large landscapes of Japan. Amazing stuff!
A magician helps shelter dogs find homes
Feeling down? I’ve got just the thing: Puppies! Celebrity magician John Stressel doesn’t just use his gifts of illusion to make money. He takes his act on the road, to St. Hubert’s Animal Welfare Center in New Jersey. He makes toys and treats disappear, and the dogs go nuts for it. Their reactions are so cute, it helps them get adopted.
Watch a paralyzed man walk again
A man paralyzed in a cycling accident is walking again, thanks to a chip that reads his brain waves and stimulates his spine. After a decade, he can stand, climb stairs and walk with a little help. Amazing!
Stealing a car using only a photo
Maybe you’ve heard that you should never post a picture of your car or house key online because someone can duplicate it just from the pic. Myth or reality? Spoiler: Yes, it’s true! Watch this vid to see how it works.
The billionaire who owns 98% of the island where he lives got pulled over
Larry Ellison, co-founder of Oracle, is worth $132.8 billion and owns 98% of the Hawaiian island Lanai. And he was ticketed for running a stop sign while driving his orange Corvette. He also didn’t have his driver’s license. Oops. Here’s the officer’s body cam video of the stop.
The excitement that comes with unboxing an original iPhone
The iPhone has been around for more than 15 years. It has had dozens of different iterations since its initial release. But what is it like to open an actual original iPhone that was released back in 2007?
The strange history of Clip Art
Throughout the ’90s and early 2000s, Clip Art was seemingly everywhere. Those little pre-made images were included in practically every program. Why do we not use it much anymore, and how did it become so popular?
First 'livestream' of Mars
The European Space Agency marks 20 years of the Mars Express with a live look at what’s going down on the Red Planet. It takes up to 22 minutes for us to get “live” pictures of Mars down here on Earth, so not technically a livestream, but still pretty dang cool.
If historical figures had smartphones and social media ...
Just love this video. It’s a compilation of famous historical figures taking selfies and posting them on social. It’s amazing, really.
Amazing inventions that changed the world
From the seatbelt to flushable toilets, there are a ton of inventions that have changed the world. But these might be some of the biggest game-changers of all time. I’m sure some of these will surprise you.
Creating a robot that can ‘handwrite’ letters
Handwriting hundreds of letters can be a pain, whether for a wedding, thank you notes or anything else. But what if there were a robot that could write them for you and make them look so authentic no one would know? Would you try it?
Surgeon General's social media warning, Roku's hidden menu & Amazon palm scanner
Plus, step into an Amazon delivery mystery — a woman’s tale of dozens of packages meant for a stranger. Also, say goodbye to flat social media photos with some great hacks. A heartwarming TikTok story, HBO’s latest app and secrets to making a stellar online dating profile.
How records outsold CDs last year
Records outsold CDs in 2022 — that hasn’t happened since 1987. Why? The answer is simple: music lovers think it sounds better than digital. There’s a bigger story told in a great video from Wall Street Journal.
The unsurprisingly silly history of Silly Putty
Unless you grew up under a rock, you have heard of Silly Putty. It’s the oh-so-bendable and stretchable goo that every kid loves to play with. But this classic toy’s history probably isn’t what you think.
Why does the government sell a $1K jar of peanut butter?
There’s a government warehouse that stores just about everything you could imagine — vitamins, “domestic sludge,” a standard bullet and even a jar of peanut butter that sells for about 200 times the going grocery store rate. It even maintains a cybersecurity database with all known software vulnerabilities. You’ll find all this at the National Institute of Standards and Technology. So, what is going on?
What makes movie punches look realistic?
Have you ever watched a really good action movie and thought, “Wow, it looks like they are really punching each other.” Well, tons of secret Hollywood tricks make it seem genuine. And sometimes actors actually make contact.
Creating a ball that's impossible to hit
Wiffle Ball is an entertaining game many people remember playing when they were kids. But what if a ball was designed that is impossible to hit? That’s exactly what this popular YouTuber did, and it’s pretty amazing.
Ages 1-100 fight for $500,000
Would you sit in a glass booth for days to win $500,000? The latest Mr. Beast video pits 100 people against each other, ages one through 100. It’s a great video watched by over 50 million people in one day, including me!
Classic sounds kids of today probably have never heard
Do you remember the distinctive sound a dial-up modem made in the early days of the internet? Those beeps and boops are no longer common, and that’s just one noise kids today will never hear.