The Business Card Is Dying, Part 3,658
A marketing firm uses business cards whose whole point is that they can't be read. More »
Megan Garber is a staff writer at The Atlantic. She was formerly an assistant editor at the Nieman Journalism Lab, where she wrote about innovations in the media.
A marketing firm uses business cards whose whole point is that they can't be read. More »
The 700 people who escaped from the disaster owed their lives to the inventor of radio. More »
The ship's exercise facility was, in 1912, an innovation for an ocean-going liner. More »
The automated car of the past would have relied on an electrified road. More »
The wretched TOS document gets a plain-English makeover. More »
The International Space Station captures an earthly evening the way Gagarin witnessed it. More »
Its return to the past could reveal the network's future. More »
An instructional program piloted by the search giant wants to help bridge the Internet's generational divide. More »
The module that would suffer an explosion during the mission's attempted trip to the moon More »
The State Department, just for a day, goes Internet-meta. More »
The networks are joining the government to create a mega-database of stolen phones. More »
Do your birthday party photos call for Inkwell, or Walden, or ...? More »
Only a core group of Instagrammers don't want Mark Zuckerberg's hands on their photos. More »
A poll reveals new and crazy stats on the popularity of our biggest tech companies. More »
Another entry in the app-as-satire genre More »
With $195 and some patience, you can make perfect drawings on curved surfaces. More »
The 2012 campaign has a new meme. And, oooh, it's a good one. More »
Look out, James Cameron: YouTube is making its 3D service available to everyone. More »
For all the social capabilities of digital reading platforms, most Americas still share books the old-fashioned way. More »
A cab ride to Brooklyn? Keep on with your Instagramming, friend. More »
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