Skip to content
Advertisement

Technology_Internet

Latest Stories

9aea82c720dd9f15550f6a706700de62.jpg

9aea82c720dd9f15550f6a706700de62.jpg

In this photo taken Wednesday, May 14, 2014, a row of Google self-driving cars are shown outside the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif. Four years ago, the Google team developing cars which can drive themselves became convinced that, sooner than later, the technology would be ready for the masses. There was just one problem: Driverless cars almost certainly were illegal.(AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

686af14f20669c15550f6a7067003a3a.jpg

686af14f20669c15550f6a7067003a3a.jpg

File - In this April 30, 2014 file photo, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg gestures while delivering the keynote address at the f8 Facebook Developer Conference in San Francisco. Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, are donating $120 million over the next five years to the San Francisco Bay Area’s public school system. The gift is the biggest allocation to date of the more than $1 billion in Facebook stock the couple pledged last year to the nonprofit Silicon Valley Community Foundation. (AP Photo/Ben Margot, file)

cdc9d985003a9715550f6a70670026f9.jpg

cdc9d985003a9715550f6a70670026f9.jpg

Embargoed to 0001 Friday May 30 --- In this undated image issued Friday May 30, 2014, by Britain's University of Leicester, showing a series of images of a turning 3-Dimensional model, showing the kink in the spine of Britain's King Richard III, which has been created by scientists. In new analysis of the medieval king’s skeleton released Friday May 30, 2014, scientists who carried out scans of the King's long fabled kinked spine found it had a "well balanced curve" that could have been concealed under clothes or armour, unlike the exaggerated hunchback which Shakespeare depicted as "deformed, unfinished, sent before time into this breathing world, scarce half made up". In reality scientist say his head and neck would have been straight, not tilted to one side, and there was also no evidence that he had a limp. (AP Photo / University of Leicester)