THE TABOO INDUSTRY PAVED THE WAY FOR THE INTERNET By C. Harold Pierce ts beginnings trace back to side street theaters that guys ducked into looking to get in and get off.
By JP Chabot Online dating has led to millions of couples finding each other, but now the Internet is breaking them up just as easily. “Divorce is messy,” says the Wevorce website
Planting Wood By C. Harold Pierce This past Arbor Day, environmentalists took matters into their own hands. Or hand. The smut site Pornhub announced that it would plant a tree for every
By Chelsea Ybanez The Uber app connects users with a private driver and costs less than a taxi service. Using a phone’s GPS, Uber tracks drivers’ locations before arrival, estimates the fare
An intuitive fitness-geared bracelet nags users healthy By C. Harold Pierce I’m anxious, and I blame the Jawbone UP24. Marketed as an intuitive bracelet that helps you understand how you sleep, move
By Rogelio Santana To prevent fatalities and injuries, the U.S. Department of Transportation is requiring vehicles built after 2018 to have rear-view cameras. “Rear visibility requirements will save lives,” said Acting Administrator
By Aaron Vasquez You may want to watch your web presence. A computer virus bleeding websites of memory has users scrambling to change their passwords. Amazon, Gmail and Reddit are just some
By Aaron Vasquez The iPod is dead. Like the compact disc and the Walkman, technology killed it. Once ubiquitous, iPods dominated the MP3-player market in the mid-00s. After a peak of 22
By Ale Gonzalez As if you didn’t feel awkward enough on social media, Twitter released a tool that will unearth your very first tweet for its eighth birthday. Besides reading your
By C. Harold Pierce Finally, someone is putting glow in the dark technology to good use. Mission Bicycle Company is rolling out bikes with reflective frames aimed at the most cautious of