Graphic designer Tyler Adam Smith is a masters of branding student at The School of Visual Arts. Now he’s taken to his imaginary (...)
Donald Judd believed fiercely in the idea that art should be installed permanently. 101 Spring Street was the place where he put (...)
Did you know the Wi-Fi in your office is making you sick? Are you feeling sort of gross all of a sudden? Just kidding. You’re (...)
Now You See Me’s magic consultant David Kwong reveals how helping the cast master real sleight-of-hand moves helped authenticate (...)
Matthew Keys, the former deputy social media editor at Reuters who was fired over alleged collaborations with the Anonymous Group, (...)
Microsoft has officially entered the Myanmar market, forming a partnership with a local IT firm as it seeks to grow its presence in (...)
Beachfront home-owners in Malibu like to pretend that they own the beaches in front of their mansions. That’s not true. A (...)
A new intelligent, rotating street sign parses tweets, check-ins, RSS feeds, and other online data sources to point you to the most (...)
A new service called Etch convert print your Foursquare data into a beautiful poster. The inspiration: none other than data-viz (...)
S’well is trying to marry sleek style with social substance, and put an end to our plastic crisis. With the average American (...)
In the famously chunky ice cream’s latest campaign, fans in several cities can help decide what their local ice cream flavor (...)
Chinese restaurants are wasting tons and tons of food. But how do you change a culture that values over-ordering? Americans (...)
Tap an icon. Instant privacy. Magic? Nope. Just the future of DIY home upgrades. Blinds are a clumsy technology. And generally, (...)
Artist Adrien Parlange gets right to the point with his latest project, CINEMA.JPEG, which re-creates the feel of classic films (...)
Because if you’re going to stand next to an ad anyway, it might as well be useful. Billboard ads are an architectural (...)
Mark Crummett uses circuit boards, discarded motherboards, and tiny figurines to elaborate on what goes on in our machines. (...)
Retirement doesn’t mean what it used to. A new site gives those "in transition" a tool to manage change and plot the next (...)
As the school year ends, classrooms are often really hot. It is not conducive to learning to be really hot. What would a little (...)
Wook at those bunny wunnies! Forget kittens and puppies. The newest Internet puffballs of cuteness are bunnies, as evidenced (...)
Could your day not get any worse? What if you think about it a little differently: In the grand scope of the universe, today doesn’t (...)
A work of art for our crunched times. Creative collective The Glue Society, whose previous artwork includes a melted ice cream (...)
Part chair, part sculpture, part bodybuilder test. Mies van der Rohe famously remarked that a skyscraper was almost easier to (...)
Police in states where marijuana is legal are facing an interesting conundrum: How to tell their dogs that pot is okay, but to (...)
Now it’s easy to make your mobile one of a kind. No rhinestones required. If you want your mobile to nab some serious (...)
Want to buy clothes from Native, a high-end South African boutique? First you have to promise your organs will go to people in (...)
Lanzavecchia + Wai translate the strange beauty of deformed insects into plush rugs. Insects found in the house often meet a (...)
Google Glass is arguably the most concerning new product for privacy advocates nowadays, but certain businesses also have reason to (...)
Google today released its Google Keyboard for phones and tablets running Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) and above. You can download (...)
Google launched its new Google Maps Engine API today, enabling developers with large amounts of location-based data the chance to (...)
Google today announced image extensions for search ads, which lets advertisers show images alongside the text pushing their products (...)
Google today announced it is keeping its API for CalDAV, an Internet standard allowing a client to access calendar and scheduling (...)
As planned, Google today announced it has rolled out the new YouTube “One Channel” design, which includes cover photos (...)
When it comes to love, the algorithms may know better than your mom. A nationally representative scientific sample of over 19,000 (...)
To Luddites, Google Glass looks pretty much like glasses without lenses, but with a screen-thing over one eye that helps you surf (...)
See how easy it is to morph from a fresh-faced youth into a drug-addled wreck. The effects of drug use may be gradual but for (...)
Futurist Glen Hiemstra discusses how our jobs--and even the idea of having a job--will change. Editor’s NoteThis post (...)
Brooklyn collaborative studio Snarkitecture recasts the utilitarian ping pong table as a sculptural art piece. In its 125-year (...)
Why bother with the long, hard work in the wilderness looking for rare animals when you can just trap some flies, pump their stomachs, (...)
Knauf & Brown’s Profile turns the lowly folding chair into a design centerpiece. The folding chair doesn’t get (...)
Once a bookkeepers’ shorthand, @ has become the fulcrum of our digital identities. How did that happen? For a moment, (...)
Google’s Abigail Posner explains why those screaming goat videos aren’t just a mindless distraction, they reflect a (...)
If you do a good job, you get a bonus from your boss. Not so for companies using Bonus.ly, a service that lets employees decide (...)
Where there was once lube and lingerie, there are now solar panels and a "vampire energy kill switch." Most (if not all) American (...)
We’ve all heard the Facebook ping sound, but did you know that it’s reminiscent of old telephones and TV shows? (...)
The newly minted protest group (actually members of schlock movie company) thinks Cannes does a pretty bad job celebrating independent (...)
The chef cooking up one of the most exciting dining experiences in New York chats live with Fast Company readers on Wednesday, June (...)
At Google I/O, the Glass team promised monthly updates for the head-mounted computer. Today, a new version of the software (XE6) is (...)
Michael Dubin, CEO of the thriving Dollar Shave Club, introduces a new product in his latest ad--but while still for use within (...)