By: Jonathan Itskovitch
Another week and another App store game makes an appearance. This week’s fad is 2048. I’m sure everyone on campus has heard of the game if they haven’t played it already.
By: Jonathan Itskovitch
Another week and another App store game makes an appearance. This week’s fad is 2048. I’m sure everyone on campus has heard of the game if they haven’t played it already.
In my previous column, I criticized Neil deGrasse Tyson, host of the new science series Cosmos (which I’m loving), for downplaying historical links between science and war.
About two weeks ago, I volunteered at a FIRST Robotics Competition in Clifton. A large number of other Stevens students (from the Theta Alpha chapter Alpha Phi Omega) also volunteered.
Oculus has become increasingly popular ever since their successful $2 million Kickstarter. Numerous people have purchased their Oculus Rift developer kit.
As of this article’s publication, WrestleMania 30 in New Orleans at the Mercedes-Benz Superdrome is only nine days away. In terms of WWE programming, that means there is only one Raw and SmackDown left before the “big one” called WrestleMania.
I hope Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey, launched on Fox launched two weeks ago, becomes a smash hit, as much so as the 1980 version of Cosmos, hosted by astrophysicist Carl Sagan.
How is it possible that finding approximately 700,000 pounds of aircraft, passengers, and cargo is so difficult and mind boggling in today’s date?
Between the Pebble Steel (and its other competitors) and Google Glass, wearable tech has made its début. Engineers are looking for new and unique places for people to integrate themselves.