Elsewhere at Wired

Pentagon’s PCs Bend to Your Brain [Danger Room] Noah Schachtman looks at the Pentagon’s curious invasion of the cognitive space, and what it means for soldiers. The World’s First Drive-In [Table of Malcontents] For whom does the lamp flicker? It flickers for Brownlee: “An open-air movie theater exclusively for motorists has just been opened at […]

Slot1_mindfieldPentagon's PCs Bend to Your Brain [Danger Room]
Noah Schachtman looks at the Pentagon's curious invasion of the cognitive space, and what it means for soldiers.

The World's First Drive-In [Table of Malcontents]
For whom does the lamp flicker? It flickers for Brownlee: "An open-air movie theater exclusively for motorists has just been opened at Camden, N.J."

Geekdad [Wired Blogs]
Check out Wired's newest blog, Geekdad, aimed at for technology lovers whose family members also come in a small form factor.

Does Motorola Shakeup Quash Palm Acquisition? [Epicenter]
Dylan Tweney points out why Moto isn't a likely candidate for Palm: the company is basically a complete shambles.

Sensors Listen to Crashes [Autopia]
John Gartner: "Do you hear what I hear? A crash, a crash, it's just beyond the dash..."

How Did Apple Blow It With QuickTime VR? [Cult of Mac]
Pete Mortensen on why this amazing, reliable, beautiful technology is an also-ran.

CD Sales Tanking Faster Than Ever [Listening Post]
Eliot Van Buskirk makes a great point: if your business model is based on making people rebuy music they already have in another format, the market for the new format has a built-in saturation point beyond which sales must inevitably decline.