In Soviet Russia, Party finds YOU ... Linear image sensors are a lot like the elements in your CMOS digital camera, with the exception that the elements are arranged in a line instead of ...
Bradshaw showed photos from the scene of what he said was an assassination attempt depicting a rifle, backpack and GoPro camera ... that the rifle is actually a Soviet cousin of the AK, the ...
That was the case when [Davis DeWitt] got his hands on a weird Soviet-era box with four original Nixie tubes inside. He tears the unit down, shows off the engineering that went into it and ...
The Soviet Union detonated its first atomic bomb, known in the West as Joe-1, on Aug. 29, 1949, at Semipalatinsk Test Site, in Kazakhstan. The Soviets called their first atomic test "First Lightning." ...
Following three days of commission sessions, the delegates, from 33 countries, embarked on a two-week tour of dams sponsored by the Soviet Ministry of Power Station Construction. Bowman’s 18-pag ...
Tired of hauling around an extra camera? Grab one of the best smartphones for taking photos and you might find your DSLR or mirrorless collecting dust. I’m PCMag’s managing editor for consumer ...
“Detente” was the overriding theme of Expo ’74’s Soviet Union National Day. The term referred to a thawing trend in the three-decade Cold War, and visiting Soviet officials were presenting ...
However, the use of nuclear materials remains a controversial and often sensitive topic in Kazakhstan, which was used as a testing ground for the Soviet Union’s nuclear program. The weapon tests ...
British politics today, and particularly Conservative politics, is repeating the mistakes of Soviet socialism, despite appearing its ideological opposite, argues Abby Innes in her new book. Dr Abby ...
A tall chimney stack is a lone relic from the site's time as a Soviet sock factory. (The bricks hark back to this history — laid out to mimic the pattern of the socks .) Now it's known as Cyber ...
Then he and his family were given a guided tour of the pavilion. The Soviet Pavilion, as it was also called, was by far the biggest foreign pavilion at 52,000 square feet, and one of the most popular.