Use red bull cans to create a layout for a racing track, then use the red Bull app to take a photo that is automatically converted into a track for the user to race on in-game.
Red Bull, so the popular beverage's ad slogan tells us, gives you "wiiiiings." Too bad the product's recent appearance in an ABC sitcom offeRed the network nothing but food for thought.
"Sprint has been forced to build a new 4G LTE network after betting its 4G strategy on WiMax and Clearwire (NSDQ: CLWR), and also had to pay dearly in order to carry the iPhone 4S on its network for the first time in October."
The aptly named app development firm Hiccup has finally fixed a major meow mixup: The interface in their free iPad app, "Game For Cats," allowed felines across the world to download premium content add-ons by accident.
Like many iPad gaming firms, Hiccup opted to go for a freemium profit model. Their game comes loaded with a screen emulating a laser pointer, whose darting red dot is irresistible to most cats. But screens displaying other forms of virtual catnip--a mouse on a string, for example--cost 99 cents as DLC (downloadable content). There was only one problem: Early versions of the game had a user interface that made it extremely easy for cats to purchase the DLC with their paws--taking their human guardians (but not their credit cards) completely out of the equation.
A daredevil leapt from a balloon more than 18 miles above the Earth today (July 25), moving one step closer to a so-called "space jump" that would set the record for the world's highest skydive.
Austrian adventurer Felix Baumgartner stepped out of his custom-built capsule at an altitude of 96,640 feet (29,456 meters) above southeastern New Mexico, officials with red Bull Stratos - the name of Baumgartner's mission - announced today.
Imperial Leisure geo-tagged and color-coded tweets from around the world. The size, color, and number of leaves are influenced by variables like the length of the tweets, the time the tweets were posted, and whether the tweets mention love or hate. The blue leaves represent the tweets that mention hate, while the red leaves show the love. When you scroll over the leaves, the actual tweet appears at the bottom of the screen.
most hateful is US and UK --
most love Chile and Indonesia