While you might be most familiar with the freeze dried astronaut food stocked in museum gift shops, the larders of spacecraft and stations looks a little different. Check out the last five decades of space food.
Over at Mashable they’ve rounded up photos and descriptions of what astronauts ate going all the way back to the Mercury and Gemini missions in the early 1960s. Hit up the link below to check out the gallery; you’ll see how the food has definitely improved in quality and variety but the packaging still looks as utilitarian as ever.
See What Astronauts Really Eat In Space [Mashable]
Our latest edition of WIG is filled with news link coverage on topics such as Windows 8 Fast Startup feature can put data at risk on dual-boot systems, a critical Ruby on Rails bug threatens 200,000+ sites, Microsoft confirms Windows Live Messenger – Skype transition bugs, and more.
Last week, we published a list of websites for sharing photos with friends and family. Of course, you can also share your photos by emailing them, but many email services impose a limit on the size of files you can send.
Galaxies make for stunning desktops when images of them are tweaked just right and today we have an awesome collection of these universal wonders to share with you. Visit the far corners of the universe on your desktop with the first in our series of Galaxies Wallpaper collections.
Linux has come a long way, but you may still need to run Windows applications occasionally – especially Windows-only PC games. Luckily, there are quite a few ways to run Windows applications on Linux.
Think you know the answer? Click through to see if you're right!
If you’ve bought a CD on Amazon anytime between 1998 and today, you can enjoy a free MP3 copy of that music courtesy of Amazon’s new program: AutoRip. Read on to see how it works.
Why spend extra money on a scan-to-email capable scanner or multi-purpose device when you can repurpose an old scanner and a Raspberry Pi into a one-button email-enabled scanner.
This week’s game is a bit of a mind bender as you attempt to move colored discs to specific locations on game boards with a very limited amount of maneuverability. Can you successfully move all the discs to their proper locations or will the logic of the game leave you tangled up and frustrated?
Windows 8 and Windows 10 no longer include the Windows Classic theme, which hasn’t been the default theme since Windows 2000. If you don’t like all the new colors and the shiny new Windows 10 look and feel, you can always revert to the super-old-school look.
Once upon a time Windows was, well, the Windows dressing for DOS–but is Windows still dependent on the DOS architecture for daily operations? Read on as we investigate.