Albert Einstein’s Brain: 12 Facts About Gray Matter Of Scientific Genius (PHOTOS)

Albert Einstein has been dead for more than 50 years, but Einstein’s brain has been “living” at the center of a strange mystery ever since–at least until recently.

After Einstein’s death on April 18, 1955, his brain was removed from his body by Dr. Thomas Harvey, a pathologist at the Princeton, N.J. hospital where Einstein died. For many years, the whereabouts of the brain were unknown. But now photographs of Einstein’s brain, along with tissue specimens, have reemerged.

The recovered items have allowed researchers to identify unusual features of Einstein’s brain–perhaps helping to explain his amazing brainpower. The items have also helped them figure out just what happened to the brain after it was removed from his body.

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Ask Engadget: best new smartphone that isn’t massive?

Ask Engadget best new smartphone that isn't massive

We know you’ve got questions, and if you’re brave enough to ask the world for answers, then here’s the outlet to do so. This week’s Ask Engadget inquiry is from Diamar, who is eyeing up a new smartphone, but doesn’t want one the size of a table tennis bat. If you’re looking to ask one of your own, drop us a line at ask [at] engadget [dawt] com.

“I read your site and I figured I’d give this a shot. I’ll be in the market to upgrade my iPhone 4S, but all of the best smartphones now have huge screens. I’ve wanted a Galaxy SIII, but its 4.8-inch screen is pushing it. Can you recommend any current or future smartphones that don’t have massive screens? Thanks!”

Were we in the construction trade, we’d be sucking the air over our teeth in a disapproving manner. If you’re looking for a flagship model, then it’s probably going to be on the sizable side:

Of course, if size is your only concern, then you could drop down a few levels (and price points) and snag a Galaxy S III Mini, which has a 4-inch display, but far more modest specs. That’s our take on the situation, anyway, but what about the community? Share your thoughts, folks.

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Bobcats Keep Wizards Winless With 108-106 2OT Win

WASHINGTON — Byron Mullens scored 27 points, Ramon Sessions had 20 and Ben Gordon added 19 as the Charlotte Bobcats earned their seventh win of the season and kept the Washington Wizards winless with a 108-106 double-overtime victory on Saturday night.

Last season, the Bobcats went 7-59 in the lockout-shortened season, the lowest winning percentage in NBA history, but have already equaled that victory total in their 12th game.

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Dinosaur ‘Birds’ Glided Rather Than Flew Like Modern Birds, Fossil Analysis Suggests

By: Live Science Staff
Published: 11/23/2012 10:10 AM EST on LiveScience

Some of the first birdlike creatures to emerge during the age of the dinosaurs probably couldn’t get their heavy wings to take them off the ground, and they likely opted for gliding over flying, new research shows.

Modern flying birds have a single primary layer of easily separated long feathers covered with short ones — a design that helps them overcome drag when taking flight. A new analysis of the fossils of two of their ancestors shows that the arrangement of feathers for primitive birds was quite different.

The birdlike dinosaurs Anchiornis huxley and Archaeopteryx lithographica had dense overlapping layers of wing feathers that were likely difficult to separate, the researchers found. Instead of lifting off from the ground, these creatures probably climbed trees and used their wings to glide from a height, the scientists said.

What’s more, differences in the wing feathers of Archaeopteryx and Anchiornis appear to represent early evolutionary experiments in wing design, according to the researchers. For example, Archaeopteryx had multiple layers of long feathers, while Anchiornis had an abundance of simple feathers that overlapped like a penguin’s, said study researcher Nicholas R. Longrich, a postdoctoral fellow at Yale.

Longrich’s colleague Jakob Vinther, a former Yale doctoral student, now with the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom, said the fossil analyses add to an intricate picture of how feathers and modern birds evolved.

"We now seem to see that feathers evolved initially for insulation," Vinther explained in a statement. "More complex vaned or pinnate feathers evolved for display. These display feathers turned out to be excellent membranes that could have been utilized for aerial locomotion, which only very late in bird evolution became what we consider flapping flight."

The research was detailed today (Nov. 21) online in the journal Current Biology.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We’re also on Facebook & Google+.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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Sandy Victims’ Homes Looted In Breezy Point Over Thanksgiving

NEW YORK — Some residents of a New York City neighborhood that suffered fire and flooding during Superstorm Sandy say thieves looted their damaged houses over Thanksgiving.

One couple lost a $25,000 coin collection along with jewelry and watches.

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Andrew Bynum Out Indefinitely: Sixers Center Has No Timetable For First Game

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Andrew Bynum’s debut with the Philadelphia 76ers is on hold again.

General manager Tony DiLeo said Saturday that Bynum is out indefinitely and there’s no timetable set for his first game. The All-Star center was acquired from the Los Angeles Lakers in a four-team trade before the season.

“We don’t know when he’ll be back,” DiLeo said. “Only Andrew’s body can answer that question. When he feels better, we can step up the rehab program. We just have to wait to see how he reacts to the rehab.”

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Mobile Miscellany: week of November 19th, 2012

Mobile Miscellany week of November 19th, 2012

If you didn’t get enough mobile news during the week, not to worry, because we’ve opened the firehose for the truly hardcore. This past week, we discovered an abundance of special edition smartphones and T-Mobile gave ten new reasons for owners of unlocked iPhones to smile. So buy the ticket and take the ride as we explore the “best of the rest” for this week of November 19th, 2012.

Continue reading Mobile Miscellany: week of November 19th, 2012

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Oklahoma Beats Oklahoma State 51-48: Brennan Clay’s TD Lifts No. 14 Sooners To Bedlam Win

NORMAN, Okla. — After the first overtime game in the Bedlam rivalry, a wild celebration on Owen Field and yet another 500-yard passing game, it all settled in for Landry Jones.

His last home game with Oklahoma was over, and what a way to go out.

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Sony coats Xperia P in 24-carat gold, keeps up tradition of so-so phones in luxury shells

Sony coats Xperia P in 24carat gold, keeps up tradition of soso phones in luxury shells

Outside of custom projects, the cardinal rule for draping phones in exotic materials is that they must never, ever be truly high end devices: at best, they should involve mid-tier hardware that could be eclipsed by a garden-variety smartphone at a fraction of the price. Sony’s maintaining that all too time-honored tradition by producing a gold-coated, 24-carat version of… the Xperia P. Yes, rather than spruce up a flagship like the James Bond-approved Xperia T, Sony has instead given the luxury treatment to a smartphone with a strictly middling 4-inch display and dual-core 1GHz processor. In fairness, the company sees this as an experiment rather than a Vertu-like business model, with the intent strictly to emphasize the unibody design. A maximum 15 have been built as a result — and rather than count on impulse purchases from oligarchs, Sony hints that it’s offering at least some of its gold Xperia P stock to followers on Facebook. As long as there’s no pretenses of living the high life with what’s really a very ordinary phone underneath, we’re satisfied.

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Source: Sony

Tufty: You Will Never Look at a Teddy Bear the Same Way Ever Again

You probably had a teddy bear as a kid, or some other stuffed animal. We all did. There’s nothing wrong with that, right? Not here in the real world (probably) but according to the short film Tufty, you’ve got some blood on your hands. More »