Architect Repays Fickle Utah Customers With Anonymous Concrete Bunker

Architect Repays Fickle Utah Customers With Anonymous Concrete Bunker

Are you happy now, Park City? After a planned addition to the Kimball Art Center sparked public outrage over the design—an awesome, spiraling log cabin from space—the architects behind the proposal, Bjarke Ingels Group, have unveiled an austere new design.

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You, Too, Can Be Mummified in Utah

You, Too, Can Be Mummified in Utah

While reading Sarah Murray’s excellent book, Making An Exit—a global travelogue that explores rituals of dying around the world—I learned that you can actually be mummified by a private company in Utah. They’re called Summum, they’re based in Salt Lake City, and their process is patented. It involves rubber.

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A City Getting Google Fiber Explains How Awesome Google Fiber Is

Google Fiber—which for most of us is an idea better than any dream we’ve ever had—is expanding. After blessing Kansas City with superlightspeed Internet, it’s moving on to Austin, Texas and Provo, Utah. Chances are you probably don’t live there. Chances are you might have not even heard of Provo. Chances are you’re wondering why it’s not your city getting Google Fiber and not Provo.

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Aereo bringing online TV to Utah on August 19th

Aereo bringing online TV to Utah on August 19th

Online TV streaming service Aereo is going Manifest Destiny and headed westward, specifically to the fine state of Utah. The service is set to launch statewide on August 19th, just ahead of its September launch in Chicago. “Whether you live in Salt Lake City, St. George or Ogden,” the company’s PR announcement reads, indicating that the service isn’t localized to any one major metropolitan area (like with previous rollouts).

Should you self-identify as a “Utahn” and have interest in getting signed up, you can pre-register at Aereo’s main site and get “priority access” when the service launches next month. For a look at which networks will be offered, head below for the official word from Aereo.

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Fallen kingdom: 38 Studios’ collapse and the pitfalls of using public money to support tech companies

Fallen kingdom 38 Studios' collapse and the pitfalls of using public money to support tech companies

In a career filled with many clutch throws from the baseball mound, former Boston Red Sox ace Curt Schilling’s main calling card was a gutsy post-season performance made even more memorable by a blood-soaked sock. It was a pitch made by Schilling outside of Major League Baseball, however, that would prove to be his most daring one yet.

In 2010, Schilling convinced Rhode Island officials to give his video game company, 38 Studios, a $75 million loan guarantee. A self-professed fan of massively multiplayer online role-playing games (MMORPG), Schilling’s dream was to create a worthy competitor to Blizzard’s MMORPG juggernaut, World of Warcraft. In 2006, Schilling started Green Monster Games, which was later renamed 38 Studios. Luring the company away from Massachusetts was supposed to bring in more than 400 jobs and serve as the linchpin for launching a new tech-based industry in Rhode Island. Instead, the state’s taxpayers found themselves left at the table with a multimillion-dollar tab.

Continue reading Fallen kingdom: 38 Studios’ collapse and the pitfalls of using public money to support tech companies

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Fallen kingdom: 38 Studios’ collapse and the pitfalls of using public money to support tech companies originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Sep 2012 11:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Utah researchers create ‘Spintronic’ LED, claim it’s ‘brighter, cheaper’ and eco-friendly

Utah researchers create 'Spintronic' LED, claims its 'brighter, cheaper' and ecofriendlySpintronics? Not exactly a new term ’round these parts, but University of Utah physicists are applying it in a unique way that may eventually make TVs look even sharper than they do today. The entity is trumpeting a new “spintronic” organic light-emitting diode (that’s OLED, for short) that’s said to be “cheaper and more environmentally friendly than the kinds of LEDs now used in television and computer displays, lighting, traffic lights and numerous electronic devices.” Z. Valy Vardeny is even going so far as to call it a “completely different technology,” and better still, a prototype has already been made. The professor expects that the newfangled tech — which produces an orange glow today — will be able to product red, blue and white spin OLEDs within a few years. It’s a lot to wade through, but here’s our question: will these things make the Galaxy S XI impeccably visible in outdoor sunlight? (Please say “yes.”)

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Utah researchers create ‘Spintronic’ LED, claim it’s ‘brighter, cheaper’ and eco-friendly originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 14 Jul 2012 18:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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