Website review: Wired 11.08: The Super Power IssueB...
joh6nn discovered this in Science/Tech
•43 reviews since Jul 10, 2003
science, technology
•wired.com/wired/archive/11.08/pwr_invisible.h...
People who like this website

- ksullsal
San Diego

- Angriegator
California

- Nago31
California

- WearingtheFuture
California

- jnhughes1
California

- jivix
Mountain View

- tberbert
Pleasant Hill

- beansandrice
Daly City

- chillami
Eagle Mountain

- soitisnow
Delta
StumbleUpon is the best way to discover great web sites, videos, photos, blogs and more - based on your interests.
Everything is submitted and rated by the community. Discover, share and review the best of the web!
Reviews of this website

joh6nn discovered 61 months ago- i have never laughed so hard at the end of a serious technical discussion.

lionsearch rated 6 months ago- VERY cool!!!

blogstumbler rated 6 months ago- From the page: "Being Invisible Next-gen optical camouflage is busting out of defense labs and into the street. This is technology you have to see to believe."

vzu rated 6 months ago- Pretty cool! its a pretty obvious kind of an idea that never hits many.

compuveg rated 7 months ago- From the page: "Being Invisible Next-gen optical camouflage is busting out of defense labs and into the street. This is technology you have to see to believe." I hate these articles that make it sound like there's some new cool technology becoming available, only to find out that they're basically just telling us, 'They haven't done it yet'. How few thumbs down I give.

wordgasm rated 8 months ago- Invisibility - is it?

msaleem-stumbl rated 9 months ago- From the page: "Next-gen optical camouflage is busting out of defense labs and into the street. This is technology you have to see to believe."

waggyhang rated 11 months ago- ......this is dumb Not really invisibility at all. and its 4 years old...

aedansma rated 32 months ago- Imagine this 10 years from now....

babirox rated 32 months ago- From the page: "Invisibility has been on humanity's wish list at least since Amon-Ra, a diety who could disappear and reappear at will, joined the Egyptian pantheon in 2008 BC. With recent advances in optics and computing, however, this elusive goal is no longer purely imaginary."