Monday 25 August 2025
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SEATTLE -- It's hard to explain Archie McPhee.

Instead, let's start with some of the things you can buy here:

Cthulhu water bottles. Bacon-flavored toothpaste. Devil duckies. Fire-spitting wind-up nuns. Band-Aids that look like bacon strips. Bacon-flavored gumballs. A plastic narwhal -- complete with a penguin for it to impale. A yodeling plastic pickle. Bacon-flavored mints.

And, of course, there's a bin full of rubber chickens.

The company, named after founder Mark Pahlow's eccentric great uncle, has been shipping strange objects, offbeat toys and slightly off-color gifts from its Seattle...

Gore, Ex-Apple Engineers Team Up to Blow Up the Book

Former Apple engineers Kimon Tsinteris (left) and Mike Matas teamed up with Al Gore to create a new publishing platform called Push Pop Press. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

What do you do after working for Apple, a company that disrupts entire industries? Easy. You start a company to create your own ding in the universe.

That’s the idea behind Push Pop Press, a digital creation tool made by ex-Apple engineers who are about to blow up the concept of the book — with some help from Al Gore, who sits on Apple’s board of directors.

Developed by former Apple employees Mike Matas and Kimon Tsinteris,...

Drones Spray, Track the Unwilling in Air Force Plan

Here’s how the U.S. Air Force wants to hunt the next generation of its enemies: A tiny drone sneaks up to a suspect, paints him with an unnoticed powder or goo that allows American forces to follow him everywhere he goes — until they train a missile on him.

On Tuesday, the Air Force issued a call for help making a miniature drone that could covertly drop a mysterious and unspecified tracking “dust” onto people, allowing them to be tracked from a distance. The proposal says its useful for all kinds of random things, from identifying friendly forces and civilians to tracking wildlife. But the...

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