|   |   A Japanese phone maker's journey through every cell phone trend in history, from two-tone LCDs and big buttons to full-color touchscreens and 4G Internet. From NTT Docomo and Designboom.   | 
  
      |   |   Snapchat shares photos that self-destruct. It says it's not about sexting, even though that's how it's used by some teens. But you definitely shouldn't use it for sexting.   | 
  
      |   |   Whoa. Tell us what you really think, Twitter search! (First image via @cool_pond)   | 
  
      |   |   Minus the tears. A professional cluster-balloonist re-created Up's flying house this weekend.   | 
  
      |   |   The shoppers will look up to the sky and shout, "Save us some flat-screens," and the Best Buy manager shall look down and whisper, "No." But seriously, these Black Friday shoppers look really sad.   | 
  
      |   |   I don't know which is worse: the people waiting for Black Friday sales on Monday, or the people stopping to Instagram it.   | 
  
      |   |   Synthetic biology — the science fiction-like branch of genetic engineering — hopes to automate programs used to engineer organisms that could produce better drugs and cleaner fuels. But can open-source science really succeed?   | 
  
      |   |   IT'S A SCAM. And it will make you sad. Also: leftovers.   | 
  
      |   |   It's a dangerous world out there.   | 
  
      |   |   Here's a supercut of the most indecipherable moments from last week's Gaza debate on HuffPost Live!   | 
  
      |   |   By now, you've seen the totally radical redesign of the computer you've likely been using for years: Windows 8. But have you seen what Windows 8 originally looked like?   | 
  
      |   |   Just in case people didn't already know that Google owns the historic Port Authority building. You know, and your soul.   | 
  
      |   |   I would ignore the part about Apple buying Twitter — I don't think it makes that much sense, and would likely be a flustercuck — but this nugget seems very true: "Google is getting better at design faster than Apple is getting better at web services."   | 
  
      |   |   To be honest, my first impressions of Nokia's Here maps for the iPhone aren't very good: It looks very fuzzy in some places, and transit directions — something Nokia has been pushing hard, since Apple Maps don't have them — kept failing. But maybe it'll get better faster than Apple Maps. Or at least tide you over till Google Maps finally arrive for the iPhone.   | 
  
  
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