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An iPhone 7 Case So Thin You'll Forget It's Even There

The iPhone 7 is a beautiful piece of design — which can easily get ruined if you don't use a case or if you use an ugly case. Enter the Peel case. At just 0.35mm thin, its sleek, minimal design will keep your iPhone safe and beautiful.
DOES A BEAR SHIT IN THE WOODS?

Shorter days trigger biological changes in the bears to prepare them for their hibernation. All the while, inside their bodies intestinal secretions and cells start to slough off and form a plug, which grows to about seven to fifteen inches long and one to two and half inches in diameter.
WE'RE LOW ON FIBER

America has two historic networks in place: the copper wires that made up the original telephone network, and the coaxial cabling that started to replace it. These two systems are how most of our Internet is still connected, and, in today’s age, they’re both ancient technology.
TAKING THINGS ONE THING AT A TIME

Despite having healthy eyes, Agnes finds it impossible to see more than one object at a time, while being blind to everything else around her. Her strange condition reveals surprising truths about the ways we all perceive the world.
NOT AS OBVIOUS AS YOU MIGHT THINK

Physical separation of different races persists in America despite the legal disassembly of racist policies of the past. The phenomenon has commonly been attributed to economics, but now a new study adds proof to the theory that conscious racism is partly to blame.
DEFENDING THE INDEFENSIBLE

If you haven’t heard of John Henry Browne, the results of a quick Google search may be alarming. Terms like “murderer” and “serial killer” are practically synonymous with the attorney's name.
NO SURPRISES HERE

Russia's parliamentary elections brought a landslide win for President Vladimir Putin's United Russia and its allies, in a vote that gives Putin a free hand in the country he first led in 2000. At least one incident of ballot-stuffing was caught on camera; officials say results from that station won't be counted.
INTERNET OF CRIMINAL THINGS

Through the eyes of a master hacker turned security expert, William Langewiesche chronicles the rise of the Dark Net — where weapons, drugs, and information are bought, sold, and hacked — and learns how high the stakes have really become.