Penn alum brings Flappy Bird to life
Flappy Bird is back, and this time in 3-D.
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Flappy Bird is back, and this time in 3-D.
A new app, designed by Whartonites, lets users earn money by looking at advertisements on their Android phone.
A recent study published in the Journal of Women & Aging found that only 12 percent of women are satisfied with their body image. 88 percent of women surveyed were in the normal weight range.
If you have ever felt reluctant to accept your parents’ friend requests on Facebook, Blend might be another place for you.
It’s easy to get lost in a crowd — even if you’re the star of the second most expensive film of all time.
A new internship program is hoping to bring talented interns to Philadelphia startups.
What do Grouplove, T-Pain and Juan Pablo from ABC’s The Bachelor have in common?
Liquid crystals are best known for their use in liquid crystal display screens. However, Penn say their uses in research are expanding.
The American Red Cross and the School of Veterinary Medicine are bringing a veterinarian to pet owners’ palms.
Penn employees are taking up their pens with a passion.
Four Penn juniors are redesigning Istanbul.
In February, elite athletes from around the world will travel to Sochi for the Olympic Games. However, the “Olympic Games for robotics” already happened in December.
When the “Awake” self goes to bed, the “Asleep” self opens its eyes and starts its own life. This isn’t about Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. This is about “Sleepwalkers,” a new film produced by graduates of the Class of 2013.
When Ted Bunch, co-founder of A Call to Men — a national association of men and women committed to ending violence against women — talks about manhood, he doesn’t limit himself to the man’s side of the story.
Last night, Civic House Associates Coalition brought together four panelists — from Penn and from local nonprofits — in Huntsman Hall for the coalition’s second “Think About It” event, “Food in Philly: Justice and Access.”
Much ink has been spilled already over the Internet’s role in publishing new writing — but some new publishers and authors have begun exploring its capacity to create new writing, too.
Penn for Palestine brought Josh Ruebner — author and national advocacy director of U.S. Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation, a nonprofit coalition — to campus yesterday for a lunchtime discussion of his book “Shattered Hopes: Obama’s Failure to Broker Israeli-Palestinian Peace.”