The first thing you may notice is that PopSci.com now looks like a blog. That's because we think the organizational style of blogs is elegantly simple to navigate and search. Dig into the content, however, and you'll find the authoritative Popular Science articles you're used to, plus the up-to-the-minute news and expert opinions you'd expect from a top-notch tech site. And here's what really gets us excited: you can arrange the "posts" on PopSci.com in just about any way you can imagine.
Start with our seven top-level categories—Cars, Gear & Gadgets, DIY, Military Aviation & Space, Entertainment & Gaming, The Environment, and SciTech. You can use the tabs to arrange posts within each category by date, popularity, rating, or most commented—all without reloading the page.
Below the category level, you'll find thousands of organizational keywords, or tags, assigned to each article, photo gallery, image or video on the site. These help link similar content together, and also give you a handy way to find all the given articles about a particular topic.
If you click on a tag anywhere on the site (say, robot), you'll be taken to a page showing all articles assigned to that tag. In addition, each tag has an individual RSS feed you can use to have articles instantly delivered to your personal newsreader, Web site, or social networking page (for more on our site's copious RSS subscription options, see the RSS Feeds page).
You'll also soon find tag pages for all your favorite recurring features (5-Minute Project Videos, Gray Matter) as well as a page for each author.
Since we're still in "beta" you may see a few slightly strange tags assigned to some articles. That's because we enlisted the help of a friendly robot to help us categorize all of the content we've imported into the new site—the Yahoo Term Extractor API. This great free web service patiently reads ream after ream of text and identifies what it thinks are the best descriptive tags. Our editors are combing through and removing the funnier ones (that's the price we pay for referencing pop culture in our articles), and we think you'll find many of the auto-generated tags to be incredibly useful in linking similar content.
New on PopSci.com is the ability to create your own personal profile. Don't worry—all you need is a valid email address to register, and then you can do a lot more with the site. Click on "Your Profile" in the top left and see:
Once you're logged in, you can add your two cents to just about any piece of content on the site—articles, photo galleries, the works. If you find a particularly good comment somewhere, mark it "helpful."
Give each article or gallery a rating between one and five stars. Once enough ratings are collected, an aggregate community rating will appear and can be used to sort articles by their popularity.
If you see a piece of content you love, click the "add to favorites" button at the top of the page. It will automatically be placed into the favorites list on your profile page, so you can come back to it quickly and easily.
Join the forums for general discussion with other PopSci readers and editors about science and technology, as well as future contests and games.
Our new and improved search (found in the upper-right corner of every page) makes it easy to find articles, videos, galleries and individual images. Even cooler is the ability to save any PopSci.com search as a custom RSS feed (see the RSS Feeds page for more).
Note: Our search is a work-in-progress, so if you see anything unexpected, bear with us—or better yet, send feedback on improvements or bugs to webmaster@popsci.com.
The PopSci Predictions Exchange—where you can bet on the future you read about every day on PopSci.com for fun and prizes—has also been redesigned. Now, your PopSci.com user name and PPX account will be unified into a single login (current PPX traders can use their existing PPX username to instantly log in to PopSci.com—no additional signup required).
You'll also find information about the most actively traded PPX propositions by category on nearly every page, matching the category of the article or page you're already browsing.
"Beta" doesn't imply mere roughness—it also implies greater things to come. Our new open-source Drupal platform allows us a ton of freedom and flexibility, and we'll be taking advantage of it with an always-under-construction, always-expanding feature set. Still to come are great user-generated contests, special offers and new columns—all in addition to the same sort of high-quality content you've enjoyed in the pages of Popular Science.
We hope you'll enjoy all the new site has to offer.
-The PopSci.com Staff
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Featuring every article from the magazine and website, plus links from around the Web. Also see our PopSci DIY feed
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Inside NASA's astronaut bootcamp and the grueling new training regimen for deep space. Plus, ten young geniuses shaking up science today, one writer's quest to analyze every man-made chemical in her body and more.
Check out the issue's full contents online here
wow, i like the white! when did you guys do this?
We've been working on it for about 4 months, but we just turned it on today.
I like the new design but I prefer black. White is just too blah.
the other one was better. it had better designs. where is the how to section?
where is the how2.0, i loved that, and i dont see a search bar; the new stuff is cool but i like black better, and they cut off a lot of stuff
the old one was much better
And what happened to the How2.0!!!!
It's kind of a pain in the butt that I have to keep logging off and logging back in every time my session expires...I used to be able to stay logged in days at a time for PPX.
How 2.0 is still around - it's just called DIY now. Same great stuff. Check it out!
And as for search - we're still working out a kink or two that came up when we launched. It should be back very soon.
Does Popsci test the products it advertises in the magazine? Have you tested the product in the ad on page 93 of the February 2008 issue? This is the Hydro-Assist Fuel Cell Kit and the Pre-Ignition Catalytic Converter (www.picctv.com/ps).
If you have tested these products, I would certainly like to know. If you have tested them and shown them to work, I certainly would buy a product that Popsci recommends. Where can I find the Popsci test report on this product you advertise? Does it work?
I don't know if this problem is unique to me, but ever since the launch of the new site I get an "access denied" message every time I try to use the PPX. The opening page loads fine, but then I try to enter my portfolio and it says, quote "Access denied, You are not authorized to access this page." I have been using the PPX since it started, and am finding this quite vexing. I don't know if this is the proper spot to put this complaint, but I have not been able to find a troubleshooting or "contact us" link. Other than that, this looks great, good job guys!
i hate the new site i liked the old one better
I find the daily updates on the front page very useful. I am now checking the sight out more often now versus once an month. Thanks PopSci
from Birmingham, MI
Your problem Jonny is that you need to sign out and sign back in to popsci's website, your logon expired. after doing that just click PPX and Portfolio and your back in action.