Kecia Lynn

Kecia Lynn

Kecia Lynn has worked as a technical writer, editor, software developer, arts administrator, summer camp director, and television host. A graduate of Case Western Reserve University and the Iowa Writers' Workshop, she is currently living in Iowa City and working on her first novel.

More than 82,000 people downloaded the Operation Predator app in the month after its September release. One official calls it a new way "to [turbo-charge] our traditional tip lines."
The FAA has lifted regulations restricting the use of certain electronic devices during flight. However, it's leaving it up to the airlines to prove how well their planes can tolerate the extra interference.
In research done on mice, a compound inside the venom of Chinese red-headed centipedes performed as well as, and in some cases even better than, morphine.
Several marketing campaigns launched over the last few months are designed to help young working men unplug, ideally with a beer. One of them is an app that offers a reward for leaving their phones alone.
The last above-ground map of the ancient water system was completed a century ago. Now, a group of scientists is using 21st-century technology to provide the first-ever map containing both underground and surface data.
To celebrate 10 years of images from the European Space Agency's Mars Express orbiter, the German Aerospace Center has compiled a video that gives sweeping digital views of the planet's landscape.
Two new studies agree that Kepler-78b is about the same size and composition as Earth, but because it orbits its star at one-tenth the distance of our orbit, it's way too hot to support life.