Search
Robert Montenegro
Ideafeed Editor
Robert Montenegro is a writer and dramaturg who regularly contributes to Big Think and Crooked Scoreboard. He lives in Washington DC and is a graduate of Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles.
Twitter: @Monteneggroll. Website: robertmontenegro.com.
Read Less
The consensus among most academics is that college students are cheating more today than ever before.
Several recent pieces and studies on workplace dynamics have determined that office bullies are not unlike weeds -- they're hardy and dependable but often stifle the growth of other workers.
If you're self-employed or work in a job with irregular cash flow, it's vital to dedicate yourself to a money management system that works for you.
In 2012, a "leap second" crashed sites such as Reddit and Yelp. Linux creator Linus Torvalds tells WIRED that we shouldn't expect that to happen again this June.
Beantown beat out Los Angeles, Washington D.C., and the San Francisco Bay Area bids. Local debate has already begun as to whether trying to host the Olympics is even worth it.
Game theorists have cracked Texas Hold'em poker by creating an algorithm that bluffs, learns from previous mistakes, and makes smart decisions despite lacking perfect information.
A group of lawmakers have introduced bills in the South Carolina legislature that would require public schools to establish gun safety courses for students.
If you're afraid that your shoddy pipes will burst during a spate of cold weather like our current one, try letting your faucet drip a little now to save a whole lot of hassle later.
Northern states like Minnesota pride themselves on maintaining operations in the bitter cold. But today's massive cold spell has people wondering how cold is too cold for kids in school.
On Monday the price of gas was down to a national average of $2.19 per gallon, capping off a record 102 days of decline. The price of a domestic flight remains flat.
WIRED's Mat Honan argues that recent advances in the way tablets foster communication should serve as a death knell for traditional phone plans.
It's useful to have a strategy for saying "no" to people trying to connect over e-mail without coming off as callous or cold.
Although government-run job training programs are intended to instill young workers with new skills, more and more pensioners are jumping at the opportunity to try something new.
For many industries, the next big innovative step is often spurred by achievement from an outside industry. The historical marriage between food preservation technology and nautical advancement is a perfect example.
The Quadrantid Meteor Shower peaks tonight but astronomers warn that the forthcoming full moon will likely dampen the occasion.
Researchers from the University of Maryland and Australian research center NICTA have developed a method to teach robots tasks by exposing them to lessons on YouTube.
A workshop in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. helps equip children with the necessary survival knowledge in case they're separated from parents and friends.
The District of Columbia sports the third highest rent in the country yet prices have begun to fall as a construction boom injects supply into a seller's market.
A Rutgers Medical School professor has developed an exercise called "Psy-Feld" in which students watch episodes of the beloved 90's sitcom and discuss the psychopathology of the characters.