This is my personal blog being used as a news portal for another web site. News I find interesting will be posted here and then picked up via the RSS feed to use on another site. Please contact me with any questions.

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Good Eats Fan Page Is a Kitchen Hacker's Wonderland

Do we love us some Alton Brown food science around here? We most certainly do. You can learn a whole lot more from the Food Network star and kitchen hacker at the wonderful Good Eats Fan Page.

To put it mildly, the Fan Page has neither a slick interface (frame navigation ahoy) nor the kind of inter-locking, wiki-style organization that such a subject cries out for. Still, what the Good Eats Fan Page has is in-depth information on all the food, gadgets, and clever work-arounds Alton has covered on his much-loved show, and lots of it. Want to know more about the pressure cooking Alton was doing in that one episode? Check the equipment list, grab recipes and location links from the episode guide, or, heck, Ctrl+F-search the entire episode transcript. If it's not covered on the site, it's probably somewhere in the user forums.

It's the kind of geeky, obsessed site that restores your faith in the web's promise—and makes you eager to do crazy things with your kitchen equipment.

Good Eats Fan Page

Good Eats Fan Page Is a Kitchen Hacker's Wonderland - alton brown - Lifehacker

Most Popular Hive Five Topics of 2009

Every week we pose a simple, focused question to the Lifehacker readership about a specific topic: Which is best? From netbooks and malware removal to home servers and wallpaper, here's a look back at the most popular Hive Five topics of 2009.

The Hive Five asks the question "Which is best?" in a variety of topics covering hardware, software, and sometimes even a combination of the two. Although sometimes it's easy to predict the winner—Ubuntu has had its share of wins, to be sure—the real value in the Hive Five isn't actually its ability to elevate a single winner to a pedestal but to highlight all the great options that are out there.

Between the four runners up in each Hive Five and the other options highlighted in the hundreds of comments on both the Hive Five Call for Contenders and the actual Hive Five every week, it's easy to discover new things. If ever you're not sold on the winner of any Hive Five always make sure to read over the comments and see if any of them tip you off to a new and awesome product you'd never heard of.

Five Best Netbooks

Some months have elapsed since we asked you which netbook was best, but the newer models of the winner and runners up in that Hive Five are still the forerunners in the netbook market.

Five Best Malware Removal Tools

Nobody likes having their machine laden down with malware. Check out this Hive Five to find great applications for keeping things running smooth and malware free.

Best Home Server Software

Media files, data synchronization, and remote backups, oh my! Home computing has advanced to a point where it's practical to run your own home server, and we're running down the five best tools for the job.

Five Best Linux Distributions

There are many, many Linux distributions, and a lot of unique reasons to like them. Read on to see which open-source operating systems inspired our readers to provide our biggest Hive Five response to date.

Five Best Wallpaper Sites

Nobody likes staring at a boring desktop when they fire up their computer every morning. Keep your wallpaper fresh with the five most popular sites Lifehacker readers use to satisfy their wallpaper needs.

Five Best Free Data Recovery Tools

The best way to recover from unexpected data loss is to be properly prepared. With one of the following tools on hand, you'll always be ready to save your data from the Reaper.

Six Best Video Editing Applications

You want to be the supreme ruler of your own virtual cutting room? Better break out the checkbook—your film-chopping powers aren't going to come cheaply.

Five Best Web Browsers

It's probably the most important and debated piece of software on the modern computer. See how your fellow readers get around the net, and vote for your favorite web browser.

Six Best MP3 Tagging Tools

A well tagged MP3 collection makes everything from organization to playback easier. Keep reading for a closer look at your fellow readers' favorite tools for cleaning up their MP3 tags in this Hive Five.

Five Best Antivirus Applications

Computer viruses are increasingly sophisticated and pervasive. If you can't afford to run your computer without some sort of antivirus software installed, check out these five popular options to protect your PC.

Five Best Live CDs

Live CDs (and DVDs) are versatile tools, allowing you to boot into an operating system without installing anything to your hard drives. Let's take a closer look at the five most popular live CDs.

Five Best Disk Defragmenters

Your computer is a busy beaver, rapidly accessing and utilizing files all in the name of bringing you what you want, when you want it. Sometimes it needs a little help tidying up, and that's where these five disk defragmenters come in.

Five Best Portable Applications

Whether you got a shiny new flash drive over the holidays or your old thumb drive is looking for a new lease on life, pack it full of goodness with these five killer portable applications.

Five Best Instant Messengers

Instant messaging has become so ubiquitous, an entire generation of internet users is probably unaware there was ever life without it. Check out the following five most popular instant messengers to to help you communicate across networks and the world.

Five Best Free System Restore Tools

Backing up data is a great way to minimize losses after a computing catastrophe. But what about restoring your actual system right away? Here are the five most popular reader choices.

Five Best People-Search Engines

Need to do a little online detective work? Track down anyone from long lost schoolmates to the new friend whose number you've lost with this assortment of powerful people-search engines.

Five Best System Tray Applications


The Windows system tray can be so much more than a parking lot for programs you don't want cluttering up your task bar. Read on to see the five most popular tray tools readers can't live without.

Five Best Online Backup Tools

Local backup is a useful and necessary part of securing your data against catastrophe, but with the advent of broadband and inexpensive online storage, you've got little reason to not back up critical files to the cloud as well.

Five Best PDF Readers


Adobe's free PDF reader has long been a standard for handling its extremely popular document format, but you aren't limited to using it to view your PDF files. Let's take a look at five of the most popular PDF readers.

Five Best Video Players


We've come a long way since animated GIFs and video-game-style MIDI files were considered cutting edge computer-provided A/V entertainment. Take advantage of today's high-quality video with one of these five most popular video players.

Hive Five: Five Best Mind Mapping Applications


Mind mapping is a great way to add structure to brainstorming sessions and visualize your ideas. Check out the applications your fellow readers use to do their best brainstorming.

Five Best Windows Task Manager Alternatives


The Windows Task Manager is a functional but basic tool for keeping an eye on what your computer's up to. If you want to go beyond the built-in tool and for more in depth information and control, check out these five alternatives.

Six Best Portable Operating Systems


Why restrict yourself to merely carrying around your data on a thumb drive? Take your entire operating system on your flash drive with the excellent portable operating systems you'll find inside this week's Hive Five.

Five Best Portable Apps Suites


Once upon a time, easy remote computing was a pipe dream, now people routinely carry gigs of data around on flash drives smaller than a modest pack of chewing gum. Manage your apps and data with these portable application suites.

Five Best Virtual-Desktop Managers


Long before multiple monitors were popular (or financially feasible), there were virtual desktops—applications that allow you to swap your entire workspace with another for easy compartmentalization of your work. Here's a look at five of the most popular virtual-desktop managers.

Five Best Application Docks


Remember the days of digging through folders of shortcuts and menus to launch applications? These days many users prefer customizable, attractive docks for launching and keeping track of their favorite apps. Here's a look at five of the most popular docks.

Five Best Time-Tracking Applications


Where does the time go? Whether you need to know for billing purposes or just want a better idea of how your work day is split up, you can always answer that question with a good time-tracking application.

Five Best Software Update Tools


Rather than wait around for your software to notify you of updates (let's face it, a lot of applications never will), these five handy tools keep an eye on your apps, alert you when an update's available, and streamline the updating process.

Six Best Exercise Planning and Tracking Tools


Technology and exercise make an excellent pair; you can now track, plan, and graph your workouts more easily than ever. We're here to take a look at six of the most popular tools for the job.

Five Best Alternative File Copiers


If you do any serious file copying on a Windows system, you'll quickly discover that there are substantial limitations to the default file copier. Ease your file copying frustrations with these five alternative copiers.

Most Popular Hive Five Topics of 2009 - Best of 2009 - Lifehacker

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Most Popular Firefox Extensions and Themes of 2009

This year's release of Firefox 3.5 gave us a lot of reasons to like it, but its extensibility remains everyone's favorite feature. These add-ons and theme tools were the most popular in the year gone by.

This list is culled from a straight listing of the most popular posts that offered a Firefox extension for download in 2009. We're not including posts about configuring Firefox, or even our own hand-rolled Firefox add-on packs—even if they were pretty popular, too. Let's get to the good stuff.

Firefox 3.7 Theme Makes Your Browser Look Awesome


One of the greatest things about Firefox is that its development happens way out wide in the open. When the design workers start coming up with preliminary sketches of a new release, anyone can peek at them and even compile them into a theme, which does just what the headline suggests.

All-Glass Firefox Enables Slick Transparency Effects


Windows Vista and 7 feature some fairly nice looking transparency effects, but if your primary browser doesn't use them, it can feel a bit disconnected. All-Glass Firefox v2 tweaks your browser to look just, well, proper in its fancy-pants surroundings.

"Vacuum Places Improved" Speeds Up Firefox with a Click of Your Mouse


You can speed up Firefox by cleaning up its fragmented database, and the Vacuum Places Improved 0.3 extension automates that admittedly pain-in-the-butt process.

Gmail Redesigned 3.0 Focuses on Speed and Message Space


Google Redesigned, a multi-site suite that trades Google's blue/white/minimal look for a darker, sleeker feel, kept improving its transformative powers this year, adding a host of improvements in its 3.0 release, and later releasing a new version with GReader Redesigned for the RSS hounds.

Dislike 0.2 Adds a Disapproving Dislike Button to Facebook


"I'm having SUCH a bad day—the cleaning lady TOTALLY left her Pine Sol smell all over my bed linens!" That, my friends, is why clever JavaScript tweakers created the Dislike extension.

TinEye Adds Reverse Image Lookup to Firefox


Many of the pictures and illustrations you find across the web aren't in their original form—and many can be had at better, perhaps more wallpaper-worthy sizes. The TinEye extension makes it a simple right-click maneuver to search out similar copies of any image you come across.

SkipScreen Lets You Pass Go and Collect Your Download


Sometimes, great stuff has to be hosted on public download services, because the file—or the attention it's getting—is just too much for our meek little personal sites. And the download sites often make it as painful as possible to grab those files.
SkipScreen acts as an automated intermediary, jumping through the necessary hoops and entering the key presses required.

FireFound Tracks Your Stolen Computer, Nukes Your Personal Data


This neat little extension, winner of the Extend Firefox 3.5 contest, utilizes lots of Firefox's built-in features, like geo-location and the extension framework, to offer wary laptop users a way to nuke their personal data, passwords, and history if necessary, track where their machine is logging on after a theft, and cull all kinds of data from the thief. FireFound is, in other words, a smart thing to install if your laptop ever leaves the home.

Gui:config Gives Easy Access to Hidden Firefox Settings


A lot of helpful stuff is tucked away in Firefox's about:config menus. Gui:config brings them into focus and offers a graphical way to manage them. As the How-To Geek puts it, it's amazing that this isn't something being considered for mainstream distribution in the browser.

Memory Fox Manages Firefox's Memory Use, Aims to Keep It Low


(Windows only): Firefox is decently light with memory on startup, but extensions and plug-ins drag it down as you actually use it. Memory Fox monitors Firefox's memory use and, once it reaches your pre-set limit, whips it back into shape.

Daum Blue Firefox Theme is Clean, Simple, and Elegant


(Windows only): Well, the headline and picture kind of say it all about Daum Blue, but it's worth noting that beyond looks, it's also fairly customizable, and looks even better on Vista and Windows 7 systems.

Decreased Productivity Helps You Browse at Work Without Getting Busted

Sure, kind of anathema for this site's stated mission, but giving your mind a break at work has real mental benefits, even if your boss doesn't think so.

UrlbarExt Adds Super Powers to the Awesome Bar

If you're likely to do more at a web site than just simply bookmark it, UrlbarExt is like a Leatherman for your AwesomeBar. Head to a site's root, search the site on Google, and do much more from a small array of address bar buttons.

Foxmarks Becomes Xmarks, Adds Search and Suggestion Features

Another headline that pretty much says it all. We weren't a big fan of Xmarks' new "discovery" features, but its growing reach into Chrome and other browsers make the former Foxmarks' expansion a good thing.

Magnetiser Downloads Torrents When No Torrent File Is Available

Given the recent legal crackdown on BitTorrent-centered sites, magnet links (explained here) are increasingly popular. Magnetiser makes it easy to track down a working torrent link to grab the file you're looking for.

Integrated Gmail Updates with Improved Looks and Handy Features


It must be mentioned that, beyond smooshing together Gmail, Google Calendar, and Google Reader into one neatly-arranged Gmail page, Integrated Gmail also customizes every niggling detail of those combined apps, making it worth the try-out, even if you think you like your Google spaces separated into different tabs.

Omnibar Extension Collapses Firefox's Address and Search Boxes into One


Omnibar is one of the clever ways Firefox can make itself into a Google Chrome clone, and we love that kind of openness 'round here.

Invisible Hand Subtly Shows Best Web Prices

If you're always looking at online purchases and wondering if you could save more before pulling the trigger, Invisible Hand affirms your hunches for you, dropping down and showing lower prices wherever it can find them.

Ubiquity Sees Major Update, New Look, Better Performance

Mozilla's future-facing automation and shortcut engine, Ubiquity, continued to get awesome-r in 2009.

App Tabs Creates Permanent, Icon-Only Tabs, Firefox 4.0-Style

We dug the idea of permanent, favicon-only tabs when a helpful reader explained it to us, but the App Tabs extension took a multi-step process and made it far more simple.

Most Popular Firefox Extensions and Themes of 2009 - Firefox Extensions - Lifehacker

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Holiday Deals and Discounts on Used Games, Hardware, and Console Downloads

Having covered the variety of seasonal PC bargains, let us now turn our eyes towards the console market, whereupon a variety of holiday and year-end sales are in the works.

In the realm of phsyical goods, online rental agency and Shacknews parent company GameFly is running its year-end sale on used games, Toys R Us is readying yet another buy one get one half-off promo, and Walmart will soon be offering a consolatory $50 gift card to those that didn't get the Xbox 360 they wanted for Christmas

    GameFly Toys R Us (via Joystiq)
    • Buy 1, Get 1 Half-Off on All PS2, PS3, Wii and Xbox 360 Games
    • Buy 1, Get 1 Half-Off on Any Nintendo DS Game under $20
      December 26, 2009 through January 1, 2010
    Walmart (via Microsoft's Aaron Greenberg)
    • $50 Gift Card with Xbox 360 Hardware Purchase
      December 26, 2009 through January 1, 2010

Meanwhile, Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and PSP owners are being subjected to a variety of digital promotions through the Xbox Live Marketplace and PlayStation Store:

    Xbox 360 / Xbox Live Marketplace
    • Shadow Complex - 800 MS Points / $10 (33% Off, Gold Only)
      Through December 27, 2009
    • The Maw - 400 MS Points / $5 (50% Off, Gold Only)
      December 28, 2009 through January 3, 2010
    • Buy three EA digital games or add-ons, get $10 back
      December 25, 2009 through January 31, 2010
        Shooters
        • Battlefield Bad Company / $19.99 / Games on Demand
        • Army of Two / $19.99 / Games on Demand
        • Black / $19.99 / Xbox Classic
        • Dead Space / $19.99 / Games on Demand
        • Battlefield 1943 / 1200 MS Points/ Arcade
        • Battlefield 2: Modern Combat / $19.99 / Games on Demand
        Racing
        • Need for Speed: Most Wanted / $19.99 / Games on Demand
        • Need for Speed: Carbon / $19.99 / Games on Demand
        • Need for Speed: Pro Street / $19.99 / Games on Demand
        • Burnout Paradise / $19.99 / Games on Demand
        • Burnout Paradise - Big Surf Island / 1000 MS Points/ Game add-on
        • Burnout Revenge / $19.99 / Games on Demand
        Sports
        • Madden NFL Arcade / 1200 MS Points/ Arcade
        • NHL 3 on 3 Arcade / 800 MS Points/ Arcade
        • Fight Night Round 3 / $19.99 / Games on Demand
        • Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10 - Predator Golf Course / 600 MS Points/ Game add-on
        • FIFA 10 - Live Season 2 All Leagues / 800 MS Points/ Game add-on
        • Madden NFL 10 AFL Legacy Pack / 560 MS Points/ Game add-on
        Family Friendly
        • Sorry! Sliders / 800 MS Points/ Arcade
        • Sorry! / 800 MS Points/ Arcade
        • Yahtzee / 800 MS Points/ Arcade
        • Battleship / 800 MS Points/ Arcade
        • Monopoly / $29.99 / Games on Demand
        • Connect 4 / 800 MS Points/ Arcade
        Action, RPG & Strategy
        • Mass Effect / $19.99 / Games on Demand
        • Mass Effect - Bring Down the Sky / 400 MS Points/ Game add-on
        • Command & Conquer Commander's Challenge / 800 MS Points/ Arcade
        • Boom Boom Rocket / 560 MS Points/ Arcade
        • Dragon Age: Origins - Warden's Keep / 560 MS Points/ Game add-on
        • Mass Effect - Pinnacle Station / 400 MS Points/ Game add-on

    PlayStation 3 & PSP / PlayStation Store
      30% Off EA Digital Titles
      December 22, 2009 through January 2, 2010
        PlayStation 3
        • Commander's Challenge - $6.99
        • Battlefield 1943 - $10.49
        • Hasbro Family Game Night - $29.99
        • Burnout Paradise: Ultimate Bundle - $20.99
        PSP
        • Madden NFL 10
        • Scrabble - $13.99
        • NFS Carbon - $13.99
        • NFS Most Wanted - $13.99
        • NFS ProStreet - $13.99
        • NFS Underground Rivals - $10.49
        • GI Joe - $27.99
        • Tetris - $6.99
        • Sims 2 - $10.49

      40% Off SEGA Digital Goods
      Through January 7, 2010
        PlayStation 3 Games and Add-ons
        • Gunstar Heroes - $2.99
        • Sonic Unleashed Apatos & Shamar Adventure Pack - $1.99
        • Sonic Unleashed Chun-nan Adventure Pack - $1.99
        • Sonic Unleashed Empire City & Adabat Adventure Pack- $1.99
        • Sonic Unleashed Holoska Adventure Pack - $1.99
        • Sonic Unleashed Mazuri Adventure Pack - $1.99
        • Sonic Unleashed Spagonia Adventure Pack - $1.99
        • SONIC: Very Hard Shadow Missions - $1.49
        • SONIC: Very Hard Silver Missions - $1.49
        • SONIC: Very Hard Sonic Missions - $1.49
        • Valkyria Chronicles Edy's Mission "Enter the Edy Detachment" - $2.99
        • Valkyria Chronicles Hard EX Mode - $2.99
        • Valkyria Chronicles Selveria's Mission "Behind Her Blue Flame" - $2.99
        PSP Games
        • Alien Syndrome - $9.99
        • Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars - $9.99
        • Crush - $9.99
        • Full Auto 2: Battlelines - $9.99
        • Iron Man - $11.99
        • Sega Genesis Collection - $9.99
        • Sonic Rivals - $9.99
        • Sonic Rivals 2 - $17.99
        • Super Monkey Ball Adventure - $9.99

      Other Sales
      Until January 7, 2010 unless noted
        PlayStation 3
        • Bomberman Ultra - $4.99
          (revert to regular price on 1/7/10)
        • Worms - $9.99
        • Topatoi - $4.99
        • ZOMBIE TYCOON - $4.99
        PSP
        • Armored Core 3 Portable - $9.99
          (revert to regular price on 1/21/10)
        • ZOMBIE TYCOON - $4.99

Shack PSA: Holiday Deals and Discounts on Used Games, Hardware, and Console Downloads - Shacknews

Massive Steam Holiday Sale Plus Savings on Torchlight, GOG's Catalog and More

Update: As expected, Steam has now begun rolling out its massive holiday sale, with daily and week-long discounts of up to 80% through Sunday, January 3, 2010, including massive savings on entire company catalogs. The highlights are below.

Original: With Christmas just a few days off, 'tis the season for digital retailers to start rolling out, or at least tease, their major year-end sales on PC offerings. For example, Good Old Games is offering "up to 40% off nearly every game in its catalogue."

 
Torchlight and Trine

Some mighty fine deals are underway, including half-off Runic's awesome action-RPG Torchlight--making it $9.99, the perfect chance to test the Steam version's newly added Cloud integration and server-side save game storage--and 60% off Trine, bringing Frozenbyte's wizard-centric puzzle-platformer down to just $7.99.

Shack PC PSA: Massive Steam Holiday Sale Plus Savings on Torchlight, GOG's Catalog and More - Shacknews

Friday, December 18, 2009

Team Fortress 2 'War' Update, Free Weekend and 50% Discount Now Live, Justice Declared Dead

Team Fortress 2's War' update is now live, bringing new soldier and demoman weapons and achievements, two new maps, and a free weekend as well as a 50% discount.

The alpine CP_Gorge is "designed for quick rounds and fast, frantic play" with only two control points, while CTF_Doublecross brings the joy of bridges to capture the flag.

 
cp_gorge and The Gunboats.

In sad news, the foolish soldier has been declared winner of the update's titular war, winning with 6,406,065 points to the demoman's 6,372,979. As such, the churlish class has been awarded The Gunboats, secondary slot boots which reduce the damage caused by rocket jumping. May they weigh heavy on his feet and upon his soul.

Both classes also receive three new weapons in the update, while a crafting system lets players turn spare items into useful stuff.

In celebration, Valve has is running a Team Fortress 2 free weekend until 1pm PST on Sunday while a 50% discount brings the shooter down to $9.99 for the weekend.

Team Fortress 2 'War' Update, Free Weekend and 50% Discount Now Live, Justice Declared Dead - Shacknews

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Skype 4.2 beta for Windows adds call transfer, Chrome browser plugin

Skype 4.2 beta

Skype has released a new beta version of its internet communication client. Skype 4.2 beta for Windows includes a number of minor improvements and a couple of major new features including the ability to transfer calls.

You can transfer calls to any of your Skype contacts for free. You'll have to pay SkypeOut rates if you transfer a call to a mobile phone or landline.

There's also a call quality indicator, improved functionality with the Winodws 7 taskbar and system tray, and improvements to the contact importing utility. Now that the Google Chrome web browser supports plugins, Skype has also added a Chrome plugin to its list of browser tools. Firefox and Internet Explorer plugins were already available.

In other news, Skype also introduced a beta version of its chat and VoIP client for Symbian smartphones today. The software supports a number of Nokia phones running Symbian Series 60 software. You'll need 6MB of free space on your phone to install Skype for Symbian.

The Symbian client supports Skype to Skype calling, receiving calls at your Skype number, making SkypeOut calls, instant messaging, and sending and receiving data. Skype for Symbian works over WiFi or 3G data connections, but it'll eat up a fair bit of bandwidth so it might be cheaper just to make old fashioned phone calls on your mobile plan unless you have an unlimited bandwidth plan.

Skype 4.2 beta for Windows adds call transfer, Chrome browser plugin

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

DailyTech - Virgin SpaceshipTwo Christened "VSS Enterprise"

WK2 and SS2 in Hangar   (Source: International Space Fellowship) Flight testing is still ongoing for SS2

Space flight is an expensive proposition today and is limited for the most part to governments that spend billions to fund space programs. In the future, space flight may become much more affordable and everyday people may have the chance to become astronauts.

Virgin Galactic has already debuted its SpaceshipOne (SS1) spacecraft to the public. The follow up to that original spacecraft dubbed SpaceshipTwo (SS2) is now set for its first public unveiling along with its mothership the WhiteKnightTwo (WK2).

Sir Richard Branson and Burt Rutan are unveiling the SS2 and WK2 to the public this week and the craft has already made its maiden flight. SS2 hopes to start taking people on suborbital flights as soon as the test flights and required U.S. government licensing have been completed. SS2 is capable of carrying up to six "passenger astronauts" and up to two "pilot astronauts" into space on a sub-orbital flight.

The unveiling was held at the Mojave Air and Spaceport after dark. The unveiling was subject to regulatory requirements and the SS2 was attached to WK2 for the unveiling. The WK2 mothership will take the SS2 to an altitude of 50,000 feet before the spaceship drops and fires the rocket engines to carry the craft and passengers into sub-orbital space flight.

Governor Schwarzenegger of California and Governor Richardson of New Mexico were on hand to christen SS2 with the name Virgin Space Ship (VSS) Enterprise. The name was chosen in honor of the history of naming Royal Navy and U.S. Navy ships Enterprise and in honor of the Star Trek spacecraft.

The design and operation of the Virgin Galactic program has resulted in a number of new jobs being created. International Space Fellowship reports that a recent study claims 12,500 new jobs were created by the new companies involved in the project. About 600 workers are now involved in the project and that number is expected to climb to 1,100 at the peak of construction.

The maiden voyage of WK2 and SS2 lasted about an hour and the aircraft reached an altitude of 16,000 feet. Once the testing program is complete and space flights commence a ticket will cost travelers $200,000.

Sir Richard Branson, Founder of Virgin Galactic said, “This is truly a momentous day. The team has created not only a world first but also a work of art. The unveil of SS2 takes the Virgin Galactic vision to the next level and continues to provide tangible evidence that this ambitious project is not only moving rapidly, but also making tremendous progress towards our goal of safe commercial operation.”

Burt Rutan, Founder of Scaled Composites added, “All of us at Scaled are tremendously excited by the capabilities of both the mothership and SS2.  Today is the culmination of a dream that began many decades ago, was stimulated by Paul Allen’s funding of our X-Prize winning SS1 and then moved forward to commercial reality by Sir Richard and Virgin’s visionary investment in a new future for space transportation.”

DailyTech - Virgin SpaceshipTwo Christened "VSS Enterprise"