Next Level Pinball Museum is one of the world's largest arcades with over 620+ games on free play. We are a mixture of pinball machines and classic and modern arcade games as well as a 27,000 square foot pop culture museum. We also buy, sell, and trade n
[EMILY LAUGHS] Although we did, my family was just in Asheville. We went to the like, it's called the pinball museum, I think. And we didn't play a lot of pinball, but we did play a whole lot of their vintage eighties video games like Centipede and Donkey Kong with the little ...
The third floor at Funspot is mostly dedicated to the American Classic Arcade Museum. The museum is a non-profit organization that restores classic arcade games and pinball machines from the 1960s through the 1980s and offers them to the public to play for the price of a quarter, jus...
The third floor at Funspot is mostly dedicated to the American Classic Arcade Museum. The museum is a non-profit organization that restores classic arcade games and pinball machines from the 1960s through the 1980s and offers them to the public to play for the price of a quarter, just l...
Researchers from Singapore's Institute of Materials Research and Engineering (IMRE) and the University of Michigan have developed a blue organic light emitting diode (OLED) with an efficiency level that is double the maximum theoretical limit. This paves
Netflix, now in 50 markets, says it has 65 million users Netflix said Tuesday it will bring its television and movie streaming to four new locations in Asia—South Korea, Singapore, Hong Kong and Taiwan. Tha US giant first made its debut in Asia earlier this month launching service in Ja...
(PhysOrg.com) -- An international team has removed a major obstacle to engineer quantum systems that will play a key role in the computers, communication networks, and even biomedical devices of the future.
A new tool could put a delayed train back on schedule. The Traffic Control Centre in Stavanger in Norway is currently testing the tool that will provide an optimum solution in just a few seconds.
NASA is sending a new laser-toting robot to Mars. But unlike the lasers of science fiction, this one is used for studying mineralogy and chemistry from up to about 20 feet (7 meters) away. It might help scientists find signs of fossilized microbial life on the Red Planet, too. ...