Happy Tuesday, everyone. (Are Tuesday’s ever happy?) Here’s your morning tech news roundup, and your fun fact of the day: The smell of fresh cut grass is actually the plant screaming for help.
- Cancer wonder-drug shrinks all tumors — ScienceMag
- Google integrates Play into its navigation bar, further explaining name change — DT
- Net neutrality concerns raised about Comcast’s Xbox On Demand service — ArsTechnica
- How gravel could save our broken electric grid — GigaOm
- Technology can rewire our brains — USA Today
- The rise of real-time video — Wired
- Dad’s energy-monitoring app busts teenage daughter’s house party — DT
- Bully to be released unrated — ComingSoon
- Big Brother wants your Facebook password — Businessweek
- Xbox now used more for entertainment than online gaming — LA Times
- Are iPhone subsidies destroying carriers? — DT
- EPA to impose first greenhouse gas limits on power plants — Washington Post
- Why you can’t sue your wireless carrier in a class action — CNet
- Google launching third-party commenting platform to rival Facebook — TNW
- Nano-SIM war: here’s what Apple and Nokia want to put in your next phone — The Verge
- Turning down Zynga: Why I opted out of the $210M OMGPOP buy — Gamasutra
- Is it a condom or an Android phone? — BusinessInsider
- 10,000 people sign petition to put Alan Turning on the £10 note — The Atlantic