Tuesday 31 March 2015

Anonymous messaging app Yik Yak is testing a photo feature

Yik-yak

Yik Yak, the anonymous messaging app, is testing a new feature that would let users share photos, Mashable has learned.


Yik Yak is in the early stages of testing the feature on some college campuses for limited periods of time, sometimes as brief as several hours, in order to get feedback from users, according to sources familiar with the matter. Yik Yak confirmed the development to Mashable.



Uploaded photos must be snapped from inside the app. (Photos from your camera roll need not apply.) Photos are moderated and approved by Yik Yak employees, which can result in a delay before the image shows up in feeds. Any photos featuring faces, nudity, or behavior the moderator deems "inappropriate" or "illegal" won't make into feeds. Read more...


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12 obnoxious texting pranks to send your friends

Updog

Nothing says Millennial like a good text prank.


As technology has evolved, so has the art of pranking. Need proof? Download a whoopee cushion app. There are new ways to trick people and the same old jokes won't work. You try the ol' "air horn attached to the work chair" trick and see how fast you get laughed out of the Google offices, Grandma



Top pranksters know they need to keep up with the times to stay relevant, but not everyone has the time or money to turn an entire house into a ball pit.


The easiest and farthest reaching modern technology prank is practically glues to the palm of your hand. Text messages may not be the newest form of communication but they are the most common. What I'm trying to say is that pranking someone on Meerkat is still a few month away from being most effective Read more...


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You're about to see a lot more baby photos in your Facebook feed

Screen-shot-2015-03-31-at-4.41.46-pm

Facebook now has a dedicated feature that lets parents tag their children in photos.


The social network rolled out a new feature on Tuesday called Scrapbook for parents to create customizable shared photo albums of their children in the Facebook app and on the web.



Scrapbooks differ from the traditional Facebook photo album in that multiple family members can contribute to the same album, which will appear in the Photos menu of each parent who collaborates. Parents can also tightly control who can see photos in scrapbooks and how their children are tagged. If parents don't want their child's name on Facebook, for example, they can choose to identify their child by a nickname or initials. Read more...


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Gmail Update Will Wrangle All Your Accounts Into One Inbox

Gmail Update Will Wrangle All Your Accounts Into One Inbox

An updated version of Gmail for Android adds a universal inbox with conversation view for external accounts.


The post Gmail Update Will Wrangle All Your Accounts Into One Inbox appeared first on WIRED.




















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Amazon Dash Buttons may be the future of grocery shopping

Running low on something? Put an Amazon Dash Button in your home to instantly order more. Also Google makes a bigger push for Chrome OS in classrooms with new Chromebooks and the Chromebit HDMI stick.





from CNET News http://ift.tt/1NFu8IN

Bring Back SoundCloud's Fantastic Desktop App

Bring Back SoundCloud's Fantastic Desktop App


With all these rich musicians making a ruckus about Jay Z’s overpriced streaming music service, I’m getting a little emotional. Not about Jay Z’s overpriced streaming music service. About the bygone golden era of streaming music’s erstwhile golden boy: SoundCloud.


In a way, you can chart that golden era to the lifespan of the SoundCloud desktop app. The app arrived with the launch of Apple’s Mac App store in January 2011, a solid six months before Spotify entered the US market. SoundCloud summed up the appeal concisely in its announcement blog post:



The absolute coolest part: it’s free .



It was wonderful, too. The SoundCloud desktop app was the first thing I downloaded from the new Mac App Store, and it quickly replaced iTunes as my primary music player. Instead of listening to my pirated copy of the new Beach House album, I spent hours streaming gut-wrenching remixes, getting lost in DJ mixes from far off cities, and watching “WOW!” comments pop up in real time when the beat dropped.


I liked controlling everything with my keyboard and hiding the app in a corner while I browsed the web. I liked finding new artists and buying tickets to their shows when they came to town. After discovering them on SoundCloud, I go to see Aeroplane as often as possible. I even recorded some of my own stuff.


Bring Back SoundCloud's Fantastic Desktop App


In early 2013, SoundCloud quietly pulled the app “due to resources.” Mercifully, SoundCloud offered a Github link to an app close, though it really resembles a clone of the SoundCloud website. The website lacks the fast, easy browsing that I loved about the app. So now I do my desktop listening with Spotify, and I pay for the privilege. Soon, plenty of silly people will be doing it with Tidal, that overpriced new service from Jay Z and his rich friends.


SoundCloud is still free, though that probably won’t be the case for long. The Swedish startup recently raised $60 million at a $700 million valuation, a sure sign that its slow march into the record industry is nearing completion. This flood of money came just a few months after SoundCloud signed a licensing deal with Warner Music, the first deal the streaming music site ever struck with a major label. This ensured that Warner artists got paid when their music played on SoundCloud. It was also around the time I noticed my own (bad) DJ mixes were getting taken down in the name of copyright. SoundCloud also said it was prepping a paid subscription service at the same time.


Of course SoundCloud wants some of that Spotify money. It’s not a charity! And with over 175 million unique listeners a month, SoundCloud is a giant compared to Spotify’s 50 million users. And with Tidal’s glitzy relaunch—and Apple quietly prepping a new iteration of the Beats-powered streaming service—the music industry’s not getting any less competitive. Even YouTube is getting involved.


I guess it’s worth admitting that I might not miss SoundCloud’s desktop app from 2011 as much as I miss the nascent state of streaming music in 2011. I miss the time when DJs could upload an original mix of a dozen amazing tracks without expecting a DMCA notice the next day. I miss the time when new artists could completely subvert the aging major label model by putting their tracks in front of listeners without a record industry executive getting involved. You can ostensibly still do that on SoundCloud—until your remember that Warner Music is in on it.


What will be will be. The internet’s always been a bit of an ad-supported utopia, and it didn’t take corporations too long to realize that they’d make even more money if they owned the content, too. If my precious free app disappears due to lack of resources, I shouldn’t be surprised.


Maybe SoundCloud will bring back the desktop app when it launches its paid subscription service. I’ll pay for it, too. In the meantime, nobody needs to put another dollar in Jay Z’s pocket. He’s got enough problems.


Images via Soundcloud






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Everything we know about Tidal, the artist-owned music streaming service

Tidal-stakeholders

What is Tidal?


After Monday's star-studded yet surprisingly uninformative unveiling of Jay Z's new streaming venture in New York City, that question — and a host of others — is still being asked


To help clear up some confusion, here's a primer on everything we know about the platform, the business decisions behind it, who's involved, and how it differs from rivals such as Spotify



1. What is Tidal?


Tidal is a music subscription service for audio and video files. The focus is on the quality of the sound; Tidal also promises exclusive releases from artists, particularly from its 16 celebrity stakeholders Read more...


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The Oddly Compelling Spaceship Commercials of Star Citizen

The Oddly Compelling Spaceship Commercials of Star Citizen

The commercials are the closest thing Star Citizen has to a conventional advertising campaign.


The post The Oddly Compelling Spaceship Commercials of Star Citizen appeared first on WIRED.




















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A Day in the Life of the Fastest Growing Megacity in the World

A Day in the Life of the Fastest Growing Megacity in the World


China’s rapid growth isn’t all about wacky buildings—there are also millions of people whose lives have been uprooted in the name of progress.


Many of them have moved to the new megacity of Chongqing, where photographer Tim Franco has managed to capture its hyper-vertical, accelerated brand of urbanism, and the odd juxtapositions it creates with the humans who live there.


Franco, who is a photographer living in Shanghai, has been making trips to Chongqing since 2009. He has collected a gallery of the images on his website and has published a book of the photographs which can be pre-ordered now.



On paper, Chongqing’s population is eight million—not as large as China’s other fast-growing megacity of Shenzhen—but the large number of undocumented workers might make it closer to 30 million, according to Quartz. Last year, the city grew by 4,000 each week.


A Day in the Life of the Fastest Growing Megacity in the World


Many of the people of Chongqing were displaced by construction on the Three Gorges Dam, the largest infrastructure project in the world, which is basically rerouting the Yangtze River to get water to China’s other fastest-growing megacities.


A Day in the Life of the Fastest Growing Megacity in the World


Some of these new residents took jobs at local manufacturing plants and moved into instant skyscrapers, as other residents continue to farm the land between them as they have for centuries.


A Day in the Life of the Fastest Growing Megacity in the World


The building boom is unprecedented. According to Quartz’s Richard Macauley, Chongqing is home to some of the largest bridges in the world, the scale of which is needed simply to get the people from one side of the city to another.


A Day in the Life of the Fastest Growing Megacity in the World


Check out Franco’s beautiful book Metamorpolis, which you can still order at a discounted price until April 15, as well as his special signed editions and prints. [timfranco.com via Quartz]






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The new 'Mad Max: Fury Road' trailer is the wildest ride yet

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Why yes, that is a guy playing a flamethrowing guitar atop a race car.


This trailer for the Mad Max reboot looks to be even crazier than the previous three. With spiked-out cars and creepy villains galore, the clip finally addresses the question of just how many explosions can fit into a two-and-a-half minute video. (The answer: not enough.)


Mad Max: Fury Road hits theaters on May 15. The people at NASCAR should take pointers.



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YC-Backed Neverfrost Wants To Kill Windshield Frost And Keep Rocks From Ruining Your Day

I’m a fan of all different sorts of rocks. Rock music. Rock gardens. Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson. But there’s one type of rock that I — and most other drivers, I imagine — hate with a deep, fiery passion: rocks that hit my car’s windshield at 70 mph. Few things so small can wreck your day so suddenly. Everything is going great. The sun is shining. Hell,… Read More





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Reports: Cellphone video recovered from Germanwings crash site shows plane's final moments

Germanwings-debris

A passenger or crewmember on board the doomed Germanwings Flight 9525 reportedly recorded a cellphone video in the final seconds before the crash. German and French media are reporting that investigators found the footage, which was unscathed, at the crash site.


German newspaper Bild and French magazine Paris Match describe the video as "chaotic." It's blurry and doesn't show any of the passengers' faces, according to the German paper. However, the audio is reportedly quite clear


Here's how Paris Match describes the footage:



The scene was so chaotic that it was hard to identify people, but the sounds of the screaming passengers made it perfectly clear that they were aware of what was about to happen to them. One can hear cries of “My God” in several languages. Metallic banging can also be heard more than three times, perhaps of the pilot trying to open the cockpit door with a heavy object. Towards the end, after a heavy shake, stronger than the others, the screaming intensifies. Then nothing. Read more...



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It's a tough day for Trevor Noah, but every day is tough for comedians on Twitter

Trevornoah

Less than 24 hours after securing one of the coolest gigs on TV, Trevor Noah — Jon Stewart's Daily Show successor — found himself in hot water over some jokes he made on Twitter years ago


Because Internet



The content of six jokes made between 2009 and 2014 has been enough for Twitter to accuse Noah of anti-semitism, sexism and fat-shaming


But the one label the critics seem to be forgetting? Comedian on Twitter — a distinction that comes with the impossible expectation to be edgy enough to stand out on social media but digestible enough to achieve (or, in some cases, maintain) mainstream success. Read more...


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