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07 Apr 20:12

Avengers: Age of Ultron won't have a post-credit scene.

http://www.ew.com/article/2015/04/07/avengers-age-ultron-wont-have-post-credit-scene-joss-whedon-says

"There will be a tag, but theres not a post-post-credit scene.

So everyone will get to experience what a lot of foreign markets got experience last time around, as Schwarma post-credit scene was added so late in the game, that only the US and markets that had the movie premiere after that got to experience that on the big screen.

There is nothing at the very end. And thats not a fake-out, Whedon says. We want people to know so they dont sit there for 10 minutes and then go: Son of a bitch! Ill kill them!

07 Apr 20:04

Unbelievably gorgeous wave images by Ray Collins

by Andrea James
Ray-collins-original

Photographer Ray Collins has created work that stands out even in the crowded field of seascape photography. His mixture of light and wave energy captures the lure and power of the ocean. Read the rest

07 Apr 20:03

Video: “My cat was snoring, so I decided to place a microphone on his chest.”

by Xeni Jardin

When you listen to this cat snoring in his sleep up close, it sounds very different. (more…)

07 Apr 20:03

Five games about cats for you to try

by Leigh Alexander
catlady1

Being wonderfully weird, capricious and regal, cats are easy to adore (even if it's just the brain parasites). Inexplicably compelling, they're also often ideal subjects for games. Read the rest

07 Apr 17:06

Dogs that can't dog

by Heather Johanssen

Woof.

[via]

07 Apr 12:56

EE launches Wi-Fi calling with support for the Samsung Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 edge

by Rich Edmonds

UK mobile operator EE today announced the launch of Wi-Fi calling on supported hardware. The network is initially supporting the Samsung Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 edge. Should you happen to struggle with poor signal coverage indoors, this will be a handy new feature to take full advantage of.

07 Apr 12:49

All six Star Wars movies are coming to iTunes, Google Play, and other video services

by Rich McCormick

The Star Wars movies are coming to smartphones. All six movies — yes, even The Phantom Menace, unfortunately — will be launched on digital video services such as iTunes, Google Play, and Xbox Video around the world on April 10th, Disney and Lucasarts announced today. The launch will allow fans to buy Digital HD versions of the movies individually, or get them all at once as part of the Star Wars Digital Movie Collection.

The six movies each come with bonus features, including documentaries, interviews with production staff, deleted scenes, and closer looks at the films' models and sets. Some digital retailers are also offering extra incentives to buy the movies from their marketplace — get the entire collection from Xbox Video and...

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06 Apr 20:39

The TSA's $900 million behavior program is mostly catching immigration violations

by Russell Brandom

After spending almost a billion dollars on a new system for fighting terrorism, the TSA may be turning into a backdoor immigration agency. The Intercept is reporting that the agency's new behavior detection program has drifted away from its intended focus on terrorism, with more than 90 percent of arrests having to do with immigration violations. (The survey looked at a single airport over a five-week period during 2007.) The behavioral detection program has been widely mocked for flagging supposedly suspicious behaviors like yawning and whistling, but the new report suggests the vague guidelines are serving a much more sinister purpose, effectively redirecting anti-terrorism measures towards immigration enforcement, even for domestic...

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06 Apr 15:51

Hands-On With The $149 Hisense Chromebook

by Frederic Lardinois
hisense_149_open When Google announced that Haier and Hisense were about to launch $149 Chromebooks — the most affordable Google-powered laptops yet — I wasn’t quite sure what to expect. How much computer, after all, can you expect to get for $149? I’ve now had a chance to spend a few days with the Hisense Chromebook and the answer is: more than you probably expect. Read More
06 Apr 14:07

Google reportedly looking to team up with carriers for free global roaming

by Rich Edmonds

Google is reportedly in talks with Hutchison Whampoa, owner of UK mobile operator Three, to allow consumers to use their smartphones abroad at no extra cost.

06 Apr 14:05

John Oliver interviews Edward Snowden

by Rob Beschizza
The surveillance state—and the lies told in its defense—boiled down and boiled off by HBO's John Oliver.
06 Apr 12:33

I Wanted to Believe!

by Bill Crider
05 Apr 11:47

Highbrow Starts Your Morning with an Educational Course

by Dave Greenbaum

Highbrow Starts Your Morning with an Educational Course

A good morning routine starts your day out right, whether it’s making your bed or meditating. Highbrow sends you a short educational lesson each morning on a variety of subjects.

The subjects range from food and history to philosophy and art. They’ll email you a short lesson each morning and promise it takes less than five minutes to read. Most courses are ten days long. You’re checking your email in the morning anyway, so you might as well expand your knowledge.

Highbrow

05 Apr 11:45

New Windows 10 Mail and Calendar apps appear in leaked build

by Tom Warren

While Microsoft’s Windows 10 preview program is starting to supply updates on a regular basis, the leakers are always one step ahead. A new Windows 10 build (10051) has surfaced on the internet today that includes some welcome changes. The most obvious additions are new Mail and Calendar apps that look and feel a lot like Microsoft’s Office Windows 10 apps. Microsoft previously demonstrated an early copy of the apps at its Windows 10 event in January, but it’s clear the company is ready to test them more broadly, and I would expect to see them in an official preview release in the coming weeks.

The Mail and Calendar apps are fairly basic right now, but they’re also very functional and incredibly fast and smooth to use. They both feel...

Continue reading…

04 Apr 09:51

Strike Becomes Totally Dynamic With No Torrents to Takedown

by Andy

Last month we published an article on Strike, a new torrent site with a fresh approach.

In addition to a less-is-more philosophy when displaying results, Strike obtains torrent data not only from all public trackers but also BitTorrent’s Distributed Hash Table (DHT), a first in the torrent world as far as we’re aware.

But since that piece a couple of weeks ago, Strike has been under attack from multiple directions.

“The first major one was a DDOS attack, I’m still not sure who or why did it, but at 300gb/s they took half of my servers offline; some are still off and will probably never come back on because of my hosting provider not wanting to deal with it,” site operator Andrew Sampson informs TF.

But that was just the beginning. Rightsholders quickly began contacting not only Sampson, but also Cloudflare and the site’s host, complaining that Strike was infringing their copyrights. Additionally, “tons of morons” threatened to sue Strike if it didn’t stop “hosting their content”, the bemused dev explains.

Eventually German host Hetzner said it didn’t want to deal with any more DMCA notices. Sampson said the provider null-routed the non-commercial Strike which took down another of Sampson’s projects, NetflixRoulette, at the same time.

“I can’t begin to tell you how badly that hurt my revenue stream. A company in Germany adhering to a US law and not even taking the time to investigate. Note to public: Avoid Hetzner,” Sampson says.

The developer says that the majority of complaints against his site were filed by anti-piracy company Entura International. Sampson says he tried to explain that his site carries no content and no torrents but simply extracts these from DHT upon user request but the company wasn’t particularly interested.

“I have a technical background and implement many of Strike’s technologies within the toolset of my organization, so I believe that I have a good understanding of how Strike operates,” an Entura contact told Sampson.

“Our copyright infringement notifications are not requesting the removal of a hash from the BitTorrent/DHT network, we know this is not possible. We are simply requesting the de-indexing or de-listing of results from your site that allow for the downloading of copyrighted content via the magnet link that you provide or .torrent files via your API/RSS.”

In response to the DMCA issues, Sampson says he has now taken things a step further. During the past few days the dev took the decision to stop storing any data whatsoever on Strike’s servers “except for search phrases for learning purposes.”

This presents an intriguing situation. Aside from some disk caching, Sampson says that Strike now operates purely on demand. When a user types in a search the site pulls the results from its usual sources and presents them in the browser window. When that browser is closed the data effectively disappears, meaning that there is nothing for anti-piracy companies to take down because it’s already gone.

Whether that will be enough for Entura remains to be seen. An email shared with TF suggests that the company feels that Sampson’s responsibilities go beyond compliance with the law.

“I understand that the listing pages might not be served via local storage on your infrastructure, that does not detract from the matter that you are providing the platform or portal for which these remote browser requests are made,” Entura told the dev.

“Your compliance in this matter should not be reliant on me creating a compelling case, it should instead be reliant on your good will, desire to support creative industries and comply with the law.”

Nevertheless, the following message now appears on the front page on Strike.

“If you are visiting this site for anti piracy means, just know a few things. Any content you see is because you requested it. We do not provide or offer any files. You cannot download from us. We do not store any data, all content is dynamic and on demand requested via YOUR browser. So leave us alone,” the notice reads.

After moving to yet another new host, Sampson thought that things might improve but during our email exchange he received more bad news. His hosting had been terminated once again.

“Dumb media companies, bad hosting, lack of funding, lots of development. Take your pick, Strike has been a big undertaking, one I’m not sure I really want to continue, but I know I have to for the greater good,” Sampson concludes.

At the time of publication Entura had not responded to TF’s requests for comment.

Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and anonymous VPN services.

03 Apr 20:12

Microsoft Will Remove “Do Not Track” As The Default Setting In Its New Browsers

by Frederic Lardinois
12196229744_5f6fabd4e6_k Microsoft today announced that going forward, it will not turn on the “Do Not Track” feature in the upcoming versions of Internet Explorer and Spartan by default. The “Do Not Track” setting in many popular browsers tells websites and their advertisers that you want to opt out of third-party tracking for advertising purposes. All of the major browser vendors,… Read More
03 Apr 20:05

64 horrible things about the Internet

by Mark Frauenfelder
"iTunes is like having your hand held by a robot who wants to walk into the ocean and die." How very true these feel. Read the rest
03 Apr 20:01

Most Popular Umbrella: GustBuster

by Shane Roberts, Commerce Team

Most Popular Umbrella: GustBuster

Taking down 34% of your votes without getting turned inside out, GustBuster is your choice for best umbrella. The other four nominees, all great for their own reasons, were only separated by about 6% of the votes, so be sure to check them all out if the GustBuster isn't right for you.

You praised the GustBuster for its value, different size and style options, weight, and of course its durability. Anecdotally it also appears to be a prime target for theft, so be careful out there.

What product category deserves a vote next? Tell us in the comments.


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Follow us for the best deals on the Internet, and check out http://t.co/w8ke7mw7nT

— Kinja Deals (@KinjaDeals) June 9, 2014

03 Apr 16:14

Amazon Prime Instant Video Now Supports Android Tablets

by Bertel King, Jr.

AmazonInstantVideo-ThumbAmazon doesn't seem to particularly want Android users to enjoy its video streaming service. First it took its sweet time expanding the offering out from Fire and iOS devices. Then when it did finally bring the app to Android, it required installing the standard Amazon app, which then prompted you to install a dedicated Prime Instant Video app from the Amazon Appstore (Google Play, what's that?). After that, it only ran on phones.

Read More

Amazon Prime Instant Video Now Supports Android Tablets was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



03 Apr 13:29

Automatically Ignore Annoying Callers with Android Contact Settings

by Eric Ravenscraft

Automatically Ignore Annoying Callers with Android Contact Settings

Android: Few things are quite as annoying as a persistent caller that doesn’t get the hint. Fortunately, you can set certain contacts to always go to voicemail so you’ll never hear from them.

The feature (which is present in the stock Android dialer, but may vary based on your phone’s manufacturer) will skip the ringer for specific contacts. If you never came across it before, don’t feel bad. It’s not very well advertised. To activate it, find the person you want to ignore in your Contacts app, tap the Edit button, then tap Menu while editing the contact. The option will be at the bottom of the menu. It’s a little out of the way, but it’s worth it if you never want to hear from someone again.

5 Ways to Maximize the Use of Android Contacts | MakeUseOf

03 Apr 13:28

Game streaming service OnLive acquired by Sony, will shut down on April 30

by Dan Thorp-Lancaster

Game streaming service OnLive acquired by Sony, will shut down on April 30

OnLive, a service that allowed users to stream games to their computers, mobile devices, and various set-top boxes, announced today that it will shut down on April 30.

In an email sent out to users of the service, OnLive said that Sony is acquiring key parts of OnLive and has no plans to continue the service in its current form:

After five years of uninterrupted service, the OnLive Game Service will be coming to an end. Sony is acquiring important parts of OnLive, and their plans don't include a continuation of the game service in its current form. Your service should continue uninterrupted until April 30, 2015. No further subscription fees will be charged, and you can continue to play all of your games until that date.

OnLive, which originally launched its cloud gaming service in 2010, has faced a number of financial challenges over the years. In August of 2012, the company went through a restructuring and was sold to investment firm Lauder Partners after financial difficulties.

Sony's purchase of the company is likely driven by OnLive's patent portfolio. The company recently launched a cloud gaming service called PS Now for its Playstation 4 console, which gives players access to a large back-catalog of games from the Playstation 3 and is based off of technology from former OnLive rival Gaikai, which Sony acquired in 2012.

03 Apr 13:24

Google’s ARC Welder Gives You A Glimpse Of An Android-Anywhere Future

by Brian P. Rubin

On Wednesday, Google opened the beta of its latest developer tool—the App Runtime for Chrome, or ARC—to anyone on any computer running the latest version of the Chrome browser. With the ARC Welder app installed in your browser, you can theoretically run any Android app in a virtual environment without having to use any actual Android devices. Better yet, ARC Welder makes porting an Android app into a Chrome app ridiculously simple. 

In theory, ARC should also let anyone run an Android app install file (typically referred to as APKs because of their .apk file extensions) right on their PCs or Macs. In practice, however, that’s just not the case—at least not yet.

What It Means For Developers

ARC Welder’s implications go a step beyond previously released development tools. For starters, it offers a quick-and-dirty way to test unfinished apps without having to fire up an integrated development program like Google's Android Studio or to load them on separate devices. It might conceivably also be an easy way for independent developers to get feedback on early app versions from friends, family and colleagues, not all of whom may have Android devices to run them.

See also: Chrome OS Hasn't Conquered The World Yet, But Google Isn't Giving Up

But where ARC Welder sets itself apart is that it actually turns Android apps into Chrome apps with a few mouse clicks. Which could in turn vastly expand the software available for Google's steadily expanding lineup of Chromebook computers.

Yahoo Weather can transform from a mobile-only app to a Chrome app with just a couple of clicks.

Essentially, ARC Welder can vastly reduce the time and energy it might take for a developer to bring an app onto the desktop (or laptop, or MacBook, or Chromebook, or Chromebit...). Considering the Google Play Store's robust library, not to mention the popularity of the Chrome browser across nearly every computing platform, this kind of tool could potentially give app developers a huge leg-up in terms of spreading their wares.

Maybe ARC Welder could actually start to convince developers to target Android first, iOS second, instead of the typical other way around. 

What It Means For The Rest Of Us

Running Android apps on my PC has been high on my wish list for a while, mostly so I could play some Android-specific games that would really benefit from greater screen real estate. A year or so ago I experimented with Bluestacks and was relatively happy with the results, but it was still plagued with general bugginess and crashes. 

I had hopes that ARC Welder could do much the same thing with fewer hiccups, since it came directly from Google. Alas, it was not to be.

Google isn’t kidding around by calling ARC Welder a beta release. After testing apps ranging from Angry Birds to Google Maps to Yahoo Weather to Instagram, I came up empty handed. I wasn’t able to make any of these apps run on my PC once—despite following instructions posted by 9to5Google to the letter. I should note that I tried downloading APKs from the site the post recommends, APKMirror, as well as backing up APK files from installed apps on my smartphone and moving those files to my PC for testing. None of them worked.

That sad puzzle piece became my  friend as my morning disappeared after countless attempts to make ARC Welder run an app...ANY app.

Interestingly, three other ReadWriters tried it out, all with varying successes and failures. Out of the four of us, only two managed to get ARC Welder to run Android apps on their computers—and of the two of them, one was on a Mac and the other on a PC. Both downloaded the Yahoo Weather app from APKMirror—the same one I and the other tester downloaded and failed to run.

Yahoo Weather for Android running on a PC ... and proof that ARC Welder works for some, but not for all.

And the problems aren’t limited to us—the ARC Welder support page is full of comments from users who experienced similar problems with apps that failed to launch, among others. I asked a developer friend of mine what I might be doing wrong, and he summed it this way: "Generally Google stuff in dev is pretty raw."

A glimpse at ARC Welder's support page.

The upshot here is that ARC Welder offers plenty of promise for developers, and may eventually turn into a stable tool for us non-developers who want to enjoy Android-specific apps on our desktops. But for now, it’s probably best to leave the ARC welding to the professionals.

Images courtesy of Google

03 Apr 13:24

A creepy viral marketer sent a photo of my girlfriend’s cat to my apartment

by Bryan Bishop

Under most circumstances, I’m actually a pretty big fan of viral marketing. Whether you’re talking about a mysterious cell phone or an elaborate alternate reality game, it’s fun to have the line between our reality and a fictional world blurred just a little. It might not always work — okay, most of the time it doesn’t work — but when everything clicks into place, it’s like you’re Neo in The Matrix: nothing around you is what it seems, and you’re the hero of the story.

So I was pretty excited when a couple of days ago a stranger was waiting outside my door with a big box wrapped with a bow. Inside was a note along with something very cool: a heat-sensitive Tetris coffee mug. I remembered them from back in the ‘80s — I’ve been obsessed...

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03 Apr 13:05

You can now run Android apps on a Mac or PC with Google Chrome

by Tom Warren

Google’s convergence of Chrome and Android is taking a big step forward this week. After launching a limited App Runtime for Chrome (ARC) back in September, Google is expanding its beta project to allow Android apps to run on Windows, OS X, and Linux. It’s an early experiment designed primarily for developers, but anyone can now download an APK of an existing Android app and launch it on a Windows / Linux PC, Mac, or Chromebook.

You simply need to download the ARC Welder app and obtain APKs from Google’s Play Store. There are some limitations: only one app can be loaded at a time, and you have to select landscape or portrait layout and whether you want the app to run in phone- or tablet-style. During my testing I’ve found that most apps...

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02 Apr 20:05

UK’s myDogBuddy Merges With Spain’s Bibulu To Become Europe’s Largest Dog Sitting Marketplace

by Steve O'Hear
DogBuddy The U.K.’s myDogBuddy, which offers a marketplace that connects dog owners with local dog sitters, has merged with its Spanish rival Bibulu, to become what it claims is the largest offering of its kind, citing a combined 10,000 local dog sitters registered with the platform. The merger also sees a rebranding of the combined entity to the much simpler DogBuddy.com domain. Read More
02 Apr 20:05

Microsoft Debuts Office Lens, A Document-Scanning App For iOS And Android

by Sarah Perez
Screen Shot 2015-04-02 at 1.14.19 PM Microsoft today launched Office Lens, a mobile document scanner app that works with OneNote, for iOS and Android smartphones. The app, which allows users to snap photos of paper documents, receipts, business cards, menus, whiteboards, sticky notes and more, was first launched a year ago as an application designed only for Windows Phone devices. But in conjunction with the company’s… Read More
02 Apr 19:58

WATCH: Rainworks, street art that only appears visible when wet

by Caroline Siede

I’m a big fan of street art in general, but Seattle-based artist Peregrine Church has created one of the coolest projects I’ve ever seen. Read the rest

02 Apr 19:57

Disney Plans Live-Action Winnie The Pooh

Disney Plans Live-Action Winnie The Pooh

Another 'toon character heads back to the screen

Disney-Plans-Live-Action-Pooh

At first it almost sounded like a late April Fool, but Disney has spun its big giant wheel of Animated Icons To Convert To Live-Action Adventures and the pointer has reached Winnie The Pooh. According to Deadline, the Mouse House is looking to give the residents of Hundred Acre Wood a new lease on life

In addition to Disney’s current push to convert a lot of its cartoon characters – Maleficent, Cinderella, Alice In Wonderland, and the upcoming Pete’s Dragon and Dumbo – this feels a little like the company seeing the success of Paddington and wondering whether their own beloved bear, adapted from AA Milne’s stories, could enjoy similar CG life in the cinema.

Alex Ross Perry, who won praise for his indie comedy drama Listen Up Phillip, which stars Jason Schwartzman as an arrogant, self-obsessed novelist, has been hired to develop the new film, an interesting wrinkle, but one that has precedent with the studio, which set Ain’t Them Bodies Saints writer/director David Lowery to work on Pete’s Dragon. 

Naturally, given how early this one is in development, there are no details on plot, but we’d expect Pooh, Piglet, Eeyore and the rest to be present and correct. Will they work as CG characters rubbing shoulders with actual humans? Looks like we’ll find out…


02 Apr 16:50

Blinkfeed now part of HTC Sense Home on Google Play, brings themes and more to older devices

by Jared DiPane

HTC has made Blinkfeed part of HTC Sense Home, which brings several features from the HTC One M9 to previous generation devices.

Some of the big new software features of the HTC One M9 are now available for older HTC devices, like the HTC One M8, thanks to HTC Sense Home. HTC Blinkfeed has been renamed to HTC Sense Home, which rolls Blinkfeed, HTC Themes, and the Sense Home widget together in one app.

02 Apr 16:47

Max Headroom: the definitive history of the 1980s digital icon

by Bryan Bishop

On Thursday, April 4th, 1985, a blast of dystopian satire hit the UK airwaves. Max Headroom: 20 Minutes into the Future was a snarky take on media and corporate greed, told through the eyes of investigative journalist Edison Carter (Matt Frewer) and his computer-generated alter-ego: an artificial intelligence named Max Headroom.

Continue reading…