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01 Apr 14:27

Go On a Financial Fast to Break Bad Spending Habits

by Eric Ravenscraft

Go On a Financial Fast to Break Bad Spending Habits

Getting your spending habits under control is never easy. Neither is quitting a bad habit cold turkey. Finance blog Money Crashers suggests a middle ground: go on a three week financial fast to help kick some bad habits and learn your budgetary problem areas.

The idea of the financial fast is not to permanently break any particular habits (though you may decide to stick with a couple when you're done), but to give yourself a chance to see what really matters. So, the site says, take a few weeks and cut back to the bare necessities:

Make It Last for 21 Days. Three weeks is a perfectly reasonable period of time to cut back on your wants and focus only on your needs. If you commit for less time, you may not really absorb the benefits of a fast and the transformative effects it can have on your financial habits. However, a longer period could put your resolve and willpower to an unreasonable test.

Only Purchase Needs. Unless you absolutely need it to survive, don't buy it during your fast. That eliminates trips to the hair salon, happy hour at the bar, restaurant dinners, movies, online purchases, and even birthday presents for your best friends. Instead, your money should only go toward food, housing, medication, and other necessities.

We all have those indulgences that kill our budgets and a financial fast should help highlight what they are, in addition to breaking us away from the routines that leave us stuck there. Plus, at the end, you'll have a better sense of which unnecessary purchases you really don't want to live without. It's not a cure-all for your financial woes, but it can help get you centered.

How to Use a 21-Day Financial Fast to Improve Spending Habits | Money Crashers

Photo by 401(k) Calculator.

01 Apr 13:51

EZTV Fights Piracy By Going Much Further Than Google

by Andy

eztvsmallEZTV is undoubtedly the most popular TV-focused torrent site on the Internet today. Founded way back in 2005, it is also one of the oldest with nine full years under its belt.

Through its indexing of all popular TV shows, EZTV has become the go-to venue for torrent downloaders but behind the scenes the site has been wrestling with a copyright predicament. Instead of sending in takedown notices via email, in recent months several studios switched to sending theirs in via regular mail, overloading the site’s staff in the process.

“For the first few days UPS turned up with a couple of small boxes of notices, but it was soon several crates a day stacking several feet deep,” EZTV informs TorrentFreak.

In a bid to solve the crisis, EZTV decided to speak with the two studios responsible for sending the majority of the notices. The outcome of the discussions, which were facilitated by the MPAA, was unequivocal – EZTV would have to massively change the way it does business.

EZTV went back to the drawing board. Which model could they emulate to show that they were now a completely neutral, content agnostic platform? Which company, by virtue of the fact that it had never been sued by the studios over its indexing, could EZTV emulate?

It was obvious – GOOGLE.

Visitors to EZTV today can see the outcome. Instead of the layout users have become accustomed to over the past near-decade, EZTV now sports a minimal Google-style search engine beneath a new and rebranded EZTV logo.

EZTVGoogle

All TV show categories have gone and all that remains are descriptions pulled from the Internet using algorithms licensed from Google. Completing the sterilization of the site, all torrents have been deleted and now only magnet hash values of content specifically searched for by the user are listed.

EZTVResults

But EZTV’s operators wanted to do more. Realizing that Google’s Auto-Complete and Auto-Suggest features only serve to direct people to infringing content, EZTV now filters these from Google’s API and hence its own search results. Not suggesting stuff before people had even asked for it was a key MPAA-pleasing move.

moneybannedHoning the business model that has enabled Google to avoid being sued by any Hollywood studio over its search results, EZTV went further still. Working closely with City of London Police’s new Operation Creative, EZTV has filtered out not only all major brands’ advertising, but all advertising entirely.

“We’ve never had any advertising on EZTV but noticed how little trouble Google has had monetizing links to potentially infringing content. With that in mind, we decided nearly a decade ago to go much further, but we’re only really shouting about it now,” EZTV told TF.

Unsurprisingly, the MPAA are pleased with the results.

“By working with the industry, EZTV has successfully removed all financial incentives for it to exist by cutting off its own revenues for the last nine years,” the MPAA said in a statement. “This is just the kind of action that will save jobs and fuel innovation.”

The changes, which were phased in during the past month but visible over the past few hours, were expected to solve all of EZTV’s problems, but this morning at the site’s spacious New York offices a different picture was emerging.

ups“Becoming just like Google is proving to be a nightmare. Just like them we’re now receiving millions of notices every hour,” EZTV told TF in phone call a few minutes ago.

“UPS just turned up with a convoy of trucks. We’re scanning the notices as quickly as we can but the folks at Chilling Effects have already run out of space.”

Whether EZTV will continue to emulate Google into the future is unclear, but at this point it seems that going back to the way they were might be the best option.

Update: Yes this this was an April Fools prank. EZTV is back to normal now.

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

01 Apr 13:40

Linkrot on The Million-Dollar Homepage

by Rob Beschizza
The Million Dollar Homepage was a lucrative advertising gimmick launched in 2005: one pixel cost one dollar. Nearly a decade on, 22 percent of the links on the homepage are dead, reports David Yanofsky. [via]

I bet a lot of the 'live' stuff is effectively dead, too: squatted, sold and repurposed domains. But that would be much harder to check for. Perhaps a "heat map" showing how many DNS changes the domain for each ad has undergone since 2005?

These non-functioning links account for 221,900 of the million pixels—$221,900 worth of real estate, assuming the pixels have kept their value in the last eight years.

The atrophy of links has been shown to stabilize over time, meaning we should expect fewer than 22% of links to break over the next eight years. The longer a link continues to work on a webpage, the longer it can been expected to work into the future.

Nonetheless, it remains a problem for thought experiments and seminal works alike. Researchers at Harvard found that at least 50% of URL-based legal citations in US Supreme Court opinions, for instance, no longer point to the originally referenced material.


    






01 Apr 13:39

Samsung Gear 2 Neo, Gear Fit now in stock at UK retailer

by Richard Devine

Samsung Galaxy Gear

Brits looking to pick up a new Samsung Gear Fit or Gear 2 Neo might be pleased to hear that one retailer has just confirmed it has both versions in stock. Unlocked-mobiles sends word that they now have both wearables in stock, in black, and will happily sell you one for £179.98 including VAT.

Of course, you'll need to have a compatible Samsung Galaxy smartphone to pair each of them with, but if you're in the market for one then definitely take a look. Standard delivery is 1-3 business days, and you can buy the Gear 2 Neo here and the Gear Fit here.

01 Apr 13:38

Google+ Photos introduces Auto Awesome Photobombs, with David Hasselhoff!

by Chris Parsons

Not to be left out of the April fool's fun, the Google+ team has conjured up an April fool's joke of their own involving the auto awesome feature on Google+ and none other than David Hasselhoff.


    






01 Apr 13:36

Google Chromecast sold every 4.5 seconds at UK retailer on launch day

by Richard Devine

Google's Chromecast finally made it to European shores in recent weeks and it looks as if the £30 HDMI dongle has seen a pretty strong start. According to Giga OM, the Dixons group – owners of Currys PCWorld – in the UK saw a sale every 4.5 seconds on launch day resulting in a temporary sell out on available stock. [Giga OM]


    






01 Apr 13:35

WebOS betrayal costs HP $57 million in class action settlement

by Vlad Savov

It may have been overshadowed by pricier acquisition deals in subsequent years, but HP's 2010 takeover of Palm remains a milestone event. It was a seemingly perfect combination of a highly competitive mobile operating system with a deep-pocketed hardware juggernaut. HP promised it would fund the future development of webOS and support it with a broad ecosystem of devices. Only a year later, however, the company reversed course and abandoned its touted plans, to the chagrin of hard-hit shareholders.

class action lawsuit filed in the wake of that decision in 2011 has now been settled by HP at the cost of $57 million. The plaintiffs are primarily pension funds and other institutional investors, whose anger stems from the dissonance...

Continue reading…

31 Mar 20:01

Civil Rights Lawyer To Fight U.S. Govt. in Internet Piracy Case

by Andy

In the summer of 2012, the FBI with assistance from French and Dutch police shut down applanet.net, appbucket.net and snappzmarket.com, three sites that offered Android apps outside Google’s ecosystem.

The action was heralded as ground-breaking, with the authorities seizing the domains of these alternative stores and putting up the now-infamous FBI banner to inform visitors of their fate. Together it was claimed the sites were responsible for millions of dollars in losses to software producers.

News of the shutdowns came in August 2012, but it took until last week for the U.S. Government to provide a significant update. The Department of Justice revealed that two of the three operators of the Appbucket site had signed a plea deal with the Government and now face sentencing in June.

But while the Appbucket guys appear to have accepted their fate, the former admin of Applanet certainly has not. Speaking with TorrentFreak, Attorney Rain Minns says her client is still under fire, but won’t be giving in.

“It is extremely unfortunate that some of the young people targeted by the government’s dragnet have been forced to plead guilty,” Minns told TF.

“But this is an inevitable, and incredibly sad and disheartening, consequence when the United States unleashes the power and resources of the most powerful nation on earth against defenseless citizens who, like Aaron, care about free and open world-wide access to publicly available information, and who have not earned any significant income for their efforts.”

But while Minns says that the mere threat of a long prison term is enough for even the most innocent citizen to plead guilty, that isn’t going to be happening in Aaron’s case.

FBI Seizure

“Aaron is an extraordinarily brave and ethical young man, who is not willing to buckle under the pressure of the government’s abusive practices. He believes that someone should stand up to abuse of power, and he is willing to put himself at risk if that is the only way to keep information sites free and open.”

To that end and in an effort to level the playing field against the Government, Minns informs TF that Aaron’s legal team has just received a significant boost.

“After an extensive vetting process, I have now been joined by Attorney Antonio Ponvert III, an accomplished and much-feared civil rights lawyer from Connecticut who, to put it plainly, has enjoyed kicking the government’s ass for almost 25 years,” Minns explains.

“Antonio’s task is to take the offense in Aaron’s case, focusing on the government’s violation of state and federal civil rights laws, the First Amendment free speech implications of the government’s tactics, and the substantial reputational and financial harm that the D.O.J. has inflicted, and will continue to inflict on Aaron. One can be sure that a damages case is coming down the pike if, and when, an indictment is forthcoming.”

Through his lawyer Aaron informed TF that while it’s a pity that the Appbucket guys were “forced to buckle under the heavy-handed threats of the government”, he wishes them luck as he looks forward to his own day in court.

From the tone of the language employed by Rain Minns and by extension Antonio Ponvert, there appears to be plenty of appetite for a fight, should the Government decide to go the whole way against Aaron. If they do, Minns is confident he will prevail.

“It is not even close to a fair fight anymore. And we look forward to the battle,” she concludes.

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

31 Mar 19:58

The bionic owl

by Maggie Koerth-Baker
Gentlemen, we can rebuild this bird. All we need is some bamboo sticks, quick-dry epoxy, and feathers from another owl.
    






31 Mar 19:56

Google Wants This April Fool's Day To Be The Very Best, Kicks Things Off With A Google Maps Pokémon Challenge

by Michael Crider

catchemThe kids who obsessed about Nintendo's Pokémon in the late 1990s are now the up-and-comers at some of the world's biggest technology companies. If you don't believe us, then check out the following video:

Yup, Google is back to its April 1st tricks, and they're going all-out this year. The video sets up an augmented reality game that lets you go out into the world and catch "real" Pokémon through you phone's camera.

Done With This Post? You Might Also Like These:

Google Wants This April Fool's Day To Be The Very Best, Kicks Things Off With A Google Maps Pokémon Challenge was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

    


31 Mar 19:52

Amazon Greenlights Six More Original Shows, Renews “Alpha House”

by Sarah Perez
Confirming and expanding on news scooped by Variety earlier this month, Amazon this morning officially announced its plans to greenlight six more of its Amazon Studios’ pilot shows, which are now being given full seasons. The new shows, which include The After, Bosch, Gortimer Gibbon’s Life on Normal Street, Mozart in the Jungle, Transparent and Wishenpoof!, will come to… Read More
31 Mar 19:52

Twitter Buys France’s Mesagraph And UK’s SecondSync, Inks Deal With Kantar To Ramp Up Social TV Efforts In Europe

by Ingrid Lunden
Twitter is adding more global firepower to its ambitions to cosy up to broadcasters and TV advertisers: it is buying France's Mesagraph, and it is also acquiring SecondSync in the UK. It is also teaming with with Kantar, the market analytics firm owned by WPP who was also an investor in SecondSync, as part of its string of announcements today to further its global reach with its social TV… Read More
31 Mar 14:35

Host Your Own Blog On a Server You Control with Virtualbox

by Alan Henry

Host Your Own Blog On a Server You Control with Virtualbox

We've discussed some of the best blogging platforms and web hosts , but if you prefer to really control your data, there's no reason you can't do it all at home. All you need is Virtualbox, a VM as your web server, and a shared folder for your posts and blog content. Maymay shows us how it's done.

Maymay's setup is brilliant in its simplicity. Ultimately, there's very little a web host is doing aside from running software that you can run on your own linux-based VM (virtual machine,) and then talking to an off-server database that contains all of your blog's posts, media, and other content. You can duplicate the setup rather easily with your own computer, a VM running in VirtualBox as your web server, and a shared folder on the host computer that has your database in it.

The rest is a matter of configuring VirtualBox and pointing it at the shared folders, installing Wordpress on your virtual web server, and then setting up any cross-posting capabilities you might want (Maymay uses it to crosspost to Tumblr, but the self-hosted site is a great escape route in case something changes over there, and serves as and always-updated backup your Tumblr as well) to other places around the web. Ideally, you could just leave this setup on, point your personal domain at your site hosted at home, and let it all fly-then you're hosting everything at home, on your own, for free. Maymay even includes a pre-configured "Bring Your Own Content" VM for Virtualbox to get you started that supports Tumblr and Wordpress out of the box.

Hit the link below to see the whole post. By the time you're finished with the project, you'll have your own blog or website, running free, open-source software, on your own computer at home, without paying anyone anything for the privilege. It's a great way to own your site, your content, and your web presence all by yourself.

Bring Your Own Content: Virtual Self-Hosting Web Publishing | Everything In Between

31 Mar 12:07

Reader's Digest a "stooge" of China

by Rob Beschizza
Readers Digest was once a staunch anticommunist publication. As recently as 2012, its editors spoke of its churchy conservatism in response to claims of ideological decline. Today, however, its website is a bland BuzzFeed clone and it agrees to censor international publications at the behest of its Chinese printers. If the irony is only as deep as Beijing's vestigial socialist pretenses, perhaps a new maxim is needed to embody the power of the printing press—one less about who buys ink by the barrel and more about who sells it.
    






31 Mar 12:03

A treasure trove of silent American movies found in Amsterdam

by Bill Crider
A treasure trove of silent American movies found in Amsterdam: Long-missing comedy shorts such as 1927’s “Mickey’s Circus,” featuring a 6-year-old Mickey Rooney in his first starring role, 1917's "Neptune's Naughty Daughter"; 1925’s “Fifty Million Years Ago,” an animated introduction to the theory of evolution; and a 1924 industrial short, “The Last Word in Chickens,” are among the American silent films recently found at the EYE Filmmusem in Amsterdam.
31 Mar 11:59

Smart skin patch knows when you need your meds

by Arielle Duhaime-Ross

A lot can go wrong when doctors prescribe drugs to patients. For one thing, there's always a chance that someone might forget to take their pill or refill their prescription. And then there's also the risk of unmonitored side-effects, drug addiction, and overdose. So pharmaceutical companies have been trying for some time now to come up with wearable drug-delivery systems that can dispense a continuous flow of therapeutics, without having to rely on the patient to physically take the drug.

There's a problem with that approach, however, because these systems don't monitor a patient's vitals. This means they can't be responsive. So when a patient needs to take a stronger dose or when they actually feel pretty good, they still receive the...

Continue reading…

31 Mar 11:58

UK Police Launch Pirate Site Blacklist for Advertisers

by Ernesto

cityoflondonpoliceOver the past few months City of London Police have been working together with the music and movie industries to tackle sites that provide unauthorized access to copyrighted content.

Initially the police only sent warning letters to site owners, asking them to go legit or shut down. Late last year this was followed by a campaign targeted at domain registrars, asking them to suspend the domain names of several so-called pirate sites.

Today sees the launch of the next initiative in “Operation Creative,” an official URL blacklist of “pirate sites”.

The Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit (PIPCU) just launched their “Infringing Website List” (IWL) and are encouraging advertising agencies to embrace it. The main goal of the blacklist is to disrupt the revenues of infringing websites worldwide.

Together with the movie and music industries the police carried out a three-month pilot which resulted in a 12% reduction of ads from major brands appearing on these sites. To what extent the blocklist will hurt total revenues is unclear though, as there are dozens of ad firms who focus on file-sharing sites, and these are unlikely to join the program.

The police and their partners, however, are convinced that the blacklist will have a positive effect, not only in terms of cutting off revenue to pirate sites, but also as a tool to prevent advertisers being associated with rogue websites.

“If an advert from an established brand appears on an infringing website not only does it lend the site a look of legitimacy, but inadvertently the brand and advertiser are funding online crime,” PIPCU Chief Andy Fyfe says.

From the information that was made available to TF, it appears that the blacklist will not be open to the public. This is worrying, since there is a serious threat of overblocking without any public oversight.

For example, in their announcement the police cite a recent report on the profitability of pirate sites. However, that report included many sites with perfectly legitimate uses, and even a purely informational website that doesn’t host or link to infringing content at all.

Concerns aside, music industry group BPI is confident that the “Infringing Website List” will turn out to be another successful voluntary agreement focused on tackling online piracy.

“The early results from Operation Creative show that through working with the police and the online advertising industry, we can begin to disrupt the funding that sustains illegal websites and the advertising that lends them a false air of legitimacy,” BPI’s Chief Executive Geoff Taylor says.

Similarly, the Hollywood backed group FACT is also positive about the new initiative.

“FACT is delighted to be working with PIPCU to deliver a unique initiative that puts the UK at the forefront of brand protection by allowing everyone in the advertising value chain to prevent misplacement of ads,” Kieron Sharp, Director General at FACT says.

“For those rogue sites that continue to provide access to illegally obtained films and TV programmes there will now be affirmative action taken by PIPCU to ask them to change their operation or shut up shop,” he adds.

Whether the “Infringing Website List” will indeed have a significant impact on the business of the affected sites has yet to be seen. In any case, City of London Police and the entertainment industries are determined to keep the pressure on.

Update: The City of London Police confirmed to to us that the blacklist will not be made public.

“All sites on IWL are identified and evidenced as infringing by rights holders and then verified by PIPCU. We are not making the IWL public. The List will be ever changing as new sites appear and older sites comply,” a City of London Police spokesperson told TF.

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

31 Mar 11:51

Shouldn't Be Hard

(six hours later) ARGH. How are these stupid microchips so durable?! All I want is to undo a massive industrial process with household tools!
30 Mar 19:02

Bad Google DMCA Takedown is Hurting Us, Hosting Site Says

by Andy

As revealed in a report earlier this week, DMCA takedown notices issued to Google have surged 711,887 percent in just four years.

In fact, this month saw a new record week for notices received by the search engine. In a seven day period starting March 10, Google processed an amazing 6,532,393 notices, sent mainly by the music and adult industries.

GoogleDMCA

While the majority of these notices are precise, there are some serious inaccuracies. Google does a pretty good job of rejecting many that are sent in error but it’s inevitable that some slip through the net, and when they do sites can suffer.

One of the latest sites to get on the wrong end of an overbroad notice is UpToBox, a file-hosting service with millions of visitors each month. Particularly popular with the French, the site is France’s 191st most-visited site.

On March 25, anti-piracy company Piracy Stops Here LLC sent a notice on behalf of adult movie company Jim Weathers Productions, asking for more than a thousand URLs to be removed from Google’s search results. All of them were specific URLs, except one – UptoBox’s homepage at UptoBox.com.

uptobox

Despite zero infringing content appearing on the file-hosting site’s homepage, Google subsequently de-listed the site. On Friday, French news site Numerama contacted Google to find out whether there had been a mistake or whether removing the homepage was intentional, but received no response.

UptoBox

Speaking with TorrentFreak, UpToBox operator ‘Guillaume’ says despite contacting Google several times in the past few days, no one from the company has responded to their requests for an explanation.

“We have sent a notice to Google to cancel this decision some days ago, without any reply from them,” Guillaume explains. “We will continue to send a notice everyday to get us put back in the search engine.”

Guillaume says the cost to his site is already high. Thousands of people have failed to find the site as they might do ordinarily and as a result UptoBox has lost “a huge quantity” of new members.

So, could there be unusual circumstances which would explain the complete de-listing of the site? To find out, we asked Guillaume how the site responds to copyright complaints.

“We analyze them one by one, to see if notices are legal, and if files are really copyright infringing. We have received some DMCA notices about legal files in the past, so now we analyze everything,” he explains. “We delete an infringing file quickly when we received the notification, usually in 24 to 48 hours.”

So for now the UptoBox homepage remains delisted by Google with no idea of when, if ever, it will be restored. The big question now is whether Piracy Stops Here knew what they were doing when they sent the notice or if it was a genuine mistake. That said, with no punishments available for those who send bad notices, nothing can be done against them anyway, a problem raised by WordPress owners Automattic earlier this month.

Update: Good new for UptoBox, as the homepage has now been reinstated.

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

30 Mar 19:00

[New App] Coursera Brings Its Free Online Classes And Lectures To Android

by Michael Crider

unnamed (1)Going to school online is what all the cool kids are doing. And the really cool kids are doing it without paying a dime (if you can stretch the definition of "school" to services offering commitment-free classes to thousands of people at once who don't earn college credit). Coursera is one of the more popular options for this non-traditional learning, and now it's got an Android app to make it even easier.

Done With This Post? You Might Also Like These:

[New App] Coursera Brings Its Free Online Classes And Lectures To Android was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

    


30 Mar 16:56

Spyware increasingly a part of domestic violence

by Cory Doctorow

Australian Simon Gittany murdered his girlfriend, Lisa Harnum, after an abusive relationship that involved his surveillance of her electronic communications using off-the-shelf spyware marketed for purposes ranging from keeping your kids safe to spotting dishonest employees. As Rachel Olding writes in The Age, surveillance technology is increasingly a factor in domestic violence, offering abusive partners new, thoroughgoing ways of invading their spouses' privacy and controlling them.

The spyware industry relies upon computers -- laptops, mobile devices, and soon, cars and TVs and thermostats -- being insecure. In this, it has the same goals as the NSA and GCHQ, whose BULLRUN/EDGEHILL program sought to weaken the security of widely used operating systems, algorithms and programs. Every weakness created at taxpayer expense was a weakness that spyware vendors could exploit for their products.

Likewise, the entertainment industry wants devices that are capable of running code that users can't terminate or inspect, so that they can stop you from killing the programs that stop you from saving Netflix streams, running unapproved apps, or hooking unapproved devices to your cable box.

And Ratters, the creeps who hijack peoples' webcams in order to spy on them and blackmail them into sexual performances, also want computers that can run code that users can't stop. And so do identity thieves, who want to run keyloggers on your computer to get your banking passwords. And so do cops, who want new powers to insert malware into criminals' computers.

There are a lot of ways to slice the political spectrum -- left/right, authoritarian/anti-authoritarian, centralist/decentralist. But increasingly, the 21st century is being defined by the split between people who think your computer should do what you tell it, and people who think that you can't be trusted to control your own computer, and so they should be able to run code on it against your will, without your knowledge, and to your detriment.

Pick a side.

Spyware's role in domestic violence [Rachel Olding/The Age]

(via Geek Feminism)

    






30 Mar 15:50

Alzheimers awareness takes the form of 'Alz': a haunting stroll among pixels

by Josh Lowensohn

More often than not, video games about illness involve surviving in a post-apocalyptic hellscape filled with zombies, not diseases typically associated with old age. But that's just what you get with Alz, a very brief web game — if you can call it that — that tries to put the viewer in the mind of someone with Alzheimer's disease. You play the role of a nameless, faceless man walking through various parts of a house and city, trying to remember the details of what's around you, but failing. "Enjoy your walk. Interact with your surroundings. Or don't," Alz's creator who goes by Dylan, says. "Have a forgotten, but hopefully not forgetful, experience."

Continue reading…

30 Mar 15:46

Five Best Android Home Screen Replacements

by Alan Henry

Five Best Android Home Screen Replacements

Anyone can just download a launcher, but when you want an experience that transforms how you interact with your Android phone—especially one that's context-aware and surfaces information you need when you need it, you have a few solid options to choose from. Here are five of the best.

Earlier in the week, we asked you to tell us which home screen replacements you thought were the absolute best . Note, we're not just talking about alternative Android launchers—we already have a list of the best launchers around (and we're planning on updating it very soon!) Today, we're talking about suites that customize your phone in a way that's truly personal, and useful to you, when you need it. Here's what you said, in no particular order:

Aviate

Aviate is a smart home screen tool that adapts and adjusts to your needs and your position. On its face, it simplifies your phone's layout significantly by categorizing your apps and putting them into groups where they're easily reached. Past that however, it uses your phone's GPS and known locations to show you what you need when you need it. For example, if you're at the gym, it'll change the home screen to show you your music player, your workout and fitness apps. When you're at the office, it'll load up your calendar, email, or other productivity apps. Even when you move between locations, Aviate will notice you're on the go and pull up relevant directions, based on the way you prefer to travel.

It may sound like all work, but Aviate is in for play as well. It'll help you find places to eat, or businesses nearby that interest you, foods you'd like, and so on. It'll also float apps that you don't have installed that you might like. It's only real drawback is that it's only customizable within certain parameters, and you have to like its overall look and feel to enjoy it. We've highlighted Aviate before , and it's being regularly updated with new features, despite the reputation that its new owners—Yahoo—have for buying great things and shutting them down. Those of you who praised Aviate noted that it's great at figuring out where you are and just changing, without your assistance, to meet your needs, and best of all, it's free. Read more in the nominations thread here .


Themer

Themer is probably the king of personalization tools for Android. Users have been busy making skins and home screen replacements for months now that incorporate beautiful art, functional widgets, and other useful tools to transform your phone into something personal that no one else has. Themer makes it easy to find—or create—complete skins for your home screen that categorize your apps into groups, keep favorite apps where they're easy to reach, show useful information right on the home screen (like unread messages, missed calls, weather, time/date), and more. The wealth of themes and ways to personalize your phone—whether you want something whimsical or strictly business—is incredible.

We've highlighted Themer before and even run down the best Themer themes to give you a headstart. Note however that Themer isn't context aware, and doesn't float information in front of you when it's needed—it's really a personalization and customization suite for Android. Still, that's good enough for us, and given the love it got in the call for contenders thread, it's good enough for you, too. W'ell be flexible on this one. Read more in the nominations thread .


Cover

Cover isn't a home screen replacement at all—it's a lock screen replacement, but given the way it works, you may never need to go to your home screen again, so in that way, it's replacing something. Instead of personalizing your entire device or changing the entire interface every time something new happens or you move from place to place, Cover simply changes the lock screen. When you're at the office, it'll change the lock screen to "work" mode, and show you your email app, calendar app, to-do list, and so on, right on the lock screen so you can tap it and open it immediately. When you get in the car, Cover changes the lock screen to car mode, switching layout and apps to your navigation app, music player, and so on. One neat trick: Cover lets you "peek" at apps running under the lock screen by sliding it away partially—perfect for sneaking a look at your inbox during a meeting to see if you missed anything important.

We've highlighed Cover before as well , and its great at what it does. It's not perfect, of course—it doesn't work well with other screenlock tools, so if you prefer a PIN or pattern lock, you might have a little trouble. The team at Cover have some tips for you in that department though. It's tricky. However, one thing you noted in the nominations round was that since Cover is a lock screen app, you can pair it with another of these tools as well for an even greater experience. Read more in the nominations thread here .


EverythingMe

Everything.Me started life as a customizable Android launcher that you could talk to in order to open apps and change the layout of your phone, or look up relevant information. More recently, it's transformed into a fully contextual home screen replacement tool that is still dynamic, but now adapts to your location and time of day with information that you need. For example, in the morning, the app will float the weather to you, along with news headlines, or any other apps you check first during the day. When you get to the office, your calendar floats forward, along with your productivity apps. EverythingMe also pushes other relevant information to you, like apps you don't have installed that it thinks you'll like, or nearby businesses or restaurants it thinks you should try.

EverythingMe is a bit of a blend between some of the others here. It's more focused on app discovery and suggesting new tools and apps to you, and while it brings up useful information and apps you have installed already, it doesn't hesitate to make sure they're mixed up with other things you don't have but it thinks you want. Still, it's great, and in the nominations thread, you shared some ways to further customize it to suit your needs. You can read more about it in that thread here .


Google Now Launcher

Five Best Android Home Screen Replacements

The Google Now Launcher brings all of the features of Google Now and touchless controls to your current Android phone. It's not available for all devices, and to be sure, it's not a home screen replacement—it is very much just a launcher—but it's great at what it does, and it earned high praise in the call for contenders thread. Technically the app is only supported no Nexus or Google Play Edition devices, but TalkAndroid has a guide to get around that. You'll get all of the benefits of Google Now, including location and context-specific cards, and the ability to tap or say "OK, Google" to launch search and perform voice actions.

The big drawback here is obviously that it's not available for most phones, and even on some phones where you can shoehorn it in, it won't work terribly well. It's a great feature if you have it, but it's still a stretch to call this a home screen replacement, since it's really just a launcher and doesn't replace anything. Still, the discussion in the nominations thread was great, and many of you pointed to ways to use the Xposed framework to get the same effect, and more. Read more in the nominations thread here


Now that you've seen the top five, it's time to put them to an all out vote. It may be voting for apples versus oranges, but we'd still like to know which you would choose if you only could choose one:

No honorable mentions this week, although there were a few other good nominations in the call for contenders thread. One thing we learned from this Hive is that this entire category of contextual launchers is still young, and many people still mistake them for traditional app launchers, like our favorite, Nova Launcher, and its runner up, Apex Launcher . Still, more of them hit the market all the time, and competition is a good thing.

Want to make the case for your personal favorite, even if it wasn't included in the list? Remember, the top five are based on your most popular nominations from the call for contenders thread from earlier in the week . Don't just complain about the top five, let us know what your preferred alternative is—and make your case for it—in the discussions below.

The Hive Five is based on reader nominations. As with most Hive Five posts, if your favorite was left out, it didn't get the nominations required in the call for contenders post to make the top five. We understand it's a bit of a popularity contest. Have a suggestion for the Hive Five? Send us an email at tips+hivefive@lifehacker.com!

30 Mar 09:09

HTC uploads Dot View app to the Play Store for fast updates in the future

by Dima Aryeh

HTC is taking a page out of Motorola’s book and uploading one of its system apps to the Play Store. The app is HTC Dot View, which allows support for the HTC Dot View case that you’ve probably seen for the all new HTC One. The case has a flip cover style front, but it’s covered in holes. The display shines through those holes in a retro dot style.

The benefit of having the app on the Play Store is that HTC doesn’t have to wait until it has a full system update ready to expand the functionality of Dot View. The app can be updated on the Play Store and users can download it immediately, allowing for far faster updates with new features and bug fixes. Motorola has done this with multiple apps for the Moto X and various DROID devices, including Active Display and the Gallery, and it has worked incredibly well.

If you’re the proud owner of a brand new HTC One M8, you already have this app installed. But when it’s updated, you’ll be prompted to update it just like any other app. Sadly, its compatibility is limited to only the M8, so M7 users need not apply.

 

29 Mar 18:33

Readmill Ebook Reader And Service Shutting Down After Dropbox Acquisition, Data Export Available

by Michael Crider

nexusae0_Readmill-Thumb_thumbMost people rely on Amazon, Google, Barnes and Noble, or some other all-in-one ebook service for their digital literary fix, but there is a thriving community of users who prefer the flexibility and lack of DRM that comes with independent reading apps. This has led to more than a few excellent choices in the space, including Readmill, an ebook app dedicated to simplicity and readability. Apparently Readmill users aren't the only ones who were impressed: Dropbox has acquired the app (or at least hired the employees who made it) and the service is shutting down.

Done With This Post? You Might Also Like These:

Readmill Ebook Reader And Service Shutting Down After Dropbox Acquisition, Data Export Available was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

    


29 Mar 18:33

The Pulsar smartwatch concept gives us a hint of Moto 360

by Adam Zeis

With the Moto 360 still a way off on the horizon, we're left to speculate just what awesome features the Android Wear device will have in store for us. We know that there will be notifications and plenty of Google Now goodies, but not too much else as far as specs go.

One new concept gives us a glimpse into what something like the Moto 360 could offer up however. The Pulsar smartwatch concept is a round watch that shows off plenty of action including notifications, weather, music, phone calls, directions, secure payments and more.

There's a whole collection of images at Behance that show off the UI/UX of this cool project. Take a spin over and check them all out, then let us know what you think in the comments!

29 Mar 14:24

Create a Common Gmail Account to Sync Contacts in Everyone's Phones

by Mihir Patkar

Create a Common Gmail Account to Sync Contacts in Everyone's Phones

To keep your partner, housemates or office colleagues always updated with commonly used contacts, create a group Gmail account. Smartphones can add it as a secondary account and sync the contacts, so everyone's phone is always updated.

Here's how it works. For the sake of example, let's say I want to do this for my family. First, create a new Google account with an easy-to-remember handle. In Google Contacts , add the details of any common people, like the cable guy or car mechanic or favorite restaurants. Now, ask every member who needs these contacts to add this as a secondary email account in their smartphones, syncing only the Contacts—not mail, calendar or anything else.

And that's it. All of the people who use that account will have the same Contacts. If they update or add a new one to that account on their phone, everyone else's phones will be updated too. This hack could be used effectively for other scenarios too, like for colleagues' contact details in an office.

However, don't use this email id for anything apart from contacts—you don't want sensitive information on there because then you'd want to enable two-step verification, which would be a pain on a shared account.

29 Mar 11:54

Teen discovers that simply changing fonts can save tons of money on printer ink

by Chris Smith
How to Save Money on Printer Ink

Studying ways to reduce paper and ink use for his school, a 14-year old teenager figured out that by switching from Times New Roman and other fonts to Garamond, organizations and businesses could save a ton of money on printer ink each year, CNN reports.

Continue reading...

29 Mar 11:52

Putin: Pirate Site Blocking Has Failed to End Piracy

by Andy

In the early days of 2013 it became clear that after years of wavering, Russia was finally going to get tough on Internet piracy. Despite outcry from Internet giants such as Google, and Yandex, the country’s largest search engine, the government pressed ahead with its plans.

On August 1, 2013, a new law was passed which would allow sites to be blocked at the ISP level if they failed to respond to copyright infringement complaints in a timely fashion. But despite the legislative teeth, file-sharing sites were not blocked, with many simply complying with takedown demands as required by law.

In January 2014, however, the government said that the law was actually having the required effect, with the number of Internet users purchasing legal content going up by 30%. But at the same time there were complaints.

The founder of IVI.ru, the country’s leading source of Hollywood-licensed video, said that his company had not benefited from the law. And now it seems that the law’s lack of success is being admitted be people right at the top – the very, very top.

During a meeting with members of the House of the Federation Council, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that the legislation introduced in August 2013 had failed to meet its objectives.

“This is an extremely important area, and we still have very much to do here,” he told the meeting.

“Even after we have adopted these solutions for intellectual property protection in the field of cinema, recent analysis has shown that it does not work as effectively as we expected.”

Putin added that despite the new law, pirate movies can appear on websites anywhere and completely undermine the framework.

“The effect is that all of our protection is reduced to zero,” the President said.

But even though things aren’t working, there are no signs of any retreat. Instead the Russian government is looking to get even more aggressive.

“It is necessary to consider additional steps to protect intellectual property rights,” Putin concluded.

Work is already underway to expand the current legislation to encompass all content since right now only video is protected. The government is also looking at introducing fines for errant hosting providers and wants to find a way to permanently close sites persistently engaging in piracy.

“Sites engaging in piracy professionally (it’s their business) should be closed,” said Vladimir Medina of the Ministry of Culture.

But the idea that closing sites will solve the problem was dismissed by a representative from the body in control of .ru domains. Noting that she is reminded of the “Streisand Effect”, where suppressed information only leads to wider dissemination, Olga Alexandrova-Massine said people will find a way to access blocked content.

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

28 Mar 17:18

The Dune in our Heads

by Ethan Gilsdorf

Dune is in Your Head

The mirage of Jodorowsky’s Unfilmed Epic

 By Ethan Gilsdorf

A problem crops up when filmmakers try to adapt epic fantasy worlds to the big screen—particularly beloved, richly-imagined literary ones. Sacrifices must be made. Characters are cut, and plotlines are re-routed. Scenes and places don’t match what readers have pictured with their minds. Fans of the original book cry foul.

In the case of director Alejandro Jodorowsky, he had a vision for Frank Herbert’s masterwork Dune that was so over the top, so surreal (and, at times, so absurd), it probably would have blown the minds of critics before they had a chance to grumble.

That is, if Jodorowsky’s translation and transmogrification of Dune had ever been made. It never was.

Finally, the story of the greatest science fiction epic never made has finally been told. Jodorowsky’s Dune is a new documentary about that beautiful, crazy-ambitious, disaster of an adaptation.

“They did everything right, really. Maybe a little too, right, you know?” said director Frank Pavich, when I reached him earlier this week via telephone from New York City.

“They” were Chilean cult filmmaker Jodorowsky, the self-taught visionary behind El Topo (1970) and The Holy Mountain (1973), and his French producer Michel Seydoux. This was 1975, and Jodorowsky had assembled a dream team of actors and artists to bring alive Herbert’s tale of a feudal-like interstellar culture driven by the market for a valuable substance caled the “spice.” David Carradine was to play Duke Leto, Jodorowsky’s 12 year old son Brontis was cast as Paul Atreides, Udo Kier (Andy Warhol’s favorite actor) would be Piter De Vries, and Orson Welles was slated to play Baron Harkonnen. (Apparently, Welles was lured by promises of on-set French bistro food.)

Spacecraft concept art by British artist Chris Foss   

Jodorowsky’s vision extended to the soundtrack. A different band or composer was to invent music representing each of Dune’s major families. Straight off of their “Dark Side of the Moon” success, Pink Floyd would write and perform the House Atreides theme. The French prog rock band Magma would cover the House Harkonnen. The British avant-rock group Henry Cow and German composer Karlheinz Stockhausen were also approached  (Contrast this with the band chosen for the 1984 David Lynch version of Dune: Toto.“I bless the spice down in Arrakis. Gonna take some time to do the things we never had...Ooh ooh ooh”)

Even Mick Jagger and Salvador Dali had agreed to be in the movie.

Orson Welles was slated to play the antagonist, Baron Harkonnen (Photo: Gary Graver)   

Pavich’s documentary focuses largely on Jodorowsky, now 85, who recounts his courtship of each of the film’s key players. He spins one unlikely story after another. “Whenever you think that he’s embellishing it, you kind of roll your eyes and think, ‘Well, this possibly can’t be true,’ somebody else would back it up,” said Pavich, whose previous feature was N.Y.H.C., a 1999 documentary about New York Hardcore music scene. “These stories really did happen like that. It was a weird time. I think that the circles [Jodorowsky] was travelling in—of course he would be at a weird party in Paris, where Mick Jagger would be.”

Fanboys and girls would have drooled over the visual team. A then-obscure H.R. Giger designed the creepier Harkonnen settings. Dan O’Bannon, known at the time for his work with John Carpenter on the sci-fi film Dark Star, was brought on as the special effects wiz. (Jodorowsky rejected Douglas Trumbull because he found him too full of himself.)  British artist Chris Foss designed the space craft. And Jean Giraud, aka French comic book artist Moebius, brought Jodorowsky’s dreams to life in some 3,000 storyboard drawings that perfectly capture a character or scene with a few quick pencil marks on the page.

Concept art by Swiss artist H.R. Giger   

These drawings showed every shot in the film, every composition, every angle and every camera movement, as well every line in the script. Along with concept art and sketches of costumes, spaceships, vehicles, palaces and landscapes, the storyboard drawings were then bound into a 30-pound book that Jodorowsky used to shop his mammoth project to financiers and Hollywood studios. Twenty copies were made.

At that point, two years of pre-production had run up a tab of $2 million. The overall budget has been estimated at $15 million, “because nobody really knew how high it could possibly get.” Mind to you, this was 1975, two years before the success of Star Wars. Blockbuster sci-fi epics were hardly the slam-dunks they are today. In that era, a $15 million price tag would have been an “insanely huge,” Pavich said. Amazingly, $10 million was raised from Jodorowsky’s money and European backers. They needed the final $5 million, from “a studio partner, so they could get the film out on US screens.”

That money was never raised.

Jodorowsky and Moebius   

Production was shut down just as filming was about to begin in Algeria. “They had the cooperation of the Algerian government,” Pavich said. “The Algerian army was going to play Harkonnen extras.”

Today, of those 20 original bibles, only two remain. Seydoux has one. Jodorowosky kept another copy all these years in his Paris apartment, where much of the Jodorowsky’s Dune takes places.

“I wanted to make something sacred,” Jodorowsky says during one of his many bombastic moments. “Dune will be the coming of a God.” When he tries to persuade Pink Floyd to come on board, he describes his project as “the most important picture in the history of humanity.” Modest, the man is not. But shining through Jodorowsky’s often poetically-broken English are his indefatigable spirit and enthusiasm, which win you over in the end.

Alejandro Jodorowsky (Photo: David Cavallo)

“He speaks whatever he feels like. Sometimes he doesn’t even know. It’s in French, and English, and Spanish – he kind of goes all over the place,” said Pavich. “He doesn’t have a self-censor button.” In between the interviews with Jodorowsky (whose intimates call “Jodo”), we hear from producer Seydoux (also a producer of Pavich’s documentary), Giger, Star Wars producer Gary Kurtz, Nicolas Winding Refn, and others.

All the while, that tome gains psychic weight. Its pages which we occasionally glimpse become more poignant, and more pregnant with possibility. Why? Because Jodorowsky never shot one foot of film for his adaptation of Dune.

Storyboard of Dune (Photo: David Cavallo)   

“As we were making the film, we learned there was nothing. Nobody had any record of anything.” Pavich found no photographs of the artists at work, nor of the location scouting in Chile, Mexico and Algeria. Jodorowsky’s document was all that remained.

“What an amazing object that is,” said Pavich. Between its covers, in these drawings, the film still lives.

Pavich brings some of that imagination to life by cleverly, but not obtrusively, animating Moebius’s pencil sketches. “I didn’t want to sort of CGI-ify the whole thing. Because then it becomes someone else’s vision—my vision, or someone else’s—when it really should be Alejandro’s.” His approach, via the animation of Emmy Award-nominated Syd Garon, was to take the original artwork and “just breathe enough life into it” to “lift it off the page.” The viewer sees some movement, and a glimmer of what Jodorowsky’s film would have been like. “Then hopefully your imagination carries it the rest of the way, because that’s where the movie exists—in his imagination, and yours, and all the viewers’.”

As Jodorowsky rails against those who got in the way of his vision, the documentary becomes as much about an unmade movie as it is a meditation on hope and hubris. “Why will you not have ambition?” Jodorowsky admonishes the viewer, Yoda-style, towards the end of the film. “If you fail, it is not important. You need to try.”

David Carradine and Jodorowsky   

As for those 18 other copies of Jodorowsky’s Dune, they disappeared. As Pavich conjectures, the drawings and designs could have made the rounds in Hollywood. George Lucas might have seen the book. Steven Spielberg might have seen it. Ridley Scott, too. Or their minions. After all, O’Bannon, Giger, Foss and Moebius went on to work on Alien. O’Bannon was also writer for Heavy Metal, Lifeforce, Invaders from Mars, Total Recall and other films, and even did a little computer graphics for Star Wars. Chris Foss did design work for Superman, Flash Gordon, and the Kubrick version of A.I. Artificial Intelligence. A comic called “The Long Tomorrow,” written by O’Bannon in 1975 and illustrated by Moebius, was said to influence Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner. And so forth.

Concept art by Chris Foss   

From that design team, and sprouting from Jodorowsky’s psychedelic brain, came a hundred science fictional ideas, aesthetics, and family trees. But Pavich doesn’t think Jodorowsky’s Dune inspired thievery.

“I don’t think that they’re pillaging it and stealing ideas. I think they’re taking it and they’re being inspired by it,” he said. “Sometimes things seep in and you don’t even realize it.” That’s what makes Jodorowsky’s Dune an interesting story, Pavich added. “It’s not an unmade film that just ended, it’s an unmade film that just keeps on living. And you see its children in other films.”

Concept art by Giger   

As for Dune, Italian producer Dino De Laurentiis bought the rights and hired David Lynch to direct it. Which Lynch did. Fans of the original book cried foul. Dune also became a three-part TV mini-series in 2000.

As for Alejandro Jodorowsky, he went on to direct a few other films, including last year’s The Dance of Reality. But thinking about his Dune, I wonder how all of Jodo’s wild images would have been captured by circa 1975 technology. Probably poorly. In a way, I’m glad the film was never made.

The best version of Dune is the one still in my head. Or, I should say, in all of our heads.

Giger in his studio   

Concept art by Foss   

Concept art by Giger   
All photos courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics   

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