The Daily Dose

laugh every day with cartoons jokes and humor
  • Home
  • About
    • Press
      • Press Release – Announcing Laughzilla the Third ebook
      • Press Release – The Daily Dose Kicks Off Its 16th Year with New Books and More Irreverent Laughter
      • Press Release – Themes Memes and Laser Beams Now Available in Paperback
      • Press Release – Announcing Themes Memes and Laser Beams
      • In The News
    • Privacy
  • Archive
  • Books
  • Shop
  • Collections
    • Galleries
      • Gallery
      • Captions
      • Flash Cartoons & Greeting Cards
        • Laughzilla’s Oska Flash Animation Cartoon Greeting Cards
        • Oska Cupid Love Humor
    • #OccupyWallStreet
    • cats
    • China
    • Food
      • Hors d’oeuvres
        • Ball of Cream Cheese
      • Entrees / Main Courses
        • Meatballs with Baked Beans and Celery
    • Gadaffy
    • Google
  • Links
  • Video
  • Submit a joke
DeviantART Facebook Twitter Flickr pinterest YouTube RSS

Subscribe for Free Laughs!


 

Latest Comics

  • This Memorial Day, Trump Meme Coin Congratulates Profit Takers
  • 25 Years of The Daily Dose
  • The Best Cartoons
  • Bitcoin sings “Fly Me To The Moon”
  • 22 years of The Daily Dose

Comic Archive

Ismail Hanniyeh and Abu Mazen editorial caricature by laughzilla for the daily dose 2014-04-29
Why the new face of Palestinian Unity is so scary to Israel

Daily Dose News Roundup

  • Jeff Bezos’s representative just left the board of a startup that raised $1.4 billion on his name. The first truck has not been built.
  • Snap lost a 400 million dollar AI deal, 20 million dollars a month to the Iran war, and 24 per cent of its stock price. The AR glasses had better work.
  • Volkswagen just became Rivian’s biggest investor. It is not buying trucks. It is buying the software its own engineers could not build.
  • Pinterest just crossed $1 billion in quarterly revenue. The bet that made it work was not social media. It was search.
  • Tesla is selling Chinese-made cars in Canada to escape the tariffs that both China and America imposed on it

Quotable

"Alvin Greene, South Carolina's Democrat candidate for the U.S. Senate in 2010, is driving the state's party crazy, by doing what BP's CEO did on Capitol Hill on June 17: Saying very little and letting the politicians hang themselves by their own foolishness." ~ Yasha Harari

Fresh Baked Goods

Get The Daily Dose's ebook: Laughzilla the Third - A Funny Stuff Collection of 101 Cartoons from TheDailyDose. Click here to get the e-book on Amazon kdp. Laughzilla the Third (2012) The Third Volume in the Funny Stuff Cartoon Book Collection Available Now.

Click here for the Paperback edition


Support independent publishing: Buy The Daily Dose's book: Themes Memes and Laser Beams - A Funny Stuff Collection of 101 Cartoons by Laughzilla from TheDailyDose. Click here to get the book on Amazon. Themes Memes and Laser Beams - The Second Volume in the Funny Stuff Cartoon Book Collection.

Click Here to get the book in Paperback While Available on Amazon

Themes Memes and Laser Beams - 101 Cartoons by Laughzilla. Get the e-book on Lulu.

Click Here to get The Daily Dose Cartoon ebook on amazon kindle

Funny Stuff :
The First Cartoon Book
from The Daily Dose.
Available on Lulu.

a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Livr: This social network unlocks features the more drunk you get

Mar07
by Sindy Cator on March 7, 2014 at 11:36 am
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, Insider, Product Launches

beer 520x245 Livr: This social network unlocks features the more drunk you get

Most social networking services are a sea of inane comments on people’s pictures of their pets or children. Or both. But Livr, a social network for drinking and socializing promises to be different.

Livr 220x575 Livr: This social network unlocks features the more drunk you getFor one thing, it won’t even let you log in until you’ve had a drink and blown into the blood-alcohol analyzer attachment. The higher your reading, the more features that are available for use. It’s certainly a novel idea, unless it’s some sort of parody app designed to draw awareness to binge-drinking – which seems pretty likely considering some of its feature list.

For example, there are apparently gamification elements, like Truth or Dare, which net users points for taking part in challenges set by other members.

Similarly, there’s a map that shows not only where other people are drinking around you, but also what stage they are at in their night out – indicated by a different color circle around the area. So, if the circle on the map is large, there are lots of people and if it’s dark in color, they’ve had a lot to drink.

There’s also a Drunk Dial feature that will connect you with another random Livr user that has been allowed into the app for a chat, should you wish to talk nonsense with a total stranger.

Content (like drunken pictures) is all shared within the app, so if you wake up the next morning feeling regretful, Livr also includes a Blackout function that erases everything in one touch. If on the other hand it was a fun night out, you can send a report to other Livr users.

Livr isn’t quite ready for release just yet, but it is scheduled for launch “this spring”, so it shouldn’t be too long before you can download it.

Whether it will be free, chargeable or indeed will ever exist at all remains to be seen – other apps have in the past come under under attack for encouraging excessive drinking – and, while this might sound like a bit of fun – can you actually imagine wanting to use it on your night out?

Update: This post has been updated to clarify our skepticism about how legitimate Livr is.

➤ Livr [Via Pocket-Lint]

Featured Image Credit – Thinkstock

└ Tags: news, syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Dutch journalism startup Blendle wants to create an iTunes for newspaper and magazine articles

Mar07
by Sindy Cator on March 7, 2014 at 8:54 am
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, magazines, newspapers

shutterstock 159891725 520x245 Dutch journalism startup Blendle wants to create an iTunes for newspaper and magazine articles

As newspapers and magazines increasingly welcome the digital world by taking their content online, the common way to monetize is via paywalls. As a reader, you’ve probably been reluctant to pay for a monthly subscription when all you want to do is read one story.

Blendle, a journalism startup from The Netherlands, is out to change the scene by introducing the iTunes model for journalism. This has been a hot topic for quite a few years already, and this pay-for-what-you-read model has already been applied to niche areas of publishing, but bringing it to mainstream journalism will be taking a huge step forward.

Co-founder Alexander Klöpping says in a blog post detailing the project:

If anything, the music business has taught us that consumers want a simple way to pay for content. As a consumer, you only want to pay for content you actually consume, you want algorithms and social to help you filter, and you want everything in one place. While consumers changed, newspapers and magazines didn’t adapt.

Recently, the two founders of Blendle united the major newspapers and magazines in the country under one roof, so all their articles are available in one Web app with just a single pay wall, where users will only have to pay for whatever articles they read with just one click.

“We think that unbundling of journalism is the Holy Grail in getting young people to pay for journalism again,” Klöpping says.

Blendle 1 730x547 Dutch journalism startup Blendle wants to create an iTunes for newspaper and magazine articles

The Blendle app doesn’t only let make it convenient for you to readily access and pay for articles in a single place — it also shows you what articles are trending, and lets you see what stories your friends or curators (such as celebrities, politicians and journalists) have shared. What’s more, you can even search for premium content from newspapers and magazines. If you’re particularly interested in a specific subject, you can also set email alerts containing certain words or phrases.

New Blendle users get €2.50 ($3.50) for free, and they can top up their Blendle wallet when that has been spent. To encourage adoption, Blendle has a unique policy of allowing refunds if a reader doesn’t think the article was worth his/her money after reading it — though it notes that a fair use policy applies. Apparently this function “greatly increases the amount of money spent on journalism in the beta.”

Blendle is still in beta, and it launches officially in Holland in April. The founders promise that other countries will follow — and honestly it’s an exciting proposition that could change the way newspapers and magazines all over the world operate in the online world now. However, it’s going to be extremely challenging to persuade media outlets to license its content to Blendle, so there is probably still a long journey ahead before an iTunes for news may be truly ingrained in people’s lives.

➤ Blendle

Headline image via Shutterstock

└ Tags: europe, news, syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Daily Dose for Fri, Mar 7: The I Hate to Cook Book

Mar07
by Sindy Cator on March 7, 2014 at 8:00 am
Posted In: Around the Web


The I Hate to Cook Book by Peg Bracken
Reviewed by Anne from Indianapolis, Indiana.

└ Tags: syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Daily Dose for Fri, Mar 7: The I Hate to Cook Book

Mar07
by Sindy Cator on March 7, 2014 at 8:00 am
Posted In: Around the Web


The I Hate to Cook Book by Peg Bracken
Reviewed by Anne from Indianapolis, Indiana.

└ Tags: syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Alzheimer’s Disease Death Toll Higher Than Thought

Mar07
by Sindy Cator on March 7, 2014 at 7:00 am
Posted In: Around the Web

Title: Alzheimer’s Disease Death Toll Higher Than Thought
Category: Health News
Created: 3/6/2014 11:00:00 AM
Last Editorial Review: 3/6/2014 12:00:00 AM

└ Tags: syndicated
  • Page 14,333 of 14,641
  • « First
  • «
  • 14,331
  • 14,332
  • 14,333
  • 14,334
  • 14,335
  • »
  • Last »
The Daily Dose, The Daily Dose © 1996 - Present. All Rights Reserved.
  • Home
  • About
  • Archive
  • Books
  • Collections
  • Links
  • Shop
  • Submit a joke
  • Video
  • Privacy Policy