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

Mitt Romney Introduces Paul Ryan As Running Mate

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

"Wall Street is the only place that people ride to work in a Rolls-Royce to get advice from those who took the subway". ~ Warren Buffett

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

Why mobile developers should refocus their market from China to India

Mar06
by Sindy Cator on March 6, 2014 at 9:38 pm
Posted In: Analysis and Opinion, Around the Web, Asia, Design & Dev

smartphones denis devisevic 520x245 Why mobile developers should refocus their market from China to India

Sanjay Sinha is the General Manager of Fortumo India


If you were to launch a mobile app or game today, what markets would you go after? Common sense would say US, Japan, China, UK, South Korea, Germany, Taiwan and Australia as these are the countries at the top of revenue charts for mobile developers. However, going by this list leaves out the elephant in the room: India.

If India is not at the top of the revenue charts, why should it matter for developers? Let’s look at the facts.

For starters, India will have more smartphone owners by the end of 2014 than there are people living in Australia, Germany, South Korea, Taiwan and UK combined. The latest estimates – admittedly, perhaps too optimistic – say India will overtake the US in smartphone ownership this year as well.

So there will be a lot of smartphone users, but if China is leading in revenue and smartphones, why not focus there instead?

China vs. India?

China still remains a big challenge for developers. The country has great limitations in entering the market – not just local regulations and publishing rules which are a grey area, but also barriers in language and culture.

Our own experience has been that obtaining a publishing license in China may take up to 12 months to complete – even if you have a dedicated team working on it. This is not to say that China should be ignored, but it’s important to understand that entering the Chinese market takes effort and time.

India, on the other hand, is a relatively Westernized country in the technological sense. A significant part of the population speaks English and there aren’t any real restrictions on launching your online services or games.

Unlike China, all global app distribution channels are available and widely used in India. There is also no competition from giants like Tencent or Baidu for China who have been able to attain a critical mass among consumers. India is therefore still a greenfield opportunity for many online and mobile content categories. But what about the revenue?

Lifetime value is key to revenue in India

According to estimates, 10 to 15 percent of monthly mobile ARPU in India is spent on content or value added services. In terms of monetary value, this is approximately 20 INR ($0.3).

Perhaps low by Western standards, but for an app with 1 million users, this would already translate into $300,000 monthly additional revenue for a relatively small effort. ARPU is expected to grow as well since the payment landscape for content is starting to slowly change in India.

So far there have been three key challenges in making revenue in India. The biggest challenge has been finding an appropriate payment mechanism. An enormous gap exists between people who are able to consume content (both smartphone and feature phone owners) and people who can pay through traditional methods (credit cards).

Going after revenue with credit cards in a market where only 1.7 percent of the people own them is a great way to set one up for failure. Working with local merchants we’ve seen how bringing operator billing into the payment mix resolves this issue.

The other key challenge is distribution, how to reach consumers. Thankfully, social media marketing, ad networks, mobile operator and OEM deals provide significant thrust. In fact, we work very closely with our developer partner in their distribution endeavor.

But even with broader payment coverage and distribution, the average user spending will still remain relatively low. That’s the third key challenge.

Our own Android in-app payment data indicates monthly average revenue per paying user of around $2. It is important therefore to get most out of customer lifetime value – retain and engage users for a reasonably long time, at least four to six months. Otherwise, the amount invested into user acquisition compared to their spending simply does not pay off.

Understanding ABC, feature phones & local OEM-s

So far the growth in mobile consumption has been driven mainly by English content, aimed at the urban population living in bigger metro areas like Mumbai, Delhi and Bangalore. However, most of the future growth will come from rural areas where large, uncaptured audiences expect localized content.

Native English speakers tend to forget that less than a fifth of the world can understand them. Localization means not just translation of your service into Hindi and other local languages (there are 30 languages spoken by more than a million native speakers in India). In some cases it also means localizing your content.

Historically any content related to ABC – astrology, Bollywood and cricket – has had the biggest success with Indian audiences. Even six of the top 10 videos on YouTube in India are Bollywood or local cinema, TV or cricket; translating your content and modifying it to fit around these culturally dominant themes gives a strong competitive advantage over other developers trying to battle for eyeballs.

It’s not just local Indians who like this content – there are an estimated 25 million people of Indian descent living outside India as well.

Another key issue to understand about the Indian market is that even though smartphones are growing at a huge rate, feature phones still dominate. So for wWb services, having feature phone friendly access to your content is essential.

Ninety percent of YouTube views, for example, come from feature phones in India. Adapting existing content to meet local needs is nothing new as it has been utilized in Africa as well by companies like Mxit and Eskimi.

Adding 700 million feature phone owners to your potential customer base should be enough of an incentive to not forget this part of the mobile user base.

Thirdly, local smartphone manufacturers and app stores are relatively popular in India. While most consumers want to buy a phone from Samsung, Apple or Nokia, local customer tastes and low income have given space to Indian OEM-s like Micromax, Karbonn and Lava to capture a third of the market.

Beside Google Play, the alternative app stores like Mobango, SlideMe and Getjar are quite popular amongst smartphone owners as well. For those merchants not familiar with India, it makes sense to work together with these local players who have a strong understanding on the local mobile market.

There are only so many countries in the world with a potential smartphone ownership of more than 1 billion. While India is currently big for Western developers in terms of downloads, the revenue challenge still remains to be solved.

The booming mobile gaming market in China has proven that such challenges can be conquered. And if India does become as huge in the next few years as China is today, would you be happy with the missed opportunity?

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

Jack Tretton to step down as CEO of Sony Computer Entertainment America

Mar06
by Sindy Cator on March 6, 2014 at 8:40 pm
Posted In: Around the Web

tretton 520x245 Jack Tretton to step down as CEO of Sony Computer Entertainment America

Starting April 1, Jack Tretton will no longer be president and chief executive of Sony Computer Entertainment America (SCEA). The reason for his departure isn’t yet clear, although in a press release Sony said it was a “mutual agreement” between the two parties.

Shawn Layden, who is the executive vice president and COO of Sony Network Entertainment International at the moment, will take his position.

Tretton joined Sony in 1995 and has been a prominent figure in North America since taking his current role in 2006. He was at the forefront of Sony while the PlayStation 3 was its flagship video game console and leaves while the PlayStation 4 is enjoying an early lead over the Xbox One.

“Working at SCEA for the past 19 years has been the most rewarding experience of my career,” said Tretton. “Although I will deeply miss the talented team at SCEA and the passion demonstrated every day by our fans, I’m very excited about starting the next chapter of my career.

“I leave PlayStation in a position of considerable strength and the future will only get brighter for PlayStation Nation.”

Read Next: Why PlayStation 4 was the best-selling next-gen console in the US last month

➤ Press Release

Image Credit: FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/GettyImages

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

Jack Tretton to step down as CEO of Sony Computer Entertainment America

Mar06
by Sindy Cator on March 6, 2014 at 8:40 pm
Posted In: Around the Web

tretton 520x245 Jack Tretton to step down as CEO of Sony Computer Entertainment America

Starting April 1, Jack Tretton will no longer be president and chief executive of Sony Computer Entertainment America (SCEA). The reason for his departure isn’t yet clear, although in a press release Sony said it was a “mutual agreement” between the two parties.

Shawn Layden, who is the executive vice president and COO of Sony Network Entertainment International at the moment, will take his position.

Tretton joined Sony in 1995 and has been a prominent figure in North America since taking his current role in 2006. He was at the forefront of Sony while the PlayStation 3 was its flagship video game console and leaves while the PlayStation 4 is enjoying an early lead over the Xbox One.

“Working at SCEA for the past 19 years has been the most rewarding experience of my career,” said Tretton. “Although I will deeply miss the talented team at SCEA and the passion demonstrated every day by our fans, I’m very excited about starting the next chapter of my career.

“I leave PlayStation in a position of considerable strength and the future will only get brighter for PlayStation Nation.”

Read Next: Why PlayStation 4 was the best-selling next-gen console in the US last month

➤ Press Release

Image Credit: FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/GettyImages

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

How to find your passion: The benefits of business experiments

Mar06
by Sindy Cator on March 6, 2014 at 7:17 pm
Posted In: Analysis and Opinion, Around the Web, Entrepreneur

long road 520x245 How to find your passion: The benefits of business experiments

Richard Price is the founder and CEO of Academia.edu.


My philosophy is that the best way to find your passion is to experiment until you get there.

I began my career selling banana bread and started several businesses before I finally decided to found Academia.edu, a startup that has raised $18M in venture funding and provides a platform for academics to share their research papers freely.

Through this process of experiments, some which failed and some which were successful (but not inspiring) I have discovered a method that ultimately helped me find my passion in Academia.edu. The main idea is to do a series of low-risk experiments.

Don’t get too attached to each experiment: take a lesson from it, close it down, and start a new one.

A series of cheap experiments

As a doctoral student at Oxford, I started a banana cake company in my spare time called Richard’s Banana Bakery. I quickly learned that people didn’t buy pastries every day of the week and that the ticket price of $1.50 a slice was too low, so overall margins were pretty low.

I morphed Richard’s Banana Bakery into a sandwich company, Dashing Lunches. Sandwiches were attractive because they had a higher ticket price, making the margin higher, and people bought them every day. I ran Dashing Lunches for a year, and then decided that it was going to be hard to scale.

A lesson I took was that I wanted a highly scalable business, and I started thinking about the Internet.

With some friends at Oxford, I started a housing search site for students, a kind of Craigslist for Oxford, called LiveOut. I ran the site for about a year, and found that the idea wasn’t super scalable: it involved an on-the-ground sales team persuading real estate agents to add their properties to the site.

The more you experiment, the more you learn about yourself

From here, I decided to create a pure internet business with no offline component. I closed LiveOut and started a Facebook app called PeopleRadar. PeopleRadar was a Facebook application that allowed people to rate their friends based on attractiveness. The application grew fast, becoming the top app on Facebook for nine months in Facebook’s early days.

PeopleRadar was scalable and growing. I could see that financial success was a possibility. The problem was that I wasn’t proud of what I was doing.

That’s when I had an “aha” moment: in order for me to be passionate about my business, I should something that would improve the world, and that I was proud to be part of.

This was when the concept of Academia.edu came about. The site combined both scalability and stood for what I cared about.

College was an easy place to do experiments and fail often since I didn’t have extreme financial responsibilities. My prior ventures had all been funded by the venture before – Richard’s Banana Bakery funded Dashing Lunches which funded LiveOut, and so on.

It’s a little different after college. You have to be a bit creative to figure out how to get the experimental approach to work. Academia.edu was higher stakes but I knew I had to go out and raise capital and do the venture full time, but this time, because I was so passionate in the mission, I was driven to make it successful.

Don’t overthink it

Being an entrepreneur gets a lot easier after the first phone call. Your project will take on its own momentum if you just take a first step.

It is like swimming in cold water: the first 30 seconds are very cold, and many people get out immediately. But for those who stay in, what is amazing is that after 30 seconds of swimming in cold water, your body starts to warm up, and you start feeling absolutely fine – not cold at all.

A lot of people wonder how they are going to find their passion. It’s hard to find it by just reading books, Web articles, and talking to friends. My experience has been that over the course of a few years, you can try out a few experiments, and you’ll start to get closer to something that really resonates with you.

You don’t need to accomplish anything extravagant on the first try. Something as small a banana cake company that took $150 of startup capital can easily help you find what you truly believe in.

Image credit: Shutterstock/jonson

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

Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high-end performance at a mid-range price

Mar06
by Sindy Cator on March 6, 2014 at 7:00 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Gadgets, Product Reviews

小米手机3 520x245 Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high end performance at a mid range price

Popular Chinese smartphone manufacturer Xiaomi released its third-generation Android smartphone in September last year, but the device is only just making its way beyond Greater China and into Singapore today.

The Southeast Asian country marks Xiaomi’s first stop in its march overseas. The company has already released its lowest-cost smartphone in its range of devices, the Redmi, to a warm welcome in Singapore. Though Xiaomi refused to release figures, the first batch of Redmi phones sold out in eight minutes when launched on February 21, while the second batch, which followed six days later, sold out in six minutes. The enthusiasm for the Redmi is perhaps not unexpected — the handset sells for just S$169 ($134), thus widening its potential appeal. 

The real test comes as Xiaomi’s flagship Mi 3 goes on sale with a price tag of S$419 ($332) unlocked, nearly triple the price of the Redmi. If the Mi-3 does well in Singapore, it could very well give competitors including Samsung, HTC and LG cause for concern. 

Design and display

Xiaomi’s flagship phone is an extremely slim and light device, measuring 5-inches with a thickness of a mere 8.1mm and weighing in at only 145g. Its slim build is the only outstanding feature about its looks though — other than that, the rectangular phone is a bit clunky and doesn’t sit well in my hands.

 Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high end performance at a mid range price
 Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high end performance at a mid range price
 Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high end performance at a mid range price

As for the screen, the Mi 3′s 1080p IPS display produces a fantastic resolution — so visuals and text are extremely clear, while the colors are brilliant and consistent from any angle. What’s more, the screen is very sensitive to touch, which makes it much easier to play games that require you to tap on the display (think Flappy Bird-style). Indeed, one of the nifty features touted by Xiaomi is that even when you are wearing gloves during the harshest of winters and struggling to use your phone, the Mi 3 screen still responds to your touch, just like the Nokia Lumia 1020.

The software design is where Xiaomi’s devices really shine though. This is the first time that Xiaomi is launching its highly-customizable MIUI firmware, which is based on Android, officially in English. The Mi-3 runs on Android 4.3 optimized with MIUI version 5. Xiaomi Global VP Hugo Barra previously noted that it was a big challenge as the team had to change a lot of things around the UI to accommodate English characters. The result of all that hard work, however, is impressive. The UI is simple and easy to navigate, while you can easily customize the look of your phone via different themes.

And here we come to what I love best about Xiaomi’s devices — its themes, which are basically different outfits for the phone. In conjunction with its move into Singapore, Xiaomi released two new themes to commemorate the city, and there are many great-looking ones in the theme store available to download for free. They show up particularly well on the Mi 3 due to the high-resolution screen, and it’s a joy to be able to change the entire look and feel of your phone so easily when you get tired of its appearance.

Xiaomi Theme 730x648 Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high end performance at a mid range price

Performance

The Mi 3 touts itself as the fastest-ever smartphone — and it doesn’t disappoint.

The Mi 3 released in Singapore is the 16GB version equipped with a quad-core 2.3GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processor. According to the AnTuTu benchmark, the Mi 3 is ranked number one in terms of speed currently, outperforming key competing handsets including range-toppers like the Samsung Galaxy S4 and HTC One.

The result of equipping it with such a high-performance chipset shows: the phone responds beautifully when watching videos, playing games or just browsing the Web. While playing games such as graphic-heavy Badland and Angry Birds Go!, they were speedy and extremely responsive without any lag at all.

The battery life of the particular Mi 3 device I received, however, was strangely disappointing at first. Xiaomi says the Mi 3′s 3050mAh battery has 30 percent more capacity than its predecessor, and will give you 21 hours Internet use on 3G, or 25 hours talk-time on 2G. The company also notes that it has “integrated power management from operating system all the way down to the CPU, which means you can stretch every last drop out of the 3050mAh battery.”

Yet when I first started using the phone — about two hours of playing several rounds of Angry Birds Go!, watching a couple of videos on YouTube, downloading two apps, and browsing through pages on the Chrome browser saw the battery life deplete by nearly half. That was pretty shocking. More so was the fact that my remaining battery continued to drain itself to empty over the rest of the day and night. The result was that I woke up to a phone that didn’t wake up with me – not very impressive for a phone that specifically touts its battery life!

It was only after I optimized the performance of the device, a nifty feature that requires some effort to find — it’s under the ‘Security’ tab — that my battery life suddenly extended itself. UPDATE: After some investigation, I found out that it was due to a particular app sapping all my battery life — a Singapore-developed food-related app 8 Days Eat. The optimization feature kills apps that are running in the background, so it did that to the rogue app and returned me a robust battery life. So the lesson learnt here is: check on rogue apps!

Xiaomi Optimized 730x648 Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high end performance at a mid range price

The difference was jaw-dropping. After I optimized the Mi 3, only about one quarter of the battery was sapped after I put it to heavy usage for about an hour and a half — playing several rounds of Angry Birds Go!, watching several videos on YouTube, and exploring Tokyo on Google Earth. The battery didn’t drain overnight either, and even after being on standby for more than 24 hours (including some infrequent usage like taking photos and watching videos), the battery stayed robust at 30 percent.

Camera

The Mi 3 is equipped with a 13-megapixel rear camera from Sony, which produces pictures that are crisp, extremely sharp and detailed — especially outdoors.

IMG 20140306 122238 520x292 Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high end performance at a mid range price
IMG 20140306 173718 520x924 Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high end performance at a mid range price
IMG 20140306 174724 520x292 Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high end performance at a mid range price

Unfortunately, the camera disappoints in certain situations, especially when the light is lacking. The colors are pretty much washed out whenever you take photos in low lighting, and that happens even outdoors when the sun disappears behind the clouds. This seems to be a common problem as a lot of smartphone cameras struggle with this issue too.

IMG 20140306 122042 520x292 Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high end performance at a mid range price
IMG 20140306 173943 520x292 Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high end performance at a mid range price

The HDR feature also produces photos that look strangely fake — in this photo of a sunset, the colors are tweaked weirdly, as you can see.

IMG 20140306 193025 HDR 730x410 Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high end performance at a mid range price

Just like most smartphone manufacturers out there, Xiaomi has added in some nifty features to make its camera more appealing. Other than filters and burst mode, a particularly gimmicky feature is that the camera can automatically beautify your photos by detecting your gender and age automatically, before you click the shutter. Of course, whether the age reflected is accurate is another matter altogether (hint: it typically makes me younger).

Xiaomi Me 730x648 Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high end performance at a mid range price

Sound

To play games and watch videos, sound is obviously a key factor — and the quality of the Mi 3′s sound output is robust. However, with the speaker located at the bottom of the phone, when you play games in landscape mode the sound can actually disappear entirely if you put your hands in the wrong place.

To keep the phone slim though, having the speakers at the bottom of the phone is a necessary sacrifice, and this problem can be easily avoided if you normally listen in headphones anyway. Xiaomi says that it employs Dirac technology so the Mi 3 will adjust audio output to optimize quality based on the type of headphones you’re using — and that it’s ”the first smartphone ever to bring SFX surround sound to your headphones.”

All I can say is the sound execution is pretty flawless — and yes, that surround sound effect is impressive.

Integration

Xiaomi’s MIUI firmware is based on Android, which means it’s compatible with games and apps found on Google Play. To differentiate itself from its Chinese counterpart, the Mi 3 comes pre-loaded with a whole bunch of Google services and integrates seamlessly with Google once you key in your Gmail address. This also means you back up your data — including app data, Wi-Fi passwords and other settings — to Google servers.

To this extent, Xiaomi’s Mi Cloud service takes a back-seat in the international version of Mi 3. You have an option to sign up for the Mi Cloud service when you start up your phone though, and it’s actually very useful as it lets you access your contacts, photos and files from any browser. This also means you can easily use your Mi Cloud account to transfer your contacts, texts, settings, and content from your old device to your new one.

Other services such as Xiaomi’s dedicated messaging app, Mi-Talk, come pre-installed on the phone but probably won’t see huge numbers of users until Xiaomi’s devices gain more traction.

Xiaomi Cloud 730x648 Xiaomi Mi 3 review: An Android smartphone that delivers high end performance at a mid range price

Wrap-up

The Mi 3 is a solid Android smartphone that performs excellently — way beyond what people assume its price tag of $332 can buy you — and it makes me wonder why companies like Samsung, HTC and LG are tooting their horns for smartphones that come in at double to triple the price when the performance of the Mi 3 seems to be largely on par with their flagship devices. However, one bit that the Mi 3 is severely lacking is support for 4G LTE, which could put off consumers used to having such a speedy network and propel them to opt for other devices instead.

Most of the time, the Mi 3 is a joy to use, especially from a non-Android user perspective (I’ve been an iPhone user for years). The UI is uncluttered and easily customizable, while the high screen resolution makes reading, playing games and watching videos an immersive experience. The only disappointing part may be the camera, as Xiaomi seems to have fallen into the same bracket as other Android smartphone manufacturers that boast of high megapixels but tend to neglect the image quality.

However, that is only a minor bump in the overall execution of the Mi 3. For its price, the Mi 3 is more than well worth it, and it could give current Android smartphones out there a good run for their money indeed.

Read also – Can China’s coolost phone maker take Xiaomi-mania international? We ask VP Hugo Barra

Headline image via Xiaomi

└ Tags: syndicated
  • Page 14,339 of 14,641
  • « First
  • «
  • 14,337
  • 14,338
  • 14,339
  • 14,340
  • 14,341
  • »
  • 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