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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.

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AirPair’s network of pay-per-hour API experts want to make your next integration a doddle

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 5:41 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Design & Dev, Insider, Product Updates

Code 2 520x245 AirPairs network of pay per hour API experts want to make your next integration a doddle

AirPair, the service that allows its users to get technical help from devs on-demand, has launched a new feature designed to take the pain out of integrating APIs from some of the Web’s most popular services.

The new Trusted Partner Community Experts option provides access to people who know exactly what they’re doing when it comes to integrating APIs from the likes of Twilio, Stripe, Tokbox, Balanced, Evernote, Adroll, and a dozen other companies.

AirPair decided to build the API integration feature into a core offering as it found that many of its users were making use of the service specifically to get in touch with experts for API integrations. The partners chosen so far have each selected their own experts from dev communities to help out with user requests, or have otherwise helped to vet experts that were already active on AirPair and capable of providing help.

In short, if you’re in need of API integration advice for any of the listed companies and are willing to pay by the hour to get it, AirPair’s ‘Trusted Partner Community Experts’ are ready and waiting.

➤ AirPair

Featured Image Credit – Shutterstock

└ Tags: news, syndicated
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Stepsie wants to help you manage projects by breaking them down into digestible chunks

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 5:23 pm
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, Insider, Product Reviews

Project Management Stepsie  520x245 Stepsie wants to help you manage projects by breaking them down into digestible chunks

With the likes of Asana, Wrike and countless other tools of a similar ilk, the online project management/productivity space is fairly saturated, so it’s difficult to get overly excited at the prospect of yet another entrant to the space. But Stepsie, a bootstrapped Estonia-based startup run by three Australians and one Italian, recently launched its own take on what a cloud-based project management and collaboration tool is all about.

How it works

One of the core tenets of Stepsie is its simplicity – it is very easy to grasp and doesn’t throw features at you. You simply give the project a name, description, deadline and invite participants by email.

Stepsie lets you create as many ‘steps’ for each project that you like – which may include things like ‘Ideas’ and ‘Prototype’, all the way through to ‘Launch’. This is a little like Asana’s own Subtasks features.

newpz 730x524 Stepsie wants to help you manage projects by breaking them down into digestible chunks

Within each step, you have individual discussions, files (attachments) and tasks related to that element only. This is designed to help you break each project down into clearer, more manageable chunks, and it does collate all this information neatly.

Furthermore, you are able to keep some steps private and restricted to only certain users, which could be particularly useful when working with agencies or third-parties for certain stages of a product launch.

FireShot Screen Capture 091 Open Parachutes stepsie com 1172 projects 1409 730x426 Stepsie wants to help you manage projects by breaking them down into digestible chunks
You can sign up for a free 30 day trial, which gives you 200MB of storage. After this, you can pay anything up to $99/month for access – a price that varies accordingly to the amount of storage required, and number of people on the team.

pricing Stepsie wants to help you manage projects by breaking them down into digestible chunksThough it is simple to use, Stepsie may be a little too simple for many teams in terms of the available features. That said, if you’re on the hunt for your company’s first project management tool, then Stepsie is certainly worth your time checking out. If nothing else, it will help you establish what exactly you need from a cloud-based project management tool.

➤ Stepsie

Feature Image Credit – Shutterstock

└ Tags: syndicated
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Microsoft details social Office Graph updates coming to Office 365 in 2014

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 5:15 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Product Updates

185573209 520x245 Microsoft details social Office Graph updates coming to Office 365 in 2014

Microsoft is building new social features for Office 365 to help people collaborate and communicate with other employees in their company. Called the Office Graph, Microsoft is now able to analyze how its users interact with email, documents, sites and instant messages to create a personalized view of their company network.

It’s based on the Enterprise Graph used in Microsoft’s private social network Yammer and will be adapted for Office 365 through a new, dedicated app codenamed Oslo. It takes the Metro-style design language and builds it around files, updates and people tied to their organizations. Microsoft will be tapping Office Graph to surface information that is relevant to you.

ES 02 730x410 Microsoft details social Office Graph updates coming to Office 365 in 2014

In one screenshot, Microsoft shows a selection of cards and six filters along the top with names such as presented to me, trending around me and modified by me. A second displays a user profile, which lists projects they’re working on and colleagues that both users are currently working alongside.

Microsoft is also bringing across the ‘Groups Experience’ from Yammer which, as the name implies, will allow users to set up a new group from within any Office 365 app. It automatically includes an inbox, social feed, calendar and document library that users can pull from to stay organized and work together with greater efficiency. Changes will also be synced with Yammer so users can pick their preferred platform.

ES Yammer 05 resized 730x410 Microsoft details social Office Graph updates coming to Office 365 in 2014

While these groups will be open and discoverable by default, Microsoft stresses that users can also make them private for sensitive projects.

Users will also soon notice a Yammer messenger built into documents stored with SharePoint Online and OneDrive for Business. Furthermore, Microsoft says it’ll allow user to share new content to Yammer from SharePoint Online and Outlook and plans to integrate the business-focused social network with its video calling services Lync and Skype at some point in the future.

ES 09 resized 730x410 Microsoft details social Office Graph updates coming to Office 365 in 2014

Microsoft said these updates will become available “throughout 2014″ but refrained from giving any firm release dates.

➤ Work like a network! Enterprise social and the future of work (Via TechCrunch)

Image Credit: Joe Raedle/Getty Images

└ Tags: microsoft, syndicated
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How to make your content stand out: Give it muscle

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 4:41 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, How-To's

publishign 520x245 How to make your content stand out: Give it muscle

If you want to your online content to have an impact on your audience, it pays to give it some serious muscle. Here’s how…

Make it longer, better, slower, stronger

Sure, your audience has limited time, but if everything is brief, “snackable” and relentless, you may end up getting more unsubscribes than you’d like. Consider changing the length and frequency of your content to make an impact.

Yes, there will always be the scores of OMG political gaffes, animals jumping on trampolines and Ryan Gosling memes. But we’re starting to see a trend away from thinly-reported, quick-hit posts toward longform, magazine-style, well-reported narratives and rich multimedia, experiences (think the Webby/Pulitzer-winning New York Times Snowfall, The Jockey or this Pitchfork feature on the band Bat For Lashes).

When experiences are immersive and compelling, users become more invested. And you might not even need to hire a slew of developers or go quite so big.

Patagonia does a great job with slower, more thoughtful, yet simple content: elegant photo essays, gorgeous, immersive big wave surfing videos, and in-depth profiles of their Ambassadors. You want to spend time on and explore the site, because simply, it’s a great publication.  So when you decide to buy active gear, you’re probably going to feel better about purchasing something from Patagonia.

Adjust the volume

Try slowing down the cadence, too. Make an impact with a weekly schedule instead of daily (radical!) and a make sure to stick to a powerful set of related, thematic features. Take your readers on a longer ride.

Speaking of longer, as we’re all more comfortable reading vertically, there are more and more sites employing scrolling, usually Parallax techniques to tell a visual, interactive story.

The company VonDutch spins a yarn about their namesake Kenneth Howard through super cool iconography and visual wizardry. Every Last Drop UK is just educational storytelling at its most charming. The wide screen, immersive approach lends itself well to narrative storytelling, biography and infographic or educational concepts come to life (see Dangers of Fracking).

Do it live!

What’s better than cooking from a recipe on your iPad? Cooking, live, with a chef that you can tweet and interact with, of course. Companies like The Chopping Block use Google+ for monthly cooking classes where they teach viewers to sauté spinach or trim a tenderloin.

Event-based content using Google Hangouts, Scribble, Ustream or Livestream make it possible to connect with your readers/ consumers in an immediate, humanizing way. But brands are still hesitant to embrace the technology for fear of “Hello? Hello? I can’t hear you…OK now I can’t see you” (and their fears aren’t unwarranted — the technology requires a solid connection from all participants).

Still, this kind of content has legs: with Google Hangouts the content is live streamed and recorded to YouTube — so you can archive it, share it, repurpose it. How-tos, multiple blogger discussions, one-on-one access to experts are all great ways to take your content into real time goodness.

ASOS, a UK-based clothing retailer offered a series of fashion advice Hangouts featuring celebrities and stylists giving two-minute tips to individual users who signed up.

For a different kind of event-based Hangout, consider Scribble, a paid service that allows you to tap into its partner networks through “Scribble Market”(including ABC News and Reuters). If those networks like the content you’re creating, you can find yourself a whole set of new eyeballs. Scribble can also live curate any related topic and the stream can be embedded right into your own site. The NY Daily News used the service for its coverage of Fashion Week.

This article is an excerpt from the Contently ebook ‘Making your Content Stand Out‘. You can get the full version here.

Image credit: Shutterstock

└ Tags: media, syndicated
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Microsoft Research reveals 3D browser SurroundWeb that displays content across multiple surfaces in a room

Mar03
by Sindy Cator on March 3, 2014 at 4:24 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Shareables

Microsoft SurroundWeb Research1 520x245 Microsoft Research reveals 3D browser SurroundWeb that displays content across multiple surfaces in a room

Microsoft has a small obsession with innovating in the living room, so it should come as no surprise that its research arm continues to plough forward with a 3D browser. Called SurroundWeb, the prototype allows Web pages to display content across multiple surfaces in a room.

The browser has come a long way, but moving from mouse clicks to finger touches is only the beginning. Microsoft wants to take the tool further, making it truly immersive. Here is what the company has so far:

Microsoft SurroundWeb Research 520x390 Microsoft Research reveals 3D browser SurroundWeb that displays content across multiple surfaces in a room
Microsoft SurroundWeb Research 1 520x393 Microsoft Research reveals 3D browser SurroundWeb that displays content across multiple surfaces in a room
Microsoft SurroundWeb Research 2 520x390 Microsoft Research reveals 3D browser SurroundWeb that displays content across multiple surfaces in a room

If you’re getting a feeling of déjà vu, you’re probably remembering Microsoft’s IllumiRoom, an exploratory concept that projects images beyond your TV for an immersive gaming experience. Here’s the video back from January 2013:

Microsoft Research has essentially taken the idea from the gaming world and applied it to the Web. The latter is arguably much more difficult to achive as games are much more static than constantly-evolving webpages.

The abstract for SurroundWeb is as follows:

We introduce SurroundWeb, the first least-privilege platform for immersive room experiences. SurroundWeb is a “3D Browser” that gives web pages the ability to display across multiple surfaces in a room, adapt their appearance to objects present in that room, and interact using natural user input.

SurroundWeb enables least privilege for these immersive web pages by introducing two new abstractions: first, a Room Skeleton that enables least privilege for room rendering, unlike previous approaches that focus on inputs alone. Second, a Detection Sandbox that allows web pages to register content to show if an object is detected, but prevents the web server from knowing if the object is present. SurroundWeb provides three privacy properties: detection privacy, rendering privacy, and interaction privacy while simultaneously enabling Web pages to use object recognition and room display capabilities.

Surveys show the information revealed by SurroundWeb is acceptable. SurroundWeb is practical: After a one-time setup procedure that scans a room for projectable surfaces in about a minute, our proto- type can render immersive multi-display web rooms at greater than 30 frames per second with up to 25 screens and up to a 1440×720 display. We demonstrate a range of previously proposed and novel experiences can be implemented in a least-privilege way using SurroundWeb.

You can read the full 16-page paper below.

➤ SurroundWeb: Least Privilege for Immersive “Web Rooms”

Image Credits: Microsoft-News

└ Tags: microsoft, syndicated
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