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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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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.

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Outread now helps you speed-read from your iPad

Feb25
by Sindy Cator on February 25, 2014 at 10:49 am
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, Insider

20140225 104226 520x245 Outread now helps you speed read from your iPad

Last month we brought you news on Outread, an iOS app that takes a slightly different approach to other speed-reading apps such as ReadQuick, by displaying a full page of text and highlighting words as your eyes scan across the page.

Now, version 1.1. has hit the App Store bringing in a handful of updates – perhaps most notably, Outread has been optimized for iPads. This should prove popular for those who like to catch up with their Pocket, Instapaper or Readability articles on the move.

Also, while OutRead initially adopted a yellow highlighter to make key text stand out on the page – this has now been replaced by a dimming function that makes the words on the rest of the page less prominent instead.

Other notable enhancements include AirDrop sharing, and an import option for Word, .rtf and .txt documents. And while it’s not an enhancement as such, when we first went hands-on with Outread it was priced at $2.99 – this has now been ramped up to $4.99.

Related read: 16 apps to help you read on the move

➤ Outread | App Store

└ Tags: news, syndicated
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BlackBerry returns to its roots with new enterprise security features for BBM

Feb25
by Sindy Cator on February 25, 2014 at 8:52 am
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, BBM

bbm 520x245 BlackBerry returns to its roots with new enterprise security features for BBM

BlackBerry is going back to its enterprise roots after it announced a set of new security features for BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) that cater to the needs of its corporate users.

The company has pushed BBM as a consumer product for some time — launching Android and iOS apps last year — but it says that the ‘the eBBM Suite,’ which launches this summer, will enable more secure level of communications which corporate customers require. The first feature from the suite is BBM Protected, which BlackBerry says provides end-to-end message encryption of messages, public-private signing and other advanced security technologies.

Yesterday, Nokia announced a partnership to put BBM on its Windows Phone devices, emphasizing BlackBerry’s consumer play. With 80 million active users, BBM trails WhatsApp and other chat apps, but the enterprise space remains a strong spot for the service.

➤ eBBM Suite: Finally – A Mobile Messaging Platform for the Security Conscious [BlackBerry]

Related: BlackBerry announces Q20 and Z3 smartphones, arriving this year

Headline image via Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

└ Tags: news, syndicated
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Add an eyecatching finish to photos with Macphun’s new Focus 2 Pro for Mac

Feb25
by Sindy Cator on February 25, 2014 at 8:01 am
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, Product Launches, Product Updates

shutterstock 123571759 520x245 Add an eyecatching finish to photos with Macphuns new Focus 2 Pro for Mac

Macphun Software—maker of Snapheal and FX Photo Studio—has launched a pro version of its Focus 2 photo app for the Mac, designed to enhance the lens blur and tilt shift features photo editors are familiar with from its recent version 2 release.

The Pro software will sell concurrently with the standard version, but for $40 as opposed to $12, reflecting a target audience that Macphun hopes will benefit from the new version’s additional features.

Both Focus 2 products aim to direct the viewer’s eye toward the part of the image the photographer wants to emphasize. Such effects are optimally achieved during the initial photo shoot, with an assist from an assortment of lenses. In post production, achieving the same result in Photoshop or Aperture generally require a higher level of editing skill, not to mention some additional cash. The Focus 2 apps offer simple mouse- or gesture-based sliders within a straightforward interface that lets anyone go back and adjust the focus of their photos with real-time previews.

Screen Shot 2014 02 23 at 7.15.21 PM 520x333 Add an eyecatching finish to photos with Macphuns new Focus 2 Pro for Mac

Adjust the size of the blur and the gradual falloff to spotlight the most important part of the photo.

The new Pro version also assumes that some users will already own high-level image editing software. Thus, the first change you’ll see upon launching Focus 2 Pro is the prompt to install plug-ins to Adobe Photoshop, Photoshop Lightroom, and Photoshop Elements, as well as Apple Aperture. In each instance, the plug-in is an adjunct accessed within the host program and launches into its own interface. Plug-in installation is a quick button click—no dragging and dropping files.

This new app boosts version 2′s functionality by several orders of magnitude. Alongside new plug-in support, the program features new advanced motion blur algorithms such as motion, radial, linear, and twist and increased control over depth of field (bokeh). You can further fine-tune blurred parts by adjusting the amount, vignette, saturation, highlights, and contrast. Additional controls for the sharp parts of the image include brightness, sharpen, clarity, and vividness. Like the previous version, Focus 2 Pro supports raw images up to a 16-bit.

Screen Shot 2014 02 23 at 7.30.11 PM 520x333 Add an eyecatching finish to photos with Macphuns new Focus 2 Pro for Mac

This tilt shift effect was opened as a Photoshop plug-in, and looks the same as in the standalone program.

As with the standard version, Focus 2 Pro contains five major aperture settings targeted to specific types of shots, including Portrait, Nature, Architecture, Macro, and Tilt-Shift. In each module, users visually set and adjust the focal point, blur amount, and falloff parameters. But don’t take the software at its word—instead check out all the parameters on your photo to see which one gives the best result.

A Custom Focus setting provides even greater control by letting you draw in a mask with an adjustable brush to indicate which parts of the image stay sharp and blurred.

Screen Shot 2014 02 23 at 7.53.13 PM 520x333 Add an eyecatching finish to photos with Macphuns new Focus 2 Pro for Mac

The custom module blurs the entire frame, and you use the masking tool to carve out the sharp focus.

Each preset works the same way. There’s a pre-defined primary focus and a gradual-falloff focus, and both are adjustable. The Custom setting works the opposite of the other presets: Choosing it applies a blur to your entire photo, and you then selectively paint a mask over the areas where you don’t want the blur to appear.

Focus 2 Pro removes some adjustments and enhances others. For example, version 2 Pro removes the Auto Fix command, which is a good thing. The crop tool is more intuitive than in the previous version. However, removing the mask in the custom tool still requires a trip to the main menu. It would also be nice if there could be an even smaller brush diameter for delicate mask selections.

All the Pro improvements come at a price. Whereas Focus 2 is now $12, you’ll have to fork over $40 for the Pro version, a rather large price difference. Focus 2 is still available via the Mac App Store. The Pro version is available via the vendor’s website. However, current owners of Focus 2 can upgrade to the Pro version for $20 via the Macphun website. The software will also be available from camera retailers on SD cards by the end of March.

Pros: Specialty focus lets you concentrate on composition and artistic rendering, swift performance, a variety of controls, easy to use for both amateurs and pros.

Cons: Custom masking is still somewhat unintuitive, smallest brush diameter is too big, large difference in price between standard and pro versions.

➤ Macphun Focus 2 Pro

Image credit: Shutterstock

└ Tags: creativity, news, syndicated
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Last-minute night out app YPlan arrives in San Francisco with Noise Pop partnership

Feb25
by Sindy Cator on February 25, 2014 at 8:01 am
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web

YPlan Ladytron 520x245 Last minute night out app YPlan arrives in San Francisco with Noise Pop partnership

YPlan, an app for planning a last-minute night on the town, has announced an expansion into San Francisco, following successful launches in London and New York.

In order to make some (pardon the pun) noise as it arrives in SF, YPlan has partnered with the Noise Pop music festival to book tickets, including a couple of exclusive events. Similar to its New York expansion, YPlan has hired a local team in SF to curate events on the app.

Designed to answer the question “What should we do tonight?,” YPlan offers users a choice of several events that they can purchase tickets to.

yplan sf 220x396 Last minute night out app YPlan arrives in San Francisco with Noise Pop partnership

As it grows, YPlan is decreasing the time between new city launches. It took roughly a year to expand to its second city, and now it needed just five months for its third. The company has also been successful at reaching locals, with over just 10 percent of users coming from out of town, according to YPlan co-founder and CEO Rytis Vitkauskas.

“The scaling model is already starting to work,” he said in an interview. “When we decided to go into SF, we only needed to hire a couple extra guys.”

YPlan launched in 2012 and raised a $12 million Series A last June. It has achieved over 500,000 total downloads and boasts 20 percent penetration among smartphone users in London.

The company got its start in London because its founders already had a network of potential hires and investors from working in the city, but Vitkauskas and his co-founder are now mostly based in New York.

➤ YPlan for iOS | Android

└ Tags: syndicated
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Daily Dose for Tue, Feb 25: Far Far Away

Feb25
by Sindy Cator on February 25, 2014 at 8:00 am
Posted In: Around the Web


Far Far Away by Tom McNeal
Reviewed by Elizabeth from Oregon City, Oregon.

└ Tags: syndicated
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