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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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Offline over the weekend? Catch up with the tech news you missed right here…

Feb24
by Sindy Cator on February 24, 2014 at 12:13 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider, Roundups

coffee 520x245 Offline over the weekend? Catch up with the tech news you missed right here...

It’s that time of the week where we grab a photograph of a cup of coffee from our image library. Why? Because the idea is that you put your feet up with a nice hot drink and catch up on what you might have missed over the weekend from The Next Web and beyond.

Regardez-vous… 

News from The Next Web over the weekend:

  • You should update your iPhones and iPads to iOS 7.0.6 for a crucial SSL security fix
  • Facebook testing a new Highlights feature on iOS to showcase your friend’s life events
  • WhatsApp is down due to server issues [Update: Now working after 4-hour outage]
  • Samsung Gear 2 and Gear 2 Neo smartwatches will arrive in April, dropping Android for Tizen
  • Huawei TalkBand B1 is a fitness and sleep tracker with a Bluetooth 4.1 earpiece for wireless calls
  • Huawei launches pocket-friendly MediaPad X1 and M1 Android tablets at MWC 2014
  • Huawei unveils the Ascend G6, a skinny 4G-enabled Android smartphone
  • Mozilla is bringing Firefox OS to new markets, as Alcatel unveils first tablet and new smartphones
  • Lenovo debuts its DOit suite of apps to help protect, share, and manage your digital information

Good reads:

  • Meet Joseph Tame: Marathon runner, art runner, iRunner
  • Lessons for Facebook: How WhatsApp went from red-hot to passé in Southeast Asia
  • User-hostile vs. user-friendly email signup tactics: Which works best?
  • 6 things you may not know about Tencent
  • Why you should pay attention to these 8 emerging tech hubs
  • 5 reasons you should stop hiring based on titles

From beyond The Next Web:

  • On the Timing of iOS’s SSL Vulnerability and Apple’s ‘Addition’ to the NSA’s PRISM Program [Daring Fireball]
  • Apple promises fix ‘very soon’ for Macs with failed encryption [Reuters]
  • Netflix to Pay Comcast for Smoother Streaming [Wall Street Journal]
  • Are the robots about to rise? Google’s new director of engineering thinks so… [The Guardian]

Image credit: Shutterstock

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

WhatsApp will add voice calls in Q2 2014 after passing 465 million monthly active users

Feb24
by Sindy Cator on February 24, 2014 at 11:46 am
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, MWC

470737655 520x245 WhatsApp will add voice calls in Q2 2014 after passing 465 million monthly active users

WhatsApp founder Jan Koum today has revealed that voice calling will be added to the cross-platform messaging service during Q2 2014.

While we don’t know which platform it will be landing on first, or exactly how it will be implemented, it signals the first significant evolution of WhatsApp following its $19 billion acquisition by Facebook.

The feature is hardly original though. BlackBerry Messenger (BBM), Line, Skype and many other messaging apps have offered voice calls for some time, although given the size of WhatsApp – it now stands at 330 million daily and 465 million monthly active users, Koum announced today – it’s important for the service to maintain its rapid growth by offering a feature set comparative to its rivals.

WhatsApp is known for its simplicity, however. The app is approachable because it replaces SMS without bolting on too many peripheral, experimental or money-making features. During a panel at Mobile World Congress, Koum said these “core values” would be preserved when voice calling is patched in.

Read Next: Lessons for Facebook: How WhatsApp went from red-hot to passé in Southeast Asia / WhatsApp is hugely popular, but it doesn’t dominate the world quite like you might think

Visit our MWC 2014 page for more coverage

Image Credit: STAN HONDA/AFP/Getty Images

└ Tags: syndicated
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Hands-on with the Nokia X Android-based smartphone

Feb24
by Sindy Cator on February 24, 2014 at 11:25 am
Posted In: Around the Web, Gadgets, Mobile

NokiaX 3 520x245 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone

Nokia finally launching an Android-based handset might not be the biggest surprise given the number of leaks leading up to Mobile World Congress this year, but there’s a world of difference between leaks and rumors and using the device in the flesh, so we went hands on to see what the device had to offer at first glance.

With just a 1GHz processor on board, I hadn’t expected it to perform particularly snappily – and indeed, it’s not quite as fast as a high-end smartphone when navigating around, but then, priced at less than €90, it doesn’t attract the same kind of cash commitment either.

That’s not to say it lags horribly in normal use either. We’ll need to take a more detailed look at the device to see how well it handles multitasking when you have lots of apps open at once.

NokiaX 730x823 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone

Like the Asha range, it features the Fastlane UI that provides a chronological list of everything you’ve done with the phone so you can quickly jump to anything you need to access again.  I actually really like this feature, so it’s good to see it making its way up the hardware chain a little and outside of Asha-branded devices.

Rather than adopt the standard Android home screen, the page is split into Live Tile-esque icons, although they’re not actually live tiles and won’t update automatically in the same way.

NokiaX rear 730x507 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone

Similarly, rather than have a sea of apps and numerous possible home screens, scrolling left or right from the main screen takes you to the Fastlane UI. Carry on scrolling and you’re returned back to the main home screen. No matter which direction you go in, the home screen has infinite horizontal scroll between them.

It makes sense that Nokia would want to differentiate the experience of using a Nokia X from any other Android smartphone through a custom UI, and as the devices are aimed primarily at growth  markets, there’s a good chance that this will be the first fully-fledged smartphone that some users will touch. So it equally makes sense to keep the main menus and home screens straightforward and uncluttered.

NokiaX side 220x362 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone

Similarly, it’s no prom queen in terms of size or weight but it’s also not excessive by any means, and whether you like the slightly blocky industrial design of the device is down to you – either way, it’s very much in keeping with the rest of Nokia’s line-up. It also doesn’t feel quite as cheap as I feared it might with its all plastic chassis and relatively low price tag.

Unfortunately, with patchy WiFi on the show floor at MWC 2014 and no opportunity to see what photographs look like on a larger screen, it’s hard to say how well the camera perfoms – we’ll have to wait to get a full review model for more on this, but don’t go expecting Lumia-like performance.

The XL offers much of the same experience – with little to no obvious differences when actually using it from the Nokia X – but with a larger 5-inch display.

Overall, the Nokia X family is an interesting development for the Finnish company – and at first look seems like it could satisfy some buyers’ desire for a Nokia branded Android phone. However, if what you really wanted was a Lumia camera phone running the Android OS, then you’re left wanting.  We’ll have a full review up of the Nokia X devices in the near future.

NokiaX rear cover 520x680 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone
NokiaX 3 520x201 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone
NokiaX 520x586 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone
Nokiax2 520x503 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone

Visit our MWC 2014 page for more coverage

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

Hands-on with the Nokia X Android-based smartphone

Feb24
by Sindy Cator on February 24, 2014 at 11:25 am
Posted In: Around the Web, Gadgets, Mobile

NokiaX 3 520x245 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone

Nokia finally launching an Android-based handset might not be the biggest surprise given the number of leaks leading up to Mobile World Congress this year, but there’s a world of difference between leaks and rumors and using the device in the flesh, so we went hands on to see what the device had to offer at first glance.

With just a 1GHz processor on board, I hadn’t expected it to perform particularly snappily – and indeed, it’s not quite as fast as a high-end smartphone when navigating around, but then, priced at less than €90, it doesn’t attract the same kind of cash commitment either.

That’s not to say it lags horribly in normal use either. We’ll need to take a more detailed look at the device to see how well it handles multitasking when you have lots of apps open at once.

NokiaX 730x823 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone

Like the Asha range, it features the Fastlane UI that provides a chronological list of everything you’ve done with the phone so you can quickly jump to anything you need to access again.  I actually really like this feature, so it’s good to see it making its way up the hardware chain a little and outside of Asha-branded devices.

Rather than adopt the standard Android home screen, the page is split into Live Tile-esque icons, although they’re not actually live tiles and won’t update automatically in the same way.

NokiaX rear 730x507 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone

Similarly, rather than have a sea of apps and numerous possible home screens, scrolling left or right from the main screen takes you to the Fastlane UI. Carry on scrolling and you’re returned back to the main home screen. No matter which direction you go in, the home screen has infinite horizontal scroll between them.

It makes sense that Nokia would want to differentiate the experience of using a Nokia X from any other Android smartphone through a custom UI, and as the devices are aimed primarily at growth  markets, there’s a good chance that this will be the first fully-fledged smartphone that some users will touch. So it equally makes sense to keep the main menus and home screens straightforward and uncluttered.

NokiaX side 220x362 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone

Similarly, it’s no prom queen in terms of size or weight but it’s also not excessive by any means, and whether you like the slightly blocky industrial design of the device is down to you – either way, it’s very much in keeping with the rest of Nokia’s line-up. It also doesn’t feel quite as cheap as I feared it might with its all plastic chassis and relatively low price tag.

Unfortunately, with patchy WiFi on the show floor at MWC 2014 and no opportunity to see what photographs look like on a larger screen, it’s hard to say how well the camera perfoms – we’ll have to wait to get a full review model for more on this, but don’t go expecting Lumia-like performance.

The XL offers much of the same experience – with little to no obvious differences when actually using it from the Nokia X – but with a larger 5-inch display.

Overall, the Nokia X family is an interesting development for the Finnish company – and at first look seems like it could satisfy some buyers’ desire for a Nokia branded Android phone. However, if what you really wanted was a Lumia camera phone running the Android OS, then you’re left wanting.  We’ll have a full review up of the Nokia X devices in the near future.

NokiaX rear cover 520x680 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone
NokiaX 3 520x201 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone
NokiaX 520x586 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone
Nokiax2 520x503 Hands on with the Nokia X Android based smartphone

Visit our MWC 2014 page for more coverage

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

Sony will launch its Core and SmartBand fitness tracker with new Lifelog app in March

Feb24
by Sindy Cator on February 24, 2014 at 9:46 am
Posted In: Around the Web, Gadgets, MWC, Product Updates

smartbandlo 520x245 Sony will launch its Core and SmartBand fitness tracker with new Lifelog app in March

Sony unveiled its Core fitness tracker and SmartBand accessory at CES last month, but today it has a global release date: March 2014.

The hardware hasn’t changed since the original reveal, although Sony did expand upon what it’s describing as the ‘SmartWear Experience’. This centers on the upcoming Lifelog app, which will give Android users the ability to review their activity, where they’ve traveled and progress towards specified goals.

Sony says the hardware will also embrace actions outside of the fitness space too, such as places the user has visited and music, books and video games they’ve been listening, reading or playing recently.

smartbandapp 730x546 Sony will launch its Core and SmartBand fitness tracker with new Lifelog app in March
The Japanese firm also showed some concept designs for third-party accessories from the likes of Elecom, Simplism and Colors. While these weren’t confirmed for a retail release, Sony did reveal a limited edition of the SmartBand that will coincide with the FIFA World Cup later this year.

When combined, the Core and SmartBand will also measure sleep patterns, vibrate when a paired smartphone exceeds a certain distance and alert you to incoming calls, texts, tweets and ‘likes’.

Visit our MWC 2014 page for more coverage

➤ Sony SmartWear Experience (Blog Post)

└ Tags: syndicated
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