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

Internet Meme Miss South Carolina

Daily Dose News Roundup

  • Netflix launches Playground, a standalone games app for children aged eight and under
  • Monzo is shutting down its US operation, and its European banking licence explains why
  • Anthropic cuts Claude subscribers off from OpenClaw in cost crackdown
  • Musk wants a million data centre satellites. Bezos wants 51,600. Scientists want to know why.
  • Google launches Gemma 4: four open-weight models from smartphones to workstations

Quotable

"The American sax icon Clarence Clemons has passed away. Once again, Bruce is loose." ~ 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

Microsoft taps DocuSign to let you digitally sign and send documents in Office 365

Feb17
by Sindy Cator on February 17, 2014 at 5:00 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider, Product Updates

Signature 520x245 Microsoft taps DocuSign to let you digitally sign and send documents in Office 365

Microsoft and DocuSign have announced a deal that will see Office 365 users able to digitally sign and send documents using the service without ever needing to print, scan or copy a document on paper ever again.

The companies announced the move on Monday, with DocuSign’s Jesper Frederikson, general manager of EMEA, telling The Next Web that it’s just the start of things, with future features and integrations planned:

We’re taking two flagship cloud services and doing a tight integration, we’re not just doing it at a tactical level… It’s the launch of a strategic relationship that will see good functionality come out in the first iteration and we’re committed to continuing to innovate and bring even more functionality by integrating our respective services.

From today, the DocuSign application will be embedded directly into Office 365 so Word, Outlook, SharePoint Online or SharePoint Server (on-premise) users can sign and stamp documents from within those applications.

Docusign 730x396 Microsoft taps DocuSign to let you digitally sign and send documents in Office 365

As well as integrating across the platform, DocuSign has also adopted the Windows Azure Active Directory so customers can use single sign-on, rather than needing separate credentials to use the platform.

Documents are automatically saved in Microsoft’s recently renamed cloud storage service OneDrive.

Signing documents using DocuSign is free for all Office 365 users, and there’s the option to send up to five documents for free. If you want to carry on and send more digitally signed documents after that, you’ll need to pay up.

Frederiksen told TNW that pricing varies according to the size of the organization, but that an average small-to-medium sized business would end up paying somewhere around £300 – £400 per year for unlimited digital signing and sending of documents.

Confirmation of the integration comes just days after DocuSign is said to be looking to raise up to $100 million in a deal that values the company at more than $1 billion, according to The Wall Street Journal‘s sources. Clearly, an ongoing agreement with Microsoft for integration into platforms like Office 365 is hardly likely to hurt these talks.

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

Ky. enrollment under Obamacare to hit 250,000 by month’s end

Feb17
by Sindy Cator on February 17, 2014 at 4:08 pm
Posted In: Affordable Care Act, Around the Web, Beshear, Kentucky, Obamacare

With six weeks until the March 31 deadline, more than 231,367 Kentuckians have enrolled in new health coverage, including Medicaid and private insurance, through the state’s online exchange kynect.ky.gov. If the current rate of enrollment continues, more than a quarter of a million Kentuckians should be enrolled by the end of February. The state didn’t disclose how many people […]

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

Ky. enrollment under Obamacare to hit 250,000 by month’s end

Feb17
by Sindy Cator on February 17, 2014 at 4:08 pm
Posted In: Affordable Care Act, Around the Web, Beshear, Kentucky, Obamacare

With six weeks until the March 31 deadline, more than 231,367 Kentuckians have enrolled in new health coverage, including Medicaid and private insurance, through the state’s online exchange kynect.ky.gov. If the current rate of enrollment continues, more than a quarter of a million Kentuckians should be enrolled by the end of February. The state didn’t disclose how many people […]

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

WikiLeaks now offers a search engine to help you find documents linked to any keyword

Feb17
by Sindy Cator on February 17, 2014 at 4:00 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider

Searching WikiLeaks for documents about a particular topic, event or individual just got a little bit easier. The whistle-blowing site now offers a search engine where you can query its entire database of published documents for a specific phrase or keyword of your choosing.

Just like Google, you can also refine the nature of your search for more accurate and focused results. Filters allow you to request that Wikileaks ignore documents with certain words, or only if your search terms appear within the body of the page. A series of check-boxes, meanwhile, gives you the ability to find files from a specific WikiLeaks release, such as the Kissinger Cables.

Screen Shot 2014 02 17 at 15.40.51 730x479 WikiLeaks now offers a search engine to help you find documents linked to any keyword

WikiLeaks was, until now, a daunting site for some people. A straight-forward search tool such as this one should go a long way to help newcomers leverage and learn from the mass of information that WikiLeaks now offers on the Web.

➤ WikiLeaks Search (Via Blog Post)

Image Credit: LEON NEAL/AFP/Getty Images

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

Rbutr makes it easier for anyone to flag misinformation on the Web

Feb17
by Sindy Cator on February 17, 2014 at 3:47 pm
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, Insider, Product Updates

20140217 153910 520x245 Rbutr makes it easier for anyone to flag misinformation on the Web

Rbutr has been working away for a number of years already, serving as a ‘peer review’ system for the Internet, letting users follow rebuttals for information contained within certain Web pages.

In a nutshell, Rbutr lets you follow inter-website disagreements. Found great evidence or counter-arguments to an online article? Rbutr helps you connects the dots.

Though Rbutr in its original guise was available for Chrome only, it has since been added to Firefox too. And now, Rbutr is making it easier to for anyone to access the service with a platform-independent toolbar, which is accessed simply by adding rbutr.com/ to the start of any URL. No plugins needed.

rbutr iFrame 730x47 Rbutr makes it easier for anyone to flag misinformation on the Web

When you do this, it essentially reloads the whole page within a separate Frame which displays the rebutting pages and any disputes. Though it can be a little fiddly manually adding this to the start of any URL, it’s certainly a step forward for the technology in terms of making it accessible to those who prefer not to use Chrome or Firefox.

So now if you see any spurious claims made in online publications, you can prefix the URL with a few characters and see whether anyone has taken umbrage.

rburs 730x420 Rbutr makes it easier for anyone to flag misinformation on the Web

But it’s not just about sifting through spurious journalistic claims. It can be used for anything really – for example, a subject-specific book on Amazon can be appended with counter-claims from across the Web too, which in turn can be voted up and down. And these rebuttals can be rebutted too.

rburs2 730x377 Rbutr makes it easier for anyone to flag misinformation on the Web

So Rbutr moves beyond the confines of a website’s comments section (if indeed it has one), and takes it cross-site and cross-platform. It also means it can’t be edited by a site’s owners.

Also, with the new URL in tow – e.g. http://rbutr.com/http://www.amazon.com/Radical-Abundance-Revolution-Nanotechnology-Civilization/dp/1610391136 – this can be shared across the social sphere, email, and elsewhere, with everyone clicking on that link landing on the Rbutr-ized version instead.

A secondary (but important) advantage here is that it also helps you share nonsense content (e.g. articles that make very dubious claims) without contributing to its online kudos. Google and social channels use buzz around an article to rank it, so you could be helping promote an article’s claims – even if your intention was the exact opposite. By sharing the Rbutr link instead, you sidestep this altogether.

There have been many such tools in the past that do this, such as the now-defunct Istyosty, a proxy Daily Mail browsing service. And, of course, DoNotLink offers such functionality more broadly across the Web’s content.

Rbutr is an interesting proposition for sure, it’s just a shame it’s only as powerful as the number of people using it – a tonne of spurious online content remains unchallenged. But by opening things up to every browser, it has gone some way towards spreading the good word.

➤ Rbutr

└ Tags: syndicated
  • Page 14,505 of 14,637
  • « First
  • «
  • 14,503
  • 14,504
  • 14,505
  • 14,506
  • 14,507
  • »
  • 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