5 SECONDS OF SUMMER

Michael Clifford Fires Back at Abigail Breslin's Diss Track

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

Stars Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

GMAIL BLOCKED IN CHINA

5-Minute Outfit Idea

5-Minute Outfit Idea: An Effortless, Polished Look to Try This Weekend.

Facebook suffers outage

Facebook suffers outage affecting users worldwide!! .

Monday 21 July 2014

Beauty apps show 'before and after,' glamorize selfies

Beauty apps show 'before and after,' glamorize selfies
By Natasha 
BakerReuters 




TORONTO (Reuters) - Women looking to enhance their image but wary of spending money on expensive cosmetics can take the guesswork out of finding a new look, or improving selfies, with the latest beauty apps.
Consumers can experiment with different looks in the apps that act like augmented reality mirrors.
With the Beauty Mirror app, which uses filters, people can see how they would look with fewer wrinkles, bigger lips or lifted eyebrows in a real-time photograph or video.

“Our idea was to apply a subtle, realistic change to a person’s reflection so that when someone put it on Facebook no one would know it was an altered video,” said Parham Aarabi, the CEO of Toronto-based ModiFace, which created the app.

The app uses facial tracking technology to apply anti-aging and beauty enhancements, such as a lip enlargement, to the person's image in real time.
“They look the same but everything is just a little better - their wrinkles are gone, their eyes are retouched,” said Aarabi.

In addition to enhancing self-portraits, Aarabi said the company plans to use the technology to help skin care and cosmetic companies to showcase their products.
“Selfie apps have become all the rage. The ability to change 2-D photos before uploading them to Facebook has been really popular, but now people can take video and touch it up using the app too,” he said.
A similar app called Makeup Genius, created by the France-based cosmetics group L'Oreal, lets users change the colors of products they have applied like lipstick and eye shadow in real time so they can test them before buying.

Both Beauty Mirror and Makeup Genius are free for iPhone and iPad and available worldwide. Most looks within Beauty Mirror are free, but some advanced customized options cost $1.99.
Sarah Maria, a California-based body image expert and author of "Love Your Body, Love Your Life," said people are constantly bombarded with enhanced images in films and magazines that portray unrealistic standards of beauty.

“The apps probably add to the already prevalent idea that the face needs to be enhanced to look younger or thinner,” said Maria, who added it could also contribute to negative body image among those already struggling.

Aarabi said consumers are already improving their self-portraits before posting them to Facebook or Instagram, a trend he believes will grow.

“Today, people care about enhancing how they look before they take a photo,” he added. “But in the future, I can see a scenario that people care less about putting on makeup or skin-care products before they take a photo or video, knowing that they can apply one-click effects after the video is taken."

Facebook's new Save feature lets you read top ten lists later

Facebook's new Save feature lets you read top ten lists later
Sean Buckley
Engadget 


Dying to know what the top ten best shows from the 1990s are, but just don't have time to click through that Facebook link? That's okay -- the social network's app is about to get a new feature: Save. Think of it like Pocket, but just for Facebook. Links, movies, places, music and more can now be added to a "saved" list by tapping on the item's options drop-down, enabling them to be viewed later through the app's "more" tab. Saved items (like an interesting restaurant) can be re-shared to your friends, and if you forget to check your saved items for too long, Facebook will remind you. The update is rolling out to iOS, Android and web users over the next few days. A simple, but welcome change. Skip on past the break to see the new feature in action.

Companies have a tricky new way to track your movement across the web

Companies have a tricky new way to track your movement across the web
Russell Brandom
The Verge



Researchers at Princeton have uncovered a new web-tracking method that's nearly impossible to block. It's called "canvas fingerprinting," and can potentially follow users between sites even if they've disabled more conventional methods like cookies and isn't logged into Facebook. Instead, the tactic works by asking the browser to draw a hidden image, and using that image to track the unique properties of the browser.
Researchers found the tactic being used on five percent of the top 1000 sites on the website, including Whitehouse.gov, YouPorn, The Blaze, and the official website for the State of California.

The source behind the fingerprinting may be AddThis, a suite of plug-in share tools that is found on many of the named sites. AddThis has been testing canvas fingerprinting on certain sites as part of the company's broader search for alternatives to cookie tracking. It's still unclear how effective the tactic, with one survey only showing a 90 percent success rate, and AddThis says the fingerprinting trials may soon end since the results are "not uniquely identifying enough." Still, as concerns over web privacy grow, it's a reminder that simply blocking cookies may not be enough.

Apple asks suppliers to produce up to 80 million large-screen iPhones: WSJ

Apple asks suppliers to produce up to 80 million large-screen iPhones: WSJ
Reuters

- Apple Inc has asked suppliers to manufacture between 70 million and 80 million of its two forthcoming large-screen iPhones by the end of the year, its largest initial production run of iPhones, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

Its forecast for the iPhones with 4.7-inch (11.9-cm) and 5.5-inch (14-cm) displays is much larger than the initial order last year of between 50 million and 60 million for iPhone 5S and 5C models, the people told the Journal.

Foxconn and Pegatron Corp plan to start mass producing the 4.7-inch iPhone model next month, and Hon Hai Precision Industry Co Ltd, whose parent is Foxconn, will begin making the 5.5-inch version exclusively in September, the people said.

Both iPhone 6 screens will be larger than the 4.0-inch (10.2-cm) panels on Apple's existing iPhone 5S and 5C models.

The new phone models are also expected to feature metal cases similar to the iPhone 5S and likely come in multiple colors, the people said.

Both iPhone 6 screens are expected to use in-cell touch panel technology, built into the screen and allowing for thinner construction than with standard touch panel films, that was introduced with the iPhone 5, sources told Reuters in March.

There could be difficulties with in-cell production technology for the larger 5.5-inch size, one of the sources told Reuters then.

To factor in the possibility of a higher failure rate for displays, Apple has asked component makers to be prepared to make up to 120 million iPhones, the people told the Journal on Monday

Microsoft makes design central to its future

Microsoft makes design central to its future

RYAN NAKASHIMA
Associated Press


REDMOND, Wash. — Before Ralf Groene helped devise the look and feel of Microsoft's Surface tablet, he designed food — or "food concepts," he says, for people on the go. Among them: dried noodles that come wrapped around a pair of chopsticks; a tubular meal that can be pulled with two fingers from a car cup holder base; and a fork that squeezes out sauce
.
Though none of these ideas made it into production, the principles behind them can be applied to computing devices that fit into busy lives, says Groene, and they are just as varied as the ones Microsoft now uses to redesign all its software and devices.

"In a way, we've designed Surface with very similar principles," Groene said on a recent tour of the Surface lab on Microsoft's sprawling campus in Redmond, Washington. "Surface is trying to dissolve into your day."
Groene and his team designed the Surface to accompany its users everywhere. It can be used as a tablet-style news reader propped up on its kickstand while you eat your morning bowl of cereal, as a notepad to be scribbled on with a digital pen at a business meeting, and for watching a movie while sitting on your couch later in the day.

Microsoft is putting an emphasis on design excellence more than ever — to make its products more competitive with offerings from rivals Apple, Google, and Amazon and to prod its hardware making partners to dream up new, more innovative devices. In recent years, the software giant has put a priority on fashioning devices that work around people's lives, help reduce information overload and become intimate, personal and knowledgeable about their users.

And yes, Microsoft is even trying to make devices attractive, cool and desirable, top executives say.
Over the last four years, Microsoft has doubled the number of designers it employs to some 1,400. They have backgrounds as varied as filmmaking, food and footwear. While that pales in comparison to the 64,000 engineers who make up over half the company's workforce, designers are now shaping products, building user interfaces and mocking up devices with wood and 3-D printers.

"It used to be that engineers ruled the roost and engineers would bring in designers to make icons," says Joe Belfiore, Microsoft's corporate vice president overseeing personal computers, tablets and phones. "It's changed now."
Even as the company eliminates 18,000 jobs — most of them related to its purchase of Nokia's devices unit — Microsoft is empowering people like Belfiore and Groene to challenge conventional notions of what Windows devices can do.

Microsoft's new design ethos is a break from the past — a time, not long ago, when the company's software was largely a workplace necessity housed in functional plastic that was crafted by other companies.
It's no secret that Apple is the world's most beloved technology company in part because its devices are sleek, comfortable, and easy to use. And Microsoft now wants to infuse its products with the same qualities.
Designers today are woven into the process, from the early stages of product development to the way products are marketed to consumers, Belfiore says.

Microsoft has also recently elevated designers to more prominent leadership roles.
Take Albert Shum. A former designer for Nike, Shum was part of the team that revolutionized the Windows Phone software design to feature the boxy, "live tiles" that are central to the Windows 8 touch-based interface. Shum now heads "interaction design" for PC operating systems, Xbox game consoles, and phones, all of which were previously managed separately.

Microsoft's modern design philosophy draws upon the minimalist Bauhaus movement, which stresses function over ornamentation, while adding in clean typography and swooping motions. This common design language is key to making Microsoft's offerings seem like a related family of products and services.
With minimal market share in both tablets and phones, Microsoft has its work cut out for it. Yet a focus on design over compatibility under new CEO Satya Nadella means Microsoft can make products and services for non-Windows platforms, such as Apple's iOS and Google's Android, and still retain the look, feel and functionality of the Microsoft brand.

Steve Kaneko, a design manager who has been with Microsoft since 1991 and has worked on Office, Windows and other projects, said it's important for the company to not only design its products to work well on other platforms, but to talk about what design means to Microsoft.

That's become an easier conversation to have with top executives including Nadella, who took over as chief executive in February. It's a dialogue the company wants to start with consumers, Kaneko says.
As part of one noteworthy design project, the company plans to make greater use of the tiles in an update to the Windows 8.1 operating system. Pressing Start while in desktop mode will soon bring up several boxy live tiles in the pop-up menu, from which users can launch touch-first apps in the traditional mouse-and-keyboard environment — a feature it previewed at its Build developer conference in April.

Groene's Surface team already showed off design improvements with the Surface Pro 3, released in June. Clicking the device's accompanying pen launches the OneNote note-taking app, so it's as ready as a yellow legal pad for scribbling. And a new bar magnet on the keyboard cover and a kickstand with a wider range of motion helped created a sturdier foundation for typing on a lap.
Another problem the design team is working on: fixing the "hamburger" icon, says Shum.
The icon, featured in Windows Phone and the Xbox One, has three stacked lines resembling two buns and a patty. It mostly acts as a "junk drawer" for random menu items, so it's not clear what you'll get when you click on it, Shum says.
On the Xbox One controller for instance, a physical hamburger button represents "enter" on a virtual keyboard. In games like "Titanfall," it brings up a menu of various in-game options. In Windows Phone's Cortana app, though, a hamburger button will bring up options for interacting with the digital assistant.
Shum says his team wants to make the icon work similarly across devices. A hint: it will act like a signpost in a city with many neighborhoods. "It should always be this thing that allows you to go to different parts of the city," he says.

The company is also working to expand the use of the Cortana digital assistant, which is active on some Windows Phone devices. The voice-activated persona is meant to offer help proactively — giving you a snapshot of traffic on the route from the office to your home when the workday ends, for instance.
Kat Holmes, a principal designer who helped design Cortana, is working on ways that it might work in other Microsoft devices, from PCs to the Xbox. The guiding principle, which adheres closely to Microsoft's new philosophy, is to help the user in various ways depending on the situation.

Israel strikes hospital, houses; Gaza death toll passes 570

Israel strikes hospital, houses; Gaza death toll passes 570

The Palestinian death toll in an Israeli offensive against Islamist militants in the Gaza Strip passed 570 on Monday as Israeli shells struck a hospital, residential homes were bombed, and the army said it had killed at least 10 gunmen who'd tunneled into Israel. More than 570 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli strikes, most of them civilians, according to Gaza health officials, and more than 3,000 have been injured. 

Tens of thousands of Gazans have fled the fighting Israeli shells hit the Shuada al-Aqsa hospital in the town of Deir al-Balah on Monday, killing four people and wounding 70, the Gaza Health Ministry said. Hospital staff said that shells hit the third floor, which houses operating rooms and an intensive care unit. 

Two patients were killed in their beds.

You Do Not Have To Be a Muslim To Stand up For Gaza You Just Have To Be a Human Wake Up world!

Hasbro Is Cool With Fans Designing Their Own 3D-Printed Toys

Hasbro Is Cool With Fans Designing Their Own 3D-Printed Toys:

Andrew Liszewski
Gizmodo 


The advent of online file sharing made it easy for anyone to copy and distribute media for free, and many feel—and fear—that 3D printing will eventually do the same for physical products. So it's surprisingly refreshing to hear that a corporation like Hasbro has decided to embrace 3D printing, and will work with Shapeways to allow fans to design and sell their own toys based on the company's properties.

Timed to correspond with the start of Comic-Con later this week, this morning the two companies officially unveiled SuperFanArt, a dedicated website that will allow fans and artists to showcase their creations based on existing Hasbro toy lines, starting with My Little Pony. The site isn't just a place for amateur designers to show off their creations, though. They'll actually be able to sell them to the public, produced through Shapeways' existing 3D printing infrastructure.

That being said, SuperFanArt isn't going to be a complete free-for-all with anyone being able to design and sell bootleg My Little Pony figurines. The featured artists and their creations will be individually approved and curated, so for the time being you can probably think of this partnership as Hasbro testing the 3D printing waters. But the fact that the toymaker is officially allowing fans to design and sell their own My Little Pony figures, instead of simply demanding that Shapeways remove existing creations from its online catalog, is pretty exciting.

And if SuperFanArt ends up being a success, there's no reason to think that Hasbro won't give the green light to fan creations based on its other properties too. Who hasn't thought that Optimus Prime would be an even greater leader with a majestic flowing beard and mustache? I can't be the only one who'd buy that figure.

Actor Tyler Posey to host Teen Choice Awards

Actor Tyler Posey to host Teen Choice Awards

Associated Press 


BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Actor Tyler Posey will host Teen Choice 2014, with musical groups Magic and Rixton performing on the show that awards popular teens in television, music, film, sports and fashion.
The show airs Aug. 10 on Fox. Winners are determined by online fan voting.
Posey stars on "Teen Wolf." He won a Teen Choice Award last year as male summer TV star.

Batman will not appear in Fox's 'Gotham' series

Batman will not appear in Fox's 'Gotham' series
ALICIA RANCILIO 
Associated Press 
Richard Shotwell, InvisionBenjamin McKenzie stars as Detective James Gordon on 'Gotham'

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Yes, the new Fox series "Gotham" will feature a young Bruce Wayne, but don't expect him to turn into the caped crusader.

Creator Bruno Heller told journalists Sunday at the Television Critics Association summer press tour that "If there is a superhero on this show, it's Gotham."

"To me, heroes are more interesting than superheroes," he said, "because the difference is superheroes do the impossible, and drama is really about the physically possible. This is about people and people trying to overcome real problems versus trying to learn how to fly."

"Gotham" stars Ben McKenzie as Detective James Gordon. Heller says he's "the moral lynchpin of the show. If you look at the mythology, he's the guy that creates Batman or gives Batman permission to exist in that world."

Richard Shotwell, InvisionRobin Lord Taylor is slated to appear as the Penguin on 'Gotham'

We also meet the future Penguin, future Riddler, future Catwoman and future Joker.

There's a new villain called Fish Mooney, played by Jada Pinkett Smith. The possibility she will evolve into another character from the story's mythology was teased at Sunday's panel.

Season one, says Heller, will focus on the rise of the Penguin, played by Robin Lord Taylor, and his power struggle with Fish Mooney.
"Gotham" is scheduled to premiere Sept. 22 on Fox.

Most Stylish Selfie of the Week

Most Stylish Selfie of the Week


Credit: Twitter
Demi Lovato shared a selfie on Twitter showcasing her new haircut, and fans are totally obsessed with her layered, shoulder-length 'do. Her purple ombre is still going strong, but she added some major texture and volume to her bangs and shorter strands.
Credit: Instagram
Fifth Harmony's Camila Cabello looked so funny showing off a silly face selfie on Instagram! fans love her gorgeous powder blue shirt with its crochet detailed sleeves, and her hair and makeup are perfect too!










Credit: Instagram
Little Mix's Perrie Edwards showcased her glossy makeup perfectly in a cool black and white selfie. Even without color in the photo, Perrie's  lipstick and eye makeup are highlighted in the shot, which also features pretty rays of sunlight.


Credit: Twitter
Can a baby be the most stylish star of the day? He can if he's Niall Horan's nephew Theo Horan! We decided to dedicate the day's stylish selfie title to Theo in honor of his first birthday today.


Credit: Instagram
Bella Thorne looked absolutely cool in new selfie she shared while at an oceanside photo shoot.

Credit: Instagram
Harry Styles looked cool rocking a printed shirt and wearing a turban-style headband to keep back his messy hair in a new photo posted on One Direction's Instagram page!


Credit: Instagram 
Ariana Grande's latest Instagram pic has us seeing double!

Credit: Instagram 
Did Taylor Swift get a whole new hairstyle? She showed off a cool new Instagram pic where her hair looks green on top and fiery red ombre at the ends! Tay explained in the photo's caption that it was actually the beautiful sunset making her hair look so colorful

Find Out Why Miley Cyrus' Fans Have BeenWorried:

Find Out Why Miley Cyrus' Fans Have BeenWorried:


Another death hoax has hit the Internet, and this time Miley Cyrus is the victim. While you may have heard reports that Miley passed away this weekend, those rumors are absolutely false. 
Fans worried after Miley didn't post anything online for a few days — which, considering her recentInstagram obsession, seemed kind of strange — but a Facebook hoax really sparked the gossip. A link with the headline "{SHOCKING} Miley Cyrus Found Dead In Her Los Angeles Home!" quickly spread the fake news.
Soon, people on Facebook and Twitter were freaking out about what happened to Miley.
No worries, because the story is entirely fabricated. But according to Hollywood Life, Miley is not only alive and well — she thinks it's a funny joke.
The source said, “She is aware of the death hoax and thought it was actually pretty funny. By not responding, she thinks it is that much more of a joke because people are continuing to believe it.”

MIT's new robot glove can give you extra fingers

MIT's new robot glove can give you extra fingers
Sean Buckley
Engadget 


Have you ever wondered if five fingers is really enough? The folks at MIT have. Researchers in the institute's department of mechanical engineering have created a robotic glove that adds two additional digits to the standard human claw, positioning two long fingers on either side of the hand. It's ridiculously easy to use, too. "You do not need to command the robot, but simply move your fingers naturally." Ford Professor of Engineering Harry Asada says. "Then the robotic fingers react and assist your fingers." The glove's movements are based on biomechanical synergy, the idea that each finger reacts to the movements of its peers - if you try to grasp a bottle, the glove's extra fingers will try to help.

The team crafted its synergy algorithm by outfitting a prototype with multiple positioning sensors and grasping assorted objects -- manually moving the glove's two extra "fingers" to help grab or support the object. This data was used to determined a set of specific movement patterns that the final product could use to identify what the user is attempting to do, allowing it to assume a position that naturally augments the wearer's normal hand movements. For now, the glove has to rely on this basic algorithm, but the team hopes to upgrade it to account for the amount of force applied. Future versions of the robotic fingers may also learn actively, adapting to a specific users' gesture style.

The prototype glove is pretty bulky, but MIT researchers are confident that it can be distilled down to a smaller, foldable size. "We could make this into a watch or a bracelet where the fingers pop up, and when he job is done, they come back into the watch," Asada explained. "Wearable robots are a way to bring the robot closer to our daily life."