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!! .

Friday, 10 October 2014

Barcelona comedy club only makes you pay for the jokes you laugh at

Barcelona comedy club only makes you pay for the jokes you laugh at

Sean Buckley
Engadget

Ever regret buying a ticket to a comedy show that just wasn't funny? Some day, you might not: the Teatreneu, a theater in Barcelona, Spain, has changed from charging for admission to charging by laugh. The theater has outfitted each of its seats with a front-facing iPad and PayPerLaugh, an app that uses facial recognition to detect smiles. Ever joke you smile at costs 0.30 euros (about $0.38), with a maximum charge of 24 euros per show (about $30). The theater says that ticket prices have actually gone up as a result -- monetary proof that its productions are legitimately funny. Teatreneu says its system is being copied in other venues throughout Spain, too. Would you prefer to pay by laugh? Skip through the break to the comments and let us know what you think.
Source: YouTube

Find Out Why Taylor Swift Chooses Friends Over Guys

Find Out Why Taylor Swift Chooses Friends Over Guys


Taylor Swift hasn't been with anyone since Harry Styles, but she's actually not that bothered by her lack of a love life. In a new interview with People, the singer revealed that her friends are "the most important thing" to her right now — way more important than finding any new guy.
"They are trustworthy and know me and like me for who I actually am," she said.
In fact, she basically said her Fourth of July party with her girlfriends was the most fun thing ever.
"Everybody in the group was so happy. Seeing your friends all together, and seeing your friends bond and everyone smiling and laughing together was the coolest thing I could have expected of that trip," she gushed.
Sounds like she had a better time with her girls than her she had on her vacation in Aspen with Harry!

Apple's designer accuses copycats of theft

Apple's designer accuses copycats of theft


Apple's lead designer Sir Jonathan "Jony" Ive has hit out at companies he believes copy his firm's products.
Speaking at an event hosted by Vanity Fair, the 47-year-old said: "I don't see it as flattery, I see it as theft."
He was responding to a question from the audience about Chinese tech maker Xiaomi, but was referring to Apple's competition in general.
Xiaomi has been accused of copying before, but the company has said the suggestion was "sensationalist".
Hugo Barra, who was poached by Xiaomi from Google, said the Chinese firm was "an incredibly innovative company".
But the company has come under fire from people who believed its designs appeared similar to Apple's iPhones and iPads.
Sir Jonathan, who was born in Chingford, London, was at the San Francisco event to discuss his career.
But when asked about his feelings towards copycat manufacturers, he said: "I have to be honest the last thing I think is, 'Oh, that is flattering.'
"All those weekends I could've been home with my family - I think it's theft and lazy. I don't think it's OK at all."
Learn from mistakes
However, some argue that Apple itself is not immune from picking up design and hardware inspiration from its competitors.
"Every Apple product is an evolution of a product that has come before it," said Chris Green, principal technology analyst at Davis Murphy Group.
"They are rarely the first to come to market with a product.
Xiaomi's Mi 4 smartphone has been compared to the iPhone 4
"They sit back and see what mistakes happen. That's what they did with the iPod - they let others steam in with early mp3 players and make a mess of them."
But Mr Green said he felt the Apple designer's comments were a sign that Apple wanted to be seen as vigorously defending its work.
"When it comes to defending intellectual property based around software and appearance, it's very hard to defend that in court and to argue your position over that - rather than something that is more physical like a chip.
"They have to be seen to be defending their position."

Taylor Swift Looked Awesome Wearing Bold Neon Pink Sweater In London

Taylor Swift Looked Awesome Wearing Bold 

Neon Pink Sweater In London


Friday, October 10 2014:

Credit:Splash News
Taylor Swift looked so pretty wearing a bold neon pink sweater and khaki skinnies while out and about in London. We love how she gave her look an added edge with some black rhinestone-studded flats!


Taylor Swift’s Perfect Red Lip In Paris Copy Her Color!

Taylor Swift’s Perfect Red Lip In Paris Copy Her Color


A little rain couldn’t stop Taylor Swift from rocking the most perfect red lip of all time! (Take that, Kanye!) Get her favorite red lip crayon below!


Taylor rocks a red lip like no other celeb. Along with her bold lip color, she also rocked her cat eye liner.

Taylor Swift Reveals Favorite Red Lip Color

Taylor told People magazine in May about her favorite red:
 
Nars
“Right now [I'm using] Dragon Girl by NARS … I’ll go through different phases with makeup and always try new things. Except I never really get too far from red lipstick, do I? I guess I just think my face looks worse without it. That’s pretty much the only rationale behind it.”


Taylor Swift Teased New Announcement on Instagram And Clarified it On Twitter Herself

Taylor Swift Teased New Announcement on Instagram And Clarified it On Twitter Herself

Billboard 

Taylor Swift is teasing a new puzzle on Instagram
Alongside the message, Swift posted a photo with "5" and "Woods" with a pinterest-worthy picture of a forest with many fans speculating that means that the next tune would be the already-discussed "Out of the Woods," dropping in five days. 
Correction: Originally this post had a headline touting a new single by Swift. A rep for Swift told Billboard that that conclusion isn't true, so fans will just have to wait five days to see what Swift's news is. 
Update: Taylor Swift has clarified the Instagram news herself on Twitter. Originally reported as a new "single," Swift clarified it's not a "single" but a song.

Whatever Swift's announcement winds up being, we can't wait to hear more from1989.

Sony cuts the price of its 'Digital Paper' and now it's only $1,000

Sony cuts the price of its 'Digital Paper' and now it's only $1,000

Richard Lawler
Engadget

If the only thing keeping you from Sony's electronic paper replacement was the price, you're in luck. According to The eBook Reader, these days anyone can grab the flexible 13.3-inch E Ink display from Sony's online store (previously it was restricted to legal or banking professionals), and the price just recently fell $100. We're still not sure if dropping under the $1,000 barrier is enough to make reading PDFs and signing A4-sized documents is enough to make it worthwhile, but there are probably some folks who will find a use. Sure it doesn't do color, but the display is high res (1,200 x 1,600) and it has a three week battery life. Who needs two Xbox Ones anyway?
Source: Sony Store

Google Now gets a conversational search upgrade, learns to use OpenTable

Google Now gets a conversational search upgrade, learns to use OpenTable

Sean Buckley
Engadget


Nothing makes voice recognition software shine more than good conversational algorithms -- and the natural search function in Google Now just got a minor upgrade. Not only can use your hotel confirmation to find nearby restaurants, but now you can casually ask it to show you the resturant's menu or book a reservation via OpenTable. You'll still have to do a little work to complete the reservation, however (Google only gets the booking started), and it's still perfect: if a given restaurant doesn't support the OpenTable or doesn't have a menu online, the process kind of falls apart. Still, it's a nice upgrade, assuming you've already come to terms with the fact that Google's algorithms are skimming your email.
[Image credit: Google]
Source: Google

Taylor Swift Is Releasing a Harry Styles-Inspired Song Next Week and Fans Can't Wait

Taylor Swift Is Releasing a Harry Styles-Inspired Song Next Week and Fans Can't Wait


Our Swifty queen dropped a (very obvious) clue that she will be releasing a song next week, in five days to be exact. But not just any song. It's one of the songs that's supposedly about her relationship with Harry Styles and is titled "Out of the Woods."

According to the Rolling Stone piece on Swift and her new album 1989, "Out of the Woods" is the "frantic tale of a relationship" that Taylor described as an everyday struggle.
"Forgetting making plans for life. We were just trying to make it to next week," she said.
"Out of the Woods" is also the song that references a secret trip to the emergency room after a snowmobile accident with (assumed to be Harry), with lyrics like: "Remember when you hit the brakes too soon/ Twenty stitches in a hospital room."
Needless to say, fans are going apes--t over the news that not only are we getting a new Taylor Swift song in five days, but it's one of the tracks that fans have been dying to hear since the Rolling Stone interview.

A Nokia Lumia 1020 powers this automated 3D-printed telescope

A Nokia Lumia 1020 powers this automated 3D-printed telescope

Mariella Moon
Engadget 

There are many, many people who've always wanted a powerful space telescope in their backyards but can't exactly afford one. For avid makers and DIY enthusiasts, at least, that's not such an absurd dream anymore -- not when someone has designed an automated 3D-printed telescope that's powered by a commercially available phone: the Nokia Lumia 1020. The device is called Ultrascope, and it stands one meter tall when assembled, with a base that measures 65 centimeters wide. It was created by Open Space Agency founder James Parr, who promised to upload the current design and future iterations to his organization's website once the ongoing beta testing's done.
Here's how the robotic telescope works: first, your Windows laptop locates the ISS and forwards its location to Ultrascope's Arduino shield to move its motors. After the telescope positions itself, the 1020 starts snapping images and sends them to the cloud for post-processing. Parr hasn't revealed how powerful Ultrascope is exactly, but it's worth noting that the 1020's 41-megapixel camera blew us away when we tested it. It'll sadly take a while before you can find out for yourself, though, as OSA's busy working with Microsoft at the moment, developing an app that connects Lumia phones to the device.

Apple fashion push puts its Watch on the cover of Vogue China

Apple fashion push puts its Watch on the cover of Vogue China

Mariella Moon
Engadget


Would you buy an Apple Watch if the fashion industry names it the "it gadget" of 2015, even if couldn't care less about what it can do? See, it's slated to grace the cover of Vogue China's November issue, merely a month after it made its first public appearance at Paris Fashion Week -- so clearly, Cupertino wants to present it as a chic device for the tech-savvy fashionista. According to Vogue China EIC Angelica Cheung, she met with Apple CEO Tim Cook and head designer Jony Ive way before the watch's September 9 unveiling, hinting that the company always meant to put some focus on fashion when it comes to marketing this particular product. If you're wondering which variant gets the honor, it's the fancy 18-karat gold one (check out the image after the break), though you'll see other versions in the editorial spread inside.

Source: Business of Fashion

There Are Now More Mobile Connections Than People in the World

There Are Now More Mobile Connections Than People in the World

Lauren Walker
Newsweek 


Active mobile devices now outnumber people for the first time.

The U.S. Census Bureau says that there are nearly 7.2 billion people on Earth, growing at a rate of 2 people per second. But according to GSMA Intelligence—a global trade association conducting real-time mobile network analysis—there are now more than 7.2 billion active SIM cards in the world and the number is increasing five times faster than the human population.

Since around half of the world population has access to a mobile phone, where are these active SIM cards coming from?

Some people have more than one cell phone, possibly for business, while others have a tablet or similar device that uses mobile data. The number of mobile connections is expected to continue trending upward as the technology becomes even more integral to modern life and is adopted by a more people in the developing world.

But another game changer is the increasing number of active connections between machines (medical appliances and cars, for instance). They make up a quarter of a billion of the world’s SIM cards at the moment—a number that is expected to skyrocket as the Internet of Everything connects more of our devices.

But be careful, these connections come with a risk. Just ask Dick Cheney.