I CALL BULL#&@ !!!

San Bullshit Sans font converts tech buzzwords into…well, you can probably work it out

sans bullshit sans in action San Bullshit Sans font converts tech buzzwords into…well, you can probably work it out

Build on the open-source Droid Sans font, Sans Bullshit Sans uses support for ligatures to cover the words on its banned list with “bullshit” signs written in the most feared typeface of all, Comic Sans.

You can get a live demo of the font at the Sans Bullshit Sans site, download it here and read an extensive breakdown of  how it was created. If there are terms you want translated that aren’t already on the list, you can submit them via GitHub.

My cat hates it when I sing to him or sing full stop! He will hate this new update that Spotify has announced!

Spotify desktop update brings Musixmatch integration for full song lyrics

Musixmatch Integration Hozier

Musixmatch was previously available as a Spotify app but now it’s fully baked in to the service’s desktop client.

To sing along, you’ll just need to select a song in the desktop app and hit the new Lyrics button. You can also search and browse popular lyrics from Spotify’s top songs using its Explore feature.

There’s also a new version of Friend Feed which makes it easier to see what other people are listening to. Scrolling down the sidebar shows the playlists, songs and artists your friends are checking out.

Desktop Browse 520x317 Spotify desktop update brings Musixmatch integration for full song lyrics

Along with the other changes to the desktop app, Spotify has introduced new daily viral charts which will show the most shared songs in the world as well as in your specific region. It’s also added indicators to all its charts to show what tracks are new and how they’re performing day by day.

If you’re not seeing the desktop app update yet, don’t worry. Spotify says the changes are rolling out gradually over the next few weeks.

Swipemy.pics…Love it!

SwipeMy.Pics Web-based Instagram viewer focuses your eyes on the image

Screen-Shot-2015-02-25-at-6.36.18-PM

ACNEa marketing and communications company, aims to create the go-to platform for Instagram joy with SwipeMy.Pics, a new Web app launched today, designed to let you view unadulterated Instagram images. SwipeMy.Pics is a free, lightweight app that works on all browsers and devices. Updates to the service are automatically incorporated with a browser refresh.  

SwipeMy.Pics revamps the Instagram experience to eliminate distracting elements from view and aims for a fresh design. Users can swipe through a gallery from left to right and zoom in on images, by either double-clicking or tapping — features not currently available on Instagram. 

Screen Shot 2015 02 25 at 5.15.36 PM 730x465 SwipeMy.Pics Web based Instagram viewer focuses your eyes on the image

The navigation swipe for phones, coupled with a zoom function, offer the biggest advantage over Instagram. Each image on SwipeMy.Pics has its own showcase: there’s one image per window that sits on top of a blurred background of the same image.

There’s no comments or grids. You can enter a public Instagram handle to view a specific feed or sign into your own account.

Screen Shot 2015 02 25 at 5.12.53 PM 730x528 SwipeMy.Pics Web based Instagram viewer focuses your eyes on the image

Instagram’s interface has long been a source of angst so it’s not like many others haven’t already tried to tame Instagram. One recent entrant into the arena is Grids, a $3.99 Instagram viewer available from the Mac App Store that’s based on a grid design and supports almost all Instagram features.

From ACNE’s viewpoint, it’s not enough because not only does it maintain a tired grid interface, it only works on the Mac and does not function in the browser or on mobile devices. Plus, Grids updates must be downloaded and relaunched.

IMG 0081 730x974 SwipeMy.Pics Web based Instagram viewer focuses your eyes on the image

SwipeMy.Pics, which is open source, is built with the Instagram API and the code will soon be available on ACNE’s GitHub. The company says it is not designed for commercial purposes and is not being optimized for the Internet Explorer browser. 

A watch and phone in one…it’s about time!

LG Watch Urbane LTE runs a proprietary OS and lets you make calls without a phone

LG Watch Urbane LTE header
Ahead of the Mobile World Congress trade show, LG has unveiled an LTE variant of its fashionable Watch Urbane that will support calls over VoLTE without a phone, as well as NFC payments.

Unlike the Android Wear-based original, the LG Watch Urbane LTE will feature a proprietary OS that the company says is not webOS, which runs its smart TVs and was shown off on an Audi watch. It also has a walkie-talkie feature for group voice chats as well as an SOS button to quickly place a call to your contacts in case of an emergency.

It will also sport sensors for GPS and fitness tracking, as well as atmospheric pressure and heart rate monitoring. The watch will also support translate foreign languages via voice recognition. A 700mAh battery (significantly larger than the original Watch Urbane’s 410mAh battery) keeps the timepiece ticking.

LG will show off the device next week at MWC; hopefully we’ll get a chance to see how it looks and feels up close.

Network = Net worth, follow the tips below

A guide to networking for those who hate networking

sitting alone

Once I was making oatmeal in the microwave in my dorm and two of my other flatmates came in…

I never cooked food in that kitchen again.

I’m an introvert and people scare the hell out of me.

For the rest of the year I made instant soup using hot water that came out of the tap in my room.

It’s hard for me to meet people, but I’ve been working at it for a long time and I wanted to share some of the things I’ve learned along the way.

Extroverts and introverts, of different minds

Most people aren’t all introverts or extroverts, instead they probably share some characteristics of both.

spectrrum A guide to networking for those who hate networking

The brain of an extrovert is wired to feel reward and pleasure from engaging in social activities. Their nervous system signals the brain to free up extra attentional resources to be available when around other people. They are more motivated by social stimuli.

Those same resources are not made available in the introverts brain. Extroverts also respond more to positive stimuli, whereas introverts respond more to negative stimuli.

Research says that extroverts rely on blood flow traveling a short pathway where it is transmitted to the areas of the brain where external sensory processing occurs. Extroverts require a good amount of the neurotransmitter dopamine to feel rewarded. Activation in this part of the brain is said to be the extroverts drive for sensory and emotional stimulation from the outside world.

dop A guide to networking for those who hate networking

For introverts, the blood flow is focused on the areas of the brain necessary for the following: memory recall, self-talk, making future plans, or problem solving. The introvert pathway is much longer and more complex and requires the use of a different neurotransmitter known as acetylcholine.

introvert A guide to networking for those who hate networking

Individuals who are introverted are able to take in much more informationregarding what is happening around them. They also expend a considerable amount of mental energy analyzing that information. People who score highly on the introversion scale are acutely aware of any changes to their surroundings. This is why social events are so taxing.

In summary:

  • Extroverts: Obtain energy from social situations
  • Introverts: Obtain energy from being alone

Whether you’re more extroverted or introverted, the tips below can help you gain more confidence when meeting new people.

Get comfortable

There are plenty of opportunities to meet people outside of networking events. Finding locations where you already feel at ease can help to make talking to complete strangers a little easier.

The effect your environment has on you is substantial. Your environment can improve your mood, participation, and even influence your willingness to act (or not) with others around you.

Feeling comfortable in your surroundings also increases confidence and lowers stress. When you experience environmental stress, however, you also experience personal stress. Which can make the idea of talking to others seem downright impossible.

How can you make an uncomfortable or stressful environment seem less so?

Try to bring some of your routines from home with you. I have a habit of checking my phone when I’m uncomfortable—as I’m sure many of us do.

If I were to leave my phone at home, that would be an added stressor on me, and one that would make me feel even less comfortable. Instead, I will look at my phone when I feel my anxiety levels getting too high. It’s always easy for me to tell when that’s happening because I begin to sweat profusely from my right armpit.

The habit of checking my phone eases the mental burden (if only for a little bit). This is thanks to the basal ganglia aka the habit center.

brain1 730x446 A guide to networking for those who hate networking

The basal ganglia is what allows you to perform tasks without “thinking” about them, it’s that autopilot feeling. Routines serve a purpose. They free up mental space and make room for other cognitive tasks and thoughts—like talking to people.

Feeling prepared

If there is one major thing that keeps me from speaking my mind it is my fear of looking stupid. I hardly believe I am alone in this feeling. This fear is what is known as evaluation apprehension. Preparing yourself for an event or social situation can help ease this fear.

Give yourself enough time

If you’ve ever been rushed to a job interview, or come in late to an event, you know it is a pretty awful feeling. It completely throws you off your game—not to mention the increase in blood pressure and heart rate. By giving yourself the time you need to get ready, you help to reduce your stress level.

Plan some conversations

Okay, this might sound like a little much, but having some planned outquestions or quips to fall back on, it does seriously help. Consider where you are going, what the event is and who will be there. Planning is something introverts are really good at, so play to your strengths.

Give yourself permission to say no

In the past I have created a fake sense of obligation to say yes to every event regardless of my intention to go our not. This leaves me in a terrible position. I either go and have a miserable time because I did not want to go in the first place—or I back out at the last minute, in which case my trustworthiness is questioned. Maya Townsend from Inc.com puts it this way:

Focus on being trustworthy. Keep your word. Follow up on your commitments. Give reliable, accurate information, and, if you can’t, say so. Don’t try to be something you aren’t.

The purpose of all of this, is about being as genuine to yourself as you can be. Do that, and the rest will come easily, or at least easier.

Get out there

friends coffee work 730x489 A guide to networking for those who hate networking

You know that feeling you get when you have something really good to say, and you just know that people would like it if you said it, but then you don’t say it? This happens to me more times than I can bear to count.

There’s an actual warmth that rushes through my body when I have a joke I really want to tell, but then abandon at the last second. I think about the joke for years and ‘what might have been.’

Those on the introverted side of the scale do receive emotional benefits when they occasionally act extroverted. It is actually good for introverts to engage in momentary extroversion. So why don’t either groups take on the traits of one another more often? Because we assume that the social costs will be too high—that people will think less of us, or judge us.

Being in large groups also induces what is known as “social loafing.” That’s when we exert less effort in larger groups than we would alone. We do this for a variety of reasons:

  • We cannot judge how our contributions will be received (so we do not make any to avoid negative judgements.)
  • We assume others will do the work for us.
  • The more meaningless we feel a task is, the less effort we are willing to put into it.

This is less about trust and more about group cohesion. Having ties to a group increases your sense of obligation to participate. Finding the connection you have to a group or identifying what it means to you, can help reduce your desire to rely on others and speak up for yourself.

So, I may never be the most comfortable person in the room, that’s okay with me. What I want is to be able to stop passing up opportunities to meet new people, to build new relationships because I was too afraid.

Is anyone else sharing this article right now? #tworlds

Tworlds for iPhone lets anonymous people across the globe share a soulful moment in time

handheld_tworlds

So, initially I was a little reluctant to waste my time with try out Noodlewerk’s Tworlds, a free iPhone app that connects people in disparate locations whose only shared attribute may be doing or thinking about the same thing at the same time, and recording it with the device’s camera.

But I tried it anyway. And the discovery that a single individual in the Netherlands or in Ireland or in New York was also pondering their pets or drinking coffee or at their desks working and was conscious enough to acknowledge, record and share the moment, inspired a distinct psychological response.

Untitled 11 730x436 Tworlds for iPhone lets anonymous people across the globe share a soulful moment in time

When you download Tworlds, you choose from among 26 predetermined themes like #cat or #work or #coffee, signifying a connection between you and your potential partner in thought. Then, you just snap a picture. Instantly, a related image springs onto the screen, sharing equal space with yours. All you know about that person is their city and country and what’s in front of their eyeballs at that moment.

The anonymity of this connection is actually cool; I found that I just liked to see someone’s cat or dog or work desk or coffee in real time and relinquished concern about their actual identity. And, for now, that’s the app’s intent. “For whatever reason you use Tworlds, there arises an experience between you and a complete random stranger somewhere else on this planet,” the app’s developer Antoine Peters, told TNW.

“Tworlds wants to break through the sociographic bubble of our curated (online) environment. The anti-social aspect, the anonymity and comparison, lowers the threshold having to ‘like’ or to ‘follow’ and challenges us to gift each other pictures of our everyday lives — unpolished glimpses into someone else’s reality.”

Untitled 3 730x432 Tworlds for iPhone lets anonymous people across the globe share a soulful moment in time

That means you must shoot the image in real time — you can’t reach back into your Camera Roll to grab a gorgeous shot that you fixed up with one of the hundreds of mobile image editors out there. You must use the app to shoot in the moment. You don’t get a lot of camera options, either: You can use the flash, tap to focus or shoot a selfie. That’s it.

“To keep Tworlds honest, it is not possible to use a photo from your library or by editing,” Peters said. “This puts ‘make-nicer-apps’ like Instagram and other self-marketing filters out of the game and makes [it] only real and unpolished moments from our daily lives.” And of course, you can share that shot with friends and family over your favorite social networks, if you want.

One thing that would be nice is if the app were intelligent about image orientation, as some people naturally shoot in landscape. Right now, the app composites two square images together without regard to the fact that they may be shot at different orientations. The app also does not function in landscape orientation except in shooting mode.

Comparing everyday life with a random stranger turns out to be an amusing and safe way to share private thoughts and feelings — even negative sensations of sorrow, anger or insomnia. Sometimes it’s nice to know that at times when you feel truly alone, you really aren’t.

 

Contact us Kim Kardashian, we will do the job for a lot less!

Kim Kardashian allegedly spends $100,000 a year to employ a ‘professional selfie retoucher’

A new OK! magazine story says Kim Kardashian is spending $100,000 to keep a professional photo retoucher on call to perfect the selfies she posts to Instagram.

The Kardashians have long defended themselves against rumors that they alter all of their photos, but this source tells OK! magazine “Kim used to ask a friend to fix up photos, but it would take hours. She finally decided to hire a pro who can be on call 24/7.”

The source also says that part of the job is deleting every trace of the “before photos.”

Early last year, Kim made headlines after Twitter and Instagram users noticed some flubs in an uploaded photo that made it pretty clear the pic had been altered.

Kim Kardashian Butt GIF

You can see in the GIF, created by New York Magazine’s The Cut, that the photo had clearly been manipulated before it was posted to Instagram.

Business Insider reported that a Photoshop expert explained the discrepancies, noting the “curved door frame” and “distortion in the floor.”

The photo had gone viral, racking up half a million likes within days of it being published to social media.

At the time, a rep for Kardashian denied that she had altered the photo in any way. But looking at the GIF, the writing seems to be on the wall.

While OK!’s story is only going by the details given by one unnamed source, it’s not the craziest thing in the world to think that Kardashian may deem it necessary to have a hired pro to do her selfie work.

Don’t forget, taking selfies is part of Kardashian’s business and brand. In April, she will release her book, “Selfish” — 352 pages of her selfies.

Read more:  http://www.businessinsider.com/kim-kardashians-photoshopped-selfies-2015-2#ixzz3SmCInNvU

Google is planning a massive new HQ in CaliforniA

Google is planning expansive new headquarters in Mountain View, California, according to a new report in the New York Times. It’s due to be announced this week, and details on it are currently sparse. But it should be a “series of canopylike buildings,” Conor Dougherty writes, and it will also include pedestrian and bike paths.

It’s being designed by Danish architect Bjarke Ingels, as well as Heatherwick Studio.

This is the current Google HQ in Mountain View, California.

google mountain view hqLuis Villa del Campo/Flickr (CC)

It has around 20,000 local employees, according to the New York Times. Mountain View’s entire population is only 80,000.

google hq mountain viewHenry Zbyszynski/Flickr (CC)

Heatherwick Studio is probably best known for designing the 2012 Olympic Cauldron.

2012 Olympic Cauldron LondonNeil/Flickr (CC)

The studio also designed the planned “Garden Bridge” across the River Thames in London.

garden bridge river thames londonHeatherwick Studio

Here’s another of its designs — a “Leaning Hub” for a Singapore university.

heatherwick studio singapore universityHeatherwick Studio

This is Zeitz MOCAA. It’s a converted grain silo in Cape Town, South Africa.

mocaa1Heatherwick Studio

These are some houses designed by Bjarke Ingels:

Bjarke_ingels_group,_BIG_JDS_PLOT,_mountain_dwellings,_copenhagen_2005 2008SEIER + SEIER/Wikimedia Commons (CC)

This is Europa City — a far larger urban development project by the Danish architect.

Screen Shot 2015 02 25 at 12.25.55 europa city Bjarke Ingels

Read more:  http://www.businessinsider.com/google-plans-new-mountain-view-headquarters-2015-2#ixzz3SlbQ86JN

Kyocera is the next phone on my list of must buys!

Harness the power of the sun to charge Kyocera’s latest smartphone

The handset, which will be revealed at MWC, is the result of Kyocera’s partnership with Sunpartner. Even though the handset will be a prototype based on the Kyocera Torque, it will utilize Sunpartner’s Wysips Crystal technology. This technology combines both photovoltaic and optical technologies to charge the phone. In other words, the prototype handset can be charged by using both natural and artificial light.

Read more: http://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/harness-the-power-of-the-sun-to-charge-kyoceras-latest-smartphone/#ixzz3SkIx68H6