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1
Oct

JibJab is back with a personalized GIF maker


jibjab messages app

Wise to the fact that even your mom is over animated e-cards, a denizen of an internet past is trying to reinvent itself. JibJab — which rose to fame a a purveyor of political satire and “Starring You” video gift cards — is today launching JibJab Messages, an iOS app that lets you personalize GIFs with your friends’ faces, filters, and meme-style text.

At launch the app features a selection of “hilarious” content for you to play around with for free, and after your first ten messages JibJab will be happy to sell you additional content for a buck. A single tap copies the final GIF to your clipboard, meaning you can share JibJab Messages with your social app of choice. Whether, in an age of Snapchat and Emoji-only messaging, people are in need of more messaging options remains to be seen, but if you’re interested, you can check out our finest effort below or head to the App Store to try it out for yourself.

jibjab messages

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Source: JibJab Messages (App Store)

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1
Oct

Trading addictions: the inside story of the e-cig modding scene


Gizmo Vaping e-Cigarette Mod

There is a rapidly growing subculture of e-cigarette users across the globe who spend countless hours tricking out their hardware. Vape modding, as it’s known, blends technical craftsmanship, engineering creativity and artistry into one — and unbeknownst to most, it originated right here in the UK. Some do it to get better hits, while others do it to give their e-cigs a unique look. The modders are also the staunchest of users, who credit vaping with allowing them to kick the tobacco habit. But as I found out, through the process of modding, these ex-smokers may have just traded one addiction for another.

A Lack Of Adequate Hardware

The typical “cig-a-like” form factor

When most people think of an e-cigarette they, probably envision what is known as a “cig-a-like” — essentially a skeuomorphic tube. In place of the filter is the inhaler and past that is the tank of e-liquid, which contains the nicotine. Beyond that is an “atomizer,” or heat source. Then comes the bulk of the device: the battery, which powers the atomizer. Finally, a cig-a-like ends with an LED light, which mimics the glow of a cigarette ember. When a user activates the atomizer it heats up the e-liquid until it vaporizes.

That’s why the action of using an e-cigarette is called “vaping”, because nothing is burnt, it’s vaporized. Proponents of e-cigarettes argue that because the nicotine is vaporized instead of burnt, as in a traditional cigarette, vaping is much healthier than traditional smoking. That’s not something the WHO agrees with, however, and it will probably be decades before the scientific consensus is clear on the issue. Until then it remains a contentious issue between the organization and vapers, e-cig makers, and even some doctors who say vaping is preferable to smoking.

Still, the lack of agreement on any benefits e-cigarettes have over traditional ones haven’t stopped the devices from flying off the shelves. But to hardcore vapers, the “cig-a-like” e-cigarette form factor is an underpowered piece of kit. To them, it’s an Atari when what you really need is a tricked-out, custom gaming PC. And indeed, just as serious gamers kicked off the PC modding scene in the 90s in response to a lack of hardware tailored to the community’s needs, the same has happened in the vaping scene — and it started in, of all places, Newark-on-Trent.

Building A Better E-Cigarette

The first version of the “Screwdriver” mod

When e-cigs exploded onto the market in 2007, their users began to coalesce into online communities dedicated to the newly commercialized technology. One of the first major e-cig communities to spring up was E-Cig-Reviews.com, run by London-based Scott Bonner. And it’s on sites like his and other dedicated online forums like UKVaper.org that modding was born.

“Many people these days associate ‘modding’ and ‘mod-makers’ with the engineers that are manufacturing the high-quality devices that most of us currently enjoy vaping,” says Bonner when we chat about the history of the craft. “But the very early modders were the regular cig-a-like users that were tinkering with their cartridges, experimenting with different wicking materials, removing parts of the atomizer, etcetera, and we would gather on the forum, swap ideas and share our findings.”

But then the tinkering began to get more extreme. Instead of just fiddling with the internals of cig-a-likes, a pair of modders known online as Trog and Mrog took the then-radical step of completely replacing the body of a standard e-cig. For what would come to be known as “The Screwdriver,” the pair — whose real names are Ted and Matt Rogers, a father and son team from Newark-on-Trent — turned a small pocket torch into the atomizer and battery array.

“The Screwdriver created one hell of a buzz at the time, as it allowed the user to vape for hours at a time due to the torch body incorporating a far higher capacity battery than any cig-a-like on the market,” says Bonner.

“The Screwdriver created one hell of a buzz at the time.”

“The first Screwdrivers were born out of simple need,” says Matt “Mrog” Rogers, when I ask about the inspiration for what is widely considered to be the first true e-cig body mod. “Having tried everything there was to try, all the products were found wanting in some way or the other. Being skilled at tinkering and designing, it was decided to make our own robust devices that were suitable for all-day, everyday use. We found a really strangely shaped flashlight that might make a good donor for the first Screwdrivers. After much tinkering and making of custom parts the original flashlight housing was turned into an effective e-cig. Physically it rather resembled a screwdriver, and so the name stuck.”

Rogers says that after making their first mod, it soon hit them that there might be a lot of vapers who wanted a better e-cig, too. And were they right. Once images of the Screwdriver hit vaping forums, nearly everyone wanted one. So they began to make them for sale — and as a result, the first real “mod-maker” was born.

A Tale of Two Modders

Larry “LittleFeather” Ross’ box mods

After the Screwdriver arrived on the scene, it quickly inspired others to try their hand at mod-making. One such vaper was Larry Ross, or “LittleFeather” as he’s known in modding circles. For Ross, the Screwdriver’s increased battery capacity wasn’t enough. He wanted an e-cig that didn’t need its e-liquid tank refilled so often. So just six months after he started vaping, Ross began making his own mods.

“I wanted to make something that had a more sizable footprint than the tubes mods that were commercially available at the time,” says Ross. “So a box mod appeared to be the ticket for me.”

Box mods are one of the many forms modded e-cigs take — but they are by far the most popular with e-cig connoisseurs. That’s because they have a larger, box-shaped body (many around the size of a first-generation iPod). This larger shell allows for not only a longer-lasting battery, but also a larger tank, capable of holding more e-liquid.

“I like to use unusual and different materials for my enclosures, and there are always different types of adhesives and connection points to design,” Ross says when he shows me images of two of his mods. One he calls the “Relic Diamonds” and the other the “BareBones Black & Blue.” Ross’ mods are examples of one of the most endearing aspects of vape modding. A modder’s unique tastes in style — and even their work environment — are often imbued in every creation.

“I like to use unusual and different materials for my enclosures.”

Ross, who’s 63, creates his box mods on a vintage jeweler’s bench tucked away in a small section of his humble garage. “Relic Diamonds” is a gold-studded art deco enclosure, while the “BareBones Black & Blue” resembles the body of a 1920s radio my grandma once owned. And while Ross knows his designs won’t appeal to everyone, he’s fine with that. “I find working on small-scale projects more enjoyable,” he says. “At this time I only make mods for friends and family as needed, but I’m always looking for new design ideas.”

But, there are those in the vaper community who are on the opposite side of Ross’ small and personalized approach to modding; ones that take their mods and commercialize them. Here again, the Screwdriver was the first, but others quickly followed. One such modder-for-profit is a man from Leicester known as Ishy, who makes the popular Gizmo mod — a machined, anodized aluminum e-cig that, I soon found out, was designed with an Apple-like attention to detail.

A deconstructed “Gizmo” mod

Ishy, whose real name is Chris (he asked me to withhold his last name), is in his 60s and had been smoking for 45 years before trying his first cig-a-like. He liked the non-tobacco nicotine hit it gave him, but found its design lacking.

“I couldn’t get over the fact that I’d got this great big long thing in my hand. I mean the thing was eight to ten inches long and sticking out in front of me,” says Chris of the cig-a-likes he tried. “And you know you’re walking around with this sonic screwdriver and everybody’s staring at you wondering what the hell you’re doing with it. I thought, ‘Well, I’d like something that’s sort of a bit more compact.’ I’m not the sort of person that likes to draw attention to myself.”

Unable to find any mods that were both stylish and compact while still being able to hold more e-liquid and a larger battery, Chris decided to make his own with the help of his wife — and the decades of knowledge he acquired from running a company that manufactures parts for F1 cars. Chris is one of the few modders, it’s safe to say, who owns a full-blown CNC machine shop where he makes the Gizmo. It’s a mod crafted with the precision of a Swiss watchmaker: one where the engineering of every individual component is just as important as the whole of the device.

The body is manufactured from aircraft-grade aluminium, with the electrical components made of brass (unlike most other mods, which use stainless steel). And though brass is more expensive, he tells me it conducts electricity far better, which allows for more voltage to be delivered from the battery to the atomizer. This boosts the richness, thickness and general quality of the vapor you get from it.

As Chris explains how the refinement of the brass coil eliminates voltage drop and the importance of the thread pitch of the brass ring that screws into the e-liquid tank, I comment on the level of scrutiny he seems to undertake with his mod.

“I was a musician for twenty years and I suppose you could say that I’m creative and I have to create. I have to change, I have to perfect. I’m constantly refining, to the irritation of some people, but that’s just the way I am,” he says.

Modifying An Addiction

smoke!

[Credit: Flotografie/Flickr]

The way Chris describes every little detail reminds me of the phrasing other vapers have used. Vapers who say they are compelled to return to the forums each day to discuss not only the latest mods, but the very experience of the act itself. That’s not to mention discussing news of political or regulatory decisions that could affect their lifestyle. Indeed, for many in this world the latter is a concern that is always close to mind. As one modder told me, “I mod because I want to know how to make my own gear should the World Health Organization try to get vaping banned worldwide.”

For some, vaper modding is a hobby; a way of artistically expressing their creativity — no different than a painter taking a brush to a canvas. For others, it’s a business like any other, where profit is the end game. But to me — a non-smoking, non-vaping outsider — it seems there’s a subset of the community where the very act of modding can signal a new obsession, a new addiction.

These are the vapers that not only fixate on their gear, but fear the thing they’ve come to love might one day be taken away from them. The ones who worry about the WHO and the public perception of vaping. And for this small subset of vapers, I’m not sure the transference of a chemical addiction to a psychological one is that much healthier.

I ask Chris if he thinks I’m off the mark.

“I think the roots of all of this are in smoking.”

“I think the roots of all of this are in smoking,” he says. “These people were like me. They’d given up smoking and they’d smoked for years and it was so hard to give up smoking, and they become obsessed because it takes their minds off cigarettes. Some of them collect the things. They just buy them because they want them. It becomes a hobby to them. And that’s fine; anything that keeps them off cigarettes is good.”

Certainly that’s something both vapers and the World Health Organization can agree on.

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1
Oct

Microsoft’s Sway lets you share ideas on the web without any design skills


Microsoft Office Sway

Sharing ideas on the web is tricky. You probably want something more persuasive than a social network update, but it’s usually overkill to design a whole web page just to get your point across. Microsoft may have reached a happy balance between the two with Sway, a new part of the Office portfolio that lets you publish content in a slick, web-native format without knowing a thing about code or design. All you do is write and pull in content, whether it comes from your device or internet sources like Facebook, OneDrive and YouTube; Sway automatically organizes it all into polished web layouts that adapt to any screen size. You can switch layouts to fine-tune your work and update projects over time. Think of this as a Medium-like authoring tool that handles much more than just articles — it’s possible to publish daily photo diaries, non-linear presentations and other pieces that would typically require a dedicated web editor or a specialized app.

Sway is launching as an invitation-only preview on the web, but Microsoft tells us that it’s going to both expand the audience and the functionality very quickly. You should expect new features every couple of weeks, with feedback playing a big role in determining what comes next. The company plans to release an iOS app soon (Windows Phone and Android are coming as well), and you’ll eventually have the option to post interactive charts and other Office 365 content. This won’t necessarily replace an elaborate PowerPoint slide deck, but it could be good enough to get your classmates or coworkers to consider proposals that they’d otherwise dismiss out of hand.

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Source: Sway, Office Blogs

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1
Oct

‘Twilight’ mini-movies are coming to Facebook


The problem with owning the rights to Twilight is that the story eventually ends, meaning that there’s no more massively profitable movies with glitter guy, mumbling girl and the shirtless one with all the teeth. It’s a problem that Lionsgate knows all too well, which is why it’s hoping to prolong the saga by producing a series of five short movies based on a “broad spectrum of characters” from the Twilight universe. Unlike other digital video properties that have chosen Netflix or Amazon Instant Video for distribution, Lionsgate is going with a website that better caters to the shrieking tween market: Facebook.

If there’s an upside to more Twilight, it’s that Lionsgate is teaming up with Women in Film to give aspiring female filmmakers a shot at the big time. Fans will also get their chance to shape the tales, since the productions will be hammered out on crowdsourced storytelling platform Tongal. Unfortunately, fans may be disappointed to learn that their Jacob/Bella/Edward slash fiction isn’t likely to be featured, since the films will be featuring lesser-known characters and using the Twilight Saga: The Official Illustrated Guide as their source material. We guess that means that 2015 will herald the Facebook premiere of the tale of Moustache Cop and Billy Black getting breakfast at the diner.

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Via: NYT

Source: Lionsgate

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1
Oct

Amazon gives UK customers early e-book access with Kindle First


While Amazon tends to release new e-reader and tablet hardware in the UK and US simultaneously these days, we’re still not top priority when it comes to new services. That being said, the UK has caught up significantly in the past week with the launch of the all-you-can-read Kindle Unlimited subscription and now, Kindle First. Amazon runs a bunch of publishing houses, and what Kindle First offers is early access to new releases originating from them. Each month, Amazon editors will select four books scheduled for publication the following month, and let you buy one (and only one) of them in e-book form for 99 pence, or snag one for free if you’re a Prime member. Once you’ve registered, it’s basically as simple as that. You can head to the Kindle First page now to check out the selections for this month, and sign up for the newsletter if you’d like to know when other titles become available for pre-release reading.

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Source: Amazon

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1
Oct

Garmin’s multi-sport GPS watch now talks to your phone


Garmin Forerunner 920XT

Garmin’s GPS watch lineup has had an imbalance as of late; while more modest athletes have had luxuries like color displays and phone integration, you’ve had to make do with monochrome and old-school PC syncing if you need multi-sport wristwear like the Forerunner 910XT. Thankfully, you won’t have to make that sacrifice any more now that the company has launched a much-needed follow-up — not surprisingly, the Forerunner 920XT. The new watch tracks your biking, running and swimming stats like its ancestor, but catches up on 2014-era tech through a color screen, phone support (including call and message notifications) and advanced data like your running gait and oxygen volume estimates. It should be lighter, thinner and more comfortable than the 910XT, too, so you won’t notice it quite so much while you’re in the middle of a practice session. Just be ready to pay up if you want Garmin’s most capable wearable. The 920XT starts at $450 ($50 more than the 910XT) all by itself, and you’re looking at $500 if you want a heart rate monitor at the same time.

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Source: Garmin

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1
Oct

Tesco’s looking to sell or close its Blinkbox streaming service


Blinkbox Movies

When supermarket giant Tesco announced it was closing its free Clubcard TV streaming service, it didn’t come as much of a surprise. However, bigger changes could be afoot, after The Times caught wind of the company’s plans to get out of the streaming business altogether. In a recent tour of Tesco’s media division, newly-appointed CEO Dave Lewis decided that the Blinkbox business was a distraction, so he’s instructed senior staff to sell it. Apparently, if a buyer can’t be found, it will simply shut down the service it acquired a little over three years ago.

The news comes at a crunch time for the supermarket. The company is currently subject of an investigation after it overstated its quarterly profits by £250 million, and is just days away from unveiling its new Hudl 2 tablet. Tesco bundled its Blinkbox service on the first-generation Hudl, but with rumours circling about its possible closure, it’s possible the app may not make an appearance on its successor. Tesco has already sunk hundreds of millions of pounds into the streaming service, but with Netflix, Sky and Amazon also spending big, the company may go back to basics in order to return to growth.

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Source: The Times

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1
Oct

Uber for Business now automatically expenses taxis in 45 countries


The nice thing about traveling for work is that you can hop in a taxi without worrying about the cost since, after all, you’re not picking up the tab. The downside of that privilege is that, about a week or two after that, you’ll have to sit down and tediously justify your expenditure to your boss. That’s not a problem, however, if your company has signed up with Uber for Business, which sends the bills straight to the firm instead of piling on your own credit card. Until now, however, that service was only available in the US and Canada, with a few trials taking place in the UK and France. As you might have guessed from the headline, today’s the day that the company opens up Uber for Business to all of the 45 countries in which it operates. Now all we have to do is work out if we can pretend that our hand slipped and we hit the Uber Lux button by mistake.

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Source: Uber

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1
Oct

Big theater chains team up against Netflix’s first movie


Unsurprisingly, there’s one group that’s not at all excited to hear Netflix and IMAX are arranging for the Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon sequel to hit theaters and streaming at the same time: movie theater owners. According to the LA Times, Regal, AMC, Carmike and Cinemark have all stated they don’t plan to screen Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: The Green Legend on their IMAX screens when it arrives next year, while Variety notes Canada’s Cineplex and Europe’s Cineworld are also staying away from the flick. The studios blocked a planned experiment to sell Tower Heist viewing for $60 a pop (honestly, they saved everyone there) back in 2011, but it seems doubtful they’ll be able to intimidate Netflix into backing down.

Previous day-and-date home/theatrical releases, from Steven Soderbergh’s Bubble in 2006 to recent flicks like Snowpiercer and Arbitrage, have usually been very limited. When Kickstarter-backed Veronica Mars debuted earlier this year, Warner Bros. had to buy every ticket in the theater in advance just to set up the screenings. IMAX seems content to screen the movie mostly in China, where Variety says it will have over 200 locations by the time this movie is out (and where Netflix does not yet offer service).

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Source: Variety, LA Times, Washington Post, Reuters

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1
Oct

Apple Watch has a smaller screen in tweaked video


Apple has released a new version of its Apple Watch design video, and a perceptive viewer noticed a slightly different design from the original. Most noticeable is a smaller sapphire screen and larger bezel on the Watch render, which appears to more closely match the prototype hardware we saw last month. None of this too surprising — Apple had no doubt prepared the video using 3D renders before the final design was locked, and the changes are small enough that most folks won’t care. Still, it does make us wonder if there may be more fine-tuning before production starts in January, especially given rumors of battery-life issues.

[Image credit: Khaos Tian/Twitter]

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Via: 9to5 Mac

Source: Khaos Tian (Twitter)

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