Your sweat won’t affect these $10 Bluetooth headphones
Our friends at Thrifter are back again, this time with some extremely affordable Bluetooth headphones you should try!
If you’ve been considering making the move to Bluetooth headphones but don’t want to spend a ton to try them out, this may be the perfect set for you. Right now you can pick up Mpow’s sweatproof Bluetooth headphones for just $9.99 with coupon code WQMZZ4LE, which is a savings of $23. Keep in mind that at this price you won’t be getting Bose quality headphones, but if you are looking to try something out, or need a new set of headphones for the gym, these may be perfect for the job.

The headphones are lightweight and comfortable, and the non-slip rubber ear hooks help keep them in place. Odds are you can find sillier ways to spend $10 today, so why not give these headphones a shot!
See at Amazon
For more great deals be sure to check out our friends at Thrifter now!
Google I/O 2017: Developers share their highlights

Google I/O is a developers conference, after all, so we asked developers to tell us about what excited them this year.
What would Google I/O be without the mass number of developers congregating together in honor of one of the world’s biggest mobile operating systems? Well, it wouldn’t be much. After all, this is a developer’s conference.
I went around and asked a few Android developers what they loved most about the Google I/O keynote and the conference this year. And interestingly, many of those who were queried had something to say about the addition of Kotlin for Android.
Voltrack Poltrack, Fat Russell
AC: What was your favorite part of the Google I/O keynote?
I’m excited to work on stuff for the Google Home. Something for world domination.
AC: What are you most looking forward to from the conference?
I’m excited about the Android Wear talks, but I’m biased. [Poltrack is a developer of Android Wear apps.]
Mike, Developer at Speedify
AC: What was your favorite part of the Google I/O keynote?
I’m really excited about the changes to Android Studio 3.0. So many awesome features — the new profiling features really look good. I’m also really excited for the Fabric and Firebase merger. We use Fabric all the time at work and I think it will be awesome to have a single console.
AC: Will that make developing easier for you?
It’ll make detecting bugs to deliver a good, stable product much easier.
Lucia, N26 – The Mobile Bank

AC: What was your favorite part of the Google I/O keynote?
Kotlin, obviously. Kotlin is a smarter, more advanced language. Now that Google is going to support it officially, it’s going to push the community to do much more with it. I’m very excited to see how this goes.
AC: Will that make developing easier for you?
Migrating Java to Kotlin is easy in a way because you can have both, but there is a learning curve…so I don’t know about that, but let’s see.
Jerrell Mardis, Ride Metra
AC: What was your favorite part of the Google I/O keynote?
Kotlin. It’s an awesome language and it’s an upgrade over Java.
Erik Hellman, Freelancer
AC: What do you develop?
Android, mostly. Sometimes I’m unfortunate enough to do stuff that is less interesting, but mostly Android.
AC: What was your favorite part of the Google I/O keynote?
The lady from YouTube with the Red Blazer. That was amazing.
AC: Did Google announce anything that would make development easier for you?
Tons of stuff. I’ll be out of work soon because they’re going to put Machine Learning in everything, so.
AC: What about Kotlin?
I’ve been doing Kotlin for a couple of months already, so it’s nice to see it get official support.
‘Uncharted’ movie will star Sony’s new ‘Spider-Man,’ Tom Holland
The fabled Uncharted film is getting closer to reality — for real, this time. After finding a new director in Shawn Levy (Night at the Museum, Stranger Things), Deadline reports that the movie will be a prequel to the popular PlayStation games. And, even more surprising, Sony is bringing on Tom Holland, its new Spider-Man lead, to play young Nathan Drake. Since this is a complete shift for the film, the studio will also have to bring in a new writer to pen an entirely new script. Basically, be prepared to wait even longer for the Uncharted film.
As Deadline reports, the film is partially inspired by a flashback sequence in Uncharted 3, where young Nathan Drake first meets his future thieving friend Sullivan. It’s not exactly the Uncharted movie most of us were imagining, but it puts Sony is a position to create a multi-film franchise as we watch Drake mature. Personally, I would have loved to see Joe Carnahan’s take on the franchise, but at least we won’t be completely retreading everything we’ve already seen in the Uncharted games. At least, not yet.
Source: Deadline



