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Microsoft Isn't Laughing At Twitter Parody Of Windows Exec

By Dave Copeland / February 13, 2012 1:30 PM / Comments

shutterstock_microsoft_windows.jpgMicrosoft demanded the takedown of a phony Twitter account purpoting to be that of Windows Division President Steven Sinofsky.

Over the weekend, Microsoft used its @BuildWindows8 account to send a message to the account owner, saying "@StevenSinofsky please see guidelines on parody and impersonation. Your account is not following them them and has been reported."

[STUDY] Jonesing For A Retweet: Twitter Harder To Resist Than Cigarettes And Booze

By Dave Copeland / February 4, 2012 5:15 AM / Comments

shutterstock_booze.jpgSleep, sex and...Twitter?

A new study suggests that people are more likely to give into the urge to check email and their Twitter account than they are to smoke cigarettes or drink alcohol. While the study headed by Wilhelm Hofmann of Chicago University's Booth Business School was limited in size, covering just 205 people between the ages of 18 and 85, it seems to confirm what many of us have suspected for years.

Top Tech Video of the Day: My 2 Year Old Discovered Flickr Today

By Abraham Hyatt / February 3, 2012 3:01 PM / Comments

topvideo_kid_flickr.pngThis is old (as in 2007 old). The kid in the video is now seven years old and undoubtably jailbreaks his iPhone and programs Arduino boards. But five years ago he was just a toddler with a bottle, and this was the first time he was on the Web and Fleek-ler!, as he called it, on his own. It was "the moment" - the moment when you first realize that moving the cursor and clicking the trackpad leads to discovery, and that discovery is a whole lot of fun.

Convergence is Alive & Well in 2012

By Richard MacManus / February 2, 2012 8:55 PM / Comments

Deer Tick on TV

Convergence. Remember that word from the dot com era? Well, it's back and this time it actually has substance. Convergence in the 90s meant combining old media with new media, a.k.a. the Internet. The 2000 merger of AOL and Time Warner was a failed $200 billion attempt at convergence. But fast forward to 2012 and convergence is happening for real this time, thanks to Internet-connected devices in the house and a rapidly growing app ecosystem. Entertainment now flows freely through home networks, to multiple devices such as PCs, laptops, tablets, smartphones and television sets.

According to one research firm, 2012 will be when convergence really hits its stride. A new report by IMS Research states that 2012 will be when the consumer electronics industry "finally realizes the promise of multi-screen content consumption."

Top Tech Video of the Day: The SMS-Email-Facebook-Twitter-Alert Musical

By Abraham Hyatt / February 2, 2012 1:27 PM / Comments

topvideo_digitalmusical.pngTo make his "musical," as he calls it, filmmaker/actor Chris Crutchfield's, took the ubiquitous dinging, pinging, almost-melodic alerts that pervade our digital lives and mashed them up into a surprisingly beautiful little song. "One day," he explains, "I got an email, an SMS, a phone call, a Facebook message and two tweets all within about five seconds of one another. This video is a re-manifestation of my brain's interpretation of that event."

If you're a glutton for punishment, you can download the musical as an iPhone ringtone.

Study: 91% of Gen-Ys Use Their Phones in the Bathroom

By Alicia Eler / January 30, 2012 12:45 PM / Comments

Smartphones-cigarette.jpgSome people won't go anywhere without their smartphones. Not even the pot.

A new study from 11mark surveyed 1,000 Americans about their smartphone usage, and found that a whopping 75% of American smartphone owners have used their phones in the bathroom. More women have used their phones in the bathroom than men (76% vs. 74%), but men are actually more attached to their mobile devices than women. Thirty percent of men surveyed said they won't go to the bathroom without their phone versus 25% of women.

Future Of the Smart Home? Engineer Hacks Android With the Kinect API

By Dan Rowinski / January 25, 2012 1:20 PM / Comments

androidathome.jpgTake two open source projects, do a little creative hacking and ingenuity and what do you get? The Android-Kinect project. An engineer that goes by the name DDRBoxman hacked a Galaxy Nexus smartphone with his a projector, a PC and Microsoft's Kinect API and was able to use "touch" based gestures to control the user interface by interacting with the projection. Everybody has been waiting for The user experience brought to us by the film Minority Report. Well, this engineer might have brought us closer than any other hack before.

Aviary Mobile Upgrade Gives Users Powerful Photo Editing Tools

By Dan Rowinski / January 17, 2012 11:45 AM / Comments

aviary_v2_610.jpg

The golden age of mobile photography is upon us. Smartphones are now more capable at producing high-quality photos than digital cameras were just five years ago. Editing photos has been an evolving process but a lot of great services have been released to mobile users in the last year such as filters from Instagram or full-featured suites from Aviary and Skitch. Today, Aviary is making a dramatic update to its platform to gives users a set of powerful tools to edit photos on the go.

Dating a Geek? Take This Compatibility Quiz

By David Strom / January 13, 2012 6:00 AM / Comments
gold-star-geek-150.jpgDating a geek can be a lot of fun: we all want our live-in tech support. Let's face it, geeks can be sexy too. But how do you know when you have a ringer or the real deal? And what if one of you is a PC and the other is a Mac? Time to take our quiz. Ask your geek these questions and add up the score to see whether you are truly compatible in tech.

Listen To Music With Your Facebook Friends Via Chat

By Alicia Eler / January 12, 2012 10:58 AM / Comments

Facebook Logo_150x150.jpgLooking for a quick pick-me-up in those late afternoon hours, I've found myself heading over to my Spotify account to check out what Facebook friends are listening to. While this has been a neat way to notice shared music tastes, there's still something awkward about it. Unless I've already had some sort of communication about music with a friend on Spotify, or at least some recent contact on Facebook or otherwise, I feel weird scrolling through their playlists.

Facebook must have foreseen this problem because today it announced yet another way to listen to music through your account. The catch here is that you're actually listening with your friends rather than voyeuristically peering into their playlists and, unbeknownst to them, clicking on their songs.

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