Line’s COO Officially Takes Over As CEO To Turn The Messaging App Into A Mobile Services Platform


Three months after announcing the transition, Line has officially received shareholder approval to appoint Takeshi Idezawa, the messaging app’s former chief operating officer, as its chief executive officer. The company said that Idezawa will take over the reins from its previous CEO, Akira Morikawa, today.


Morikawa will move on to a position as an advisor.


It has been a busy year for Line as it seeks to transform itself from a messaging app into a platform that provides a wide array of services for users to access from their smartphones. According to Line, Idezawa’s accomplishments during his 12 months as COO include Line’s new “LIFE platform strategy,” which wants to turn the app into “an integral part of everyday life in an era where smartphones have evolved into an indispensable device for people all over the world.”


The “LIFE platform strategy” has included the creation of a $42 million fund to invest in companies that provide online-to-offline, e-commerce, payment, media, and entertainment services that can potentially be integrated into Line’s core app.


One of the main reasons Line is focusing on adding more services to its platform is to make sure that its earnings are no longer so closely tied to its main messaging app (which monetizes through branded accounts and the sale of stickers) or its connected games platform. Revenue from games have plateued for Line, as well as other messaging apps like WeChat.


The company is also key to grow outside of Japan, Taiwan, and Thailand, its key markets in Asia. Last year, Line postponed its IPO to focus on its global business, with Idezawa saying that it would localize features for different markets, like voice services in Europe.






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Don’t Read The Comments — Let Diffbot Analyze Them Instead


Diffbot‘s mission, according to CEO Mike Tung, involves “teaching a robot how to read and understand web pages.” Today it expanded that understanding to include forums, comments, reviews, and other online discussions.


When Tung talks about understanding web pages, he means turning the content into structured data — say, looking at an article and identifying the title, author, text, images, topics and so on. That information, in turn, can help businesses find and track the content that’s relevant to them. (Diffbot customers include Microsoft/Bing, Cisco and eBay.)


Until today, however, Diffbot could perform its analysis on an article or a product page, but it couldn’t do the same for the comments under the article or the reviews under the product description.


Tung said there are a couple of specific challenges when it comes to analyzing these kinds of discussions. For one thing, comments are often presented in a JavaScript widget, so it’s not as straightforward as pulling the text — it requires “a bunch of visual analysis,” he said. For another, discussions often use more casual, colloquial, and emoji-heavy English, so Diffbot needed to develop “a more specialized language model.”


You can try it out for yourself using Diffbot’s test-drive page, where you can see Diffbot’s analysis for any page. To try it out, I looked at the results for a post I wrote last week that got more comments than usual, and I could see the basic attributes of each comment — author, time, text, language and author link.


This gets more interesting in aggregate when you can start finding larger trends in the conversation — Tung noted that while there are a lot of social media monitoring tools, it’s harder to track conversations across the web, where you’ll find “detailed, well-thought-out discussions.” For example, he said a shoe company could identify which shoes customers identify as most comfortable in their online conversations.


Diffbot says its new Discussions API supports Facebook Comments, Disqus, Livefyre, WordPress, Blogger, Automattic’s Intense Debate, Kinja, Hacker News, Reddit and more.






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See You This Week In Montreal And Toronto

Here we go! TechCrunch is winging its way to Montreal and Toronto this week for some amazing meetups. We want to see you there so I hope you’ve purchased your ticket, eh.


All the pitch-off companies are picked and the judges are in line to offer pithy commentary. The pitch-offs will follow our tried and true formula. We’ll pick 6 to 8 startups per city and they will have 60 seconds to pitch. Unless you get an email from me specifically stating you are in the pitch-off then you are not in the pitch-off. Applying is not the same as making it. That said, we want to talk to as many of you as possible so be ready with your pitches as we make the rounds. It’s a great opportunity to show off your work, your ecosystem, and your city.


See you soon!


The meetup starts at 7pm and goes until 10:30pm. Tickets cost $10 and include drinks.


Place: Société des Arts Technologiques (SAT)

1201 Boul St-Laurent, Montréal

Montreal, QC H2X 2S6

Canada

Time: Wednesday, April 1, 2015 from 7:00 PM to 10:30 PM (EDT)


Buy tickets here.


TechCrunch Meetup Toronto

HIGHLINE

Thursday, April 2, 2015 from 7:00 PM to 10:00 PM (EDT)

Toronto, ON

Buy tickets here.


Pitch-Off Competition

Participants interested in competing in the pitch-off will have 60 seconds to explain why their startup is awesome. Companies will be chosen by TechCrunch.


Pitch-Off Winners

Pitches will be rated by 3-5 judges, including TechCrunch writers and local VCs. First Place will receive a table in Startup Alley at an upcoming TechCrunch Disrupt. Second Place will receive (2) tickets to an upcoming TechCrunch Disrupt. Third Place will receive (1) ticket to the upcoming TechCrunch Disrupt.


And whether you’re an investor, entrepreneur, dreamer or tech enthusiast, we want to see you at the event. Come one, come all. It’s sure to be a night to remember.


7:00pm Doors Open

8:00pm On stage interview with a VC

8:20pm Pitch-Off Competition

9:00pm Winners Announced

9:30pm Networking


Notes

This is a 18+ event.

All ticket sales are final and non-refundable


$1 from each ticket will go to the OSMO foundation, a Montreal-based grassroots non-profit supporting aspiring local entrepreneurs through initiatives like the Notman House.


For more information on sponsorship packages and to discuss becoming a sponsor, please contact partner@credoprod.com






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When April Fools’ Day Gets More Love Than Good Policy


Here is something to ponder: Silicon Valley will have gotten more work done on its April Fools’ Day jokes tomorrow than Washington has gotten done in the past several years. And that’s scary, for as much as playing PacMan on Google Maps is funny and maybe even endearing, driving on bridges ready to collapse is not.


Things are not looking good in our nation’s capital, and they haven’t in a long time. Gridlock in Congress has kept legislative action of almost any kind at a complete standstill, while the nation’s aging infrastructure continues to disintegrate. Just at a time when more attention has finally been garnered by these persistent problems, Indiana dropped gasoline on the smoldering fires of the culture wars, reigniting interest in such vital issues as who can eat at a Dairy Queen.


This weekend, I argued quite strongly that Silicon Valley is now at the zenith of its power, and wields it with a force almost unknown by any other industry today. Tech has become the most powerful force in the universe, which, while perhaps a tad hyperbolic, seems so eminently true when we look at just how little actually gets done politically.


Even technology’s critics are calling it quits. Evgeny Morozov, perhaps one of the most consistently strident critics of Silicon Valley and its political and social culture, recently wrote that there was practically no radical undercurrent in technology criticism and that “While radical thought about technology is certainly possible, the true radicals are better off theorizing—and spearheading—other, more consequential struggles, and jotting down some reflections on technology along the way.”


For Morozov, trenchant criticism has declined due to a lack of a framework for analyzing the relationship between technology and society, which he pithily summarizes as “No vision, no critique.” He offered a mea culpa here as well about his own writing: “Thus, I must acknowledge defeat as well: contemporary technology criticism in America is an empty, vain, and inevitably conservative undertaking. At best, we are just making careers; at worst, we are just useful idiots.”


It’s not just technology’s critics though that lack imagination and vision, but its proponents as well. Silicon Valley’s leaders talk about the idyllic utopia that rests just on the other side of this funding round or new product release, and yet, when we look around our society at the number of challenges we face, the action seems completely absent.


Of course, there were visions in the past. The internet was supposed to bring the world together, if not fully for peace, then at least for understanding. The internet was then supposed to be a cyberlibertarian paradise, bereft of the complicated regulatory state that had supposedly brought the physical economy to its knees.


Just in the last few days, we have seen the darker side of this network, with the Chinese government likely behind massive attacks on GitHub, as well as with the continued growth of ISIS in the Middle East. The internet is increasingly dividing into independent and militant fiefdoms, almost the antithesis of what it was all supposed to be about.


Today, it was announced that Silicon Valley heavyweights Ron Conway and Sean Parker are launching a new think tank that will hopefully get more involved in at least some of our nation’s pressing issues, such as infrastructure and economic opportunity. We should definitely have a more steady voice in policy discussions and try to minimize the wide distance between government officials and the technology world.


Policy briefs are not a vision statement though, and that sort of leadership still seems really far off. Instead, we are too busy deploying the next feature to really see what effect all of our work is actually generating. We have barely scratched the surface on what our technologies and startups are doing for workers, such as immigrants and contract laborers. While we have started responding to the need for cybersecurity (a need we created!), we do so more out of avarice than service.


There are visionary statements galore in this industry, but so little real thought about what those statements mean outside of a couple of blocks in South of Market. Even worse, there is a persistent groupthink about technology and politics, despite the vast interest that most nerds have with engaging on these topics.


What does Silicon Valley stand for? Technology progress is too easy – those words have almost no meaning whatsoever. Do we represent every individual in the pursuit of their creativity and industry? Do we want the world to become more egalitarian? Do we want more of our personal property to be managed by others? There is a cacophony of views out there, but those views are expressed so limitedly that they are almost silent to hear.


That wider discussion might be ambitious, but we can always take a few early steps. Taking a cue from some of Apple’s recent software releases, maybe it is time that we actually spent some cycles figuring out how to clean up our existing products and services rather than purely push new features. Commentators always talk about our country’s financial debt, but what about the country’s technical debt in terms of lines of code? How can we rebuild reliability, safety, and security in terms of technology and economics into the products that consumers and enterprises use everyday?


Silicon Valley has had enviable success for some time now. There are moments in a country’s history when everything looks lost, only for success to be found right around the corner, and we have the ability to potentially offer the way forward. That requires a bit more time to think and to ponder, time for concentration that just isn’t available in these frenetic unicorn days. If we can look around though, we might not just find the next big product, but a more fulfilling purpose as well.


Featured Image: dannymac15_1999/Flickr UNDER A CC BY-ND 2.0 LICENSE



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Etsy IPO Price Expected At Between $14-$16 A Share, Starting Roadshow Tomorrow


Today, Etsy gave a few more key details about its upcoming initial public offering.


The company, which is known for its marketplace for handmade and vintage objects and plans to trade on NASDAQ under the ticker symbol “ETSY,” said today that its expected IPO price will be between $14 to $16 a share. This puts Etsy’s valuation between $1.55 billion and $1.77 billion.


Etsy also said that its roadshow, which is the time that a company’s executives and bankers travel to potential stock buyers to gin up interest in the IPO and often secure early sales, is slated to begin tomorrow.


Etsy, which was founded in 2005, initially said it planned to raise up to $100 million in the IPO — that was likely a boilerplate figure in its regulatory documents, since today’s update has tripled its maximum offering price to $300 million. The company officially signaled its intent to go public a few weeks back on March 4, when it filed an S-1 with the Securities and Exchange Commission. You can read more in-depth analysis of Etsy’s planned IPO and its financials here.






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Filmmaker Morgan Spurlock Says AOL’s Connected Delivers On The Promise Of Reality TV

“Reality TV” is one of those phrases that inevitably begs for scare quotes — with its staged scenes and melodramatic confessions, a reality TV show’s relationship with reality can be … complicated. But Morgan Spurlock, director of documentaries like Super Size Me, suggested that the new online video series Connected might live up to “the promise of reality television.”


AOL (which owns TechCrunch) is launching the series today by posting the first four episodes. Connected is based on the Israeli show of the same name, with (in this case) six New Yorkers given handhold cameras to record their lives.


Each episode is a little under 30 minutes long, making this AOL’s first move into “longform” video. In the video above, Spurlock (who’s one of the executive producers on the show) and AOL’s video president Dermot McCormack talked about the big bet that the company is making on the program.


By using online distribution, Spurlock said, “the filter is pulled away,” because the show didn’t have to shy away from risqué content. The goal, he added, was “to create a show from a nonfiction standpoint that would rival something that you would see on subscription or late-night, basic cable.”


But does giving someone a camera really lead to more honesty? Sure, there’s not a big crew following the cast members around, but aren’t they still performing for the camera? Spurlock said that’s true — but only at first.


“Once that period is gone and they become, like, human beings again, then that’s when the magic comes,” he said. “Because what starts to happen is, they do become normal, they do become real; it becomes cathartic as they start to share their lives and these intimate moments with us.”






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Google’s Cloud Console for Android lets you manage your App Engine projects on the go

Google has launched Cloud Console for Android, a new app for Android that lets developers manage their projects hosted on the company’s Cloud Platform from their mobile devices.


Currently in beta, Cloud Console lets you look up the status of your apps, set up and receive incident alerts, manage your Cloud Platform resources and get performance stats from Google’s Cloud Monitoring service.


Cloud Console screens Googles Cloud Console for Android lets you manage your App Engine projects on the go


You can customize the dashboard view to include all the information you need at a glance, including monitoring graphs and billing estimates.


The app also lets you track incidents via Cloud Monitoring, and add comments to issues so your team knows how the situation is being handled.


In addition, you can view details and graphs for App Engine and Compute Engine instances and invoke operations like starting or stopping an instance, right from the app.


Cloud Console 2 Googles Cloud Console for Android lets you manage your App Engine projects on the go


Google says it will continue to add features to Cloud Console over coming months, and launch an iOS version later this year.


➤ Cloud Console [Android via Google Cloud Platform Blog]








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TechCrunch Disrupt Returns To London, From December 5th to 8th


Last year European startups raised more money in the first quarter than they had during the “dot-com boom”. Much of that money and startup activity was coming out of London. Why? It’s simple. European entrepreneurs are using this highly developed center as a bridge to global markets, and, often, to San Francisco and the Valley. At the same time, London remains the first beach-head for many U.S. startups looking to scale in Europe. So there are hard and fast reasons why TechCrunch today announces that it’s returning to London with the Disrupt conference.


Last year, TechCrunch Disrupt in London set off a “media atomic bomb”, with multiple media outlets covering the startups that launched on our stage. We aim to repeat, and better, that experience.


We’re coming back.


Unlike 99% of tech conferences, TechCrunch puts its journalists in front of every speaker and holds their feet to the fire. Incredibly, speakers love this and line-up for the battle that ensues. We love that process, and we know everyone else does too.


Certainly, the wider media also loves this approach. On the first day of Disrupt London last year, we saw around 100 media outlets attending, including The Financial Times, City AM, The Independent, Business Insider and CNBC; including the BBC’s flagship current affairs programme, Newsnight.


Disrupt it would seem, captured the imagination of the Western European press like few other tech events could.


So here is the detail.


TechCrunch Disrupt London 2015 will be held at the Copper Box Arena in Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. It will be open to any startup form anywhere in the world. But we are particularly encouraging startups to apply from Europe, the Middle East and Africa to join us.


The legendary Disrupt Hackathon will be held on December 5th to 6th, followed by the main conference on December 7th to 8th. Startup Alley tickets are immediately available for purchase.


You can apply for 2-for-1 tickets here. We will be releasing a limited number these in batches. So you need to apply for that access ASAP.


Best of luck and see you all there.






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Alibaba Signs Distribution Deal With BMG, Its First Music Partner Outside Of Asia


In a bid to increase its online entertainment offerings, Alibaba has struck an agreement with music publisher BMG, which gives it access to over 2.5 million tracks. The partnership is notable because it represents the first time Alibaba’s digital entertainment unit has signed with a music partner outside of Asia.


The business already has agreements with Taiwanese music companies Rock Records and HIM International Music.


The deal gives Alibaba access to BMG’s catalog, which includes tracks from Bruno Mars, the Rolling Stones, Aerosmith, and Kylie Minogue. Music will be made available to consumers through streaming apps Xiami and TTPod, both of which are operated by Alibaba’s digital entertainment business.


It’s important to remember that Alibaba is more than just an e-commerce company. It is also one of China’s biggest mobile Internet players, competing head-to-head with Tencent, which has already struck similar arrangements with Warner Music Group and Sony Music Entertainment.


Alibaba’s growth plans include selling other online services to the huge user base it has grown by operating China’s top e-commerce platforms and online payment service Alipay.


In addition to online entertainment, the company and its subsidiaries also has aspirations in healthcare management, cloud computing, and financial services like a credit scoring system that uses data from Alibaba’s family of e-commerce platforms.


Streaming music is a potential growth market for Chinese Internet companies, but only if they succeed in dealing with piracy. According to the Financial Times, China accounted for less than one percent of the $15 billion in global revenues made in 2013 by record companies, in part because pirated tracks are easy to obtain.


The government, however, has begun to crackdown on copyright infringement, and deals like the ones Alibaba and Tencent have struck with BMG, Warner Music Group, and Sony Music Entertainment give music publishers more power over their IP in China.


In a statement, Alibaba said “the agreement will not only significantly boost earnings by BMG artists and writers from the world’s most populous nation, but also give them a powerful ally in hleping grow the legitimate music market in China.”


This means that Alibaba will help BMG keep an eye on pirated music and work with them to take legal action against services that are using tracks that violate BMG’s copyright.


Featured Image: Antonio Gravante/Shutterstock (IMAGE HAS BEEN MODIFIED)



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This Easy Cheese 3D Printer Offers Sweet, Golden Disruption

We toss the word “disruption” around far too frivolously here but I think we’ve finally found a product that deserves to be called amazing, magical, game-changing, and – dare I say it? – disruptive. It is an Easy Cheese 3D printer, four words that have never been brought together in the English language yet that are so important to the future of mankind.


What are you watching here? The future, mostly. It’s a way to dispense sweet Easy Cheese (a cheese product extruded from a can) onto a surface. The resulting slurry can be ejected in various shapes, including, but not limited to, a square. The resulting Easy Cheese objects can be eaten or thrown away.


Created by Andrew Maxwell-Parish, the project is obviously not ready for primetime but it’s an important proof-of-concept for those ready to explore the brave new world of three-dimensional dairy manufacturing. Near the end of the video, for example, we see the cheese extruder popping off the head and we also see the dreaded “cheese foof” – a gaseous outburst associated with air bubbles in the medium. Some gave all and all gave some in the slow march to this moment.


In the end I doubt mankind is ready for true cheese extrusion but it’s an important signpost for whatever evolved species takes over after we are gone. Excelsior.






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The End Of Hardware Alley Registrations Is Nigh!


It’s almost April and Hardware Alley, our annual celebration of all things hardware, is nearly full. You need to sign up ASAP and let me know you’re coming because I want to see you and your bright, shining, robotic amazingness on our show floor.


Disrupt runs from May 4-6 and will be held at the Manhattan Center in New York City. It’s an amazing event and you can check it out here.


What is Hardware Alley? It’s a celebration of hardware startups (and other cool gear makers) featuring everything from robotic drones to 3D printers. We try to bring in an eclectic mix of amazing exhibitors and I think you’ll agree that our previous Alleys have been roaring successes.


You’ll get to exhibit on the last day of Disrupt SF, May 6, to show off your goods and get access to some of the most interesting people (and most interesting VCs) in the world.


All you need to demo is a laptop and your amazingness. TechCrunch provides you with: 30″ round cocktail table, linens, table-top sign, inclusion in program agenda and website, exhibitor WiFi, and press list.


You can reserve your spot by purchasing a Hardware Alley Exhibitor Package here.


If you are Kickstarting your project now or bootstrapping, please contact me at john@techcrunch.com with the subject line “HARDWARE ALLEY.” I will do my best to accommodate you but act quickly: I’m almost out of discounts.






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Phhhoto Tops 1 Million Users


Phhhoto, perhaps the only social network to have first launched as a physical party product aimed at the enterprise, has topped 1 million registered users over the course of the past nine months. Users have posted upwards of 10 million Phhhotos to the platform.


Phhhoto started back at SXSW in 2013 with an iPad-based photobooth, but instead of capturing the usual strip of four photos, the iPad app (hooked up to a stand with special built-in lighting) captures four frames and then strings them into a looping GIF. Users can then text themselves the Phhhoto to save to their phone and share on other social networks.


The product was called Phhhoto Pro.


nyfwphhhotoFor a year, the Phhhoto team built out Phhhoto Pro to offer at parties and different events for a negotiable fee, while secretly working on an app that consumers could use whenever they want from their own device.


The app launched in August of 2014 and the company has since grown to one million registered users. Notably, Phhhoto operates much like Snapchat when it comes to populating a user’s social graph, depending solely on the user’s phonebook as opposed to another network like Facebook or Twitter.


For a long time, Phhhoto Pro has been a useful user acquisition tool — the company has around 300 corporate clients and has set up the Phhhoto Pro booth at more than 1,000 different events — but cofounder Champ Bennet explained to TechCrunch that the app has now overtaken the physical product in terms of user acquisition rate.


“The cool thing about Phhhoto Pro is not just that it continues to drive user acquisition, but it offers this level of brand equity for users that makes them high-value users on the app side.”


phhhotobooth


Moving forward, the company is focusing on the content itself, with the intention to build a platform that fosters media creation from within the app, as opposed to outside content. By comparison, networks like Facebook and Twitter are built to hold and stream content from a number of different networks, while Snapchat (more akin to Phhhoto) is designed to support content created on Snapchat.


“We’re trying to build something pure, and the product has gotten to a point where the Phhhoto media type is something that our users are enthusiastic about, so now it’s about how we can loop that into new ways of communicating, and perhaps even new content types,” said Omar Elsayed.


Phhhoto has raised $225K in seed funding led by Diplo.





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Gmail for Android now lets you check all your accounts in a single inbox

Google is unleashing a significant update to its Android Gmail app today that should please users with several email accounts.


You can now view emails from all your different accounts in one spot with a new “All inboxes” option. This lets you respond to all of your messages without needing to manually switch between account, whether it’s a Gmail account or not.


All Inboxes View Final 540x392 Gmail for Android now lets you check all your accounts in a single inbox


Gmail’s conversation view makes sorting through long email threads easier, but it’s previously only been available for gmail.com addresses. Now any IMAP/POP accounts are getting the feature too, so your Outlook conversations will look just as organized as your Gmail ones.


Conversations View Final 540x392 Gmail for Android now lets you check all your accounts in a single inbox


Otherwise, there are a few minor updates. Search has been improved with smarter autocompete, while animations have been made more responsive and attachments now show a larger preview.


attachment preview final 540x392 Gmail for Android now lets you check all your accounts in a single inbox


The updated app should be rolling out to users everywhere today. No word on the features coming to iOS yet, but we’ll update this post if we find out more.


➤ All your mail, together in one place [Gmail Blog]








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Meet The Censorship Activists Who Are Scaring China’s Government

Google Now Includes Google+ Photos In Drive

drive_photos_nexus6_animated2Google has begun showing photos uploaded via Google+ in Google Drive, where they can be managed via a new Google Photos tab, or stored in folders alongside other kinds of files easily. The inclusion of Photos and Videos in Drive is one sign that Google is moving to part out the Google+ social network into its key components, and is good news for mobile photographers.


Google+ has one of the best automatic Photos tools in the business, thanks to its automatic enhancements of color balance and exposure, as well as other tweaks and organizational tools. The move to include your Google+ library in Drive likely helps make it much more accessible and useful for those who are already using Google+ as a backup destination for pics snapped on their mobile device. You can also now auto backup directly to Drive, bypassing the need to use Google+ for that at all.


Putting the Photos menu in Drive and populating it with Google+ images and videos means you won’t have to change your practices to take advantage of the switch, and the feature should already be available on Android, iOS and the web.






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Google+ separation begins, photos now available in Google Drive

Google is about to make looking through your old Google+ photos a whole lot easier.


drive photos nexus6 animated2 Google+ separation begins, photos now available in Google Drive


Google+ photos will now show up in Google Drive, in a move google hopes will make using its various platforms more seamless. You’ll find a new “Google Photos” menu on Drive in Android, iOS and the Web.


From there you can manage your photos and videos just like any other Drive files. It’s a small but neat addition that should make organizing your photo library a bit easier.


The change follows Google’s announcement at the beginning of the month that it would be separating Google+ into different communications, streams and photos services.


➤ Your photos and files, together in Drive [Google]








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You can now trade-in your Android, Windows or BlackBerry smartphone for credit at Apple Stores

Apple’s getting a bit friendlier about trading in your device through its Reuse and Recycling program.


The company now lets you bring in non-Apple smartphones – including Android Windows, and BlackBerry devices – to one of its stores for credits towards a new purchase of an iPhone 5c, iPhone 6 or iPhone 6 Plus. Likewise, you can now trade-in a PC computer in exchange for a discount on a new Mac.


Apple Reuse and Recycle Recycling 540x185 You can now trade in your Android, Windows or BlackBerry smartphone for credit at Apple StoresThe new trade-in offer shows up on individual store pages, so it’s currently only available at physical retail locations; the online Reuse and Recycling page doesn’t allow non-Apple devices for credit.


Previously, Apple would only offer credit for Apple products. While that would allow it to easily recycle parts from its old devices, the expanded offer now gives non-Apple users new incentive to make a switch.


➤ Apple via 9to5Mac


Image Credit: Shutterstock








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Flipboard officially launches shared Magazines for private groups

Nearly two weeks ago, we reported on Flipboard enabling Magazines for private groups on Android with the most recent version of its app. These private magazines could come in handy for folks who want to share content and ideas with only a select group of people.


Now the company has officially announced the feature and rolled it out to everyone using iOS, Android, Windows Phone or Flipboard.com.


In order to crate a private magazine, simply click on the plus button at the bottom-right of a story. You’ll now see an option to set the magazine to “Private” so that only invited users can actually read it, after which you’re prompted to set a title and description and then select the chosen few.


For existing Magazines, there’s also new “Invite Contributor” option that allows you to add collaborators who can add their own stories to your reading queue.


➤ Flipboard [Android | iOS | Windows Phone]








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Staples coupon - 20% off toner orders of $200 or more

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HOT! Posted 3 days, 19 hours ago


In the never ending string of deals from MacMall, we found this Sanho 16GB USB Flash Drive w/Lightning for iPhone & iPad - Hyperdrive for only $59.95. That's a total savings of 40% off the list price of $99.95 and the lowest we've seen this particular model. This tiny device will allow you to backup pictures music, and more from an iPhone or iPad, freeing up valuable space. Order soon, this sale's ending is unknown.



Stores: 20x200, 6pm, Amazon, Apple Store, American Eagle, Banana Republic, Best Buy


Sections: Automotive, Computers, Electronics


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Best Buy - Select Blu-ray movies from $7

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HOT! Posted 3 days, 19 hours ago


In the never ending string of deals from MacMall, we found this Sanho 16GB USB Flash Drive w/Lightning for iPhone & iPad - Hyperdrive for only $59.95. That's a total savings of 40% off the list price of $99.95 and the lowest we've seen this particular model. This tiny device will allow you to backup pictures music, and more from an iPhone or iPad, freeing up valuable space. Order soon, this sale's ending is unknown.



Stores: 20x200, 6pm, Amazon, Apple Store, American Eagle, Banana Republic, Best Buy


Sections: Automotive, Computers, Electronics


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Target - BOGO 50% off select video games

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HOT! Posted 3 days, 19 hours ago


In the never ending string of deals from MacMall, we found this Sanho 16GB USB Flash Drive w/Lightning for iPhone & iPad - Hyperdrive for only $59.95. That's a total savings of 40% off the list price of $99.95 and the lowest we've seen this particular model. This tiny device will allow you to backup pictures music, and more from an iPhone or iPad, freeing up valuable space. Order soon, this sale's ending is unknown.



Stores: 20x200, 6pm, Amazon, Apple Store, American Eagle, Banana Republic, Best Buy


Sections: Automotive, Computers, Electronics


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Carter's 50% off everything + extra 15% off + FS

istick.jpg

HOT! Posted 3 days, 19 hours ago


In the never ending string of deals from MacMall, we found this Sanho 16GB USB Flash Drive w/Lightning for iPhone & iPad - Hyperdrive for only $59.95. That's a total savings of 40% off the list price of $99.95 and the lowest we've seen this particular model. This tiny device will allow you to backup pictures music, and more from an iPhone or iPad, freeing up valuable space. Order soon, this sale's ending is unknown.



Stores: 20x200, 6pm, Amazon, Apple Store, American Eagle, Banana Republic, Best Buy


Sections: Automotive, Computers, Electronics


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GitHub may have been targeted by Chinese hackers in DDoS attack

Code management platform GitHub has been fending off a days-long distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack since last Thursday. Security experts say the attack may have originated in China, reports The Wall Street Journal.


Over the past few days, San Francisco-based GitHub has been hit with huge amounts of traffic from overseas users of Baidu, a Chinese search engine. The attack caused the service to appear unavailable to many users since March 26.


Octocat 520x432 GitHub may have been targeted by Chinese hackers in DDoS attack


GitHub, which hosts developers’ coding projects online, found an onslaught of traffic directed at two specific pages on its platform that linked to copies of two sites that are banned in China — Greatfire.org, a resource that tracks content blocked in the country, and The New York Times’ Chinese language site.


NY Times CN GitHub may have been targeted by Chinese hackers in DDoS attack


At the time of writing, GitHub reports that it still under attack, but it has managed to bring the situation under control and its site is available to users as usual.


Mikko Hyponen, the chief research officer of cybersecurity firm F-Secure, said the attack was likely to have involved Chinese authorities because it involved the manipulation of Web traffic at a high level of the country’s internet infrastructure. “It had to be someone who had the ability to tamper with all the Internet traffic coming into China,” he said.


The attack manipulated traffic to Baidu from users who accessed the search engine from outside China and sent requests for data from their computers to GitHub. This made the attack more difficult to block, as it resembled typical traffic from around the world and not a single source attempting to bombard the site with data requests.


The Chinese government could have blocked GitHub entirely, but as the site is encrypted, it can’t tell whether users in the country are trying to access ordinary code projects or are looking for anti-censorship content hosted on the platform (such as an uncensored version of the social network Weibo, managed by Greatfire.org).


Blocking the whole site would also cut off access for tech companies in China that use GitHub.


The company said in a blog post that this has been the largest attack in its history, and that it involves a range of “sophisticated new techniques that use the web browsers of unsuspecting, uninvolved people to flood github.com with high levels of traffic.”


GitHub declined to comment on what content was specifically targeted in the attack, or who it suspected to be behind it. The company said, “Based on reports we’ve received, we believe the intent of this attack is to convince us to remove a specific class of content.”


Baidu said that it wasn’t involved in the attack and its systems weren’t breached either.


➤ U.S. Coding Website GitHub Hit With Cyberattack [The Wall Street Journal]


Image credit: Shutterstock


Read next: Reuters’ news sites are currently blocked in China








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Chinese Laundry coupon - Up to $30 off purchases

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HOT! Posted 3 days, 10 hours ago


In the never ending string of deals from MacMall, we found this Sanho 16GB USB Flash Drive w/Lightning for iPhone & iPad - Hyperdrive for only $59.95. That's a total savings of 40% off the list price of $99.95 and the lowest we've seen this particular model. This tiny device will allow you to backup pictures music, and more from an iPhone or iPad, freeing up valuable space. Order soon, this sale's ending is unknown.



Stores: 20x200, 6pm, Amazon, Apple Store, American Eagle, Banana Republic, Best Buy


Sections: Automotive, Computers, Electronics


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