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Showing posts with label LIFESTYLE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LIFESTYLE. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Facebook Data Says These Are America's Fittest Cities


El Paso, San Antonio, Oklahoma City and Albuquerque are among America's 10 fittest cities, according to Facebook data.
They're joined by Colorado Springs, Virginia Beach, Portland, Tacoma, Austin, and Livingston, N.J. Facebook came up with this list by tracking fitness-related comments and updates, check-ins and app usage over the past three months in cities where at least 200,000 people use the world's largest social network.
Facebook also analyzed mentions of specific fitness-related activities to see what's popular in various cities. According to the data, people in Oakland like to get down as America's most dance-crazed city, San Diego has the most marathoners and folks in Austin are pretty obsessed with yoga.
More of Facebook's findings are presented in the following infographic. Check it out for yourself; then let us know how well you think this social data reflects real life in the comments, below.
Homepage image via Kent C. Horner/Getty Images


Thursday, 4 July 2013

Americans Spend 23 Hours Per Week Online, Texting

BusinessNewsDaily 
Staying up-to-date on emails, social media and other forms of online communication can take a lot of time — more time than many people may realize. New research has found that the average user spends 23 hours every week emailing, texting, using social media and communicating online in other ways.

That number represents nearly 14% of the total time in a week. All that time is taking a toll on users, a new eMarketer report found. However, 54% of survey respondents said they have tried to decrease their reliance on technology in the past year in favor of more in-person contact. That number is only set to grow, with 62% of web users in the United States saying they hope to be able to decrease tech usage in the coming year so they can communicate face-to-face.
Despite those efforts, over the past year, users have increased the time they have spent usingsocial networks, emailing, watching online videos, playing online games and reading or writing blogs. Additionally, time spent each day on online radio, newspapers and magazines has remained constant over the past year.
Email is the biggest time consumer, researchers found. Respondents said they spend nearly eight hours per week checking emails. They also said they spend nearly seven hours per week on Facebook and five hours per week on YouTube. Moreover, users spend nearly the same amount of time each week on Google+ and Twitter.
Users are checking those platforms with varying frequency, though, the eMarketer report found. More than 75% of users checked email, texts, Facebook and Instagram at least one time a day. Other new platforms are growing in popularity as well.
"Photo-focused sites, particularly suited to mobile, seem to be especially popular," the eMarketerreport said. "Instagram saw 70% of users logging in daily, and the relatively new Snapchat was just behind, with 67% of its users logging in daily."
Two-thirds of users also said they check YouTube once per day, while nearly 60% check Google+ daily. Just 40% of LinkedIn users check the site daily, but nearly half check it several times a week.
"Even as web users report a desire to disconnect, and discussion circulates about Facebook users decreasing time spent, it remains to be seen whether social users will follow through on that promise to log off, or perhaps simply translate their time spent on social to the sites that best suit their communication needs," the eMarketer report said.
Image via iStockphotoTsuji
This article originally published at BusinessNewsDaily here

Wednesday, 1 May 2013

Bang With Friends Is Heading to Your Smartphone


Bang With Friends, the service for lusty Facebook users, is going mobile. It raised $1 million this week to help you get more friends with benefits. The influx of cash will be focused on helping you see, from the comfort of your phone, just which friends you might want to hook up with.
The site's co-founder, who goes by C, revealed a little in an email exchange with Mashable, but still kept answers as murky as usual
"We'll be expanding BWF to enable even more honest offline meetings, helping our users break the ice and find more awesome opportunities," he said before revealing a true nugget. "We're taking it mobile soon, too."
C says the inspiration for the service was "looking at the frustration people have with other dating sites and getting tired of the dishonesty. That, and a decent amount of booze."
At least he's honest. For Bang virgins, here's what you need to know: After signing in with Facebook, the service offers anonymous scanning and selection of friends you'd like to get to know in their birthday suits. And if your matches select you as well, Bang With Friends will email both of you and let you know it's on.
Founded in January by some shy founders, the service is nearing 1 million users and about 200,000 matches. About 70% of the users are between the age of 18 and 34.
What's become window shopping-dating is a hard nut to crack, and love it or hate it, Bang With Friends is a novel digital way to break the ice. But detractors call it a privacy disaster waiting to happen, with questions of data storage, semi-public online sexual behavior and personal data identification. Plus there's also a potential PR fail in the making, should the service fall victim to the pitfalls of tools like Skout, the geo-social dating app that adults used to contact and hook up with minors. If and when that (or something worse) happens, the general public is likely to be up in arms.
There's also competition from services like Snapchat, the photo-message sharing service perfect for sending an Anthony Weiner-like message. With Facebook reportedly working on a similar service, it's very possible that beyond taking it mobile, Bang With Friends' venture capital could help it expand to this image-message space, an increasingly popular means for flirtation.
Spencer Chen, senior director of business development at Appcelerator, says he's not sure about adoption and use by young people — or at least his friends, who he says are instead experimenting with Tinder and Let's Date. Plus he's heard nothing regarding funding or growth since the service's launch before SXSW. Still, he managed to correctly read Bang With Friends' cards and thinks that based on the success of Tinder, Let's Date and Snapchat, BWF will build out its mobile offering to "exploit these serendipitous hookups leveraging mobile, social and location."
Despite a relatively crowded market, there's likely room for one more service, Chen says. "Dating is still a massive market, revenue-wise."
Would you use the app? Let us know in the comments below.
Image via iStockphotojaroon

Tuesday, 30 April 2013

No-Wash Shirt Doesn Stink After 100 Days


 For Discovery News


The clothing company, called Wool&Prince, was started several months ago by Portland, Oregon native Mac Bishop two of his friends. Their button-down shirt prototype was made from wool put through a special process to make it soft, wrinkle-resistant and odor-free. While they don’t reveal what techniques are used to achieve this, Bishop documented wearing one of the shirts for 100 days in a row here. (Hat tip to Gizmodo.)
Bishop extolls the benefits of sheep wool, and talked with Margaret Frey, an associate professor of fiber science and apparel design at Cornell University about it in a Skype video. Australian sheep have been bred to have fine, soft fibers for an even flat fabric, Frey said. “It doesn’t have that itchiness that we might have associated with wool.”
Still, I’m highly skeptical about the shirt’s odor-free properties after seeing a GIF of Bishop next to a smoker, but will have to take his word for it since nobody I know has tried the shirt out yet. The company recently created a Kickstarter campaign to sell the shirts at $98 apiece so they can raise enough to place an order with the factory.
Living in Colorado, I’ve accumulated a few really nice albeit expensive wool items for outdoor use, including base layers and socks. Washing seems to reduce their smell-resistance, though. The pieces have a vaguely sheep-like smell after they’re gently cleaned and hung up to dry. Plus the socks could walk home by themselves after several days of heavy, sweaty use.
If this NYC startup can branch out into socks and underwear that truly don’t smell after lengthy wear, then we’ll really talk. Summer and its putrid sweat is just around the corner.
Image courtesy of Wool&Prince

What Does the Internet Know About You?


 for TechNewsDaily 
As Rebecca Martinson knows, there’s no privacy on the Internet. When a profanity-laden rant she emailed to only her Delta Gamma sorority sisters made its way onto Gawker and into viral history, she was publicly mocked and forced to resign from the sorority. But the Internet is not only a place to be humiliated. It's also a place for people or companies to pick up even more information about you. That includes your address, gender, date of birth and, with a little sleuthing, your Social Security number and credit history.
That's been made clear in a recent spate of "doxing" (document tracing) of celebrities that revealed, for example, that Microsoft CEO Bill Gates had an outstanding debt on his credit card. But none of this information comes from hacking. It's either already public or accessible by, for example, paying an online people-finding service to get a Social Security number, and then running a credit check.
Then there's all the data you pour into social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Instagram, Foursquare and others. Now employers can fire workers for expressing opinions they don’t like, strangers can stalk you with mobile apps and college administrators can judge the quality of applicants by the number of drinking photos posted to their account.
Aleecia L. McDonald, director of privacy for the Center for Internet and Society at Stanford University, said people are grappling with the idea that their information has a secondary use. “The issue isn’t so much that information is out there and people can see it,” she said. “On Facebook, that’s the point. But it’s when that information gets used in a new and different way.”

It's All Public

Many gun owners felt that secondary use of private information when they saw an interactive map published by the Journal News of White Plains, N.Y., that listed the name and addresses of everyone in two New York state counties with a gun permit. A maplisting the names, addresses, phone numbers and social media accounts of Journal News reporters, including the author of the original story, was circulated online in retaliation. At least one county refused to turn over pistol permit records, citing the possibility of “endangering citizens.”
However, the records are all public. There is no law against publishing them either in print or online, even if it makes some uncomfortable.
“I can use Zillow.com and see home prices for everything up and down the neighborhood,” McDonald said. “Sure, all that information was available at City Hall, but I wasn’t going to look it all up [in person] because that takes effort.”
When real estate search site Zillow first came out, many people were shocked at the amount of information on it — including the price paid for homes and names of owners. Zillow has since backed down from publishing names, but last year, it began listing homes going through the foreclosure process, which caused another firestorm of people looking to opt out. But all the information comes from public records. Zillow says it doesn’t list names, only properties; and it does not allow those with foreclosed property to opt out” of being published.
Other sites, such as Arrests.org, list mug shots by state. And some local police departments are now posting photos of recent arrests on Facebook. Now with the Internet and databases, public records are easy to distribute and see.

Social Oversharing

Adi Kamdar of the Electronic Frontier Foundation cautions about the use of Facebook Graph Search, which allows users to search information from news feeds of friends and those users with settings set to public on Facebook. Now anyone can look for, for example, single women living in San Francisco who share their taste for tapas and perhaps find a phone number and email address. Who needs Match.com anymore?
Facebook has also reportedly been working for the past year on a socially ambient mobile app — one that lets you literally track people or friends via a map and GPS. While the socially ambient aspect hasn’t appeared yet, it’s expected to surface, according to Bloomberg News, likely in a new version of the Facebook Home interface.
“There’s nothing you can do in the electronic world that your boss can’t find and you can’t be fired for,” said Lewis Maltby, president of National Workrights Institute. “I got a call today from someone who got fired because he was writing short stories on his own time (online) and apparently they were a little kinky.”
Maltby, whose organization fights for human rights in the workplace, said that today, people’s futures are in peril every time their boss or college admissions office looks on the Internet. That means users shouldn’t post photos of themselves with an alcoholic drink in their hand or espouse political views, because it can lead to a value judgment.
“You can still go online and say what you want, but you’re crazy if you do,” Maltby said.
Another problem today is social networks becoming a larger part of one’s life. To comment on articles, people frequently log into a Facebook account first. Others are finding that their Google+ social account is being attached to their Gmail account and will be needed to comment on apps or games on Google Play. Google+ accounts are also used to sign into YouTube and other Google sites. Many social networks are seemingly trying to end anonymous posting.
To preserve privacy, a person would have to walk away from Google or Facebook. “It’s a trade-off to some extent,” Kamdar said. “The more these services get adopted, the more you have to think, ‘My entire online presence depends on this corporation or this service I don’t want to opt into.’”
Recently Facebook Home was launched on Android devices, and many noticed that the interface logged online purchases and visits, although Facebook said that it doesn’t assign names to the information. Facebook is using customer loyalty cards' information and public records to sell to advertisers and marketers. However, Facebook Home isn’t hunting anyone down to do this; people themselves are opting to use an Android phone with the Facebook skin on it.

What You Can Do

Long-term solutions could be legal, regulatory or even codes of conduct for companies, said McDonald. The White House is now working on a Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights, but there is still not a working draft of the bill, according to the New York Times.
Meanwhile, users can save themselves some headaches by understanding that whatever they place online will stay online. Nothing online is temporary; instead, it's more like an Internet tattoo. Martinson’s online (and likely late-night) outburst will follow her throughout college and possibly the workforce, according to CNN.
Keep all social networks set to the highest privacy settings even if you have to manually approve follow requests.
If posting to a forum or other online database, don’t use your real name or email address (or at least one you don’t mind people seeing).
Never give out your date of birth, phone number or physical address if you can help it.
Never give out your Social Security number. Many colleges, banks, brokerage houses and other companies now have alternative login IDs to use provided you ask for one. (However, not even colleges or banks are immune to hackers, so always monitor your credit for suspicious activity.)
Remember that what you post can be seen by others. Be careful of what you say and which photos are posted because it could potentially be seen by millions of people.
“A lot of data is coming from people directly,” McDonald said. “Lock down [social media] accounts to only friends. Being more mindful is the first step we can take before looking for other solutions.”
Image via Allison Joyce/Getty Images


Tuesday, 23 April 2013

8 Ways to Recycle Your Old Smartphone

Zoe Fox
What did you do with your old smartphone after you upgraded to the latest iPhone 5 or Samsung Galaxy III?
According to a November 2012 survey by Lookout, 62% of American households have old cellphones lying around, unused. Discarded iPhones alone account for $9 billion of unused goods in consumers' homes.
If you're among the 62% with dormant phones, we challenge you this Earth Day to come up with some creative gadget recycling solutions. We've rounded up eight ways you can recycle your old phone, from using it as an external hard drive to donating it to a worthy charity.
So what do you think: Will you give your old smartphone a second life, even though you've upgraded on to the newer model?

1. Donate Your Phone to the Troops

Non-profit Phones for Soldiers works to provide U.S. troops with a cost-free way to call home from their active stations. Through recycling partner Mindful eCycling, old mobile phones are traded in for calling cards and other communications devices.
Screenshot courtesy of Phones for Soldiers


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2. Sell It on Glyde

Looking for a one-stop shop for selling back all the old tech in your home? Glyde lets you buy and sell a variety of devices, plus it compares the amounts you can fetch on its site with offers from Amazon, Apple and Gazelle.
Screenshot courtesy of Glyde


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3. Put It on an Appstand

This picture frame for your iPhone 3 or 3GS turns your old iPhone into a lovely piece of home decor. Available on sale for $8.73, the Appstand lets you breathe new life into your outdated Apple smartphone.
Screenshot courtesy of Koyono/Appstand


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4. Sell It Back to Apple

Apple will trade your old iPhone for an Apple gift card through its Reuse and Recycling program. Amounts vary depending on your phone's make and model.
Image courtesy of Flickr, Gene Hunt


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5. Donate to Survivors of Domestic Violence

Verizon has collected more than 10 million phones since 2001 for victims of domestic abuse: one in four U.S. women, one in seven men and nearly 3 million children. To donate your old phone, drop it at a Verizon store, ship it or donate to a HopeLine phone drive.
Screenshot courtesy of Verizon HomeLine


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6. Search Your Options With the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

The U.S. EPA provides dozens of resources for recycling your old smartphone with its mobile, PC and television search engine. Depending on your device and make, the EPA surfaces optimal recycling options.
Image courtesy of Flickr, georgehotelling


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7. Donate to the One Fund for Boston, via Gazelle

Boston-based Gazelle, known for its smartphone buy-back programs, is accepting donated items for the One Fund for Boston. If you select the Boston Marathon victims' relief fund as your preferred payment type, 100% of proceeds from your donation will go toward those most-affected by the marathon tragedy.
Image courtesy of Flickr, Nick Ledford


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8. Send Your Phone to CTIA for Refurbishing

If your smartphone is still in good shape, the CTIA will clean, test and update it, then return it to certain retailers who will resell the device. Alternately, if your device doesn't need the complete refurbish, CTIA will clean it and put it up for resell. Phones unable to be refurbished or reused still get recycled for their reusable materials.
Image courtesy of Flickr, epSos.de


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