The graphic comes from Who Is Hosting This and is meant to help us choose the right file type when saving an image. JPEG’s ability to reduce file size up to 15% without losing quality makes it useful for web pages (faster uploads and less storage space usage)—especially for colorful photos. GIF files alows for transparency and animation; they’re best for simple images with few colors. PNG is great for logos and might be more attractive than JPEG and GIF, depending on if file size is an issue or not.
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76 Google Now Voice Commands: Learn One New One Today
from lifehack.org
Hi new students, a simple trick is to look down a long list like this and find ONE command that you think you might use again, like “Record a Video” and practice it. I don’t recommend bothering with an entire list, but learning one new thing you are going to put into practice three times in the next week will actually be knowledge and could change your life in some manner.
Google Now is a simple, responsive personal assistant created by the hugely successful search engine Google that has been integrated into all Androids! All you need to do is say “Okay Google” to open Google Now in your Android smartphone and the microphone icon will will begin to pulse, indicating that your phone is listening. Now all you need to is say a command, but what should you say? What can you say? Here are more than 70 different commands you can use with Google Now to make almost every aspect of your daily life easier!
[As you can see, I have an iPhone. However, you can still use some of Google Now’s features on Apple products through the Google App. If you have an Android, then all of these commands will work on your phone!]
General Commands
1. Search for [life hacks].
2. Where was [Beyonce’] born?
3. How do you say [thank you] in [French]?
4. What does [tautology] mean?
5. Who invented [the television]?
6. What time is it in [Kuala Lumpur]?
7. How old is [Bryan Cranston]?
8. Stock price of [Apple]?
9. What is [Google] trading at?
10. Author of ["Cloud Atlas"]?
11. Show me pictures of [the Northern Lights].
12. How old is [Sean Bean]?
13. What’s the weather like in [Manhattan] [tonight]?
14. What is [12 miles] in [kilometers]?
15. What’s [1,000] divided by [12]?Apps
16. Post to Twitter [I love Lifehack]!
17. Search [Tumblr] for [pizza].
18. Open [Calculator].
19. Open [Spotify].
20. Take a photo.
21. Record a video.Entertainment
22. Open [lifehack.org].
23. YouTube [how to trim own fringe].
24. Play [Still Alive] by [GlaDOS].
25. Who acted in ["Guardians Of The Galaxy"]?
26. Who is the producer of ["Taxi Driver"]?
27. Runtime of ["The Godfather"].
28. What song is this?
29. What movies are playing [tomorrow night]?
30. Read ["The Girl With All The Gifts"].Productivity
31. Set an alarm for [7 am].
32. Set a timer for [5 minutes].
33. When is my [doctor’s appointment]?
34. What is my schedule for tomorrow?
35. Remind me to [buy pasta sauce at 5:30 pm].
36. Make a note: [back-up laptop to hard-drive].
37. Find [Siobhan Harmer’s] phone number.
38. My bills due this week.
39. Where’s my package?
40. Wake me up in [4 hours].
41. Create a calendar event: [meet Rosy at Luciano’s] [Saturday at 9 pm].Communication
42. Call [Jonny].
43. Text [April] ["please put the kettle on, I’ll be there soon"].
44. Send email to [Alex H.], subject: [Broken iPad], message: [I tried to read in the bath again].
45. Listen to voicemail.Travel
46. Map of [Birmingham].
47. Where is the nearest [Indian restaurant]?
48. Navigate to [the London Eye].
49. Show me all of my flight information.
50. Where’s my hotel?
51. Show me restaurants near my hotel
52. Show me the menu for [Wagamama’s].
53. What is [100 dollars] in [pounds]?
54. How far is [Paris] from [Cannes]?
55. What are some attractions in [Tokyo]?
56. Call the [MET].Sports
57. How are [Liverpool FC] doing?
58. Did [The New York Yankees] win their last game?
59. When is the next [Barcelona] game?Easter Eggs
60. Roll dice.
61. Flip a coin.
62. Do a barrel roll.
63. When am I?
64. Make me a sandwich!
65. What’s the loneliest number?
66. Who are you?
67. Who’s on first?
68. Beam me up, Scotty!
69. How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
70. Up up down down left right left right.
71. What is the answer to life, the universe and everything?
72. Tea, Earl Grey, hot.
73. When does the narwhal bacon?
74. What does the fox say?
75. Lions, and Tigers, and Bears…
76. What is the nature of the universe?As our everyday lives become more integrated with the technology around us, applications like Google Now are becoming increasingly useful in all sorts of situations! You can even experiment with different phrases, perhaps ones that you feel most comfortable using, and see just how capable and responsive Google Now really is.
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Play Old MS-DOS Games
Play retro DOS games in a couple of clicks, thanks to The Internet Archive. The site, in an effort to help preserve the fading games of yesterday, is offering over 2,300 classic DOS titles, without the need to download anything. You’ll be playing in two clicks.
Head to the collection right now! Version 2 of the Archive’s interface gives you a quick way to browse and search games.
There is also the MS-DOS Showcase, a collection of selected interesting or historical programs.
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Google Can Now Tell You’re Not a Robot With Just One Click
This is on the topic I discussed today in some of my classes, the movie “The Imitation Game” and the resulting end-of-movie scene [SPOILER ALERT] where Benedict Cumberbatch playing Alan Turing {great link} asks if he is a person or a machine.
Getty Images
When Alan Turing first conceived of the Turing Test in 1947, he suggested that a computer program’s resemblance to a human mind could be gauged by making it answer a series of questions written by an interrogator in another room. Jump forward about seven decades, and Google says it’s now developed a Turing Test that can spot a bot by requiring it to do something far simpler: Click on a checkbox.
The new reCAPTCHA is here. A significant number of your users can now attest they are human without having to solve a CAPTCHA. Instead with just a single click they’ll confirm they are not a robot. We’re calling it the No CAPTCHA reCAPTCHA experience. See blog for more details.
reCAPTCHA protects the websites you love from spam and abuse. So, when you go online—say, for some last-minute holiday shopping—you won’t be competing with robots and abusive scripts to access sites. For years, we’ve prompted users to confirm they aren’t robots by asking them to read distorted text and type it into a box, like this:
But, we figured it would be easier to just directly ask our users whether or not they are robots—so, we did! We’ve begun rolling out a new API that radically simplifies the reCAPTCHA experience. We’re calling it the “No CAPTCHA reCAPTCHA” and this is how it looks:
On websites using this new API, a significant number of users will be able to securely and easily verify they’re human without actually having to solve a CAPTCHA. Instead, with just a single click, they’ll confirm they are not a robot.
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Selfies on a Stick, and the Social-Content Challenge for the Media
This is the second of TWO articles for use in class. As always, if you have free views left on NYTimes read the comments and related articles on NYTimes.com
Sometimes you don’t need an analyst’s report to get a look at the future of the media industry and the challenges it will bring.
A family commemorates New Year’s Eve in Times Square using a collapsible pole that improves camera angles for self-portraits. CreditZoran Milich/Reuters
On New Year’s Eve, I was one of the poor souls working in Times Square. By about 1 p.m., it was time to evacuate, and when I stepped into the cold that would assault the huddled, partying masses that night, a couple was getting ready to pose for a photo with the logo on The New York Times Building in the background. I love that I work at a place that people deem worthy of memorializing, and I often offer to help.
My assistance was not required. As I watched, the young couple mounted their phone on a collapsible pole, then extended it outward, the camera now able to capture the moment in wide-screen glory.
I’d seen the same phenomenon when I was touring the Colosseum in Rome last month. So many people were fighting for space to take selfies with their long sticks — what some have called the “Narcissistick” — that it looked like a reprise of the gladiatorial battles the place once hosted.
The urge to stare at oneself predates mirrors — you could imagine a Neanderthal fussing with his hair, his image reflected in a pool of water — but it has some pretty modern dimensions. In the forest of billboards in Times Square, the one with a camera that captures the people looking at the billboard always draws a big crowd.
Selfies are hardly new, but the incremental improvement in technology of putting a phone on a stick — a curiously analog fix that Time magazine listed as one of the best inventions of 2014 along with something called the “high-beta fusion reactor” — suggests that the séance with the self is only going to grow. (Selfie sticks are often used to shoot from above, which any self-respecting selfie auteur will tell you is the most flattering angle.)
There are now vast, automated networks to harvest all that narcissism, along with lots of personal data, creating extensive troves of user-generated content. The tendency to listen to the holy music of the self is reflected in the abundance of messaging and self-publishing services — Vine, WhatsApp, Snapchat, Instagram, Apple’s new voice messaging and the rest — all of which pose a profound challenge for media companies. Most media outfits are in the business of one-to-many, creating single pieces of text, images or audio meant to be shared by the masses.
But most sharing does not involve traditional media companies. Consumers are increasingly glued to their Facebook feeds as a source of information about not just their friends but the broader world as well. And with the explosive growth of Snapchat, the fastest-growing social app of the last year, much of the sharing that takes place involves one-to-one images that come and go in 10 seconds or less. Getting a media message — a television show, a magazine, a website, not to mention the ads that pay for most of it — into the intimate space between consumers and a torrent of information about themselves is only going to be more difficult.
I’ve been around since before there was a consumer Internet, but my frame of reference is as neither a Luddite nor a curmudgeon. I didn’t end up with over half a million followers on social media — Twitter and Facebookcombined — by posting only about broadband regulations and cable deals. (Not all self-flattering portraits are rendered in photos. You see what I did there, right?) The enhanced ability to communicate and share in the current age has many tangible benefits.
My wife travels a great deal, sometimes to perilous regions, and WhatsApp’s global reach gives us a stable way of staying in touch. Over the holidays, our family shared endless photos, emoticons and inside jokes in group messages that were very much a part of Christmas. Not that long ago, we might have spent the time gathered around watching “Elf,” but this year, we were brought together by the here and now, the familiar, the intimate and personal. We didn’t need a traditional media company to help us create a shared experience.
Many younger consumers have become mini-media companies themselves, madly distributing their own content on Vine, Instagram, YouTube and Snapchat. It’s tough to get their attention on media created for the masses when they are so busy producing their own. And while the addiction to self is not restricted to millennials — boomers bow to no one in terms of narcissism — there are now easy-to-use platforms that amplify that self-reflecting impulse.
While legacy media companies still make products meant to be studied and savored over varying lengths of time — the movie “Boyhood,” The Atlantic magazine, the novel “The Goldfinch” — much of the content that individuals produce is ephemeral. Whatever bit of content is in front of someone — text messages, Facebook posts, tweets — is quickly replaced by more and different. For Snapchat, the fact that photos and videos disappear almost immediately is not a flaw, it’s a feature. Users can send content into the world with little fear of creating a trail of digital breadcrumbs that advertisers, parents or potential employers could follow. Warhol’s 15 minutes of fame has been replaced by less than 15 seconds on Snapchat.
Facebook, which is a weave of news encompassing both the self and the world, has become, for many, a de facto operating system on the web. And many of the people who aren’t busy on Facebook are up for grabs on the web but locked up on various messaging apps. What used to be called the audience is disappearing into apps, messaging and user-generated content. Media companies in search of significant traffic have to find a way into that stream.
“The majority of time that people are spending online is on Facebook,” said Anthony De Rosa, editor in chief of Circa, a mobile news start-up. “You have to find a way to break through or tap into all that narcissism. We are way too into ourselves.”
Facebook may be dominant, but Snapchat is growing much faster, over 55 percent in the last six months, whose younger-skewing audience tells you where things might be headed. Selfies are the dominant métier of Snapchat, an art form so addictive that New York State passed a law, to take effect in February, that outlaws self-portraits with tigers and lions, one trend that would seem, um, ill-advised.
Later on New Year’s Eve, along with more than 10 million others, I settled in with friends to watch the ball drop as Ryan Seacrest hosted the countdown on ABC. Aside from Taylor Swift, the big star of the evening was Hearst Magazines, which distributed pink top hats and balloons branded with the logos of Cosmopolitan magazine and CoverGirl cosmetics. Clearly, live broadcast television events still draw a crowd, and Cosmopolitan’s name was everywhere you looked, so in that sense, the old order had been restored.
Then again, Snapchat created its own New Year’s Eve event as part of its Stories feature, a collection of user-provided photos and video from celebrations around the world, including Times Square. All of it was captured with user consent, then disappeared 24 hours later.
Regardless of whether I looked in on television and or on the chat version of the event, I saw lots of images of happy if chilly people — most of whom were busy taking selfies to commemorate the moment.