Microsoft has been working diligently on eroding Apple's leadership in the tablet and PC space for years now, trying hard to convince the world the Surface line can replace both iPads and MacBooks. Based on sales numbers, MS is a long way from changing mentalities, but Redmond continues to push. And push, and push. Assured the third-generation Surface Pro is the… Continue reading Latest Microsoft trade-in stunt offers up to $650 off Surface Pro 3 for MacBook Airs The post Latest Microsoft trade-in stunt offers up to $650 off Surface Pro 3 for MacBook Airs appeared first on GadgeTell. FireChat is an interesting messaging service since it allows people to anonymously contact each other without an internet connection as long as they are within 200 feet of each other. There are multiple applications for a service like FireChat, but the app had been limited because it only worked with either iOS or Android, not both. The app has now been updated to support cross-platform offline chats, enabling almost all smartphone users to chat with each other without a connection. Continue reading FireChat’s offline messaging works with iOS, Android The post FireChat’s offline messaging works with iOS, Android appeared first on GadgeTell. The growing popularity of stickers and Line's involvement with them since the early days has resulted in the messaging app becoming very popular. Line has found ways to draw in revenue and expand its user base, all while still providing its primary messaging service to a group of 450 million people. Three years after launching, Line has announced that its whole family of apps has reached 1 billion combined downloads. Those apps include things like Line camera, Line Car, and Line Bubble. Continue reading Line apps reach 1 billion downloads The post Line apps reach 1 billion downloads appeared first on GadgeTell. There are a lot of arguments floating around about how life was better in the days before the internet. And though I can't comment or speculate on how hard the government will roll us with all the surveillance it conducts with the Internet, I can argue that we are far better off with access to the internet. Here are 7 arguments I've heard and reasons why they're LIES. 1. Boredom bred creativity. This is a common argument that gets thrown around any time a Young brings up life before the internet. It's also false. Boredom doesn't breed creativity– sensory input does. Believe it or not, Millennials weren't born into a world with internet, smartphones and data plans. We did the whole lie-in-twelve-different-positions-while-thinking-of-ways-to-spend-this-summer-day-without-access-to-water thing and it sucked as hard as it sounds. It didn't breed creativity, it bred dangerous ideas that usually ended up in some sort of punishment or injury. Or it led to the inevitable activity of watching daytime TV. We all became exponentially more creatively productive when sites like Tumblr happened because we were bombarded with sensory input that inspired us. Nobody gets inspired by an uneventful summer day in a long string of uneventful summer days. You know what inspires people? Fan fiction. 2. Finding information in books was fulfilling. I call BS. The philosophy behind this argument is so flimsy it falls apart before we even get to how much the Dewey Decimal System cards sucked. What makes unnecessarily wasted time fulfilling? Are you sure you're not just nostalgic for the romance of time spent in a library? Because I know I am. If trekking to the library and pulling a book full of likely outdated information off… Continue reading Internet Appreciation: Debunking 7 Myths About Life Before the Internet The post Internet Appreciation: Debunking 7 Myths About Life Before the Internet appeared first on GadgeTell. Freemium apps are important on both Android and iOS, but the extent to which they provide revenue for app stores is not entirely clear. A new report from App Annie sheds some light on the matter and says that 98 percent of the Google Play Store's revenue is coming from freemium applications. Those games and apps are completely free to download and use, but they include in-app purchases that people are likely going to accept. That statistic suggests that either freemium apps make more sense when developers are trying to make money, or that there are just far more freemium apps being released. Continue reading Google Play revenue built on freemium apps The post Google Play revenue built on freemium apps appeared first on GadgeTell. | |
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Posted By e Readers Tips to
e Readers Reviews at 6/24/2014 11:50:00 PM
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e Readers Reviews at 6/24/2014 11:51:00 PM
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Posted By e Readers Tips to
e Readers Reviews at 6/24/2014 11:51:00 PM
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Posted By e Readers Tips to
e Readers Reviews at 6/24/2014 11:51:00 PM
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Posted By e Readers Tips to
e Readers Reviews at 6/24/2014 11:51:00 PM
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Posted By e Readers Tips to
e Readers Reviews at 6/24/2014 11:51:00 PM
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Posted By e Readers Tips to
e Readers Reviews at 6/24/2014 11:51:00 PM
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Posted By e Readers Tips to
e Readers Reviews at 6/24/2014 11:51:00 PM
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Posted By e Readers Tips to
e Readers Reviews at 6/24/2014 11:51:00 PM
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Posted By e Readers Tips to
e Readers Reviews at 6/24/2014 11:51:00 PM
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Posted By e Readers Tips to
e Readers Reviews at 6/24/2014 11:51:00 PM
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