Sunday, December 16, 2012
Epic Mickey: Power of Illusion (for 3DS)
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Samsung Galaxy Note II (Verizon Wireless)
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YouTube (for iPad)
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Kingston DataTraveler Workspace (32GB)
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Gmail (for iPhone)
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Samsung Entro (Virgin Mobile)
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Lenovo ThinkPad Twist (3347-4HU)
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Apple iMac 21.5-Inch (Late 2012)
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Google Maps (for iPhone)
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Wi-Fi Finder (for iPad)
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Sony Wonderbook: Book of Spells Move Bundle (PS3)
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The Elements: A Visual Exploration
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Sunday, December 9, 2012
Did Twitter's founder reveal its would-be Instagram killer?
Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey may have dropped the first public proof that Twitter is getting ready to release its own photo filtering feature, a tool it hopes could help in its increasingly tense battle with Instagram.
A report published today by All Things D suggested that informed sources have said that Twitter plans to launch its photo filtering tool before year's end. A series of black-and-white photos tweeted by Dorsey today appear to have been created using Twitter's own photo hosting service, pic.twitter.com. That would mean that Dorsey, who has largely relinquished his operational role at Twitter, and who is the founder and CEO of mobile payments startup Square, may well have been using the rumored new tool.
As All Things D wrote:
Twitter is making a big push to release a series of photo filters to be used inside the official Twitter app before the end of the year, according to sources familiar with the matter.The goal is to release the camera filters in an application update in time for the holiday season, these sources say. The new version of the app is currently in testing, which may be why we're seeing Twitter chairman Jack Dorsey post so many black-and-white filtered photos of his Square employees (not to mention the wing of his plane at takeoff, posted just this Saturday morning).
The New York Times first reported the rumors of Twitter's photo-filtering initiative last month.
If the All Things D and New York Times reports are correct, it would be the latest salvo in the escalating war between Twitter and Instagram. Earlier this week, Instagram deactivated Twitter Card integration, a step that resulted in Instagram photos showing up poorly cropped in tweets. The goal, Instagram CEO Kevin Systrom said, was to get more of his company's users utilizing the service on the Web. But it was also clear Instagram wants to wean its users off of Twitter.
Twitter did not respond to a request for comment this evening.
It appears that executives at Twitter are eager to push out major new features by year's end. In several speeches, CEO Dick Costolo has said that he is intent on making users' entire tweet histories available by the end of the year. And if the All Things D report is true, the company also wants its photo filtering tools in users' hands by New Year's. "Why push it out before the new year? Perhaps Twitter wants a cut of the inevitable jump in photos we'll see as everyone goes home for the holidays," All Things D wrote. "Instagram, for instance, saw more than 200 Thanksgiving-related photos posted to its service every second on Thanksgiving Day alone, and ten million Thanksgiving photos posted overall that day."
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Square launches gift cards
Square, a leader in mobile payments, today launched a gift card service tied to its Square Wallet program and that could be aimed at attracting some would-be Apple Passbook users.
The new service appears designed to let anyone purchase a gift card for friends or family at any of the more than 250,000 businesses nationwide that accept Square Wallet, an iOS andAndroid app that lets users pay automatically with their mobile device. The recipient would then redeem the value of the gift using Square Wallet on their own device.
The value of a service like this is that it avoids the use of physical gift cards and lets merchants that accept Square Wallet easily set up the transaction with Square Register, a system that lets them take credit cards, track sales and inventory, and generate analytics.
The gift card business is estimated to be worth $100 billion annually, yet tens of millions of dollars of such gifts expire every day, according to CouponTrade.com. Apple has recently attempted to get in on the gift card game by letting iOS 6 users store the cards in Passbook. Square is clearly hoping it can be the digital gift card service of choice for millions of iOS and Android users. The San Francisco startup has been developing more and more ways for users to pay. It started by providing merchants with plug-in dongles for iOS devices that let anyone take credit cards, and then launched Square Wallet and Square Register.
The company, which is already processing more than $10 billion in annualized transactions, also recently launched a partnership that lets customers pay using Square Wallet at more than 7,000 Starbucks outlets in the United States.
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Epson PowerLite S11 Multimedia Projector
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Xerox WorkCentre 6605N Color Multifunction Printer
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Xerox WorkCentre 6605DN Color Multifunction Printer
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Viewsonic VX2770Smh-LED
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Apple iTunes 11
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Lenovo IdeaCentre K430
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Apple iMac 27-Inch (Late 2012)
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Qooq Tablet
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Edifier Exclaim e10
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McAfee AntiVirus Plus 2013
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Sony 35mm f/1.8 Prime Lens
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Pandora Radio (for iPad)
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Panasonic Technics RP-DH1250
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McAfee Internet Security 2013
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