Oct 21

Kodak Picture Kiosks at most Target stores in the U.S. now feature newly added “Social Network Connectivity” for printing physical copies of Facebook photos.

The enhanced kiosks are a product of a partnership between Target and Kodak. Customers will be able to use them to log in to and access Facebook and Kodak online photos albums for in-store printing purposes.

The Facebook (Facebook)-friendly kiosks support a variety of printing options including photo collages, photo books, calendars and greeting cards.

Kodak previously showcased its new software earlier in the year, promising to deliver kiosks to both Target and CVS.

With the kiosks now arriving at Target stores (where you can also pick up Facebook Credits), Facebook users have even more incentive to start taking advantage of the social network’s upgraded photo features.

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Sep 17

Sarah Palin will be in the audience to cheer on her daughter, Bristol, for Monday’s season opener of “Dancing with the Stars” … sources connected with the show tell TMZ.
Our spies say security has been “beefed up” for Sarah’s appearance.

And get this … We found out the song Bristol Palin and Mark Ballas will dance to — in front of Mama Palin. It’s Three Dog Night’s, “Mama Told Me (Not to Come).” Classic.

We’re told Bristol will wear glasses and a conservative outfit but tear off her clothes mid-dance … just like in the old days.

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Aug 30

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Aug 24

Like most people who don’t have any kids, I’m convinced that I could raise them better than most parents. With my intelligence, my strength and my piercing gaze, I clearly have all the nurturing attributes necessary to bend any child to my will. But because of the current legal system and, frankly, considerable cowardice on my part, I have not seized anyone’s child and then reared them properly myself. Instead I’ve published a short guide on the subject, because that’s something I could do without leaving my chair.

Morals

Learning the difference between right and wrong is a key milestone on the road of “growing up to not be a psychopath.” For the most, part parents already do this fairly well by teaching by example. My only recommendation then, is for parents to be conscious of the limited scope of moral scenarios their daily lives present, and to begin fabricating moral dilemmas so that their brood can see how to react in more complicated scenarios. A basic “kill one to save a dozen” example from classic utilitarianism can turn an ordinary day at the petting zoo into a memorable learning experience.

Conditioning

If you want a child who can move from place to place without the assistance of gravity, be sure to encourage them to live an active lifestyle. Fortunately children have a natural instinct to run and play, and you should not only encourage this, but work to maximize the effects. Consider fastening ankle weights or a small drag parachute to your child to increase resistance and develop tone and muscle.

Another handy tool for improving a child’s hand-eye reflexes and skull-solidification instincts.

Work as a Team

If you have multiple children, you’ll be well positioned to teach them how to get along with others, minimizing the chances of them growing up to write manifestos. By regularly pasting your children in “parents vs. kids” board game nights you’ll encourage them to develop feelings of camaraderie and mutual support amongst themselves, which will come in handy when they’re abandoned together in the wilderness, as I’ll ask you to do next week when presenting the advanced tips.

Control your fear

One of the key moments of everyone’s childhood is overcoming their fear of monsters under the bed. You can help your child overcome this seemingly universal fear of the darkness and unknown by explaining to them some basic facts about death, and walking them through a simple logical argument. Observe that if there are no monsters under the bed, then the child is safe, and that no actions are necessary–aside from getting a good night’s rest. Then observe that if indeed there is a monster under the bed, the monster–who could certainly overpower your child–would devour him like some sort of delicious sandwich, and that nothing could be done to prevent it. As both possibilities result in a course where no actions are possible or necessary, your child can conclude that the only rational thing to do is simply fall asleep and let what happens happen. Like my father used to scream at me every night when I went to bed, “Do you want to live forever? Well? Do you?”

Bedtime

Getting kids to go to sleep is one of the most difficult challenges new parents face. Yet it seems quite plain to me that this can be solved simply by teaching your child about the history of the 24 hour clock and how the foundation of mankind’s economic system is based around the daylight hours–a legacy from our pre-industrial history. Point out that although there is always value in questioning social conventions such as bedtime, one must first understand the basis of these conventions, and to make digressions from the norm only after sober consideration. Try purchasing a colorful mobile which illustrates social obligations for a fun way to drive this point home.

Reading

From my experience being one several decades ago, I know that any child from the age of eight months onwards is capable of reading, and would love to if only their parents weren’t so busy drinking lager beer and fighting in the backyard. Begin by implementing a simple rewards system, where the child can earn valuable treats like parental attention by deciphering simple puzzles based on the alphabet. As your children age, you can implement progressively harder challenges, so that by the age of four they are capable of rolling their eyes at USA Today.

Financial Responsibility

The current level of financial education in the public school system is laughable, and if you want your child to grow up to be anything other than a male escort with crippling credit card debt, you owe them a solid foundation of money skills. From an early age, institute a system where your child receives an allowance in exchange for completing small household chores. This will encourage your child to develop a sense of the value of money and provide you a source of comically cheap labor. A well-designed allowance plan can get your entire roof re-shingled for as little as 80 dollars, plus materials.

Survival Instincts

Eventually your children will have to go out in the world on their own, and it’s important to pass on the critical knowledge they’ll need to make it in a cruel world. A good example is teaching your child how to make themselves look bigger to frighten away child predators.

The Birds and the Bees

This is more an issue for older children, but in an increasingly sexual world, where children are maturing faster and faster, the topic should never be far from your mind. That’s why one critical fact of life should be made clear to your child as soon as they’re old enough to understand words: they are there to spread your genetic legacy – any other goal they have in life must be secondary to that.

Hate Those Who Are Different

You grew up the way you did and turned out OK, and have learned that everyone who didn’t grow up the same way is foul and polluted. That’s why you married someone who looks as similar to you as possible, and that’s why you’re going to teach your children to be distrustful of anyone with unusual clothes, an accent or red hair.

Read more: http://www.cracked.com/blog/10-tips-raising-child-you-really-shouldnt-have-had/#ixzz0xXXggGD5

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Aug 19

Do you like sex with other people? Do you like Android? While it is my opinion that those two questions are mutually exclusive, someone, somewhere matches those two criteria. Thankfully, Cosmopolitan Magazine is there for them.

Basically, this is an app that shows sex positions, albeit in a cartoony way. Fair enough. Android is for pornographers, after all. And that’s basically the news, but I’d like to inject a little outrage into this otherwise mundane story.

First, let’s get the throat clearing out of the way. The app features:

- The Carnal Challenge Rating: the more flames a position displays, the greater the difficulty

- Erotic Instructions: hints to help you make the most of the position and what to look forward to

- Colorful Illustration: tasteful visuals that help you understand how the position works

Something so disgusting wouldn’t be available for iOS, would it? Right?

Wrong. It’s also available for the iPhone. Tasteful visuals. Ahem. Carnal Challenge? Erotic Descriptions? Sounds like porn to me. Now, if you’ll allow me, I’d like to blow up.

Android and sexytime I can understand. It’s an OS for the perverse and obscurely fetished, after all. But what the heck is going on here? If you’re Cosmopolitan magazine you can talk about making the nasty on the iPhone but if you’re some weirdo who wants to make a boob jiggling app for the iPhone you can’t? After all, the procreative act – heck, any bodily act – is incompatible with the iTunes Store mission, right?

I wouldn’t be so sure. Apparently Philip Shoemaker, director of applications technology at Apple, the man in charge of selecting apps for inclusion into the app store, is in fact the proud programmer of Graynoodle’s iWiz app, an application that allows you to simulate micturition. He also makes a number of fart apps and had these apps approved a few weeks after starting at the company. Basically if you’re on the inside, the approval process doesn’t apply to you.

Also, and sex app makers take note, if you’re a major woman’s magazine published by one of the biggest publishing houses in the world, you also get a pass. This actually fits into my worldview that the iTunes Store is like Disneyland: you can have adult beverages in the park, as long as its on Disney’s terms and at Disney’s prices. They don’t want you to come in roaring drunk and high on ether simply because it prevents them from selling you the ether.

You can’t have it both ways. Either sex is bad or sex is good. After all, think of the children. Cosmo shouldn’t get a get out of jail card because they’re a major publication and Shoemaker shouldn’t get a pass because, well, he works for Apple and controls the app approval process. All we are saying is give iOS sex apps a chance.

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Aug 13

By Ben Parr

Microsoft will be launching the completely revamped Internet Explorer 9 at an event in San Francisco on September 15, but will it be enough to turn the tide in the war for web browser supremacy?

The September event will mark the first time the world will have the chance to play with the beta for the entirely overhauled browser. The first details surrounding IE9 were revealed back in November. Since then, Microsoft has launched four platform previews detailing IE9’s adherence to web standards.

More importantly though, the platform previews tout the browser’s hardware acceleration capability, which we have to say is nothing short of impressive — check out the video below to see what we mean.

Microsoft is serious about its position in the web browser market. While Internet Explorer remains the world’s most popular browser, it has experienced a steady decline since 2004. Recently though, Microsoft’s browser has been staging a comeback, slowly regaining market one percentage point at a time.

We’ll see if Microsoft can really deliver on its promise to “beautify the web” next month.

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Jul 07

“I really believe in finding new ways to distribute my music,” pop legend Prince told the Daily Mirror in an exclusive interview today.

Puzzling, then, that the musical icon also said he deplores online and other digital means of music distribution.

“The Internet’s completely over,” he said. “I don’t see why I should give my new music to iTunes or anyone else. They won’t pay me an advance for it, and then they get angry when they can’t get it.”

Prince’s famous and longstanding battle against the web gained steam in 2007, when Prince declared his intention to file lawsuits against YouTube (), eBay and The Pirate Bay for users’ appropriation of his music. He’s banned such sites from using it, and he’s also refused to work with legal, legitimate outlets such as eMusic and iTunes.

And don’t try to find his official site; it’s been shut down, as well.

“The Internet’s like MTV,” the star said to The Mirror’s correspondent. “At one time, MTV was hip, and suddenly it became outdated.”

“Suddenly” — a.k.a. around the time the Internet () started taking off, perhaps?

Not only is Prince down on the web; he also is decidedly not a fan of consumer electronics. “All these computers and digital gadgets are no good. They just fill your head with numbers and that can’t be good for you.”

Prince’s new album, 20TEN, will be released as a CD to Mirror readers and the readers of various other print publications in Europe. It might be distributed via Warner Bros. in the U.S. This will be the artist’s 27th release.

Clearly, we at Mashable () take a radically different view, both about the Internet and about the utility and integrity of web-based music distribution models. We’re of the opinion that musicians need more (and better) online tools, not fewer.

Keeping in mind Prince’s amazing contributions to music’s past, we’re not sure he’s in touch with its present or accurately forecasting its future. So-called experts have been predicting the death of the Internet at least since 1995, and we’ve yet to see anything come of these proclamations of doom.

What do you think? Is Prince missing out on something by withdrawing himself from the web? Or could he be correct; is the Internet just a fad, after all?

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By Jolie O’Dell @ Mashable

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Jul 01

We can’t say that we didn’t see this one coming. When Microsoft announced the the KIN One and KIN Two smartphones in April, we were concerned that the customers targeted by Microsoft — those ranging from tweens to college-aged adults — just weren’t gonna fall for these socially-geared phones.

It appears that Microsoft found out too late that no one was buying their story about how well these devices would be received by consumers. Today, Microsoft confirmed that both the KIN One and KIN Two are getting the axe:

We have made the decision to focus exclusively on Windows Phone 7 and we will not ship KIN in Europe this fall as planned. Additionally, we are integrating our KIN team with the Windows Phone 7 team, incorporating valuable ideas and technologies from KIN into future Windows Phone releases. We will continue to work with Verizon in the U.S. to sell current KIN phones.

The chubby KIN One was priced at $49 while the keyboard-equipped KIN Two was priced at $99 (both after a $100 mail-in rebate). In addition, both phones had to be paired with a $29 data plan on Verizon’s network.

In the face of such powerful (and much more capable) competition like the $99 Apple iPhone 3GS and the $129 HTC Aria, the two KIN phones never stood a chance.

Reviews gave the two devices a “meh” for the most part with Engadget saying, “Here are much better choices for much less money on the market, and Microsoft hasn’t demonstrated to us why you would choose this phone over those” and Gizmodo adding, “This bizarre pricing will make potential KIN buyers’ minds jump from messaging phones, which the KIN compares favorably to, to thoughts of smartphones, with app stores and full mapping and real browsers.”

So long KIN, we hardly knew ye.

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Jun 18

By Stan Schroeder at Mashable.com

Crazy? Perhaps. But Justin, who is already camping in front of Dallas Apple store on Knox St., will definitely be the first in line to pick up an iPhone 4. He’ll also spend a week of his life camping in the Texas heat, but he doesn’t mind.

“Some would say I am crazy, but I say I’m a very determined fan. In fact I just might be one the biggest Apple fans you will actually meet. I have been the first costumer for this store since 2008 when the iPhone 3G was released. Normally I only camp out over night, but since I do not work due to the fact I am disabled with a seizure disorder and I am not in school at the point, I figure I just make it a fun experience and do it for a week”

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Jun 03

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