During World War II, the BBC temporarily banned the song “Deep in the Heart of Texas” from their radio rotation during working hours over concerns that the song’s beat was so hard to resist clapping along to that it would slow down productivity whenever it came on the radio. | | | Want to Change Your Email Preferences? | |
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By popular request, we're including a quick list of the daily articles at the top of the daily email as well as the regular format near the bottom. | | Today's Tech Term
Linkbait | |
The term Linkbait refers to website content that uses flashy/catchy/sensational headlines, controversial topics, humorous images/videos, etc. to increase webpage views, website traffic, inbound user links, and improve the website’s ranking in search engine results. | | This section contains what we're reading from around the web, along with commentary from our editors. Think of it like your daily digest of the most interesting things online. | |
How to Update Your Apple TV to tvOS 11 The latest version of tvOS is out now for the fourth-generation Apple TV (as well as the new Apple TV 4K). Here’s how to update the streaming box and get all the new features. | |
The Best Android Games Exclusive to the NVIDIA SHIELD NVIDIA’s line of SHIELD products is a great example of what Android can do when put in the right hands—SHIELD Tablet is still one of the best Android tablets around, and SHIELD Android TV is the top Android TV box you can buy. | |
How to Make Your iPhone Use JPG and MP4 Files Instead of HEIF and HEVC In iOS 11, the photos and videos you take will no longer be encoded in the compatible formats you’re used to. Instead of JPG for images and MPEG-4 for video, they'll use High Efficiency Image Format (HEIF) and High Efficiency Video Format (HEVC), respectively. Files in these newer formats are about half the size of JPG and MP4 files of similar quality. | |
Cord Cutting Only Sucks If You’re Trying to Replicate Cable The cord cutting pushback has begun. Wired, The LA Times and even my own colleagues have all argued that cutting the cord is starting to lose its luster, and that as more companies break off into their own streaming services (instead of putting their content up on Netflix), cord cutting will soon be just as expensive as cable. | |
Access More Settings in iOS 11’s Control Center with 3D Touch iOS 11 has a completely new Control Center, which squeezes in more settings onto one screen without needing to swipe back and forth. However, on top of what’s currently available in Control Center, there are even more settings that you can access from that screen with a simple 3D Touch or long press. | |
Can Other People See the Tweets I’ve Liked? You might think that Retweets are public and Likes are private. This makes sense, in a way: anything you Retweet is instantly pushed to your followers, and Twitter doesn’t make it clear at all what happens when you Like a tweet. | |
How to Quickly Transfer Files from a Computer to Your Phone with Portal We’ve all had that moment where we need a file on our phone that happens to be on the computer. Now, there are a couple of ways you can do this: email it to yourself, put it in cloud storage like Dropbox, or even transfer it with a USB cable. But there’s a faster, easier way. Enter Portal. | |
How to Stop the IMDB App from Sending You Notifications Recently, the IMDB app started sending out notifications for "Featured Trailers". As near as I can guess, this is where the production company pays IMDB to push a link to the trailer to a load of people in an effort to promote it. If IMDB isn't being paid, they're just annoying their fans for no reason. Whatever their reason, here’s how to turn these notifications off. | |
Why Do Some Websites Have Pop-Up Warnings About Cookies? If you spend any time at all on the web, you’ve probably come across a fairly normal site that seems strangely concerned about cookie education. You’ll see a pop-up that warns you that yes, the site uses cookies…just like almost every other page on the web. If the warning seems redundant and ineffectual, you’re not the only one to think so. But some people think it’s necessary, and those very specific people are in the European Union. | |
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