- Time
- 2015-08-01 22:06:13 UTC
- 2015-08-01 11:06:13 -11:00 at epicenter
- Location
- 52.176°N 169.602°W
- Depth
- 43.94 km (27.30 mi)
from USGS Magnitude 4.5+ Earthquakes, Past Hour http://ift.tt/1ICzEeG
via IFTTT
from USGS Magnitude 4.5+ Earthquakes, Past Hour http://ift.tt/1ICzEeG
via IFTTT
from USGS Magnitude 4.5+ Earthquakes, Past Hour http://ift.tt/1VTV9gF
via IFTTT
It’s fast, global, engaged and influential – so why isn’t Twitter flying?
While Facebook and Snapchat soar, the most immediate social media channel in the world has many experts worried.
August 1, 2015 at 03:57PM
via Digg http://ift.tt/1SsscJq
from Forbes – Tech http://ift.tt/1KIg4go
via IFTTT
From space, the U.S. looks like Jekyll and Hyde when it comes to rainfall this year.
from Forbes – Tech http://ift.tt/1VTiaQQ
via IFTTT
Love it or hate it, Angry Birds is one of the most successful series of games of all time. Since 2009 when the first game released on iOS, the series has spanned fifteen titles across multiple platforms and become a billion dollar franchise.
Six years since the original game released, Rovio has now released the sequel. While it may seem disingenuous to call it Angry Birds 2 considering how many games have been released since the original, it does make sense if you consider others as more of spin-offs of the original rather than sequels. Also, for the first time Angry Birds 2 brings some major changes to the bird-flinging action to warrant the sequel tag. So let's take a look at it, then.
At its core, Angry Birds 2 still has you flinging birds at pigs inside elaborate but fragile structures. Break the structures and kill all the pigs before you run out of birds and you complete the stage. Depending upon how much destruction you cause and how many birds you use (fewer the better) you get a score that decides how many stars you get for that stage, three being the highest.
That much is common to the original Angry Birds. Now here's the new stuff. Unlike the original, you can now choose which bird to use. The available birds appear at the bottom as cards and you can tap any of them to select whichever bird you think would be more appropriate for the situation instead of being stuck with a preselected bird. As you play more stages, more birds are unlocked.
Along with birds, you also unlock spells that can be used to make finishing the level easier. The duck spell rains ducks everywhere and destroys all the pigs in that level in one move. The freeze spell turns all the structures into ice, making it easy for any bird to destroy them. The chili spell makes one of the pig explode, destroying everything around it. As you progress, you unlock more spells.
As you cause destruction, you fill up a meter at the top right. When the meter fills up, you get an additional random card, which could either be one of the birds or a spell. This is why it's important to cause as much destruction as possible and not just concentrate on killing the pigs.
In Angry Birds 2, each stage has multiple levels within and finishing one level lets you progress to the next with the remaining birds (similar to Angry Birds Epic). When you finish all the levels within a stage (usually 2-4) you move on to the next one. It's important not to use up all your birds at the first level so you have some left for the remaining levels in that stage. If you use up all your birds before that then the game is over.
When game is over, you can either choose to continue by paying in gems, or restart that stage. Restarting uses one of the lives you have, and you only have five lives. If you use up all the lives you have to wait for them to refresh (a la Candy Crush Saga), or spend gems to get more lives. As you can tell, gems are important in the game if you're impatient and although you do get them every once in a while as you keep playing if you want more you have to spend real money, which is where the game's IAP component comes in.
The birds are more or less identical to the original. There are seven of them, with most of them returning from the original but the weird green one is replaced with a silver one, who instead of flying back like a boomerang flies up and then straight down. All the birds have secondary attacks, even the otherwise useless red one, where you can tap on the screen just before they hit something to activate their ability, such as sending a shock wave for the small red bird, splitting into three for the blue one, shooting in a straight line for the yellow one, dropping an egg bomb for the white one, etc. This does make the game bit more interesting than simply lobbing the birds at the structures and with some planning and clever use of their abilities you can cause far more destruction.
Angry Birds 2 has around 240 stages in the current game, with each stage having multiple levels within, so you could be playing this for days. They are split into multiple sections that unlock as you play, and more will be added later. The thing about the stages this time is that they are randomly generated every time. If you restart a stage, the structures get randomly rearranged, which never happened before in any Angry…
from GSMArena.com – Latest articles http://ift.tt/1Iw2sB6
via IFTTT
from Forbes – Tech http://ift.tt/1VTrhRK
via IFTTT
Filtraciones y más filtraciones, gracias a ellas descubrimos nuevos terminales que muy pronto saldrán a luz, como es el caso del nuevo Samsung Galaxy J2, un terminal que viene a sustituir al actual Galaxy J1.
El sucesor de la primera generación de la gama J de Samsung está a la vuelta de la esquina tal y como lo demuestra una prueba filtrada que, nos confirma las características del próximo Samsung Galaxy J2. Este nuevo terminal llegará con pantalla de 4,7 pulgadas y con la última versión del sistema operativo de Google para dispositivos móviles, Android 5.1.1 Lollipop.
Como viene siendo habitual, nos hemos acostumbrados a que, pasado un año del lanzamiento de un terminal, llegue la renovación. Esto es lo que le ha ocurrido al Samsung Galaxy J1 que muy pronto verá como su sucesor, el Galaxy J2 le quita protagonismo en el mercado. Este nuevo terminal se presentará durante las próximas semanas pero gracias a una prueba filtrada realizada en el terminal podemos saber algunas de sus características más importantes.
Este nuevo terminal de los coreanos incorporará una pantalla de 4,7 pulgadas, teniendo un incremento con respecto a las 4,3 pulgadas que tiene la primera generación. Esta pantalla tendrá una resolución QHD, 960 x 540 píxeles. Dentro del terminal nos encontramos con un procesador Quad-Core Exynos 3475 junto a una GPU Mali-T720 capaz de alcanzar una velocidad de reloj de 1,3 GHz. Junto a este SoC vemos como, su memoria de RAM será de 1 GB y tendrá 8 GB de almacenamiento interno.
En lo que respecta a otras características no menos importantes y que salen en la información filtrada del Galaxy J2 de la famosa aplicación GFXBench, vemos como el dispositivo contará con una cámara principal situada en la parte trasera del dispositivo de 5 Megapíxeles y con Flash LED. Por su parte, en la cámara frontal nos encontramos un sensor fotográfico de 2 MP que serían aptos para realizar algún que otro selfie y/o vídeollamadas. Como hemos comentado anteriormente, este nuevo dispositivo de Samsung, correrá bajo la última actualización hasta la fecha de este artículo que hay disponible, Android 5.1.1 Lollipop.
Por el momento poca cosa más podemos explicar sobre este futuro terminal, así que estaremos atentos a los movimientos de los coreanos para descubrir más de este terminal de gama baja/media. De esta forma, saldremos de dudas con respecto a los cuatro datos filtrados sobre sus características, así como también, sabremos su disponibilidad y el precio de lanzamiento, un precio que podría rondar por debajo de los 200 euros aproximadamente si tomamos como referencia el precio que tiene actualmente la primera generación.
El artículo Samsung Galaxy J2 da señales de vida ha sido originalmente publicado en Androidsis.
from Androidsis http://ift.tt/1OVpQNM
via IFTTT
The long overdue Microsoft Lumia flagships are coming and, contrary to what some insiders suggested, they won't be named Lumia 950 and 950XL, a NokiaPowerUser trusted source reports. The high-end models will be named Lumia 940 and 940XL instead, without breaking the sequence from the existing Lumia 930.
Additionally, a Lumia 840 is indeed in the works, as was previously indicated, and it will be launched before the end of the year, though we'll need to wait for the flagships' release first. And if the flagships do come out in November, we're in for a pretty Microsoft-packed holiday season. Again, the device is said to be named Lumia 840 and not 850 like another source claimed.
Perhaps the most interesting bit, outed today, is Microsoft's move towards on-screen buttons. So far, Lumias have firmly relied on capacitive buttons in the bottom bezel, and an NPU poll showed that 44% of users are opposed to the concept of on-screen buttons on a flagship Windows Phone device. Despite that, all three of the above devices are most likely going to feature on-screen buttons.
So, while that does give us plenty to look forward to from Microsoft by the end of the year, there are three more devices yet unaccounted for, if this other rumor is well founded in…
from GSMArena.com – Latest articles http://ift.tt/1IfOMuU
via IFTTT
Spam has fallen to a 10-year low and is unlikely to make a comeback
There are fewer Nigerian princes on the internet today spamming you in their quest to offload large sums of money out of their country. For the first time in a decade email spam now makes up less than half of all emails, falling to 49.7% in June, according to security company Symantec.
August 1, 2015 at 12:31PM
via Digg http://ift.tt/1MZVt7C