Podcasting: The Economics – Passions And Profits

Over the past two years, podcasting has grown dramatically. It all began after After the success of the podcast Serial. Serial was the fastest-growing podcast in iTunes history, as it reached five million views after its first six weeks in 2014. After the success of Serial, creators have rushed to get into the podcast-making game. But the question remains – can podcasts make money?

from Forbes – Tech http://ift.tt/1NOWvsb
via IFTTT

Bitcoin Creator Craig Wright Explains Why He’s Revealed Himself


Bitcoin Creator Craig Wright Explains Why He’s Revealed Himself
In an interview with the BBC, Australian entrepreneur Craig Wright provides technical proof that he is Satoshi Nakomoto, vows to decline any fame or fortune awarded to him and explains that his decision to come forward was in the interest of his employees’ privacy.

May 2, 2016 at 09:02AM
via Digg http://ift.tt/1rd0rsh

[APK] Crea tus propios GIFs con Gfycat en Android

Gfycat

Los que estéis habituados a usar diariamente Telegram, en los variados grupos que podéis llegar a tener, seguro que los GIFs animados se pasan como si se estuvieran intercambiando cromos a la antigua usanza. Unos GIFs animados que sirven perfectamente para expresar ciertos sentimientos o algún significado que otro. Esta sencillez de búsqueda de un GIF a través del comando @gif en Telegram posibilita el intercambio entre un divertido formato que da mucho juego como ha sido ya desde hace algún tiempo en Internet.

Justamente hace dos semanas tuvimos la gran incorporación a la Google Play Store de uno de los servicios más famosos de GIFs con Giphy. Ahora es cuando, otro de esos que se llevan parte de los millones de visitas de todo el mundo, se pasa a Android como es Gfycat. Una app que tiene una serie de virtudes que la posicionan en otro lugar distinto al que ocupa Giphy, una más a presentarte los mejores GIFs del momento. Gfycat te permite crear, buscar y compartir GIFs animados desde la facilidad que supone el botón de compartir de Android. Es en estas tres facetas donde posiblemente esta sea la mejor app para GIFs que existe actualmente en Android.

La mejor del momento

Lo primero que hace destacar a Gyfcat es la interfaz visual a lo Material Design donde el panel de navegación lateral y el botón FAB toman mayor protagonismo sin olvidarnos de esos GIFs animados que aparecerán de manera inmediata en el momento que la lancemos.

Gfycat

Un punto a su favor es que muestra solamente tres GIFs animados a la vez, lo que permite no consumir tantos recursos y que la descarga de datos se pueda ver perjudicada. Algo que no sucede en Giphy donde encontramos un buen montón de GIFs cargados al lanzarla.

La otra opción que es bastante destacable es cambiar esa interfaz en vez de tres elementos en pantalla hasta casi los diez. De esta forma podremos encontrar GIFs de forma más rápida, pero lo dicho, se llevará consigo un mayor impacto de la aplicación en el sistema.

El panel de navegación lateral nos vale para pasar a las categorías más importantes de GIFs animados para encontrar LOL, Funny, Happy o Sad entre otras muchas. Para terminar, tenemos la opción de iniciar sesión en la cuenta para comentar a continuación una de las cualidades más importantes de esta app para poder crear GIFs.

Cómo crear un GIF animado con Gfycat

El botón FAB flotante nos lleva directamente a la interfaz de cámara desde la que podremos tomar un vídeo o seleccionar el que queramos desde la galería. Vayamos paso por paso:

  • Pulsamos sobre el botón azul FAB flotante
  • Pasamos ante la interfaz de cámara y pulsamos sobre el cuadradito en pequeño para seleccionar algún vídeo que tengamos en la galería

Cómo crear GIF

  • La primera opción que tenemos es cambiar el filtro del vídeo desde un tono sepia a uno monocolor si así lo deseamos

Gfycat

  • Las otras tres opciones son: recortado de la imagen, añadir texto o seleccionar la franja del vídeo que queramos
  • Una vez realizados todos los cambios pulsamos en el botón azul de “Ok”

El único detalle a tener en cuenta en la opción de crear GIFs animados es que necesitáis una cuenta. Aunque gracias a que se pueden usar las credenciales de Facebook se puede iniciar sesión de una forma rápida para dar al GIF animado como finalizado.

De momento no está disponible en la Google Play Store de forma internacional, sino en ciertas regiones. Para poder acceder a la descarga, pásate por el enlace a continuación que te lleva a la APK de forma directa con la que podrás disfrutar de la mejor app del momento para GIFs, ya que tiene en si a varias posibilidades.

Descarga la APK de Gfycat 1.0.10

WP-Appbox: Gfycat: Make, Find & Send GIFs (Free, Google Play) →

 

El artículo [APK] Crea tus propios GIFs con Gfycat en Android ha sido originalmente publicado en Androidsis.

from Androidsis http://ift.tt/1SIrpzd
via IFTTT

Mojang’s “server blacklist”, what it is, and why it’s a big deal via /r/Minecraft


Mojang’s “server blacklist”, what it is, and why it’s a big deal

Was going to post this to /r/admincraft at first, but decided to post it here so more will see it.

As many of you may already know, in the latest snapshot for 1.9.3, Mojang has included a "server blacklist" in the Minecraft client. There are many implications of this, some of which are good, some of which are bad. If you're not familiar with the topic, here is a rundown of the situation:

What is going on? In case you weren't aware, Mojang's EULA (End User License Agreement) essentially forbids server owners from offering any non-cosmetic perks/bonuses to people who donate/pay money to said server. In short, Mojang doesn't like "Pay2Win" servers. This EULA has been around for quite some time, and back in 2014 you may recall that they made a blog post about server monetisation, leading to its own slew of drama.

In recent months (starting in February sometime), Mojang employees have started sending out emails to server owners who had servers that violated this EULA.

Very recently (past ~3 days or so), it was discovered that Minecraft 1.9.3 pre-2 had code that included a server blacklist, effectively preventing vanilla (or possibly all?) minecraft clients from connecting to specific servers. Naturally, server owners are outraged over this, particularly those that are themselves running P2W servers, who are now looking at losing virtually all traffic (and thus revenue) to their servers.

Whoa, what? A server blacklist?

Yup. In Minecraft 1.9.3 pre-2, a server blacklist was introduced in the client which connects to Mojang's session servers to fetch a .txt file full of SHA-1 hashed domain names/IPs to see if the domain/IP you are attempting to connect to (or even ping?) matches any of these. At the moment there are only 31 servers/domains on this list, 28 of which are known.

If the client attempts to connect to a server that is on the blacklist, it will silently fail, emulating a "network uneachable" error, meaning that most people will not be able to even tell that the server is blacklisted.

You can check to see if a server/domain is on Mojang's blacklist here.

If you're a server owner and you own a server owner that could potentially be EULA non-compliant, you should be concerned. It's almost certain this blacklist will only continue to grow, and there are reports from some server owners that you may not even be emailed by Mojang before you are put on the blacklist (only one known instance of this, not sure of details).

What can I do if I'm on the blacklist, or worried about it?

md_5 has covered this in his post on the matter. If looking into arbitration doesn't work or you're looking for some more immediate answers, look into contacting the people on Mojang's Brand Enforcement or Support team, or sending them an email at enforcement@mojang.com.

The Videogame Attorney of reddit fame has also started a reddit thread about this issue, you may ask him questions here.

What shouldn't I do?

Don't flame/harass/dox/DDoS Mojang or any of its employees- you're not going to help, and if anything you're making the situation worse.

Why does any of this matter? It's those servers' faults for violating the EULA!

You know, maybe you're right. I'm not going to bother defending servers who violate the EULA. Mojang does have a right to take action against them, seeing as it's their game, and they are within reason punishing those who violate their EULA.

What I have a problem with, though, is their method of doing it.

Regardless of your opinion on the matter, you must admit that Mojang has kept pretty quiet about this situation. To my knowledge, no Mojang employee has posted anything about this on social media or made any attempt to communicate to players what was going on. Mojang now has the power to silently prevent you from connecting to servers which they deem to be violating their EULA. You won't even know the server you tried connecting to was blacklisted. You may just assume the server is down and not really know what happened otherwise. This is unacceptable, in my opinion. Players have the right to know, at the very least, when they attempt to connect to a server that is blacklisted. They deserve to know that servers are blacklisted by Mojang now.

If any of you reading this care about this topic at all, I ask that you demand Mojang provide the community with some transparency for once on this controversial issue. Everyone deserves to know what's going on, not just the server admins that are effected by it.

I've seen reddit's opinion on this subject already… So I know I'm going to get some hate for my opinion on this. All I am really asking for is some transparency from Mojang, though. Perhaps a blog post on the matter. This is a pretty big deal, and people have a right to know what's going on.

TL;DR: Mojang is (finally) cracking down on servers that violate the EULA, but are their methods really all that sound…? That's a matter of opinion, but regardless I think they owe us a bit of transparency on the matter.

Submitted May 02, 2016 at 08:12AM by ceruleanReverie
via reddit http://ift.tt/1OaxbHX

¿Fin del misterio? Un científico australiano afirma ser el creador de bitcóin

El científico computacional australiano Craig Wright se identificó como “Satoshi Nakamoto”, el fundador de la moneda virtual bitcóin, según un post en su blog este lunes.

El post indica que Wright es la misteriosa persona que se ha escondido detrás del seudónimo de “Nakamoto" durante años. Ofrece pruebas criptográficas y otra información que se relaciona con el bitcóin.

Wright también dio entrevistas a tres medios —BBC, The Economist y GQ— publicadas este lunes. The Economist, que revisió los materiales presentados por Wright, dijo que este "podría ser" la persona detrás de “Nakamoto”, pero que todavía permanecen algunas dudas.

El científico también le dice a la BBC y The Economist que no está buscando publicidad. “No quiero dinero, no quiero fama, no quiero idolatría. Solo quiero que me dejen en paz”, dijo en un video publicado en la BBC.

from expansion.mx http://ift.tt/1Z2NVqn
via IFTTT