All ABOUT ME!!

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Love myself I do. Not everything, but I love the good as well as the bad. I love my crazy lifestyle, and I love my hard discipline. I love my freedom of speech and the way my eyes get dark when I'm tired. I love that I have learned to trust people with my heart, even if it will get broken. I am proud of everything that I am and will become.

Tuesday, June 12, 2018

Next Apple Watch could get iPhone-like touch button


Apple is reportedly looking at ways to improve the design of its future Apple Watch models. The company could ditch the physical button on the Apple Watch for a solid state button similar to the one found on the new iPhone 8. While the shape and size of the touch button of future Apple Watch models is expected to be similar, instead of pressing it, users will just have to tap the touch surface. Apple will include a small Taptic Engine that will respond to touches.

Apple is reportedly looking at ways to improve the design of its future Apple Watch models. The company could ditch the physical button on the Apple Watch for a solid state button similar to the one found on the new iPhone 8. While the shape and size of the touch button of future Apple Watch models is expected to be similar, instead of pressing it, users will just have to tap the touch surface. Apple will include a small Taptic Engine that will respond to touches.


Apple had recently announced its watchOS 5 for the Apple Watch at this year’s WorldWide Developers Conference (WWDC 2018). The new watchOS 5 adds features including Activity Sharing competitions, auto-workout detection, advanced running features, Walkie-Talkie, Apple Podcasts and third-party apps on the Siri watch face. Apple has also added Yoga and Hiking activities to the watchOS 5. Also, the Siri watch face will now show actionable content from third-party apps such as Nike+ Run Club, Glow Baby and Mobike. With watchOS 5, notifications from third-party apps can now have interactive controls and be used without needing to open the app.

Google may soon let you send text messages from desktop


Soon Google could give Android users an official method of texting back to their friends and family members right from the desktop. The first evidence of this feature was spotted last year as ‘SMS Connect’ on the Chrome OS. Now, some a set of codes have once again hinted on its existence. The code was found in Chromium Gerrit repository and is spotted by XDA Developers website.

The code explicitly mentions ‘CrOS Android Messages integration’, meaning that the SMS Connect feature will be available for 
ChromeOS users and they can try it out.
How exactly will this new feature will work, is not yet known. But what is known is that there will be some sort of pairing process with the phone, something that could be similar to what Pushbullet offers or Allo’s desktop client. It is also not for sure when this feature will see the light of the day.


Google’s ChromeOS has quite a few OEMs under its umbrella now. In March this year, Acer launched its first ever ChromeOS-powered tablet aimed for students. The Acer Chromebook Tab 10 also comes with Wacom EMR stylus as well along with Google Expeditions AR.
On the specifications front, the tablet features a 9.7-inch QXGA (2048 x 1536 pixels) IPS touch display with 264 pixels per inch. There is a 2MP HD webcam at the front along with dual microphones. At the back there is a 5MP camera. Acer claims the Chromebook Tab 10 to deliver a battery life of up to nine hours.
Earlier this month Google rolled out ChromeOS 67 with material design 2.0, split screen support and some other features. The version also gets support for zipping files on Drive via the Files app, ability to install Progressive Web Apps as standalone apps and much more.





Friday, June 8, 2018

How else can you protect your Facebook data?


There really is only one way to make sure data we create on a daily basis remains entirely private, thinks Dr Bernal. "Leave Facebook."
"The incentive Facebook will have to protect people more will only come if people start leaving. Currently it has very little incentive to change," he told the BBC.
It seems he is not alone in his in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal.
But Dr Bernal acknowledges that it is unlikely many will quit - especially those who see Facebook as "part of the infrastructure of their lives".
The less drastic option is deactivation, which stops an account from appearing in search results but gives the user the option to bring it back. It would stop future tracking but means all the information already collected will still be kept.
For those that decide deletion is the best option, users can head to the delete my account page, which explains that once gone, information cannot be retrieved.
The page is not easy to find on the site and requires quite a few steps:
§  From the top right of the blue bar, click the downward arrow
§  Select settings
§  Click General
§  Click Manage Account
§  Click Request Deletion
§  In the pop-up box, which is aimed at people who want to delete their account in the event of their death, click Learn More
§  Scroll down to the section headed Deleting Your Account and click on the link
Facebook advises users who delete their account to download a copy of their information before they delete it. They also warn users that the process can take up to 90 days, during which time the information is inaccessible to others using the platform.

Facebook privacy bug "affects 14 million users"


A software bug meant millions of Facebook users may have unknowingly posted private information to the public, the company has warned.
The glitch set a user’s post to be shared to "everyone", even if a user had previously chosen a more restricted option, such as “friends of friends”.
“We’d like to apologise for this mistake,” said Erin Egan, Facebook’s head of privacy.
Users who may have been affected will be notified on the site’s newsfeed.
"We recently found a bug that automatically suggested posting publicly when some people were creating their Facebook posts,” Ms Egan said.
"We have fixed this issue and starting today we are letting everyone affected know and asking them to review any posts they made during that time.
"To be clear, this bug did not impact anything people had posted before - and they could still choose their audience just as they always have. We’d like to apologise for this mistake."
The glitch was active between 18 and 22 May, a spokeswoman added, but it took the site until 27 May to switch posts back to private - or whatever the user had typically used before the bug became apparent.


Thursday, June 7, 2018

what happened when the Netherlands PM Mark Rutte spilled coffee on the floor of the Dutch Parliament






With great power, comes great responsibilities – and Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutteproved how a leader should act. The Prime Minister was walking into the Dutch Parliament with his associates and accidently he spilled coffee on the floor.


Without giving a second thought, PM Rutte took the mop in his hand and started cleaning the floor. The video of him cleaning the floor went viral and is winning hearts on social media

https://twitter.com/twitter/statuses/1003963694986825729


The cleaning staff gave him a round of applause for his humble act, while netizens are giving him love from all corners of the world.


However, it looks like PM Rutte believes in the ‘Swaach’ philosophy. Earlier, Rutte was photographed parking a bicycle that he rode to work. He apparently had a meeting with King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands and he decided to ride to the Palace.


In fact, PM Rutte gifted his Indian counterpart, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a bicycle when he met him in 2017.






None of the people have any real interest in a science, who only begin to be enthusiastic about it when they themselves have made discoveries in it. 

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