December 2019

Here's Yoda singing about his big boy stick, courtesy of Bad Lip Reading

Most Star Wars fans don't know Yoda for his absurdist musical numbers, but the folks at Bad Lip Reading want to change that. 

Three years after "Seagulls," the truly bizarre lip dub about Yoda's harrowing experience with some birds, they've released "My Stick," which is a song about — you guessed it — the merits of Yoda's walking stick in The Last Jedi.

We regret to admit that, like its predecessor, the song is very catchy. Unfortunately, the line "it's my big boy stick" will probably keep it out of our Spotify rotation. Read more...

More about Bad Lip Reading, Yoda, Culture, Web Culture, and Star Wars


via Tingle Tech

Here’s how thinking about building on Mars can help us build better right here on Earth

Thinking about how to build things on Mars comes with a surprising advantage, according to AI SpaceFactory. The company recently won first place at NASA’s 3D-Printed Habitat Challenge with their 3D printed Martian habitat, MARSHA. A few months after the competition, TERA, AI SpaceFactory's first attempt to 3D print a home designed for Earth, is now under construction.

The company believes its space construction technology could help us build sustainable and recyclable houses here on Earth, too. Read more...

More about Space, Mashable Video, Mars, 3d Printing, and Construction


via Tingle Tech

LG's answer to foldable phones may be a detachable display that wraps around the phone

In the never-ending quest for increasing the screen real estate on smartphones, LG has a new idea: a case that's actually a big, foldable OLED display that can wrap around the phone. 

Yes, it's a little weird. 

This is according a new LG patent unearthed by Dutch outlet LetsGoDigital (via Android Central). The patent, submitted to the WIPO Global Design Database, as well as The Hague International Design System, describes a case that's essentially all screen, and can be combined with the mobile phone and used as a foldable display. It can also be set next to the phone (it connects to the phone via a special, vertically positioned connector), allowing you to get a vast amount of screen space.  Read more...

More about Lg, Foldable Display, Tech, Smartphones, and Big Tech Companies


via Tingle Tech

Thousands told to jump into the ocean as Australia's raging fires approached

The sun didn't rise on New Year's Eve. The summer morning in a small beach town on the east coast of Australia looked like a winter's night. 

That black sky soon gave way to a blazing, eerie orange as the flames approached. At least 4,000 people were told to jump into the ocean if the worse came to pass. Gas cylinders could be heard popping like fireworks as they exploded. 

The town of Mallacoota looked apocalyptic on Tuesday local time as it became the latest victim of Australia's out-of-control bushfires.

It was too late to evacuate. 

"We are one road in, one road out. That road's been blocked for hours and hours and hours," Francesca Winterson from Mallacoota Community Radio told News Breakfast, a national TV broadcast.  Read more...

More about Australia, Bushfires, Science, and Climate Environment


via Tingle Tech

New Lyft and Uber rules to know for New Year's Day

Happy New Year! Now pay up. 

That's what it feels like with new fees, regulations, and taxes kicking in on Jan. 1 (on Wednesday) for ride-share trips on apps like Uber and Lyft. 

In California, there's a lot to take in. A statewide change to gig job classifications, called AB5, goes into effect as soon as it's officially 2020. 

That means on-demand drivers for apps like Lyft and Uber can argue they should be treated like employees with better pay and benefits, not like independent contractors. Lyft and Uber don't plan to change anything yet with how it hires, pays, and employs drivers, claiming its drivers are truly independent workers who don't need to be reclassified.  Read more...

More about Uber, Lyft, Ride Hailing Apps, Tech, and Transportation


via Tingle Tech

Matty Benedetto is the master of unnecessary inventions — Mashable Originals

From a pair of fingerless Croc gloves to a backpack designed to carry only a single baguette of bread, Vermont-based designer Matty Benedetto is solving problems that don't exist. Find out how and why these useless products come to creation.  Read more...

More about Mashable Video, Standalone Featured, Mashable Shopping, Mashable Originals, and Unnecessary Inventions


via Tingle Tech

Tana Mongeau opens up about her marriage with Jake Paul

Nearly six months after her very public wedding to controversial YouTuber Jake Paul, Tana Mongeau opened up about how her relationships have affected her mental health.  

In a vlog posted on Sunday, Mongeau told her followers that she should have been single after her relationship with Brad Sousa ended poorly in April. Discussing her "really fucked up dating history," she also acknowledged the correlation between growing up with absent parents and her tendency to jump into relationships. And although her relationship with Jake Paul started out well, she said she was so infatuated, she ignored "any" red flags before their Vegas wedding.  Read more...

More about Viral Videos, Jake Paul, Tana Mongeau, Culture, and Web Culture


via Tingle Tech

Bye, Siri. Make your car give you directions in your own voice.

Forget a random digital voice telling you to turn left in 800 feet. A new service "clones" real voices so that your mom, sister, or even you can be the one giving you directions. 

It's called "My Car, My Voice," and it's built into Cerence, the voice software in many cars from Toyota, GM, Audi, Chrysler, BMW, and other automakers. It's only available for the voice assistant built into the car, not Google Assistant or Apple's Siri.

To generate the voice, you need a live person to speak a series of sentences into the Cerence app in your infotainment system, which means you can't make it sound like your favorite celebrity unless you know them IRL. If you can get Timothée Chalamet into your car to record some phrases for you, by all means, please do. Read more...

More about Voice Assistants, Infotainment, Tech, and Transportation


via Tingle Tech

The case for 'The Witcher 2'

With The Witcher's arrival on Netflix, there's a renewed fervor for the medium-crossing fantasy series.

There are, of course, the original Witcher books by Polish author Andrzej Sapkowski, as well as the video game series created by Polish developer CD Projekt Red. On Sunday, the game The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, which came out in 2015, set a new record for concurrent players on Steam.

That's not surprisingThe Witcher 3 is the latest and best-looking game in the series, and it received a ton of acclaim when it first launched. Its sprawling open world filled with colorful characters and cool monsters is pretty enticing. Read more...

More about The Witcher, Entertainment, and Gaming


via Tingle Tech

Yep, Venmo was down for a few hours

UPDATE: Dec. 30, 2019, 3:57 p.m. EST By around 3:45 p.m. ET, Venmo appeared to be working again. The original story on the outage is below.


Given the need to buy weed so you can get through another few days with your family, it's a bad time for Venmo to go down but here we are. 

The issues first hit Venmo around 11:30 a.m. ET on Monday morning and have continued for more than two hours.

Venmo is down and that's not great!

Venmo is down and that's not great!

Users trying to access their funds or pay someone for last night's pizza were met with the following error screen.

Welp, Venmo pic.twitter.com/LO8bSogTqX

— Marcus Gilmer (@marcusgilmer) December 30, 2019 Read more...

More about Venmo, Tech, and Consumer Tech


via Tingle Tech

Behold this ridiculous Cybertruck knockoff

Russian YouTubers making a fake Tesla Cybertruck feels so on-brand for 2019 that it couldn't possibly be true. And, yet, here we are. 

In the above video, a group of Russians called "Pushka Garazh" create their own version of the Cybertruck out of a Lada (a Russian brand of car). If you want to skip ahead to the good stuff, scroll to about 40 minutes in for shots of the fake Cybertruck in action.

The deliriously ridiculous results feel like a drunken mash-up of Top Gear and Mythbusters with a healthy dose of Jackass thrown in for good measure. 

Watching the group tear around in the fake Cybertruck, you get the sense the entire vehicle is going to come apart at any moment, which also feels pretty on-brand for 2019.  Read more...

More about Russia, Cybertruck, Tech, Elon Musk, and Transportation


via Tingle Tech

Here's Yoda singing about his big boy stick, courtesy of Bad Lip Reading

Most Star Wars fans don't know Yoda for his absurdist musical numbers, but the folks at Bad Lip Reading want to change that. 

Three years after "Seagulls," the truly bizarre lip dub about Yoda's harrowing experience with some birds, they've released "My Stick," which is a song about — you guessed it — the merits of Yoda's walking stick in The Last Jedi.

We regret to admit that, like its predecessor, the song is very catchy. Unfortunately, the line "it's my big boy stick" will probably keep it out of our Spotify rotation. Read more...

More about Bad Lip Reading, Yoda, Culture, Web Culture, and Star Wars


via Tingle Tech

Here’s how thinking about building on Mars can help us build better right here on Earth

Thinking about how to build things on Mars comes with a surprising advantage, according to AI SpaceFactory. The company recently won first place at NASA’s 3D-Printed Habitat Challenge with their 3D printed Martian habitat, MARSHA. A few months after the competition, TERA, AI SpaceFactory's first attempt to 3D print a home designed for Earth, is now under construction.

The company believes its space construction technology could help us build sustainable and recyclable houses here on Earth, too. Read more...

More about Space, Mashable Video, Mars, 3d Printing, and Construction


via Tingle Tech

LG's answer to foldable phones may be a detachable display that wraps around the phone

In the never-ending quest for increasing the screen real estate on smartphones, LG has a new idea: a case that's actually a big, foldable OLED display that can wrap around the phone. 

Yes, it's a little weird. 

This is according a new LG patent unearthed by Dutch outlet LetsGoDigital (via Android Central). The patent, submitted to the WIPO Global Design Database, as well as The Hague International Design System, describes a case that's essentially all screen, and can be combined with the mobile phone and used as a foldable display. It can also be set next to the phone (it connects to the phone via a special, vertically positioned connector), allowing you to get a vast amount of screen space.  Read more...

More about Lg, Foldable Display, Tech, Smartphones, and Big Tech Companies


via Tingle Tech

Thousands told to jump into the ocean as Australia's raging fires approached

The sun didn't rise on New Year's Eve. The summer morning in a small beach town on the east coast of Australia looked like a winter's night. 

That black sky soon gave way to a blazing, eerie orange as the flames approached. At least 4,000 people were told to jump into the ocean if the worse came to pass. Gas cylinders could be heard popping like fireworks as they exploded. 

The town of Mallacoota looked apocalyptic on Tuesday local time as it became the latest victim of Australia's out-of-control bushfires.

It was too late to evacuate. 

"We are one road in, one road out. That road's been blocked for hours and hours and hours," Francesca Winterson from Mallacoota Community Radio told News Breakfast, a national TV broadcast.  Read more...

More about Australia, Bushfires, Science, and Climate Environment


via Tingle Tech

New Lyft and Uber rules to know for New Year's Day

Happy New Year! Now pay up. 

That's what it feels like with new fees, regulations, and taxes kicking in on Jan. 1 (on Wednesday) for ride-share trips on apps like Uber and Lyft. 

In California, there's a lot to take in. A statewide change to gig job classifications, called AB5, goes into effect as soon as it's officially 2020. 

That means on-demand drivers for apps like Lyft and Uber can argue they should be treated like employees with better pay and benefits, not like independent contractors. Lyft and Uber don't plan to change anything yet with how it hires, pays, and employs drivers, claiming its drivers are truly independent workers who don't need to be reclassified.  Read more...

More about Uber, Lyft, Ride Hailing Apps, Tech, and Transportation


via Tingle Tech

Matty Benedetto is the master of unnecessary inventions — Mashable Originals

From a pair of fingerless Croc gloves to a backpack designed to carry only a single baguette of bread, Vermont-based designer Matty Benedetto is solving problems that don't exist. Find out how and why these useless products come to creation.  Read more...

More about Mashable Video, Standalone Featured, Mashable Shopping, Mashable Originals, and Unnecessary Inventions


via Tingle Tech

Tana Mongeau opens up about her marriage with Jake Paul

Nearly six months after her very public wedding to controversial YouTuber Jake Paul, Tana Mongeau opened up about how her relationships have affected her mental health.  

In a vlog posted on Sunday, Mongeau told her followers that she should have been single after her relationship with Brad Sousa ended poorly in April. Discussing her "really fucked up dating history," she also acknowledged the correlation between growing up with absent parents and her tendency to jump into relationships. And although her relationship with Jake Paul started out well, she said she was so infatuated, she ignored "any" red flags before their Vegas wedding.  Read more...

More about Viral Videos, Jake Paul, Tana Mongeau, Culture, and Web Culture


via Tingle Tech

Bye, Siri. Make your car give you directions in your own voice.

Forget a random digital voice telling you to turn left in 800 feet. A new service "clones" real voices so that your mom, sister, or even you can be the one giving you directions. 

It's called "My Car, My Voice," and it's built into Cerence, the voice software in many cars from Toyota, GM, Audi, Chrysler, BMW, and other automakers. It's only available for the voice assistant built into the car, not Google Assistant or Apple's Siri.

To generate the voice, you need a live person to speak a series of sentences into the Cerence app in your infotainment system, which means you can't make it sound like your favorite celebrity unless you know them IRL. If you can get Timothée Chalamet into your car to record some phrases for you, by all means, please do. Read more...

More about Voice Assistants, Infotainment, Tech, and Transportation


via Tingle Tech

The case for 'The Witcher 2'

With The Witcher's arrival on Netflix, there's a renewed fervor for the medium-crossing fantasy series.

There are, of course, the original Witcher books by Polish author Andrzej Sapkowski, as well as the video game series created by Polish developer CD Projekt Red. On Sunday, the game The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, which came out in 2015, set a new record for concurrent players on Steam.

That's not surprisingThe Witcher 3 is the latest and best-looking game in the series, and it received a ton of acclaim when it first launched. Its sprawling open world filled with colorful characters and cool monsters is pretty enticing. Read more...

More about The Witcher, Entertainment, and Gaming


via Tingle Tech

Yep, Venmo was down for a few hours

UPDATE: Dec. 30, 2019, 3:57 p.m. EST By around 3:45 p.m. ET, Venmo appeared to be working again. The original story on the outage is below.


Given the need to buy weed so you can get through another few days with your family, it's a bad time for Venmo to go down but here we are. 

The issues first hit Venmo around 11:30 a.m. ET on Monday morning and have continued for more than two hours.

Venmo is down and that's not great!

Venmo is down and that's not great!

Users trying to access their funds or pay someone for last night's pizza were met with the following error screen.

Welp, Venmo pic.twitter.com/LO8bSogTqX

— Marcus Gilmer (@marcusgilmer) December 30, 2019 Read more...

More about Venmo, Tech, and Consumer Tech


via Tingle Tech

Behold this ridiculous Cybertruck knockoff

Russian YouTubers making a fake Tesla Cybertruck feels so on-brand for 2019 that it couldn't possibly be true. And, yet, here we are. 

In the above video, a group of Russians called "Pushka Garazh" create their own version of the Cybertruck out of a Lada (a Russian brand of car). If you want to skip ahead to the good stuff, scroll to about 40 minutes in for shots of the fake Cybertruck in action.

The deliriously ridiculous results feel like a drunken mash-up of Top Gear and Mythbusters with a healthy dose of Jackass thrown in for good measure. 

Watching the group tear around in the fake Cybertruck, you get the sense the entire vehicle is going to come apart at any moment, which also feels pretty on-brand for 2019.  Read more...

More about Russia, Cybertruck, Tech, Elon Musk, and Transportation


via Tingle Tech

Here's Yoda singing about his big boy stick, courtesy of Bad Lip Reading

Most Star Wars fans don't know Yoda for his absurdist musical numbers, but the folks at Bad Lip Reading want to change that. 

Three years after "Seagulls," the truly bizarre lip dub about Yoda's harrowing experience with some birds, they've released "My Stick," which is a song about — you guessed it — the merits of Yoda's walking stick in The Last Jedi.

We regret to admit that, like its predecessor, the song is very catchy. Unfortunately, the line "it's my big boy stick" will probably keep it out of our Spotify rotation. Read more...

More about Bad Lip Reading, Yoda, Culture, Web Culture, and Star Wars


via Tingle Tech

Shipfix, a relatively new startup aiming to drag the dry cargo shipping industry into the digital age, has raised $4.5 million in seed funding.

Leading the round is Idinvest Partners, with participation from Kima Ventures, The Family, Bpifrance and strategic business angels. The company was founded in December 2018 by Serge Alleyne (CEO) and Antoine Grisay (COO), and launched just two months ago.

“We’re trying to fix the email overload for everybody involved in the process of fixing a dry cargo ship by providing a comprehensive market monitor,” Alleyne tells TechCrunch.

“We’re also producing data-driven insights that are profoundly missing in the bulk/break-bulk space. Actually the last revolution of the dry cargo industry was email, and so far people still rely on indices based on a panel of brokers while all the data is available in emails”.

To solve this, Alleyne says that Shipfix connects to its clients’ email to extract and anonymously aggregate “billions of data points using deep learning technology”.

The idea is that, rather than spending hours scrolling through your inbox every morning to take the pulse of the market, you can search and filter structured market offers instantly via Shipfix.

In addition, you can browse what Alleyne calls “augmented directories” (ships, ports, companies and people available within emails and signatures — information that isn’t typically available on LinkedIn), and access data-driven benchmarks and indices.

Shipfix customers are primarily anyone chartering/fixing a ship, such as charterers, ship owners, ship operators, freight forwarders and “lots of brokers”.

However, longer term, the startup plans yo onboard commodity traders, insurers, banks, governments and investment firms, based on the granular benchmarks and indices it is building.

“We cover 430 cargo categories from salt, sand, iron ore, fertilizers, grain, steel, etc., and forecasting market pressures around the globe… [is useful] for everybody involved within the commodities space,” adds the Shipfix co-founder.

Meanwhile, the company currently employs 15 people, including senior engineers, shipping professionals, data scientists and analysts. The team is mostly remote-based and spread across 7 cities, with offices in London, Paris and Toulouse.




via Tingle Tech

Here's Yoda singing about his big boy stick, courtesy of Bad Lip Reading

Most Star Wars fans don't know Yoda for his absurdist musical numbers, but the folks at Bad Lip Reading want to change that. 

Three years after "Seagulls," the truly bizarre lip dub about Yoda's harrowing experience with some birds, they've released "My Stick," which is a song about — you guessed it — the merits of Yoda's walking stick in The Last Jedi.

We regret to admit that, like its predecessor, the song is very catchy. Unfortunately, the line "it's my big boy stick" will probably keep it out of our Spotify rotation. Read more...

More about Bad Lip Reading, Yoda, Culture, Web Culture, and Star Wars


via Tingle Tech

Immersion cooling manufacturer CoolBitts thinks there might be a market for immersion cooling systems at the ultra-high-end of the market. The company has announced a kit including chassis, coolant, fans, PCIe tray, power meter, pump, radiator, and rear IO panel. Total price? Just $2450 — though the five gallons of EC-120 coolant that you get does typically retail for about $500.

There are two types of immersion cooling system — two-phase evaporation where a liquid evaporates into a gas before condensing into a liquid, and single-phase systems that rely on a pump and radiator. The use of a pump and radiator makes immersion cooling conceptually similar to both closed-loop and open-loop water cooling, with the obvious difference that with immersion cooling, the entire PC is dropped directly into the fluid.

Obviously, this requires a non-conductive fluid. Mineral oil has been used before, but supposedly EC-120 is easier to work with and a bit less hard on motors. The ICEbox can handle up to 750W of cooling and the rear I/O port of the system is kept out of the liquid to ensure connectivity. The system supports both mATX and ATX motherboards and is capable of keeping both a CPU and GPU at a temperature of about 30C according to Anandtech.

Could systems like this power high-end computers of the future? They definitely can, but it’s not clear if they will. One of the major advantages of immersion cooling compared to forced air in the data center is that you waste far less energy. A ratio of 1.5W of power expended per 1W of computation is typical for data centers, advanced cooling systems have been measured as low as 1.08.

Will Immersion Cooling Ever Go Mainstream?

The advantage of coolant systems like this is that they’re as silent as it’s practically possible for any piece of equipment to be. It’s possible for advanced hardware to debut at the server level before waterfalling into consumer systems, but companies would need to get much more serious about immersion cooling in data centers before we’d see any waterfall IP usage over on the PC side of things.

There’s always been an enthusiast cooler market in PCs. It looks approximately like this: High-end air, closed-loop liquid cooler (these two overlap), followed by open-loop water coolers, chillers (water coolers that reduce the water temperature below ambient air temperature), phase change units, dry ice, and liquid nitrogen. It’s not actually clear how immersion coolers perform compared to other options — if I had to guess, I’d rank them between open-loop water coolers and below chillers. The high cost, in this case, is related to the fact that none of the highest-end options for CPU cooling are all that practical, and they get increasingly impractical the higher up you go.

Immersion cooling like this makes sense for dense deployment data centers, but I’m not sure what the enthusiast angle would be. They don’t seem likely to allow for dramatic performance improvements (overclocking, generally speaking, isn’t having a great moment). If this type of cooling is going to ever go mainstream, kits like this will play a part in making it happen, but so far the enthusiast PC community has relied on improving air coolers (or CLLCs) rather than moving to a radically new type of cooling.

Now Read:




via Tingle Tech

This Bose sale is so good, you might want to pause your vacation

There's no shame whatsoever in buying budget tech — trust us, we know how expensive it can get. One thing we don't suggest skimping on, though, is your audio equipment. We're talking headphones, speakers, soundbars; all that good stuff.

When it comes to sound tech, you can't go wrong with Bose — a bunch of their devices are on sale on Amazon, all of them high-quality and worth every penny.

Here's what you can get: 

Bose SoundSport Free Truly Wireless Headphones — Save $30.95

Total freedom of movement and amazing sound quality to boot, the Bose SoundSport earbuds are a great pick for those who regularly visit the gym — they're sweat-and-water-resistant, and come with multiple different tips to ensure you get a secure fit. You'll even get a charging case that can get you up to five hours of play at a time.  Read more...

More about Bose, Noise Canceling Headphones, Mashable Shopping, Portable Speakers, and Soundbars


via Tingle Tech

You can't go wrong with Samsonite luggage — save up to 50%

TL;DR: Travel with the best and grab Samsonite luggage for up to 50% off on Amazon. 


Luggage doesn't always get the best treatment. From being thrown onto a conveyor belt by a busy airport employee to being dragged to your Airbnb at the top of a "walking only" hill in Mykonos, they're put through a lot. That's why you want to make sure that you packed luggage that will withstand anything that's thrown its way. 

If you recently put your luggage through hell with all the holiday travel, you will definitely want to check out all the Samsonite luggage that Amazon has on sale. 

They're even offering their own clippable coupons on some pieces, like this Samsonite Framelock Hardside Luggage that's an extra $42.65 off, making it a 44% savings.  Read more...

More about Travel, Luggage, Mashable Shopping, Samsonite, and Culture


via Tingle Tech

Here's Yoda singing about his big boy stick, courtesy of Bad Lip Reading

Most Star Wars fans don't know Yoda for his absurdist musical numbers, but the folks at Bad Lip Reading want to change that. 

Three years after "Seagulls," the truly bizarre lip dub about Yoda's harrowing experience with some birds, they've released "My Stick," which is a song about — you guessed it — the merits of Yoda's walking stick in The Last Jedi.

We regret to admit that, like its predecessor, the song is very catchy. Unfortunately, the line "it's my big boy stick" will probably keep it out of our Spotify rotation. Read more...

More about Bad Lip Reading, Yoda, Culture, Web Culture, and Star Wars


via Tingle Tech

Australian fire service shares terrifying video of firefighters sheltering in their truck

If you haven't quite seen the fury of the catastrophic bushfires burning out-of-control across Australia up close yet, this may be it.

A fire and rescue crew, from the suburb of Wyoming in the state of New South Wales, recorded a terrifying moment at 3 p.m. local time on New Year's Eve, when their truck was surrounded by a bushfire. 

The crew of Fire and Rescue NSW (FRNSW) Station 509 were located south of the town of Nowra — an area currently listed with a Bushfire Emergency Warning, the highest level of bushfire alert — when the raging fire blazed around the truck. 

The crew, according to the FRNSW's Twitter account, were forced to take shelter in the truck, while the fire front passed by. One person in the truck filmed the event, and the video was later posted on Twitter and Facebook. It is unfathomable. Read more...

More about Australia, Fire, Firefighters, Bushfires, and Science


via Tingle Tech

The best viral videos of 2019

Can you believe that2019 is finally coming to an end? 

These days it seems like the internet meme machine blows things up, only to forget about them a day later. So you may need a reminder of the best moments in the past year that united us all in tears, laughter, and occasionally, sweet, sweet keyboard rage.

Here are our picks for the top 17 videos the internet loved in 2019. 

1. Dad drags his daughter through an airport

Captured on the first day of January, someone witnessed a dad lovingly dragging his daughter through Dulles International Airport by the hood of her jacket. According to the person filming, she wasn't screaming or crying, just chilling out and going for a ride. Big, big mood.  Read more...

More about Viral, Viral Videos, Best Worst Of 2019, Culture, and Web Culture


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The 10 most anticipated TV shows of 2020

2020 might mark the start of a new decade, but for TV fans it's just a continuation of being buried beneath a mountain of content through which we'll never see the light of day again. 

That said, we're not complaining; the streaming wars might get a little messy, but there's more amazing TV than ever and we have the luxury of choice. 

So where will we be pointing our precious eyeballs in the coming year? Read on.

1The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Disney+

The 10 most anticipated TV shows of 2020

Image: Disney+

We know almost nothing about this series, which will reunite MCU mainstays Sam Wilson (Anthony Mackie) and Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan), but if the sheer joy of their scenes since Captain America: Civil War is enough of a teaser to put it on this list. We also know that Stan got a haircut, and that the two have shared a special chemistry since press tours for Captain America: The Winter Soldier. This is the buddy-cop cop film Marvel never gave us, and we are ready-Proma Khosla Read more...

More about Barry, 2020 Summer Olympics, Lizzie Mcguire, Entertainment, and Movies Tv Shows


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10 of the best books by women in 2019

The end of 2019 is almost upon us. Time to curl up with a good book, and a glass of something festive, and look back on the last 12 months. What a page-turner of a year it has been. 

There were 10 books that really stood out this year because they challenged the status quo and changed the conversation about race, sexual violence, the zeitgeist, or the entire world around us. 

From non-fiction deep dives into the way we collect data, to books about the marginalisation of female desire, here are 10 of the best books by women in 2019... 

10 of the best books by women in 2019

Image: Bloomsbury Circus

Three Women

By Lisa Taddeo

Eight years in the making, Three Women — as its title suggests — tells the story of three women's innermost desires. Taddeo has been credited with inventing a new literary genre, which blends original journalism with narrative, lyrical prose. This is a book about female desire and the ways in which society marginalises it.  Read more...

More about Books, Authors, Entertainment, and Books


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Meet 9 of the best kitchen gadget deals we found in 2019

At the risk of being trolled by IP lovers out there, the truth is, you don't really need an Instant Pot. In fact, you don't really need many kitchen appliances on the market. But then again, what's the fun in that? 

While there are always manual workarounds, appliances do regularly save you time, elbow grease, and headaches while cooking. And this ease of use is the reason why even Michelin-starred chefs will opt for cooking with devices such as a sous-vide instead of hovering over an open flame. 

So if you're looking to fully trick out your kitchen in the new year, the good news is that many top-tier appliances are on sale right now (and have price tags that rival Black Friday promotions).  Read more...

More about Gadgets, Home, Food, Kitchen, and Mashable Shopping


via Tingle Tech

10 of the best charging accessories are all on sale

Take stock of the chargers you've perused ever since the beginning of the smartphone era, and we can almost guarantee that you've gone through countless ones. We get it. Most chargers are shoddy, and the options that seem promising come with questionable price tags.

But we're here to save you from purchasing another charger that you would just throw out in a matter of months. Below, you'll find 10 of the best charging accessories that we found this year, all of which are on sale for an extra 20% off with the code 20SAVE20.

Qi Wireless Fast Charging Pad

Whether you're using a sleek Samsung or a shiny new iPhone, this charger will boost your device to 100% as long as it's Qi-compatible. It rids you the hassle of dealing with wires and safeguards your gadgets from damage thanks to short circuit and overheating protection. Typically on sale for $14.99, it's just $11.99 with the code 20SAVE20. Read more...

More about Charging Cable, Charging Stations, Mashable Shopping, Wireless Charger, and Tech


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Here’s how thinking about building on Mars can help us build better right here on Earth

Thinking about how to build things on Mars comes with a surprising advantage, according to AI SpaceFactory. The company recently won first place at NASA’s 3D-Printed Habitat Challenge with their 3D printed Martian habitat, MARSHA. A few months after the competition, TERA, AI SpaceFactory's first attempt to 3D print a home designed for Earth, is now under construction.

The company believes its space construction technology could help us build sustainable and recyclable houses here on Earth, too. Read more...

More about Space, Mashable Video, Mars, 3d Printing, and Construction


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LG's answer to foldable phones may be a detachable display that wraps around the phone

In the never-ending quest for increasing the screen real estate on smartphones, LG has a new idea: a case that's actually a big, foldable OLED display that can wrap around the phone. 

Yes, it's a little weird. 

This is according a new LG patent unearthed by Dutch outlet LetsGoDigital (via Android Central). The patent, submitted to the WIPO Global Design Database, as well as The Hague International Design System, describes a case that's essentially all screen, and can be combined with the mobile phone and used as a foldable display. It can also be set next to the phone (it connects to the phone via a special, vertically positioned connector), allowing you to get a vast amount of screen space.  Read more...

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Mukesh Ambani, India’s richest man, is ready to take on Amazon and Walmart’s Flipkart.

Reliance Retail and Reliance Jio, two subsidiaries of Ambani’s Reliance Industries, said they have soft launched JioMart, their e-commerce venture, in parts of the state of Maharashtra — Mumbai, Kalyan and Thane.

The e-commerce venture, which is being marketed as “Desh Ki Nayi Dukaan” (Hindi for new sore for the country), currently offers a catalog of 50,000 grocery items and promises “free and express delivery.”

In an email to employees, accessed by TechCrunch, the two subsidiaries that are working together on the e-commerce venture, said they plan to scale the service to many parts of India in coming months. A Reliance spokesperson declined to comment.

The soft launch this week comes months after Ambani, who runs Reliance Industries — India’s largest industrial house — had said at a conference that he wants to service tens of millions of retailers and store owners across the country.

If there is anyone in India who is positioned to compete with Amazon and Walmart, it is him. Reliance Retail, which was founded in 2006, is the largest retailer in the country by revenue. It serves more than 3.5 million customers each week through its nearly 10,000 physical stores in more than 6,500 Indian cities and towns.

Reliance Jio is the largest telecom operator in India with more than 350 million subscribers. The 4G-only carrier, which launched commercial operations in the second half of 2016, disrupted the incumbent telecom operation in the country by offering bulk of data and voice calls at little to no charge for an extended period of time.

More to follow…




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Postmates and Uber have filed a complaint in California federal district court, alleging that a bill limiting how companies can label workers as independent contractors is unconstitutional. The complaint, which includes two gig workers as co-plaintiffs, was filed in U.S. District Court on Monday, days before Assembly Bill 5 (AB-5) is due to go into effect on Jan. 1. It asks for a preliminary injunction against AB-5 while the lawsuit is under consideration.

The complaint argues that AB-5 violates several clauses in the U.S. and California constitutions, including equal protection because of how it classifies gig workers for ride-sharing and on-demand delivery companies compared to the exemptions it grants to workers who do “substantively identical work” in more than twenty other industries.

AB-5 was authored by Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez, a Democrat representing the 80th Assembly District in southern California and signed into law in September by Governor Gavin Newsom. It is intended to uphold the ruling in Dynamex Operations West Inc. v Superior Court of Los Angeles, a landmark 2018 decision by the California Supreme Court about how employees and independent contractors should be classified, and ensure that gig economy workers are entitled to benefits like minimum wage, health insurance and workers’ compensation.

But the suit’s opponents, which includes tech companies whose business models rely on the gig economy, as well as groups of gig workers and freelance journalists, argue that it restricts their work opportunities and ability to earn money.

In addition to Uber and Postmates, the complaints’ plaintiffs also include Lydia Olson and Miguel Perez, drivers for on-demand companies. In a post on Postmates’ blog, Perez wrote that he joined the suit because AB5 “is threatening the freedom and flexibility I have relied on in recent years to support my family.”

A statement from Postmates said “AB5 is a blunt instrument, which is why lawmakers exempted 24 industries, seemingly at random, from its requirements.”

The company added that does not want to be exempted from AB-5 or reverse the Dynamex standard, but “call for industry and labor talks with the California legislature to modernize a robust safety net designed specifically for the needs of on-demand workers, that establishes a new portable benefits model, creates earnings guarantees higher than minimum age, and gives all workers both the strong voice they need and flexibility they demand—a framework not currently contemplated under state and federal law.”

As proof that AB-5 violates the equal protection clause, the complaint argues that “the vast majority of the statute is a list of exemptions that carve out of the statutory scope dozens of occupations, including direct salespeople, travel agents, grant writers, construction truck drivers, commercial fisherman, and many more. There is no rhyme or reason to these nonsensical exemptions, and some are so ill-defined or entirely undefined that it is impossible to discern what they include or exclude.”

The complaint also alleges that AB-5 violates due process by preventing people from choosing to work for gig companies, and the contracts clause because mandating companies like Uber and Postmates to reclassify contractors as employees will either invalidate or substantially change their existing contracts.

In statement about the lawsuit, Gonzalez said “the one clear thing we know about Uber is they will do anything to try to exempt themselves from state regulations that make us all safer and their driver employees self-sufficient. In the meantime, Uber chief executives will continue to become billionaires while too many of their drivers are forced to sleep in their cars.”

The lawsuit follows several efforts to stop or limit AB-5. In October, a group of drivers for Lyft, Uber and DoorDash announced they had submitted a California ballet initiative for the November 2020 ballot in response to AB-5. The measure which received substantial financial support from those companies, seeks to enable drivers and couriers can continue to be independent contractors while guaranteeing benefits like a minimum wage, expenses, healthcare and insurances.

Earlier this month, several organizations representing freelancer writers filed a lawsuit in federal court in Los Angeles alleging AB5 places unconstitutional restrictions on free speech, the day after Vox Media announced it will cut hundreds of freelance positions in California as it prepares for the bill.




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Thousands told to jump into the ocean as Australia's raging fires approached

The sun didn't rise on New Year's Eve. The summer morning in a small beach town on the east coast of Australia looked like a winter's night. 

That black sky soon gave way to a blazing, eery orange as the flames approached. At least 4,000 people were told to jump into the ocean. Gas cylinders could be heard popping like fireworks as they exploded. 

The town of Mallacoota looked apocalyptic on Tuesday local time as it became the latest victim of Australia's out-of-control bushfires.

It was too late to evacuate. 

"We are one road in, one road out. That road's been blocked for hours and hours and hours," Francesca Winterson from Mallacoota Community Radio told News Breakfast, a national TV broadcast.  Read more...

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Huawei reported resilient revenue for 2019 on Tuesday as the embattled Chinese technology group continues to grow despite prolonged American campaign against its business, but cautioned that growth next year could prove more challenging.

Eric Xu, Huawei’s rotating chairman, wrote in a New Year’s message to employees that the company’s revenue has topped 850 billion Chinese yuan ($122 billion) this year, a new record high for the Chinese group and an 18% increase over the previous year.

Xu said Huawei, the second largest smartphone maker globally, sold 240 million handsets this year, up from 206 million last year.

“These figures are lower than our initial projections, yet business remains solid and we stand strong in the face of adversity,” he wrote.

He acknowledged that Huawei is confronting a “strategic and long-term” campaign against its business by the U.S. government. If the campaign persists for long, it would create even more “difficult” environment for the 32-year-old firm to “survive and thrive,” he said.

Survival would be the company’s first priority in 2020, he said.

The U.S. added Huawei to the Commerce Department’s trade blacklist this year, and placed new restrictions on its ability to sell to — and maintain commercial relations with — American companies. The U.S. government has also urged its allies to not use Huawei products in building the next generation of their telecom network infrastructure, alleging that the Chinese company poses a threat to national security.

In October, U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in a conference in New Delhi that he hopes that India, the world’s second largest telecom market, “does not inadvertently subject itself to untoward security risk” by using 5G equipment from Huawei.

But not all U.S. allies have heeded its advice. On Monday, Huawei secured a major victory in India, which approved Huawei’s request to participate in trials of its 5G spectrum.

“We thank the Indian government for their continued faith in Huawei,” Jay Chen, the company’s India CEO said in a statement. “We firmly believe that only technology innovations and high quality networks will be the key to rejuvenating the Indian telecom industry,” he added.




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Funding for tech startups has been on an inevitable upswing for years, a result of a virtuous circle where wildly successful tech companies on the public markets whet the appetites of investors and investors’ backers to find more diamonds, a push met by a pull from the rush of talent with entrepreneurial aspirations out to put that money to work. 2019 has felt a bumper year in that longer trend, with 9-figure rounds ($100 million or more) and “unicorn” statuses so prevalent that the numbers have started to cease to be news items in themselves.

With 2020 now just days away, a look at the 50 biggest funding rounds for start-ups in the past year draw out some trends. We’re pulling out the top five below for a closer look, but it’s interesting too to see some of the other trends emerging across the rest of the pack.

Automotive remains a huge pull when it comes to raising big bucks: part of the reason is because the space is capital intensive, as it straddles both software and hardware (that is, not just equipment but cars). Capex is another reason for some of the other big investment rounds of the year, such as the biggest of them all, for an internet data center startup.

Asian companies figure massive in the list, and account for 7 of the 10 biggest rounds in the list.

Small players: there were only three companies in health tech in the top 50, only one in education technology, and only three in the areas of AI and robotics. I don’t know if that means these areas simply don’t require as much capital investment, or if these challenges are simply not as interesting right now for investors as those more squarely focused on revenue generation and business needs. Hopefully the former, as the wider tech world faces a lot of cynicism and skepticism from the public, and could use a better profile from solving actual problems.

Note: for this piece we have focused on investments made in pre-IPO technology companies, and on new equity investments rather than secondary or debt rounds.




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Nearly every drone would be tracked under new FAA rule

A proposal to track nearly all remote-controlled drones went public Thursday.

This new rule from the Federal Aviation Administration would affect nearly all drones in the U.S., both recreational and commercial. The only exception are drones under .55 pounds, which don't require FAA registration. 

Most photography drones, like the DJI Mavic, weigh about a pound and would need to comply with the new regulations. (FYI, the Propel Star Wars Quadcopter is 6 pounds.)

Called "Remote ID," the new system would make it easier to track the location of nearly every drone flying, and identify its registered operator. The new process would be similar to registration for airplanes. Drone manufacturers would have to start incorporating tracking tools into their devices. Read more...

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Your resolution for 2020 should be to leave your f*ckboi behind

Here’s a New Year's resolution for you: Leave your fuckboi behind in 2019.

This may seem like quite a departure from the most popular New Years’ resolutions: save money, learn a new skill, and the old mainstay — lose weight.

But actually leaving your fuckboi to rot in 2019 aligns quite well with the most popular resolutions:

  • Saving money — don’t need to pay for lame dates!

  • Learn a new skill — learn your worth and how to protect it!

  • Lose weight — lose 100+ pounds with a simple text! 

In all seriousness, I propose that we all make the decision to move on from whomever made our (dating) lives hell in 2019. It's a viable, healthy resolution to make. Leaving behind the toxic person — both physically and mentally — isn’t a sexy resolution, but it’s the self-care you may actually need for the new year. This is the kind of self-care that often gets lost among all the talk of face masks and yoga classes. Read more...

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Get a free $50 Amazon gift card when you buy any of these Dyson hair tools

TL;DR: For a limited time, you'll receive a $50 gift card when you order select Dyson hair tools through Amazon.


With this year's holiday shopping season finally mercifully over, chances are there's little room in your budget for a pre-New Year's trip to your stylist. It's not that your tresses don't deserve a little TLC after the frenzy of all of your holiday festivities — or that you shouldn't ring in 2020 looking fresh as all get-out — it's just that you probably can't justify dropping hundreds of dollars on some fancy-ass blowout, mask, or gloss after putting your wallet through the wringer for the past month or so. Read more...

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