Tuesday
Sep262017

Mozilla finally kills of Adobe Flash on Firefox version 56 for Android

Adobe Flash has been on the chopping block for ages but it doesn’t seem to want to die. Mozilla is taking a step towards removing it from all its properties with its latest announcement. Firefox 56 for Android will no longer support Adobe’s multimedia plugin. This means, Firefox on Google’s mobile OS will require Android 4.1 or higher to work, which is the Android version. You might not notice much of a difference here since most sites have dropped support for Flash but if you still need to use it, Dolphin browser works.

Source: Android Authority

Tuesday
Sep262017

Twitter doubles character limit to 280

The tweets of your friends, frenemies, favorite celebrities, and hate follows can now be twice as long. Twitter has begun testing 280-character limit to tweets. The social network claims only nine percent of all tweets right now are exactly 140 characters and that users have to edit their initial thoughts to fit under the original limit. Twitter claims it hopes to lessen the burden on “languages impacted by cramming,” which is most languages except for the likes of Chinese, Korean, and Japanese, and have people tweet more. Now, we can’t say whether this will improve the quality of tweets or not. The 140-character limit was initially set to reflect SMS message length.

Source: The Verge

Tuesday
Sep262017

Dyson gets into electric car business

Heathcliff O’Malley

Dyson’s latest project might seem a bit outside its wheelhouse but when you think about it, the technology company has always been in the business of cleaning our air of pollutants. And so the company is turning its sights to electric vehicles as announced by James Dyson, the company’s founder and chief engineer. Dyson is set to unveil a battery-powered electric vehicle by the year 2020. It’s supposedly going to be a “radical and different” type of car.

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Tuesday
Sep262017

Microsoft to improve OneDrive’s web UI and sharing options

Microsoft’s Ignite 2017 event is in full swing and at the conference the company is introducing some important changes to its OneDrive cloud storage service. One of the new things is a cleaner user interface. You can now see what content you share with others through a new people card and information pane, and the folder interface gets a new look, too. If you open a file on the web version of the service, it’ll now open in edit mode instead of read mode.

Aside from the cosmetic change, Microsoft is also improving the sharing options for Office, Windows, and Mac. Office 2016 is getting a new sharing pane in the near future that will let OneDrive users share documents to specific people or those part of an organization. Mobile clients will also get these updates so sharing on-the-go is possible. You also get notifications within the mobile app and desktop apps when files have been shared. And for file support, ZIP files can now be seen in the web view, and DRM or IRM files get full support on the service. A self-service recovery feature will also be activated when things like mass deletes, file corruption, ransomware, and other data loss scenarios happen. There are tons of other new features, which you can see at this link.