9 sites to watch excellent curated videos

Watching videos
Hundreds of hours of video are uploaded to the Web every minute, so it’s not always easy to find something interesting to watch when you have a moment to spare. Thankfully, we’re experts at faffing on company time and know where to get our fix of quality Web video. Here are our picks for the best sites to watch curated clips. 5by If you’ve only got a couple of minutes to kill, head over to 5by and let its Concierge feature know whether you just want to pass time, discover a new music video or have your mind blown right…

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Use this disposable email service and feel like a spy!

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There are no shortage of disposable email services but I really like this one for its simplicity: The excellently named (and free) MailDrop.cc is exactly that – an email drop for messages you don’t want to get sent to your main email account or things you might just want to keep secret or separate. Blofeld would dig this email service. You don’t need to sign up, you just select a username and get going. Try mine  – brokenbottleboy@maildrop.cc. Feel free to send me confidential schematics or the codes to your death ray. “You expect me to talk Mr Wright?” “No, I…

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The White House is using open data to help you shortlist US colleges

College Scorecard
If you’re planning to apply to universities in the US next year, The White House’s redesigned College Scorecard site is a good place to start shortlisting schools. Using open data and an easy-to-use interface, the resource lets you quickly look up universities by location, size and programs. The redesigned College Scorecard site uses open data to help find the right school for you It also lets you drill down to outcomes at specific colleges, including how much you can expect to accrue in debt and how soon you’ll be able to pay it off. You can also find stats for…

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Apple won’t allow web views in tvOS and that’s a good thing

Apple TV hed
Developer Daniel Pasco explained in a blog post that Apple’s upcoming tvOS — which will power the new Apple TV — doesn’t support webviews, which means apps for the device won’t be able to display Web content. This makes it a lot harder for developers to build in features like browsing websites, opening links from apps like Twitter or RSS readers, or displaying frequently updated information, such as sports scores. While that sounds like programming hell, it could be a good thing for users: Restricting the use of webviews means that developers will have to build native components that are…

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Facebook invites Indian Prime Minister Nahendra Modi to next Townhall Q&A

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Facebook’s next Townhall Q&A will have a special guest: Indian Prime Minister Nahendra Modi. Mark Zuckerberg announced the Q&A via a blog post on his own profile. The CEO says he and the Prime Minister will discuss “how communities can work together to address social and economic challenges.” Facebook started its public Townhall Q&A program last November. The company first asks its community to drop questions on Facebook, after which Zuckerberg adresses them on a live stream a couple of weeks later. In this case, we wouldn’t be surprised to see the questions turn to Internet.org, a non-profit developed by Facebook to…

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Have Lil Jon ask someone over for ‘Netflix and chill’ using Vext, his new app

Vext
Yes, you read that right, Lil Jon has created a keyboard app called Vext for iOS and Android. It lets you send video memes of Lil Jon doing what he does best – randomly shouting things like “What” and “Okay” – to your friends. Some of the other phrases are things like “Drink, drink, drink, drink” and “It’s called Google bitch.” You know, all the things you would usually text your mom. It’s not the most technologically advanced app in the world, but it’s entertaining and random enough that it could be really popular, especially since Lil Jon is known…

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Google just launched Android Pay, so why do I have two Wallet apps?

Wat Wallet Google
Android Pay launched yesterday to replace Google Wallet with a simpler, quicker contactless payments service. Actually installing the feature is pretty confusing, however. The new Android Pay app is supposed to arrive as an update to the original Google Wallet. However, Google also just launched a a second, completely separate Google Wallet app, which refocuses the platform for person-to-person payments, similar to Venmo or Square Cash. That means that if your old version of Google Wallet hasn’t been updated yet, and you try to search the Play Store for Android Pay, you’ll see two versions of Google Wallet listed: I mistakenly…

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Remember Jelly? Here’s another iPhone app that wants to help with tough decisions

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If you’re the type of person who takes an hour to decide what you’re making for dinner or whether you want an iPhone 6s or 6s Plus, Flotsm is for you. It’s a free iOS app that lets you get unbiased help making tough decisions, as well as lighthearted ones too. And it’s all anonymous. It’s also strikingly similar to the stagnant Jelly, created by Twitter co-founder Biz Stone. Getting started is easy, just sign up with Facebook or your email and ask your first question. All you have to do is decide what you want help with, add multiple answer…

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Alex stops you from publishing inconsiderate content

AlexJS
It’s all too easy in today’s overly politically correct world to get caught up in the heat of the moment and publish a comment or article that could offend readers without intending to do so. That’s why I’m excited about Alex, a new project by developer Titus Wormer that helps catch potentially insensitive language in your writing. Alex flags potentially offensive terms in your writing The open source script tracks gender favoring, polarizing, race-related, religion inconsiderate, or other unequal phrasing in any text file you throw at it. For example, it alerts you when you use ‘master’ and ‘slave’ to…

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