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Pick up that Android phone in front of you, or fish it out of your pocket. Chances are the Google+ app is installed. Here's a great way to get the best use out of it -- follow AC and the whole crew on Google+. You'll stay abreast of everything that's fit to print about Android, and it's the best way to shoot the breeze with any of us. There is also plenty of other talk going on about all of the current events, because none of us are what you would call shy.
We'll make it easy, here's a orderly bullet point list:
Like our fearless leader Crackberry Kevin (find him on Google+ here) said in today's Talk Mobile segment, social networking can be a huge time sink. You might as well have a good time doing it.
We'll see you there!
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/vl61hpsdp5Q/story01.htm
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Listen to Hang Up and Listen with Stefan Fatsis, Josh Levin, and Mike Pesca by clicking the arrow on the audio player below:
In this week?s episode of?Slate?s sports podcast Hang Up and Listen, Josh Levin, Mike Pesca, and special guest Mike Schur discuss the Aaron Hernandez murder case and the media?s quest to find someone to blame. They also talk about the NBA draft, Doc Rivers? feud with Bill Simmons, and NBA teams? quest to become awful. Finally, they celebrate Dodgers outfielder Yasiel Puig?s historic first month.
Here are links to some of the articles and other items mentioned on the show:
Mike Schur?s grass allergy: You don?t have to be a crotchety old man to appreciate when guys like Chipper Jones stay with one team their whole careers.
Podcast production and edit by Mike Vuolo. Our intern is Michael Gerber.
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If you?re a gamer, chances are you watch a lot of game trailers on YouTube. If you?re engulfed in gaming culture, you probably watch Let?s Plays and other forms of community created content on YouTube as well. Google now says that these videos are essential for publishers hoping to reach out to gamers.
In a new white paper published on Google Think Insights, the search giant found that 95 percent of all gamers turn to YouTube to consume and engage content relevant to them. This rise in content consumption correlates with a rise in subscriptions to game channels and a rise in consumption on mobile devices:
The rapid growth of game content consumption on YouTube suggests that it has become an important medium to gamers, providing them with information and entertainment. In 2012, the amount of time people spent watching gaming videos on YouTube more than doubled over the year before. The growth rate of time spent viewing gaming videos was greater than YouTube?s overall growth in the U.S.
While time spent viewing gaming videos increased year-over-year in 2012, much of that growth was fueled by video consumption on mobile devices, such as smartphones and tablets. In 2012, one in three views of gaming-related videos occurred on a tablet or smartphone, nearly double that of 2011.
Also striking was that when gamers had more free time, they chose to spend it watching video. Weekends saw an 18% day-over-day increase in gaming views. Viewing spiked during the summer, with views in June growing by 17% month-overmonth, and remaining elevated throughout July and August.
On an hourly basis, 32% of views occurred between 6:00 PM and 10:00 PM, traditional prime time television hours. The increased consumption of gaming video was partially driven by growth of subscribers to game channels. Game views from subscribers jumped 9X year-over-year in 2012. Those who were subscribers watched game content for twice as long as non-subscribers.
Google has clearly established that gamers watch a lot of video content on YouTube, but it also breaks down the kind of content being watched. It says that gamers watch seven types of video content, which includes announcement trailers, gameplay demos, launch trailers, game powered entertainment, tutorials, walkthroughs and reviews.
Google broke down the above seven types even further into three categories ? pre-launch, launch and post-launch. It found that 50 percent of video views come from the publishers, developers and press during the pre-launch period with announcement trailers taking up 24 percent of these views. At launch, only three percent of video views come from reviews.
Unsurprisingly, the post-launch community created videos are incredibly popular. Walkthroughs and tutorials only make up a total of 8 percent of these post-launch views, but game powered entertainment (Let?s Plays, parodies and analysis) make up 39 percent of all game related views on YouTube. Google says that this community created content doubles the amount of views popular games would have otherwise received by only sticking to official channels.
In short, Google says that game marketers would be wise to acknowledge that gamers increasingly:
All of the above information will certainly be welcomed by the Let?s Play community as they continue to argue that they?re now an integral part of any game?s presence online, and that publishers should let them collect ad revenue off of their videos despite using copyrighted content.
[h/t: Game Informer]
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People occasionally ask me how I choose the films I see at a film festival. There's a long, complicated answer to that but let's go with a short one: Sometimes the films pick me.
Which happened Sunday at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival. It's how I came to see a strangely engaging (and badly titled) German film, Love Steaks.
While it looked intriguing in its catalog write-up, Love Steaks didn't seem as inviting as a film from India I wanted to see, Dabba, whose press screening started a half-hour before the one for Love Steaks. Dabba was at 3:30, Love Steaks at 4 - and so Love Steaks lost the coin-toss.
Then Dabba, which I believe was in Hindi, started - and there were no English subtitles. I've been going to film festivals for 30 years - and this is only the second time I can remember that happening at a screening I was at. By the time they figured out that this was not a momentary glitch but an unsolvable problem for the day, I still had just enough time to walk next door to see Love Steaks.
Written and directed by Jakob Lass, Love Steaks is an intriguing mix of romance, comedy and drama about a newly hired masseur (Franz Rogowski) at a seaside luxury hotel. He gets involved with one of the chefs in the hotel kitchen (Lana Cooper), whose sense of daring pulls him out of a lifetime of timidity. But he recognizes that she has a drinking problem and tries to save her, leading to friction. Rogowsky looks like a young Vincent Gallo and plays the character's shyness with great wit. Cooper had an anything-goes twinkle in her eye that was funny and inviting - and then scary.
Dabba was actually the second film of the day with insufficient English subtitles. The first was a public screening of another German film, Nothing Bad Can Happen. Its Czech subtitles had the audience laughing - but it seemed like only about one line in six had been translated into English. I felt like I was missing the joke - or jokes - and bailed out after 10 minutes.
Instead, I had the chance to get to a press screening of Concussion, a film I'd seen and loved at Sundance earlier this year It was just as funny and moving the second time, and I admired it all over again, particularly the work of Robin Weigert, Johnathan Tchaikovsky and Maggie Siff in central roles.
My day started with 11.6, a compelling French film that managed to be both a thriller and a character study, by Philippe Godeau
This commentary continues on my website.
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Follow Marshall Fine on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Marshall Fine
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President Obama and his family on Sunday toured the South African prison that held Nelson Mandela, with the president writing in a visitors log that they were ?deeply humbled? by the experience.
Mr. Obama, first lady Michelle Obama, daughters Malia and Sasha, and the Obamas? niece Leslie Robinson arrived on Robben Island after a five-minute helicopter flight from Capetown on Marine One. They were accompanied by a press helicopter and a contingent of Secret Service agents.
They got a tour of the prison, where Mr. Mandela spent 27 years as a political prisoner, from 83-year-old former inmate Ahmed Kathrada. They also saw the small cell that once was occupied by Mr. Mandela, the anti-apartheid icon.
The president and first lady paused at the prison?s log book, and Mr. Obama wrote the following entry:
?On behalf of our family we?re deeply humbled to stand where men of such courage faced down injustice and refused to yield. The world is grateful for the heroes of Robben Island, who remind us that no shackles or cells can match the strength of the human spirit. Barack Obama and Michelle Obama, 30 June 2013.?
Mr. Mandela, 94, is in critical condition with a lung infection in a South African hospital. Mr. Obama didn?t visit the former South African president on this trip, saying he didn?t want to intrude on the family?s crisis.
At a quarry where prisoners labored, Mr. Obama told his daughters about the history of the nonviolence movement in South Africa.
?One thing you guys might not be aware of us that the idea of political nonviolence first took root here in South Africa because Mahatma Gandhi was a lawyer here in South Africa,? he told the girls. ?Here is where he did his first political [activism]. When he went back to India, the principles ultimately led to Indian independence, and what Gandhi did inspired Martin Luther King.?
? Copyright 2013 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.
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We hope you've had time to say your goodbyes, because Google Reader bows out today, ending its eight-year existence. The search giant gave a two-month warning, with many users incensed that they'd be losing their defacto RSS reader -- their favorite way to absorb news and internet goings-on. We'd like to hear why Reader managed to pull in such a devoted following, so leave us your memories in the comments below and let us know which service you've moved your feeds to, because some of us haven't decided yet.
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