Why use words when you can just DM friends colorful rectangles?

Why use words when you can just DM friends colorful rectangles?

Words, man. Amirite? They’re so limiting — with their defined meanings and their need for correct spelling. And don’t even get me started on grammar.

If you, too, are sick of words, ooh buddy do we have an app for you. Meet Color Chat: an app which lets you DM with your friends by sending colored rectangles of various sizes and hues back and forth. 

It might not be super efficient at getting a message across, but it’s perhaps more fun — and definitely prettier — than just shooting the regular shit.

The future of social is:
– the color chat app where you can chat with colored rectangles only. no text no emoji no video. just colored rectangles pic.twitter.com/KSzyZaOEzd

— freia lobo (@freialobo) December 13, 2019 Read more…

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He died with $190M of customers’ crypto. Now they want to dig him up.

He died with $190M of customers' crypto. Now they want to dig him up.

Gerald Cotten died unexpectedly in December of 2018, but don’t try telling that to the people who lost millions worth of cryptocurrency as a result. 

The then 30-year-old founder of the Canadian cryptocurrency exchange QuadrigaCX was traveling in India when he reportedly died from complications resulting from Crohn’s disease. His former customers, however, suspected foul play — and now, reports Coindesk, they want Cotten’s body exhumed. 

Why? Well, that would be because they don’t think he’s actually dead. 

The problem, other than the supposed death of course, was that Cotten had sole access to the approximately $190 million worth of customers’ cryptocurrency held by the exchange. With him gone, no one could touch it. To those who lost access to their funds, Cotten’s overseas death just seems too fishy to believe, especially considering the questionable way in which his company was run.  Read more…

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Apple aims for better iPhone photos using AI and infrared

Apple aims for better iPhone photos using AI and infrared

The quality of the photos smartphones capture has become increasingly important, and Apple just acquired a company called Spectral Edge to ensure future iPhone photos look even better.

As Bloomberg reports, Spectral Edge is based in Cambridge, England and focused on developing technology that improves the photos we take automatically. It does this using a combination of capturing an infrared version of each photo taken and then using machine learning to use it for image enhancement. The end result is a crisper photograph with more accurate colors.

Clearly Apple is impressed by what Spectral Edge was doing because it acquired the company. Although there’s been no official announcement yet, Peter Ronald Denwood is now listed as a director at the company. He’s better known as one of Apple’s corporate lawyers. It’s also telling that all other board members have been terminated, leaving Apple in control. Read more…

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9 Christmas tree alternatives for tiny apartments

9 Christmas tree alternatives for tiny apartments

Tiny apartment-havers face a unique dilemma during the holidays: How do you set up a Christmas tree when your home is smaller than one?

That’s when it’s a useful time to consider some Christmas tree alternatives. Wreaths, branches, a big leftover pumpkin that you’ve wrapped in tinsel (don’t do that one) … rest assured you can make your space festive without also making it unlivable.

Please note that none of these items are intended to replace a Christmas tree. Nothing can replace a Christmas tree! These are simply fun alternatives for those whose living rooms can’t accommodate a full pine.

And if it’s the smell you’re after, just light a pine-scented candle. Read more…

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Porsche’s Star Wars ‘spaceship’ sorta looks like the Taycan?

Porsche's Star Wars 'spaceship' sorta looks like the Taycan?

A new Star Wars movie is coming out around the same time German carmaker Porsche will deliver its first all-electric vehicle, the Taycan, to U.S. customers.  

So on Friday, Porsche and Star Wars released a behind-the-scenes look at its new “starship,” the Tri-Wing S-91X Pegasus Starfighter. The Taycan shape seems to be in there, somewhere. Sure. 

You’ll have to wait until Star Wars: The Rise of Starwalker‘s premiere in Los Angeles next week to see the actual model the designers made. Read more…

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Claire Saffitz attempts to recreate the Milky Way, and it’s a journey

Claire Saffitz attempts to recreate the Milky Way, and it's a journey

Pastry chef and collective internet crush Claire Saffitz took on another challenge: Milky Way bars. Unfortunately, it involves tempering chocolate. 

In the latest episode of Gourmet Makes from  Bon Appétit, Saffitz had to recreate three key components of the candy bar — chocolate, nougat, and caramel.

As usual, Saffitz underestimated how much reverse engineering would break her. 

“I think I got this,” a hopeful Saffitz said early on day two of this project. “I think I’m gonna make it today.”

At that point, there were still 25 minutes of the video left — reader, she did not finish the gourmet Milky Ways. Getting the nougat on point took an entire day.  Read more…

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Airport builds Christmas tree from confiscated knives, scissors, box cutters, and lighters

Airport builds Christmas tree from confiscated knives, scissors, box cutters, and lighters

The Vilnius Airport in Lithuania is celebrating the holidays in the way only an airport can.

While families all over the world have been placing stars and angels atop their Christmas trees, the Lithuanian airport has fashioned a tree of its own. However, you may notice a slight difference between this tree and the traditional one.

Airport builds Christmas tree from confiscated knives, scissors, box cutters, and lighters

Image: Martynas Jaugelavicius

SEE ALSO: Banksy unveils Christmas artwork drawing attention to homelessness

This tree is decked with items confiscated from passengers during security screening, according to Marius Zelenius, Lithuanian Airports’ Head of Communication. Knives, lighters, and scissors (oh, so many scissors) take the place of ornaments, lights, and ribbons. It’s five feet tall and took over two weeks to craft,  BBC News reported. Read more…

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Facebook waited two weeks to tell employees their payroll data was stolen

Facebook waited two weeks to tell employees their payroll data was stolen

Hey, Facebook employees, Mark Zuckerberg doesn’t deserve you. 

That much was made abundantly clear today with the news that the Zuckerberg-helmed behemoth waited two full weeks to notify about 29,000 current and former employees of a massive theft of their personal data. 

Specifically, Bloomberg reports that unencrypted hard drives containing 2018 payroll data were stolen from a car belonging to a member of Facebook’s payroll department on Nov. 17 of this year. It took until Nov. 29 for someone to realize that employee payroll data was on the drives and then another two weeks for the company to start notifying those affected.  Read more…

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