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JeaoneKef

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Xuep Would Calorie Counts on Vending Machines Stop You from Eating and Drinking Junk
 As part of its Windows 8 Consumer Preview, Microsoft has been releasing a small selection of apps for testing. One, called People, seems particularly interesting, acting as an OS-wide social and contact tool that integrates with Facebook, Twitter and Google, amongst others.     The cloud-based app is designed to keep contacts in order, sure, by syncing details from a glut of online addre stanley usa ss books. But it also lets users view and interact directly with their Facebook and Twitter accounts, retweeting posts or liking statuses, from within the app itself. The app is also designed to sync data from Exchange, Google stanley cups  and LinkedIn, and has a built-in conflict manag stanley flask ement system鈥攁 little like Windows Phone鈥攚hich attempts to collate contact data. But the app also shares its love, with its data being available to other apps on the OS, so the whole system can make use of a centralized contact management system. If that sounds a lot like you phone that   because, well, it is鈥攂ut it will make a refreshing change to have that kind of functionality on a Windows PC. [Microsoft via The Verge]                                                        MicrosoftWindows 8 Ttpy New Harry Potter footage shows off the horrors within Gringotts    Vault
 Much has been said over the demise of Google Reader and what it should mean to users. A popular position advocated by many tech bloggers is t stanley mugs hat you should pay for services rather than trust your data to companies offering services for free. They argue that paying for services will give you more control over your data in the event that a free service closes its doors. This position is partially stanley tazas  correct, but following this advice entirely will needlessly cost you time and money.1     There are two types of free services: open  those where your data can be exported to other services  and closed  those that aren ;t open . Open services include most free email services, such as Gmail, blog services like Tumblr, and even Google Reader. Each of these services allow users to take their data and move it to other services whenever they like. I can download all of my Gmail and move it to my own hosted email, for example. I can move Virtual Pants from Tumblr to WordPress if I like. And, as many people are figuring out right now, you can take your RSS subscriptions from Google Reader and import them into another RSS reader. Closed services include social networks, like Facebook, Google+, and Twitter. These services don ;t allow you to take your data somewhere else. Even if they allow you to download your data, like Twi stanley cup tter, that data can ;t be easily transferred to another similar service. I can ;t download my tweets and import them into Google+, for example. It makes