RadioShack bundling $100 Google Play store credit with HTC One purchases

Loyal Engadget readers know that we don’t normally trouble ourselves with promotions, but this one is too wild to ignore. Until June 30th, RadioShack is offering the HTC One to AT&T and Sprint customers with an added bonus — a $100 credit for the Google Play store. Should you elect to sign up with Sprint, you’ll basically get away like a bandit since RadioShack has slashed the price of the handset to $79.99 for new activations — on two-year contracts, of course. After all is said and done, you would basically leave $20 richer than when you started (sort of). So, if you’ve been lusting after the HTC One but have held off on buying it, the universe might be trying to tell you something.

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Via: Phone Arena

Source: Radio Shack

A Glowing Pump That Lets Drivers Know You’re Doing Roadside Repairs

A Glowing Pump That Lets Drivers Know You're Doing Roadside Repairs

There’s a reason that Topeak’s MiniRocket iGlow bike bump won a 2013 Red Dot Design Award: the transparent barrel encases a internal optical fiber that turns a small red LED into a brilliantly-visible glowing safety strip. And at just 67 grams, it adds minimal weight to your bike’s frame, so it’s easy to always keep on hand. A pair of watch-sized batteries powers it continuously for up to 50 hours on its brightest setting, and 100 hours when dimmed.

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Jay-Z Samsung “4 More” video spot tips the super-speed album production

Now that the artist known as Jay-Z has gone instantly platinum before his next record has even been released due to a Samsung deal that’ll push said title to the masses for free, his every move is being watched extra closely by the technology publications of the world as well. Magna Carta Holy Grail has

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Facebook Accidentally Exposed Contact Info for Six Million Users

Facebook Accidentally Exposed Contact Info for Six Million Users

According to a post on Facebook’s security blog, a bug in the company’s friend recommendation system exposed the contact information of some six million users to others. The bug has been present for about a year, but the company only found out about it in the last 24 hours. The affected users will be notified by email. The company says there’s no evidence the bug was exploited maliciously.

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Facebook security bug exposed 6 million users’ personal information (update)

Facebook security bug exposed 6 million users' personal information

Today, Facebook announced a security bug that compromised the personal account information of six million users. In a post on the Facebook Security page, the site’s White Hat team explained that some of the information the site uses to deliver friend recommendations was “inadvertently stored with people’s contact information as part of their account on Facebook.” When users downloaded an archive of their account via the DYI (download your information) tool, some were apparently given access to additional contact info for friends and even friends of friends. The post continues:

We’ve concluded that approximately 6 million Facebook users had email addresses or telephone numbers shared. There were other email addresses or telephone numbers included in the downloads, but they were not connected to any Facebook users or even names of individuals. For almost all of the email addresses or telephone numbers impacted, each individual email address or telephone number was only included in a download once or twice. This means, in almost all cases, an email address or telephone number was only exposed to one person. Additionally, no other types of personal or financial information were included and only people on Facebook – not developers or advertisers – have access to the DYI tool.

Facebook says it’s temporarily disabled the DYI tool to fix the breach. We’ve reached out to the site for further comment; for now, read the official statement via the source link below.

Update: Facebook has responded to our inquiries and stated that while the bug was discovered earlier this month, “it had been live since last year.” They immediately disabled the tool, fixed the bug and reenabled it within 24 hours of the bug’s discovery. The bug was reported to them through a White Hat program for external security researchers.

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Via: TechCrunch

Source: Facebook

1,556 Instagram pics create stop-motion animation

(Credit: Friends in Faux/Instagram)

If you have the time and patience, stop-motion animation can be oodles of fun to create, especially if you have a flair for wacky scenes.

Animation collective Friends in Faux has been producing some rather amazing stop-motion animated films since around 2006, when it released “Tony vs. Paul,” an epic outdoor battle between two guys.

Their latest production is “Instagramimation,” described as “a stop-motion adventure through the world of Instagram.”

Created by Paul B. Cummings and Eriq Wities, the funny 3-minute short consists of 1,556 Instagram photos stitched together to create a flowing narrative.

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17 Bizarre Themed Bars Will Get You Trashed In Style

17 Bizarre Themed Bars Will Get You Trashed In Style
Some bars just want to pour booze down your gullet and collect your cash. Well, all bars want to do that. But some do it with style. Today, we’re looking at bars around the world that draw you in with their quirky, awesome, weirdness.

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Take a Hypnotic Trip on Tokyo’s Automatic Rails

You are not watching CGI. Despite the kaleidoscope of colors and shapes rising from the infinite horizon, this is all real footage of the 12-mile Yurikamome line in Tokyo. Hold onto your butts.

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Inside the Guggenheim Museum’s Glowing, Ambient James Turrell Skylight

Inside the Guggenheim Museum's Glowing, Ambient James Turrell Skylight

The atrium of New York’s Guggenheim Museum is usually a bustling space, filled with crisp light and crowds of visitors. You wouldn’t have known it from the scene yesterday, as the museum opened its long-awaited James Turrell show: saturated in shimmering cobalt light, visitors quietly sprawled around the space, gazing up at Turrell’s “skylight.”

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Source: Sony’s next-generation SmartWatch will include NFC

An image of Sony's current SmartWatch. What would you change?

(Credit: Sony Mobile)

Sony’s rumored next-generation SmartWatch is real, and it will offer some notable feature upgrades to the company’s current wearable tech offering, a source has confirmed to CNET.

The news of a new SmartWatch is not surprising, given that Sony’s Xperia Twitter account has all but confirmed a wristwatch-related announcement at next week’s Mobile Asia Expo 2013 trade show that runs from June 26 to 28. The new model will be a successor to the Sony SmartWatch MN2SW, which is currently available for around $100.

But our source — who has provided accurate information on unannounced Sony products in the past — has indicated some specific features said to be available on the new watch.

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