Taylor Schilling Looks Utterly Perfect In Red-Hot Golden Globes Dress

Never one to shy away from calling out crazy Hollywood beauty standards, “Orange Is The New Black” star Taylor Schilling proved once again that she can do no wrong at the Golden Globe Awards on Sunday.

The nominee for Best Actress in a Television Series left viewers breathless in a backless red dress by Ralph Lauren with a slightly racy cutout in the front. Schilling’s ballerina-like bun and strong red lips accentuated the flowing dress, which she accessorized with studded earrings, a red ring and jeweled clutch. Check out the photos of her dress before. What do you think of her look?

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taylor schilling

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Keira Knightley Makes Us Think The Red Caret Is In The Forest

Golden Globe nominee Keira Knightley strolled onto the red carpet with grace.

Wearing Chanel, for her outfit and makeup, the pregnant actress looked like she was taking an afternoon stroll in the prairie, with butterflies and feathers on her dress. While we’ll never forget her past gowns, like this Valentino number from ’05, we must say that this look will definitely be in our memory for a while… for better or worse.

See Keira Knightley’s dress below and tell us what you think!

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Google Translate For Android To Get Delay-Free Translation Soon

google-logo-2011-10-25Looking to translate a sentence or a word? Chances are you might pop on over to Google Translate for your translation needs. However as most of you would agree, Google Translate isn’t exactly the most accurate, as is the case with most translation services. Sometimes the translation is spot on for simple words and sentences, but try getting a bit more complex and suddenly you are getting sentences that make no sense.

Well according to a report from The New York Times, it seems that Google plans on doing something about it. The report claims that Google is close to releasing an updated version of its Google Translate app for Android. One of the changes Google will be making to the app is the introduction of a system that will enhance the speech-to-text translation feature.

The updated app will apparently aim to deliver delay-free and “near perfect” translations, a feature which Google has been promising since a couple of years ago. This sounds a bit like the Skype translation feature that Microsoft launched where users could hold video calls in different languages and have their speech translated on the fly to the other person’s language.

No word on when the updated Google Translate app will be launched and when that updated version will be released for Android, but we will be keeping our eyes peeled for its release. In the meantime are you guys looking forward to this feature?

Google Translate For Android To Get Delay-Free Translation Soon , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

52% Of Spotify Users Use The Service Via Their Mobile Device

spotify-24-million-active-6-million-payingSpotify’s music streaming service is available on the phone, tablet, and computer thanks to its desktop client and web client, depending on which you prefer to use. With so many platforms that the music service is available on, is there one platform in which Spotify users would prefer? Well as it turns out, mobile is the preferred platform of choice.

According to Spotify, it seems that the majority of their users use their music streaming service on their mobile devices – 52% to be exact. To break that down, that’s 42% on their smartphones and 10% on their tablets. Spotify’s desktop client comes close at 45% with the remaining 3% of its users streaming their music via Spotify’s web client.

Spotify also revealed that 55% of their users connect to their Spotify accounts using Facebook. This is particularly important as connecting Facebook to Spotify allows users to find other friends who are using Spotify, and it also helps Spotify curate playlists based on their friends list, a new feature which Spotify rolled out back in December last year.

The service, as it stands, has about 50 million monthly active users. The company is boasting that 12 million of whom are paying for Spotify Premium which equates to a lot of revenue made from subscriptions alone, not counting the revenue Spotify makes from playing ads to those who aren’t subscribed. Spotify users are also reportedly streaming an average of 150 minutes of music a day.

52% Of Spotify Users Use The Service Via Their Mobile Device , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Knog’s Expose Is Another Flash Accessory For Your Smartphone

white-expose-videoDespite the best attempts by smartphone manufacturers, the flash units on our smartphones can’t be compared to that of a dedicated flash unit. They tend to be overly harsh and unflattering in the illumination of their subjects, but sometimes it’s really the best that can be done in a bad lighting situation.

Now there are plenty of flash accessory for mobile devices, but in case you were still on the lookout for an alternative, Knog’s Expose might be of interest to you. Knog, for those unfamiliar, is an Australian company who has been known for creating flash units for mobile devices, and the Expose is their latest creation.

The Expose is a flash unit that is small enough where you can clip it onto your keychain meaning that you will always have it with you when you need it. It will also come with an accompanying app that allows the user to toggle between different modes, such as flash, strobe, continuous, and so on. Users will also be able to adjust its white balance and brightness via the app as well.

The accessory pairs with your smartphone via Bluetooth and will sport 9 LEDs that will be able to output 130 lumens. The flash is good for about an hour before it requires recharging, so unless you plan to fire off flashes for the next hour, we reckon the Expose should last you quite a bit. The device will be going on sale in the next few weeks and will set you back $60.

Knog’s Expose Is Another Flash Accessory For Your Smartphone , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Thousands Of People March In Washington In Remembrance Of Paris Terror Attacks

WASHINGTON — Thousands of people gathered in the nation’s capital on Sunday to participate in a silent march in honor of the 17 victims who died in this week’s terror attacks in France.

The march, which began at the Newseum and ended at the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial, was organized by the French Embassy. French Ambassador Gerard Araud led the gathering, which the embassy estimated included about 3,000 people. Christine Lagarde, the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, was also present.

Attendees held French and American flags, signs reading “Je suis Charlie” (I am Charlie), and pens in honor of satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, which was attacked last week. The mostly silent crowd huddled under the Newseum’s facade, which bears a large inscription of the First Amendment, before snaking its way through downtown Washington. The procession ended with the singing of “La Marseillaise,” the French national anthem.

More than 40 world leaders and 3.7 million people, according to government estimates, rallied against terror in the heart of Paris earlier in the day. Rallies are also planned in London, Madrid and New York.

See photos from the march in Washington below:

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dc march

dc march

dc march

dc march

dc march

All photos by Igor Bobic of The Huffington Post

Goin' Down to Bitsyland

Despite T.S. Eliot’s claim to the contrary, for many of us, January, not April, is the cruelest month. January is burdened with following the most emotional time of the year. Just past are Thanksgiving, Christmas, Chanukah, Kwanzaa and other major end-of-year sources (for the majority of us) of joy, togetherness, family-ness, and nostalgia as well as a host of other soul-warming kinds of experiences. (It must be said and recognized that, for some people, all these holiday-time emotions, though typically as intense, are not always positive, but the recommendations I make below apply to them as well, I believe.) But come January 2, a day after that ball dropped in Times Square, the strong positive feelings felt by so many are suddenly gone. The IRS starts sending out tax forms. Employers issue W-2s and 1099s. It’s cold outside. It’s cold inside. It’s flu season. It’s six weeks until the faintest formalized cultural excuse for human warmth and interaction — Valentine’s Day. Talk about a cruel month.

There are ways to deal with these post-holiday doldrums, however, but they require our active participation. First of all, we must realize that “downs” are natural aspects of life. Everyone experiences them. But there are ways to ease them. For decades, I have been involved in the study of ways in which people, families especially, deal with the ups and downs of life. Our research at the Center for the Study of Myth and Ritual at Emory University showed that among the most powerful forces that can be brought to bear in helping us through down times are family gatherings, family dinners, stories and rituals. It further turned out that it’s not the dinners or the gatherings, per se, that make the difference. Its something more fundamental; something universal; something obvious. Simple human contact.

One of the most influential psychotherapists of our time, Irvin Yalom, once wrote that when it comes to the health-giving and healing effects of human relationships, it is hard to tell the “container” from the “contents.” He would ask, for example, whether we get together (container) with friends to have dinner (contents), or if we invite friends to dinner (container) so we can be with people (contents). Is it that specific movie we want to see or is it the time we spend with the person sitting next to us? Likely, this is a nature/nurture kind of question where both are important, but all too often we lose sight of just how important it is to find reasons and ways simply to be with people, especially in these early months of the year.

I am sure that different people would describe a variety of ways they find the kind of human contact that I am prescribing, but I will use myself as a convenient sample. For me, as for many others in the 50+ age group, gathering together to play music and sing seems to be a fairly widespread phenomenon. Among our age cohort, there are literally millions of frustrated rockers, folk singers, classical musicians, choristers, composers, even critics. In this group resides the makings of uncountable garage bands, song circles, dancing clubs and other gatherings centered on music old and new. (In London, there is one singing club that is only for people who can’t carry a tune!) Speaking as an aging guitar player (and I refer here to the player not the instrument!), I attend one of these groups almost every week and enjoy the hell out of it. Speaking as a psychologist, however, this music group represents exactly the kind of non-family ritual-based community that each one of us needs to stabilize our lives — no matter how old we may be. To be sure, there is singing, but there is also talking, discussion of news, mutual support, nurturance, concern, encouragement, empathy, sympathy and all the other things that make communities “therapeutic.”

My group comprises a lawyer, teachers, a doctor, business people, Christians, Jews, northerners, southerners, moms, dads, grandparents, some who grieve and mourn recent losses, some who anticipate upcoming weddings, births and graduations. Sometimes we sing sad songs, other times hokey ones, other times songs of love and joy. We remembered Mary Travers of Peter, Paul and Mary when she passed away and this past year, we spent an entire session singing Pete Seeger melodies. I have personally and professionally experienced formal group psychotherapy — 1960s-type T-Groups, Gestalt therapy groups, encounter groups, etc. — but I can tell you that, for people looking for psychological wellness at any age, three hours of playing music and talking with the same group of people week after week is way more powerful a force than any of these.

Specially relevant to my purpose here of encouraging gathering together (in any form) as a pure and simple psychologically healthy thing, is that there are among my music group several people who regularly perform together at retirement homes and farmer’s markets and the odd wedding. They specialize in bluegrass and country music and they call themselves the Bitsyland Band.

I have always loved that name. It sounds so country, so down home. At first, that was the sense I had of it. But over time, I have come to a different meaning in that the word “bitsy,” itself, means very small. As such the group’s name, purposely or not, can mean “tiny land” or, more academically, a microcosmic place. To me this means that, regardless of their size, be they music circles or church services or basketball games, all gatherings of people for some shared purpose are like Bitsyland — places where we can go to be with people — not to be alone. In some of these places people gather together to play music; in some, to make quilts; in some, to talk about books; in some, to watch and discuss movies. In an Ecclesiastes-like sense, there is a “place” for every purpose under Heaven.

In truth, these places we gather are all what Yalom might term “containers.” Regardless of the things that bring us together, however, the “contents” are always the same — the warmth and reassurance that come from simply being with other people — from simply knowing that there can be predictable, controllable and regular times when we will not be alone — from simply knowing that there is always a Bitsyland somewhere for each of us. There, when the good things have been taken away. There, when the joyful times are less frequent. There, even in the Januarys of our years. Even in the winters of our lives.

Paul Ryan Expertly Trolls Chris Christie After Cowboys Loss To Packers

Hat’s off to Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), who executed some expert trolling of New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) following the Green Bay Packers’ victory over the Dallas Cowboys in Sunday’s NFC divisional playoff game.

The newly bearded former GOP vice presidential nominee poked fun of the governor for sharing a painfully awkward hug with Jerry Jones, the owner of the Dallas Cowboys.

Christie, a life-long Cowboys fan, was spotted on television last week attempting to embrace Jones in the owner’s luxury box after a team victory. That prompted mockery from another Wisconsin elected official and potential 2016 rival, Gov. Scott Walker (R).

Christie took it in stride.

Golden Globes Red Carpet 2015 Photos: See All The Stunning Gowns Of The Night

Ladies and gentleman, award season is upon us!

We kick off our favorite time of year with the 72nd annual Golden Globe Awards.

Hollywood’s biggest stars descended upon Los Angeles on Sunday night, dressed to the nines in haute-couture gowns, glamorous jewels and just about everything in between. While there were tons of fashion hits, there were definitely some misses, too.

Here are all the red carpet looks from the night — including the good, the bad and the ugly. So, which looks do you love and who should fire their stylists come Monday? Sound off in the comments below!

Rosamund Pike Is Wonderful In White At The Golden Globes

You go, “Gone Girl.”

Rosamund Pike delivered an incredible (albeit haunting) performance as Amy Dunne in “Gone Girl,” and unsurprisingly, she’s already won a spot on our best-dressed list for the 2015 Golden Globes… with one small exception

The 35-year-old star stunned in a white Vera Wang gown and Brian Atwood heels, and while we love the color and shape of the dress, the bodice is a bit ill-fitting.

She has certainly come a long way from her “Bond Girl” days, though, and between her amazing performance and sartorial savvy, we have a feeling Pike will be a staple on the red carpet for many award seasons to come.

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