All Deaths In Game Of Thrones Condensed In One 21 Minute Video

Game of Thrones is one of the most popular TV shows ever made and it has a fan following of tens of millions of people across the globe. The show does things differently as far as killing off characters is concerned, there have been a lot of deaths throughout the entire series. If you’ve ever been curious about the number of deaths that have taken place so far in the series, you’d certainly want to check out this new 21 minute video.

There have been all sorts of deaths in the series, from crucial characters like the much hated King Joffrey to peasants that are not relevant to the story at all. One thing is constant, though, there have been a lot of deaths in Game of Thrones.

A YouTube channel that goes by Andrew Razon Compilations has compiled a new video that condenses every death that has taken place in Game of Thrones over the past six seasons. The number is going to surprise you, apparently, there have been a total of 150,966 deaths throughout the seasons that have been released so far.

You can be sure that there will be many more in the two remaining seasons. Game of Thrones season 7 is finally going to premiere next month while the final season may not be released until 2019.

All Deaths In Game Of Thrones Condensed In One 21 Minute Video , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Microsoft Office Released On Windows Store


Microsoft recently announced a new iteration of Windows called Windows 10 S. The iteration is basically a lightweight version of Windows 10 that’s capable of running full Windows apps, as long as they’re available on the Windows Store. Microsoft has thus released its Office productivity suite on the Windows Store. All Office apps can now be downloaded via the online store.

This isn’t the first time that Office is being listed on the Windows Store. However, it is the first time that Microsoft is enabling users to download and update the apps directly from the Windows Store.

It’s part of the company’s push to further expand the reach of its desktop operating system to markets that have been otherwise cornered by Chromebooks. The first tranche of Windows 10 S-based notebooks is aimed at students and businesses.

The company does point out in a support article that the Office version that’s listed on the Windows Store is going to have some limitations. Users will only be able to install the 32-bit versions of Office apps like Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Access, and Publisher.

Moreover, there’s no OneNote app included in the Windows Store version of Office, but users will be able to install the existing UWP app. All existing Office mobile apps will continue to work on Windows 10 S machines as well.

Microsoft Office Released On Windows Store , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Amazon Launches Dash Wand With Alexa

Amazon has launched a new product today that’s powered by Alexa, its virtual assistant. However, it’s not a new Echo device, we already have enough of those already. The company’s new product is called Dash Wand. Powered by Alexa, it enables users to scan barcodes on grocery items, order essential household items from Amazon by using voice commands, convert measurements, and more with a nifty little device that they can carry around with them in the home.

Amazon’s Dash Wand is magnetic so it can be easily attached to the fridge. It’s Wi-Fi enabled so Alexa can offer some functionality that you can get on the more expensive Echo devices. It enables users to find recipes and search for restaurants with just their voice commands.

Amazon has launched Dash-branded shopping scanners previously but they weren’t as advanced as the Wand. The previous version was priced at $49.99 and allowed users to add anything on Amazon to their shopping cart but they had to check out manually.

The Dash Wand makes it much easier by enabling users to purchase items directly. All Amazon Prime subscribers in the United States can pick one up starting today. Amazon is selling the Wand for $20 but Prime members who buy one are going to receive $20 back into their Amazon accounts which means that the Wand will essentially be free for them.

Amazon Launches Dash Wand With Alexa , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Microsoft Surface Laptop And Surface Pro Released Worldwide


Microsoft recently unveiled new hardware products that include the Surface Laptop and Surface Pro. Interested customers outside the United States would have been waiting for the opportunity to get their hands on the new machines. They can finally do that starting today as Microsoft has announced the worldwide release of the Surface Laptop and Surface Pro.

Microsoft unveiled the Surface Laptop recently. It’s the company’s own machine that’s powered by Windows 10 S. That’s Microsoft’s latest iteration of Windows 10 that’s aimed at markets where the Chrome OS reigns supreme right now.

The company has finally released the Surface Laptop in Australia, New Zealand, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. It costs $999 in the United States.

Customers should keep in mind that Microsoft is only releasing the Core i5 variant of this notebook today. It did announce a Core i7-powered variant but that won’t be available until the summer.

Microsoft has released the new Surface Pro in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, China, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan and the UK. It costs $799 in the United States.

Microsoft Surface Laptop And Surface Pro Released Worldwide , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Sling TV DVR Updated To Protect Recordings From Automatic Deletion


Sling TV started offering a cloud DVR feature to users several months ago. It enables them to save shows to their cloud DVR so that they can watch them at a later date. The cloud DVR feature has an automatic deletion functionality as it overwrites shows starting from the oldest saved one once the space fills up. Sling TV has now updated the feature to ensure that users can protect some recordings from being automatically deleted.

Sling TV is now enabling subscribers to record content on Fox channels. They can now set and watching a recording that airs on Fox local networks, Fox Sports 1, Nat Geo, and FX. If a recording is available from Fox on-demand, the user will automatically be redirected to the on-demand content.

It’s also possible to schedule, manage, and view Sling TV DVR recordings using the service’s Xbox One app in addition to the apps already available for Amazon Fire TVs and Fire tablets, Android devices, iOS devices, and Roku TVs. Cloud DVR will be expanded to more Sling TV supported devices in the near future.

Aside from the Protect feature that keeps a recording from being deleted, users can also sort their recordings into DVR folders which makes managing multiple recordings very easy.

All this and more, including minor user interface tweaks, is included in the recent update for Sling TV on supported platforms.

Sling TV DVR Updated To Protect Recordings From Automatic Deletion , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Facebook marks GIF’s 30th birthday with comments GIFs, new GIFs

Although GIF is technically just an image format not unlike JPG, PNG, and BMP, its built-in ability to support animations has made it synonymous with creative, ridiculous, and sometimes entertaining forms of expression. It has also become one of the biggest vehicles of such expression on social networks like Facebook. In gratitude and in celebration of the image format’s 30th … Continue reading

Surface Pro Review 2017

The Surface Pro Review we have here passes judgement on the Surface Pro released in June of 2017, as first outlined earlier this year. With the newest version of the Surface Pro, Microsoft made an equivalent to the iMac G4 by combining two important elements. The Microsoft Surface Pro (2017) is both enjoyable to use in a unique way, and … Continue reading

Microsoft AI beats Ms. Pac-Man with a perfect score

Is this the start of the AI takeover? Well, not really, not unless the world turned out to be one Ms. Pac-Man game. That’s because Microsoft researchers from its recently acquired Maluuba deep learning startup have developed an AI that was not only able to beat that specific game but was also able to achieve the highest score possible. A … Continue reading

Adam West — A Batman For The Ages

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Adam West was my first hero. As a child, I used to rush home from elementary school so that I could binge watch back-to-back syndicated episodes of Batman. Irrespective of what troubled me during the day, watching West’s Batman invariably transported me to my happy place.

Much has been said (and debated) about the campier aspects of the show. But as a ten-year-old, I was oblivious to much of the show’s wild and farcical humor. To me, Batman was a straightforward, exciting adventure series about a brave, uncynical and resilient superhero. West’s Batman was the “Bright Knight,” an unconflicted and eternally optimistic champion of justice, with an unwavering sense of right and wrong.

My experience is not unique. Due to the show’s immediate and ongoing popularity, — both during its original run in the Sixties and in ubiquitous reruns in subsequent decades — generations of children have grown up enthralled by West’s Batman.

As I grew older, my admiration for West deepened and, in part, inspired me to write How to Be a Superhero, a book about superheroes and the actors who play them. One of my goals was to examine the intersection between the performer and the character they played. I also wanted to investigate how playing a superhero shaped the actor’s offscreen life. for good or ill Because Adam West’s personal life and career were inextricably linked to his compelling performance as Batman, it was essential to speak to him.

In our interview (a portion of which is reprinted here), West was self-deprecating, funny and candid about his experience playing the Caped Crusader. Adam West was a superhero Founding Father who paved the way for all the caped crusaders who followed him.

Would you say your initial thoughts on playing Batman were a combination of reluctance and hope?

I’d say that’s a pretty accurate statement of the mix. But I felt that I might be able to do something fresh with the character. Something a little different. I refused to do what was normally expected [in playing a superhero].

Did you think of Bruce Wayne and Batman as two separate characters?

Yes.

Can you talk a little bit about developing those two distinct personalities?

I’ll be frank, it’s difficult for me to talk about acting. But let me relate back to your first question. When I decide I want to do a part and I get curious and I start cooking with it, I just go in and do it. I don’t even think about it. Seriously. I developed the character as best as I could and I tried to bring something unique and fun to the part, and then I didn’t think about it.

In the beginning, I got a lot of criticism from people associated with the show. “Oh, he’s not as serious as he should be. He’s not as wooden as we thought he should be. We don’t want to see the twinkle behind the mask.”

In other words, they thought it would be better if my interpretation was more mundane. It occurred to me, creatively, that if something is mundane and ordinary that it might not be as interesting. It might not have a lasting impact.

Batman has to be a little bit bigger than life to instill fear in the villains.

Batman was bigger than life. No one runs around like that 24/7. He’d be locked up somewhere. In my case, I reasoned that if I played Batman with utter sincerity (in that he doesn’t think he is funny) and, occasionally, with a little wink to the audience, then I could be absurdly big with the character. Those characters became almost Shakespearean.

Did you have to justify why a man would put on the cape to fight crime?

You know, not really so much. I think much of my interpretation came from sense memory of playing Batman as a kid. And what happens instantaneously when you put on the cape and cowl. Because I was able to conjure that up with a little bit of thinking and cooking with it, it became an easy way for me to get into that absurd characterization. I’d put on the cowl and say to Burt, or myself “Come on, let’s go play Batman and Robin in my yard. Come on, it’s neat.” I knew that if I had the enthusiasm and a kind of a quirkiness that you had as a kid playing him, then it might work.

You’re saying that the costume does a lot of the work for you.

Oh my God, yes. Good observation. It certainly does. Especially if you use the cape and the cowl and move in a certain way, you can appear dynamic. Batman hardly ever stops moving. Bruce Wayne does. But not Batman. Batman is always moving in some manner, even if he is merely gesturing with his hand or swinging his cape around.

When kids play Batman, they are pretending to be you. But what’s interesting is that you were pretending to be them playing you. Did you allow yourself to feel powerful (as a kid would) in the costume?

You are very perceptive about this stuff.

That first day walking out of my dressing room and walking on the stage was tough. I thought, “Are they going to accept me in this silly costume as the real Batman?” I had to take a deep breath. I walked across the stage towards the crew and everyone turned and there’s wasn’t a sound. They just accepted me totally.

John Wesley Shipp who played The Flash on CBS in the early Nineties told me that he felt powerful in the costume and somewhat diminished out of it. Do you relate to that?

That was not my feeling. My feeling was probably more [in character than personal] that I felt diminished when I wore the costume — at least from Bruce Wayne’s point of view. Because as Bruce Wayne, I was faking something… It’s hard to explain….

No, I understand. It speaks to the question of who is the true identity: Batman or Bruce Wayne?

It became Batman. And not Bruce Wayne. Batman was part of all the true activity that counted and propelled the story — that is, unless you include the [1966 feature length] movie. In our movie, I had more of a chance to play Bruce Wayne.

Did you try different registers to develop the voice of Bruce Wayne?

I don’t think so. But I did develop different rhythms. But that came easily. Because he was desperately involved in what he was doing, Batman would have a different rhythm to his speech. It was easier for me to play absurd lines of dialogue when I said them with [a distinct] rhythm.

Do you know what I mean?

I do.

[He chuckled.] Good. Because I don’t.

Some actors have told me that playing these heroes has rubbed off on them in some way. Did Batman make his way into your life and vice versa?

I think so a bit. But it evolved so slowly. And it took me years to “sober up.” I feel that is it unavoidable. At least in my case I’ve sensed and seen it. Batman was a show that was geared to entire families to enjoy on different levels. But you do have a responsibility that evolves over a few years when everyone you meet thanks you, and when the kids are starry-eyed and grateful as you said you were. It’s certainly gotten to me. And I’d hate to disappoint families.

You are expected to hold the mantle and be a spokesman for this character in some way. Is that exhausting?

Yes, it is. But it paid well. And it continues. Of course, I’m joking. But it is a bit of a responsibility. But there is something selfish about it too. I was being turned down for more adult fare in more interesting work. I felt that I better embrace the thing that I created. Otherwise, I would have never have become an icon.

In your autobiography, you said that you were “married to the cape.” In every marriage, in every relationship there are ups and downs. How did you make peace with the idea that your relationship with this character was going to be a very long one?

I think it was a very simple deduction. I think any intelligent person would come to the same conclusion. And that is if I am being turned down for other roles because of my association with Batman, then maybe what I should do is really embrace Batman. Pursue it and keep it alive. Which is what I’ve been trying to do for thirty years.

How has playing the part changed you?

It’s made me an extremely rich man. [Laughs] Personally, the rewards have come from the fans. Wherever I go I am met with such warmth and humor.

Favorite Bat-merchandise?

The condoms.

[Laughing] Are there really Batman condoms?

No. [Laughing]

But there should be. Who would win in a fight; Your Batman or George Clooney’s?

I think it depends on the circumstances. It probably depends on the kind of battle. If it were to be a battle of charm, of course, Clooney would win.

I’d like to reiterate how grateful I am that you took the time to talk with me. I grew up on your show so this is a thrill for me.

Oh, no problem. You’re a man of quality. I can tell. You’ve been great.

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Late Night Hosts Gave Donald Trump The Best Gags For His 71st Birthday

Late night TV hosts wished President Donald Trump a happy 71st birthday in their own amusing way.

Jimmy Kimmel, Jimmy Fallon, James Corden and Seth Meyers each used their Wednesday night broadcasts to give the president a “gift” in the form of a gag.

Kimmel imagined Trump giving himself a birthday message ― from himself:

“Late Late Show” host Corden said he was just glad that Trump could finally have a day “where he’s the center of attention.”

Corden also suggested the perfect gift for the president, before suggesting he take the day (and the week, and the month and the next four years) off:

On “Late Night,” meanwhile, Meyers joked about how Trump was now “a man in his 70s, who wants a golf score in the 60s, his country in the ’50s and his wife in her 20s.”

And “Tonight Show” host Fallon imagined just some of the birthday cards that Trump could have received ― including ones from Russian President Vladimir Putin and White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer:

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— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.