Google Search Now Shows Nutrition Information Of Most Foods

Google Search will now show nutritional information of over 1,000 food items when queried. The feature will be available on both mobile and desktop.

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Tumblr Brings In-Stream Ads To Its Website

Tumblr has announced that it is now bringing in-stream ads to the website. This advertising model initially debuted on mobile apps last month.

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Internet Meme ‘Grumpy Cat’ To Get A Movie Deal

Widely popular internet meme ‘Grumpy Cat’ is reportedly going to star in a Hollywood movie.

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The Wall Street Journal Reportedly Looking To Launch Social Network Of Their Own

The Wall Street Journal will apparently be launching a social network of its own that could compete with LinkedIn, but the question is do we really need another one?

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Facebook Will Now Verify Pages Of Public Figures And Brands

Facebook Pages of high profile celebrities, personalities, brands and companies will now sport a blue checkmark to indicate that these Pages have officially been verified.

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Wikipedia Launches ‘Nearby’ For Mobile Website

Wikipedia is launching a new “Nearby” feature which uses your location to present local information.

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Google Chrome Will Feature In-App Payments Soon

Google will soon be rolling out in-app purchases for its Chrome web browser.

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Amazon Launches ‘Login With Amazon’ For Use Across Apps, Websites

Amazon is launching its Login With Amazon service to make it easier for users to log into apps and websites.

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Amazon outs in-house login service to take on Facebook and Google

In an effort to reduce what Amazon is calling “sign-in friction,” the company has launched their own login system for third-party developers, and they’re calling it “Login with Amazon,” simply enough. The new service will compete with the likes of Facebook and Google, who have their own login services for third-party apps as well.

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Essentially, Amazon users will be able to log into third-party apps, games, and websites using their Amazon credentials, eliminating the need to register yet another account with a website that users may only visit once or twice. Users also have the ability to share certain portions of their Amazon profile with apps, games and websites.

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Login with Amazon has been in its testing phases on Zappos.com and Woot.com for awhile now, both of which are Amazon subsidiaries. It seems that testing on these two sites has gone rather well, as Amazon reports that Zappos saw 40% of its new customers choose to sign-in with their Amazon account, while Woot discovered that new customers logged in with Amazon twice as often as any other social login on the website.

Amazon says their login service can be added “in a matter of hours” and it’s based on the OAuth 2.0 authorization framework, which is a widely-adopted open protocol, so developers shouldn’t have any problem at all implementing it into their own services.

With the public launch of the login service, we should be seeing even more login options appear on websites, as well as different apps and games. Facebook and Google have been the most popular options for third-party login, and now that Amazon has joined the party, we’ll see if the retail giant can shake some feathers.


Amazon outs in-house login service to take on Facebook and Google is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
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Spotify Rolls Out ‘Discover’ Tab To Help Users Find New Tunes

Spotify has finally rolled out its Discovery tab to help users find new music across the service.

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