Thursday, October 10, 2013

Article: Crowdsourced Design Startup Dispop Gets Into the Ad Buying Business

Dispop, the startup that allows businesses to crowdsource the design of their ads, has relaunched its platform with a big addition — the ability to actually run ad campaigns.

Through the service, advertisers could already solicit submissions from multiple designers, then A/B test them to see wh...

http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/09/dispop-relaunch/

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Article: TouchMarks tests show iPads most responsive tablet screens

The new TouchMarks benchmark has determined that Apple's iPad touchscreens are more responsive than their Android and Windows RT competitors.

TouchMarks is a stripped-down benchmark developed by Agawi, a developer of streaming technology that integrates advertising within mobile games. T...

http://www.cnet.com.au/touchmarks-tests-show-ipads-most-responsive-tablet-screens-339345622.htm

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Article: Microsoft: Our Antimalware Products have 150 Million Users

Microsoft today published a blog post in which it emphasized its commitment to protecting consumer and business customers from malware with its various solutions. The company also noted its real-time antimalware products are installed on over 150 million computers worldwide, and that their qualit...

http://thenextweb.com/microsoft/2013/10/10/microsoft-says-its-antimalware-products-protect-150m-computers-reaffirms-commitment-to-quality-solutions/

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Article: Encryption tech designed to look like an Instagram filter

We live in a world where over-sharing is not just common, it's encouraged. We happily, and readily, upload our photos and thoughts to the internet, where total strangers can access them with the click of a button. There was a point somewhere along the line we decided that we were OK with sacrific...

http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2013-10/10/cryptstagram

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Article: Acer Brings Another Chromebook To The Party

Acer was early to the Chromebook market, releasing the C7 for a mere $199 and the C710 for $299. These laptops – more tablets with keyboards than fully-featured machines – work well as "third screen" devices that you throw onto a coffee table or use for browsing and some mild document editing. No...

http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/10/acer-brings-another-chromebook-to-the-party/

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