Deleting your Facebook account
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Tags: accounts, Facebook, social media
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Tags: accounts, Facebook, social media
Your cellphone is only as good as its battery. Once its power source runs out, so does your ability to call, check email and pinpoint your location on a virtual map. There could be numerous things draining your battery. Heck, it might even be time to replace it. But if your iPhone battery isn’t damaged or in need of replacement, you’ll want to figure out what’s making it drain too quickly.
If you’re a Facebook user, you’ve probably heard about the Cambridge Analytica controversy by now. It’s a grim reminder that no matter how careful you are with your online profiles, your information is still being used, cataloged, tracked, monetized and analyzed by a number of companies out there. In light of this current fiasco, short of deactivating or deleting your Facebook account, what should be your first order of business?
Camera phones are changing the landscape of photography. Professionals are using their smartphones in place of hefty DSLRs, and indie filmmakers are shooting everything from music videos to feature-length dramas. If you’ve ever dreamed of a scanner, game system and universal translator that fit into your pocket, these apps have made that vision a reality.
The end of the year is the time when we count our blessings: family, friends, and nearly unlimited movies and television for $10.99 per month. Netflix is a powerful tool for surviving the chaos of December. But I’ll bet there are some pretty neat Netflix features that you don’t know about.
It has finally happened. You knew it was coming. We’re now in the era when smartphones will set you back $1,000 – or almost. On March 16, Samsung’s Galaxy S9 and S9+ will be released and its prices start at $720 and go up to $929 for the S9+, following Apple’s high-end iPhone X, which retails for $999.
Facebook really, really wants you to watch some videos while you’re using the social networking service. Auto-play videos have been popping up in your News Feed for some time. No doubt your eye has been drawn to the action. It’s hard to miss. The problem here is that you might not appreciate the interruption.