Free app puts your face on the cover of magazines
More than one million people are faking out their friends with Faker$, a free app that lets you put yourself – or friends and family members – on the cover of famous magazines, newspapers, movie posters, and more.
Is the internet making trust obsolete?
Is the wealth of information available online eliminating the need for people to trust one another?
Wibbitz: Create a broadcast-like video from your website
One of the innovative start-ups I visited while in Israel was a company that turns websites and articles into a 90-second video summary. Check it out.
JAM with Chrome turns your browser into a rock n’ roll jam space
Google’s latest experimental web app lets you jam with real friends on virtual instruments.
Sony’s Reader app on iOS: Better late than never?
iPad owners have no shortage of ebook apps to choose from, be it Apple’s own iBooks, Kobo, Amazon’s Kindle and dozens of others. Curiously missing was Sony’s Reader app. Until now.
When you buy from the cloud, what exactly do you own?
Buying something doesn’t necessarily mean you own it, and you only have to look as far as your phone or tablet for proof.
May The Pork Be With You: Angry Birds goes Star Wars?
If Rovio’s new website is any indication, we might soon see George Lucas’s influence on the next Angry Birds.
Dog shaming: owners disgrace their dogs online
Dogs are shameless, and very rarely do they appear to be sorry for their wrongdoings. Despite this, dog owners across the globe have taken to dog shaming: publicly displaying their dogs’ weaker moments and antisocial behaviour online for the world to see. And it’s hilarious.
No Virginia, there is no ‘Internet Kill Switch’
Sir Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web, debunks the long held myth.
eBay bans spells, hexes, potions, prayers and blessings
eBay has it all – including spells, potions, hexes and other supernatural silliness. But that’s set to change.

