Google adds add-on support to Gmail

Here’s some welcome news for Gmail users: Google is adding support for third-party add-ons that can integrate directly into the service. There are plenty of services that add functionality to Gmail already, of course, but they typically do that through a browser extension.

With this new capability, which Google announced at its Cloud Next conference in San Francisco today, users will be able to install these add-ons from the G Suite Marketplace. That’s the same marketplace that already hosts add-ons for Google’s other productivity tools like Docs and Sheets. It’ll take a bit before this goes live, though. Google says this new feature is coming “later this year.”

Users who install one of these new add-ons will be able to use them on the web and in Google’s mobile Gmail apps (though there’s no mention of Inbox, Google’s next-gen e-mail client).

Developers who want to write these add-ons can write them once and they’ll run on all of these platforms. The company worked with Intuit, Salesforce and ProsperWorks on trialling this feature, but developers who want to give it a try can sign up for a Developer Preview here.

While the company is currently aiming add-ons at its business users, consumers without a paid G Suite subscription will be able to install them, too, though developers will be able to choose if they want to make their extensions available to consumers or only paying G Suite customers.

via TechCrunch
Google adds add-on support to Gmail

School Assignment Leads to Discovery of WWII Plane With Pilot’s Body Still Inside

An ME 109 Messerschmitt. (Image: German Federal Archives)

When 14-year-old Daniel Kristiansen was assigned a World War II project for history class, his father jokingly suggested he look for a German plane that had allegedly crashed at the family farm. Well wouldn’t you know it, he actually found the damned thing—along with the dead airman’s remains. It’s being called one of the most sensational discoveries in recent times.

Armed with metal detectors, father and son descended on the farm near Arabybro in northern Denmark. Years before, the father, Klaus, remembered his grandfather telling him that a plane had crashed there during the war, but that the plane was removed soon afterwards. The pair thought it might be fun if they could find a small bit of metal or two left over from the crash. Well, they found a lot more than that, uncovering thousands of pieces, as well as the remains of the pilot.

The metal detectors began to beep when they surveyed a patch of boggy ground, so they started to dig. Realizing they needed to dig a bit deeper, they borrowed a neighbor’s excavator. And that’s when bits of the plane began to reveal themselves.

“In the first moment it was not a plane,” said Klaus Kristiansen to the BBC. “It was maybe 2,000 to 5,000 pieces of a plane. And we found a motor…then suddenly we found parts of bones, and parts from [the pilot’s] clothes.”

Add to that an ME 109 Messershmitt engine, munitions, and some personal items, like the pilot’s wallet with some money still inside and a booklet suspected of being either the Bible or a copy of Mein Kampf. “We didn’t touch it, we just put it in some bags,” said Kristiansen. “A museum is now taking care of it. I think there’s a lot of information in those papers.”

“It was pretty wild to find bones and spine from the dead pilot,” said Daniel in an interview with DRP4.

Smartly, Klaus contacted a pair of WWII historians and the Danish authorities. Local police closed the crash site for the investigation and bomb disposal units were called in to safely remove the munitions. Forensic police are still working to recover the pilot’s remains. There’s hope the dead airman might be identified and given a proper burial in Germany.

Image: Luftartsmuseum

The ME 109 Messerschmitt fighter was considered the “backbone” of the Luftwaffe during the Second World War. The plane was highly adaptable, able to to perform tasks such as bomber escort, combined fighter-bomber, ground-attack, and reconnaissance. From 1936 to 1945, the Germans produced 33,984 of these planes, making it the most produced fighter aircraft in history.

No word yet on how Daniel’s project was received at school. It’d be a real shame if he got anything less than a stellar grade.

[BBC, CPH Post]

via Gizmodo
School Assignment Leads to Discovery of WWII Plane With Pilot’s Body Still Inside

A new, affordable naming startup for startups

A few years ago, when I launched a daily email newsletter called StrictlyVC, I was ecstatic — thrilled! — to be striking out on my own for the first time. Alas, just a few weeks weeks after filing to secure a trademark,  an officious-sounding note appeared in my inbox, and soon after, I found myself shelling out $10,000 in lawyer’s fees over a short-lived trademark dispute. It wasn’t nearly as painful as it might have been, but it was a rude realization that figuring out the right brand can time consuming and complicated and have implications that founders might not foresee.

Of course, my experience is hardly rare. Most founders are typically left to either conduct trademark searches on their own (which leads to a scenario like mine), or else pay top dollar for law firms or branding agencies to do it for them.

In fact, thoroughly — and affordably — eliminating risky name choices is exactly the opportunity that a two-year-old, Bay Area company, Naming Matters, is chasing, and it has already convinced  a growing number of people — including 15 founders from Y Combinator’s most recent class — that it’s service is worth a spin.

Its founder certainly appears to know what she’s doing.  S.B. Master previously cofounded Master-McNeil, a 29-year-old corporate naming and branding firm in Berkeley, Ca., whose clients include Apple, General Motors, Disney, and PayPal, among others. Now Master sees an opportunity to cater not just to deep-pocketed corporate customers but also startups on shoestring budgets. Indeed, 18 months ago, she decided to take everything she has learned over the years about linguistic analysis, trademark searching, and domain name acquisition and pour it into a self-service software product that also incorporates search and data visualization. (Her head of engineering, John Jansen, worked last as a senior engineer at Quid, a platform that offers machine learning-powered market research.)

I talked with her earlier today to learn more.

TC: You’ve already run a naming company for decades. Why start this new thing?

SM: Naming is hard, and we tend to work with companies that can afford us to do deep preliminary availability screening. I grew frustrated with how slow and antiquated that searching step is [for companies that can’t afford such a service]. I mean, if you have 100 names, how do you figure out which are most likely to get you in to trouble, and which are your stronger candidates that you should focus on? There are legacy providers, but their model is to charge users for every name they look up. If you’re looking for a name in every country and every class, it adds up. You have to be very skilled to [keep your costs down].

TC: So the idea is to pay less to your friendly trademark attorney.

 

SM: The idea is that instead of this being some super expensive cottage industry, that anyone, anywhere, whether founders or innovators in companies or paralegals in law firms or companies under pressure to do more faster and with less, can use this tool in an unlimited way.

TC: How big a problem — or opportunity — is this?

SM: About 5 million trademarks are registered worldwide each year, and to get to a name that you’re willing to spend the money to file a trademark application, you’ve probably looked at 50 to 100 names, so suggests our experience. That means people are looking up something like 500 million names a year. That’s a lot of time and effort and it still often doesn’t answer the question of whether it’s worth it, whether the name will get you sued . . . We’ve been told by big law firms that to look at one name a paralegal is going to spend three hours, and they cost $300 an hour. So, there’s $1,000 right there.

TC: Why is this the killer solution?

SM: There are so many engineers and creative people who have no knowledge of trademarks or how they should work, and by merely looking at the visualization (that we produce for users), where the bigger the dot is to the name you’ve chosen, or the more crowded, the more [risky] the brand — it’s just offers incredible cost and time savings by being able to visualize this data.

TC: Are you scanning trademarks globally or just in the U.S.? And how much are you charging?

SM: We’re still working on pricing, but we offer an unlimited day pass for less than $50 which provides users with unlimited use to search U.S. filings. We also have a standard product that offers unlimited use on a monthly basis; one seat is $100 per month, and we think it makes sense for many clients to subscribe over the long term but the service can be stopped at any time.

And we’re working on a pro product that’s much more feature rich and that will be a bit more expensive and it will include multiple data sets, not just U.S [data].

TC: Don’t companies need to worry about competition globally from the outset?

SM: Absolutely. Any business that puts itself online is intrinsically international. So even though you may not plan to do business in Germany or the U.K. tor Japan, knowing what’s out there and who could come after you – without hiring an attorney in Tokyo – you’ll be able to see if there’s something there that you should be aware of.

TC: There’s no sort of global database that exists as of today, though?

SM: You can find a newish database on line that’s sponsored by the EU. But unless you’re a very skilled operator, it’s rough. It’s almost like doing a Google search, where you’re getting inundated with large amounts of large irrelevant hits, or you have to have a lot of knowledge to know if you should care. Nothing is sorted; you can’t see how much of a threat other trademarks are. What we can do with our algorithm is rate and rank and visualize them, so you can see those that look like the most serious threats. That’s what we can do with our algorithm is rate and rank and visualize them so you can see on the graph and click on those that look like the most serious threats.

You can see who else is out there in your space with similar names and get new ideas yourself for names that are different and probably smarter in the context of knowing who else is out there. Using this as a creativity tool wasn’t something we anticipated, but it turns out to be useful to people. Once they see what’s out there, it prompts more creativity on their part to think up more unique names.

TC: Can you talk about who some of your clients are?

SM:  We have some law firm users. We have a prominent product innovation company. Fifteen companies from the last YC class signed up too. [President] Sam [Altman] loves what we’re doing.

TC: Can I ask how you came up with the brand Naming Matters? I’ve talked with branding agencies in the past that say most early firms in a space use something that literally describes their business, like Facebook. Brands start getting crazier sounding the more crowded a space grows.

SM: [Laughs.] It’s a pun. Naming does matter, but also, if you’re a lawyer, you call legal topics a “matter.” What do you think? We’re supposed to be good at this!

via TechCrunch
A new, affordable naming startup for startups

With $37 million in funding, health startup Virta aims to cure type 2 diabetes by watching what you eat

Type 2 diabetes is a disease affecting 415 million people globally and Virta, a Silicon Valley-based health startup, believes it has something unique to reverse it – remote monitoring of everything you eat.

Most people with the disease end up having to constantly monitor their blood sugar with the prick of a needle and diabetic pills or can “cure” it with bariatric surgery. However, type 2 diabetes (also know as adult onset diabetes) only affects those afflicted with it if their sugar levels go too high or too low. Thus, monitoring every carb you swallow is another measure in keeping the disease at bay.

But, believes Virta, it could also help reverse it all together without medications or surgery — something the company hopes it has proven out by working with 6,000 patients so far and publishing over 300 scientific papers on its studies of the disease.

The idea is also getting a nod from the former chief medical officer of the American Diabetes Association Dr. Robert Ratner, who is hopeful this new treatment could help significantly reduce the growth of medical costs for the disease, which ballooned to $245 billion in the U.S. since 2013.

The company has so far pulled in $37 million in funding from VC firms Venrock, Allen & Company, Ev Williams’ Obvious Ventures, Redmile Group, and PayPal and Affirm founder Max Levchin’s Scifi VC to study new treatment options that could reverse the disorder.

“Our mission is to reverse diabetes in 100 million people by 2025. It’s an ambitious goal, but we’re motivated every day by the lives we’ve already changed,” Virta co-founder Sami Inkinen said.

Featured Image: Daniele Carotenuto Photography/Getty Images

via TechCrunch
With $37 million in funding, health startup Virta aims to cure type 2 diabetes by watching what you eat

This Mesmerizing Video Shows the Evolution of Animation Over a Century

You don’t have to be a cartoonist to appreciate how far we’ve come since the first animated movies. You’ve probably seen some of the most iconic moments from cartoons like Steamboat Willie or Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. But have you ever seen them edited together in a giant supercut?

YouTube channel The Solomon Society recently compiled the most iconic 2D moments in animation history and put them all into a short video for you to see. For any newbies, it’s a crash course in some of the most seminal moments in cartoon history. For those who grew up on this stuff, it’s a familiar trip down memory lane. Either way, you should take four minutes out of your day and check out this mesmerizing video.

via Gizmodo
This Mesmerizing Video Shows the Evolution of Animation Over a Century

Bald Eagles Migrating Back to Minnesota

Spring migration 1-2 weeks ahead of historical dates
Spring migration 1-2 weeks ahead of historical dates
Minnesota Department of Natural Resources
Minnesota Department of Natural Resources

Minnesota-(Ammoland.com)- Bald eagles are migrating back to Minnesota and may be seen in large numbers across parts of the state over the next few weeks, according to the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.

The spring eagle migration usually coincides with ice-out. A warm February melted much of the snow cover, and ice is breaking up along the rivers, said DNR regional Nongame Wildlife specialist Lisa Gelvin-Innvaer. “Because of that, this year’s migration appears to be a couple weeks earlier, so folks in southern Minnesota will be seeing eagles soon, even with the last remnants of winter,” she said. “We’re already seeing small groups of eagles along the Minnesota River.”

Only two states, Florida and Alaska, have greater nesting populations of bald eagles than Minnesota. In 2005, researchers estimated there are more than 1,300 active nests in Minnesota.

Fall migration typically occurs as lakes and rivers freeze over, since most eagles prefer a diet of fish. Bald eagle wintering grounds ideally contain open water, ample food, limited human disturbance and protected roosting sites. As their population increases, however, some eagles have become tolerant of some disturbance, particularly traffic, choosing to nest near busy highways or in very urban habitats. To supplement their diets in winter, eagles also prey on mammals and other birds, and will often be seen on roadsides eating carrion.

Not all bald eagles migrate southward in the fall, Gelvin-Innvaer said. In many areas in Minnesota, it’s common for some eagle pairs to stay the winter, especially during milder winters and wherever there is open water.

“This year’s winter was a bit milder,” she said. “There were fewer subzero nights and not as much snow on the ground as some other years. That should have made for an easier winter for them to find food.”

Bald eagles that stay local may begin courting and nesting as early as December or January. Other bald eagles return to their breeding territories as soon as a food source is available.

“Eagles tend to vary their migration routes, so it’s hard to say exactly where the eagles are right now,” Gelvin-Innvaer said. In Minnesota, the biggest migrations tend to be along the Minnesota River corridor, the north shore of Lake Superior and around Lake Pepin in southeastern Minnesota.

Adult bald eagles are easily identified by a white head and tail contrasting with a dark brown body. Bald eagles attain full adult plumage in their fourth or fifth year. In flight, bald eagles are sometimes confused with turkey vultures. Bald eagles can be distinguished by their tendency to soar on flat, board-like wings, while turkey vultures fly with their wings in a V-shape.

The bald eagle’s recovery is a success story and an example of how they and many other wildlife species benefit directly from donations made to the Nongame Wildlife checkoff on Minnesota tax forms. For the past forty years, checkoff dollars have been used to fund research, surveys, and education for more than 900 nongame wildlife species. When the checkoff began, bald eagles, peregrine falcons, and trumpeter swans were almost gone from our landscape. Today, they are all thriving in Minnesota. Each dollar donated is matched by funds from the Reinvest In Minnesota Account. Donations are accepted year-round.

More information is available here: http://ift.tt/2mVv33P.

The DNR’s Nongame Wildlife Program is now streaming live video of a nesting pair of bald eagles on its website at http://ift.tt/2lVEI5F.

For additional information on bald eagles and where to view them, go to http://ift.tt/2mVmXIK.

This post Bald Eagles Migrating Back to Minnesota appeared first on AmmoLand.com Shooting Sports News .

via AmmoLand.com Shooting Sports News
Bald Eagles Migrating Back to Minnesota

5 Things Star Wars Needs To Do To Stay Badass

Most people fell back in love with the Star Wars franchise when it first came out, with the prequels really sullying our good memories of the original trilogy (that would come to define all sci fi movies that came after it). But then the prequels happened and (insert what you already know about how shitty they were here) and that kind of fucked up everything. But just when we felt like there was no new hope (yes, that was on purpose) “J.J. Abrams, reboot master” pops into the picture and gives us fans a Star Wars experience back we have been so hungry for in the last decade (or three). But after Rogue One some people have some questions and concerns. The movie was by no means bad, but at this point, how does a badasss franchise that has pretty much milked itself dry stay badass?

Just follow these five simple rules I came up with. I may not be George Lucas but I can definitely handle his franchise better than he can at this point, and now that Abrams is out of the picture, should we be concerned? Read on to find out.

Get Hard

This fake trailer gets it.

No, I don’t want Star Wars to get erection. I am referring to that Kevin Hart movie (you know, that one where Kevin Hart plays Kevin Hart?). In this sense, getting hard means toughening up. I have said it before and will say it again but more GEN-X’ers and baby boomers fill the seats to those new movies more than the tweens do. WE grew up on the series. So why not age like we did a bit (and I don’t mean get old, many of the cast did that, actually. R.I.P Carrie Fisher).

I mean make a Star Wars that deals with heavier issues and maybe has some actual blood. I can PROMISE you an R-Rated Star Wars would do fantastic at the box office and redefine the way people looked at it (A.K.A lose the whole “it’s for kids” rep it has had for 40 years now). You know C-3PO uses that red arm for fisting, let’s not even play games.

Don’t Just Reboot Us

Only a sinner would delete scenes from a Star Wars movie.

As a lot of us came to realize, The Force Awakens wasn’t as much of a new Star Wars movie as it was a sort of refresh of the first plot with some new faces and side stories. I thought it worked really well to bring us back INTO that world, but we need more than that to keep us coming back.

In other words, if Star Wars VIII in the series coming at the end of this year is just a reboot of Empire Strikes Back, (we will be kinda happy because that IS the BEST Star Wars movie, period) but we will also start becoming weary. Using the base storyline as the roots for this new story is great, but please, take us in unexpected directions.

But keep the second movie in this trilogy thematically as dark as Empire. That is what made Empire so jaw-dropping in the first place, it left the audience hopeless at the end.

Flip the Switches

A redemption down the road for Kylo Ren would be awesome to see!

Obviously, what is laid out on the table for us is Rey getting more masterful at her Jedi skills while Kylo Ren does the same, only on the evil side. How about Rey finds out about her past and is disgusted and goes bad (she was orphaned, after all) and Ren realizes he has been manipulated this whole time by the bad guys and his family LOVED him. Boom, he regrets killing his Dad and severing his familial ties, and he goes full- good to take down Rey, who is clearly more powerful than him right now.

THAT WOULD KICK-ASS!

That is the kinda shit I mean. Throw some curves that do not fit into the Jedi blueprint to really redefine the series and keep us wet. Yes, our vaginas. Even us men. Wet them and wet them good with twists and turns on this ride NONE of us can see coming (pun intended yet again).

Add Some Mass Effect Elements

Yup, just watch these scenes to understand.

I am sorry, but whether you know it or not, Mass Effect was bioware doing an original Star Wars. They had done KOTR (best Star Wars game ever BTW) and after that and Jade Empire, they decided to take a stab at the space opera themselves and the end result was astounding and some of the best sci fi we have had in years. So as much as Mass Effect borrowed from Star Wars, maybe Star Wars needs to repay the favor. I know what you are thinking. How?

One of the cooler elements of the game was bringing together a ragtag group of different SPECIES who did not always get along and your Shepard had to do some politicking to get them to agree or work together. Yet everyone who joins in on the good guy side of the Star Wars movies always pretty much just get along from the start, outside minor bickering.

How about we enliven the gang a little by adding some warring species into the mix. It would be a great way to address racial tension in our world right now and it would make it all feel just a little less “by the books” and a little more realistic. No crew of any massive craft of any kind all get along, but that doesn’t mean they can’t learn how to work together. Seeing that evolution could benefit the series greatly.

More of The Stuff We Love

I got me a Fett Fetish.

A good example of this is Boba Fett. We all loved Boba Fett then they dropped him into the sarlacc pit and that was that (except in extended U where he actually escaped but we will leave that alone). That was weak. Then you get the most badass Game of Thrones female character, put her in super shiny armor, and use her for two minutes in TFA. What was that? So many people went into that movie thinking Captain Phasma was gonna be a favorite. And then puff. Gone. Not cool.

Granted, we didn’t see her go into compactors like Finn said, so we have to assume she is alive and we will see her again but don’t play with your fan’s balls like that. Give us less of the wrinkly old CG lady and more of the badass characters we love to hate to love and you know what Star Wars, you just might make the 100 movies you clearly have in mind.

Just be careful, a movie a year is a great way to burn people out, especially if they are all so similar. Just ask Marvel who seems to go with a movie a month now. You don’t want to drown your audience in material, you want to give them just enough that they choose to jump in and swim. Follow these steps and that is just what will continue to happen with Star Wars.

Featured Image Via

via Forever Geek
5 Things Star Wars Needs To Do To Stay Badass

Wrapify raises $3M from Avery Dennison to pay you to wrap your car in ads

Wrapify, the startup that will pay you to wrap your car with an advertisement, has raised $3M in seed funding. As a refresher, the startup provides a two-side marketplace that matches up drivers wanting to make some extra money with brands looking for a unique way to advertise. Eligible drivers will get their car wrap installed (and removed) for free, and on average are paid $450 a month for the duration of their campaign.

The entire round of funding will come from Avery Dennison, the global manufacturer of adhesive materials (including the Avery brand of office supplies you probably know them for).

Interestingly, Avery Dennison is the manufacturer of the wraps that Wrapify uses on all of its cars. While the adhesive manufacturer has already provided Wrapify exclusive access to new adhesive wrap technology (wraps with fast install-ability and removability) that better fit the startup’s use case of short-term installations, being on the cap table should incentivize them to continue investing in wrap technology that will allow Wrapify to operate more efficiently.

Wrapify plans on using the new funding to grow the company’s sales and engineering teams, as well as build out more features for its brand-facing portal.

Currently, brands can see things like how many cars with their ads are currently on the road, routes these cars are driving each day, and even estimates on how many impressions their campaigns are receiving. These statistics are provided to Wrapify directly from software running on the phones of all drivers currently participating in ad campaigns. Just like Uber uses a virtual phone-based “meter” to track rides, Wrapify uses a similar solution to figure out where and when its cars are on the road.

Wrapify is now live in 29 U.S cities, and has 42,000 drivers signed up on its platform.

 

via TechCrunch
Wrapify raises $3M from Avery Dennison to pay you to wrap your car in ads

The Best 27-Inch Monitor

“Our pick” 27-inch monitor on a desk.

After spending 35 hours researching 18 big, high-resolution monitors and testing six finalists, we recommend the 27-inch HP Z27n for most people. Its out-of-the-box measurements are phenomenal, it has a bevy of useful features including a USB 3.0 hub and a highly adjustable stand, and its slim bezels make the screen look even larger. It’s an excellent choice for anyone who wants to upgrade to a larger monitor. (If you’re looking for a 4K monitor, we have another guide for that.)

via The Wirecutter
The Best 27-Inch Monitor