Sunday, May 4, 2014

Don't risk your safety, leave finding stolen iPhones and iPads to the police

Don't risk your safety, leave finding stolen iPhones and iPads to the police


Don't risk your safety, leave finding stolen iPhones and iPads to the police

Find my iPhone, a technology that allows you to track down your iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, or Mac to the last place it was connected to a cellular or Wi-Fi network, has unsurprisingly lead to incidents of "hero complex" over the years. That's when an every day person, not affiliated with law-enforcement, decides to take crime intervention into their own hands, track down the perpetrator, and make them pay. And, tragically, sometimes that's the last thing they ever get to do. Numerous recent incidents have been collected by the New York Times, which also offers this quote from San Francisco DA George Gascón:
Some have been successful. Others have gotten hurt.
That's the most important part of the entire article. A phone is just a phone. If yours is ever stolen you might be out some money, maybe some pictures — remember to back up! — but if you chase after a criminal and create a secondary crime scene you could lose a lot more, including your life.
Phones can be replaced. People can't.
Chasing after an iPhone thief is no different than chasing after a mugger. You just don't know what kind of a situation you'll end up in. We, none of us, are the Batman. We won't always win. Justice and karma won't always come out in our favor. And even if we do, we could go to jail for our own actions.
Use Find my iPhone to track down your device if you lost it in your house or left it at a restaurant or anything else dumb like that. Leave law enforcement to the people who are trained, equipped, and backed up enough to do it properly.

LiveLens and More

5 Can't-Miss Apps: LiveLens and More

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Tagg.ly

Tagg.ly cofounder and Vice journalist Tim Pool is known for using mobile tools in his reporting, so it's appropriate that his app would help ensure photographers always have their work correctly attributed. The app allows users to quickly add customized watermarks that include name, date, location, logo and timestamp to photos they shoot. The identifying info can be added automatically, when photos are taken within the app, or added to photos uploaded from your device’s camera roll. Tagg.ly is available for iOS.
 
With all the news that came out of Facebook's first F8 conference in three years and Snapchat's recent major overhaul, you may have overlooked some of this week's best new apps.
Luckily, Mashable creates a roundup each weekend of our favorite new and updated apps, so you won't miss out.
This week's list includes an app for watermarking photos easily, a messaging app just for couples and Threadless' new app for creating T-shirts.
Check out the gallery, above, to see all the apps that made our list of top picks. And if you're looking for more, check out last week's edition of can't-miss apps.

for more check http://mashable.com/2014/05/03/5-cant-miss-apps-livelens/

Capture 360-Degree HD Video With This Tiny UFO-Style Camera

Capture 360-Degree HD Video With This Tiny UFO-Style Camera

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Tools like Google Street View and even Apple's iPhone allow you to view the world as captured in panoramic photos, but a new camera called Centr delivers the same kind of immersive experience in high-definition video.
Created by a team of ex-Apple employees, Centr is a beautifully designed, palm-sized panoramic camera that you can control with your smartphone or tablet (iOS and Android).

more at http://mashable.com/2014/05/04/centr-camera/?utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Mashable+%28Mashable%29&utm_cid=Mash-Prod-RSS-Feedburner-All-Partial&utm_medium=feed&utm_source=feedburner