Thursday, 31 July 2014

Whatsapp rival Chaatz now lets you talk to strangers without having to give your real phone number

WE wrote about Chaatz earlier this year when itlaunched as a messaging app targeted at emerging markets, but now it seems to be going in a slightly different direction with a new feature that taps on its unique offering of a ‘Chaatz number.’
The ‘Chaatz number’ feature was a central part of the app’s original offering. It is a number that the chat app assigns to you so you can keep your real phone number entirely secret, which means that you don’t have to reveal your real number to people including marketing and sales personnel, work acquaintances or those whom you meet on your travels.
Now, this Chaatz number is being extended for use in a new feature called Chaatz Connect, which has rolled out on both the iOS and Android apps. It basically lets you talk to anyone who has signed up for the feature. All you have to do is select which countries you’d like to see people from — the initial roll-out involves 60 countries — and then you will be shown a tile-based list of random people. Send any of them a request, and then you can start chatting while maintaining your privacy, given that you won’t be revealing your real number to these strangers at all.
Chaatz Connect 730x431 Whatsapp rival Chaatz now lets you talk to strangers without having to give your real phone number
Honestly, it reminds me a bit of Tinder, but a much more liberal version (and without the swiping; you just scroll and choose). You can basically strike up a conversation with a pool of strangers who have connected their number to the feature  – all without having to be restricted by location, and without having to connect your Facebook account.
Other than Chaatz Connect, the new update adds animated emoticons and a wider array of characters. You can also change your chat room wallpaper background now, see when others are typing, as well as add filters to photos.
With its latest update, Chaatz seems more geared towards users who value anonymity (with the stronger emphasis on the alias number and richer features), rather than focusing on users in emerging markets.
However, as we wrote previously, the long-term goal of Chaatz’s founders is to connect the remaining population of five billion feature phone users around the world to a mobile social network. In the third quarter of this year, the team will launch an app solely for feature phones to allow users to communicate on the same platform as those with smartphones — and Chaatz Connect could be an interesting penpal-like feature, if it gains enough users on the platform.

Why stress sucks and how to escape it


I’ve never been good at dealing with stress. In high school, I used to pluck out my own eyelashes. That’s how bad I was at dealing with stress.
People would be like, “Oh Andrea why don’t you have eyelashes?”
And I would be like, “BECAUSE THEY GIVE ME ALLERGIES!”
I took my social studies final with a wet paper towel over my eye because I was convinced it would block out any allergens. That’s where I was in my life at that time. I had no idea how to cope with stress, so I just developed really unhealthy habits.
Everyone knows that they should deal with stress, but knowing what you should do and actually doing it, are two very different things.

What is stress, really?

The National Institute of Mental Health defines stress as:
“The brain’s response to any demand. Many things can trigger this response, including change. Changes can be positive or negative, as well as real or perceived.”
It’s probably more aptly put to say that stress is the body’s response to any demand. Your response to stress is the same despite whether or not the stress is all in your imagination.
The American Psychological Association conducts an annual stress survey each year to which they almost always find that surprise, surprise, everyone is really stressed the hell out.
  • 43 percent of American adults lie awake each night because of stress
  • 35 percent of American teens lie awake each night because of stress
  • 71 percent of people say their stress is caused of money (surprise, surprise)
Let’s break this down further into the three categories of stress:
Acute: This is the most common form of stress, which people easily recognize. This kind of stress is short-term and stems from demands or pressure we feel from the recent past or near future. This kind of stress, however, can be exciting like playing in a soccer tournament.
Episodic Acute: This kind of stress occurs most often in people who overextend themselves on a consistent basis. They live from crisis to crisis. They are usually in a rush and almost always trying to play catch up.
Chronic: This form of stress comes from traumatic experiences that are difficult for the individual to escape. People who experience chronic stress often take it on as part of their own identity and find it difficult to escape. This kind of stress is the most dangerous for our body and mind.
What happens inside your body when you are experiencing a stressful event? Well, it all begins right here in the hypothalamus and pituitary gland:
m7 glands Why stress sucks and how to escape it
This happens very, very quickly. Your body responds to a stressor before your eyes can even finish processing what is in your visual field. A single neuron in the prefrontal cortex can respond to a stressor in .12 seconds. To contrast that, it takes your brain .15 seconds to process an image.
Once your body has sent a distress signal your Sympathetic Nervous System (SNS) kicks in—aka—the fight-or-flight response. This triggers a response in your adrenal glands (which sit right on top of your kidneys).
mcdc7 adrenal glands Why stress sucks and how to escape it
Initially, your adrenals pump stress hormones like epinephrine (adrenaline), into your body, which causes your body to undergo certain changes:
  • increase in heart rate and blood pressure
  • open up bronchioles to allow for my oxygen to circulate to the brain
  • glucose and fat deposits are burned off to provide your body with energy
  • other bodily systems are suppressed (like the urge to go pee) to ensure all energy is directed towards what your body believes is a pressing danger
It takes far less time for your body to respond to a threat than it does for your body to come down from it. The Parasympathetic Nervous System (PNS) is responsible for applying the brakes once a threat or danger has subsided. Adrenaline isn’t the only hormone to be released during a stressful event though, there’s also cortisol.

When stress gets out of hand

Cortisol is regulated in the body by the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. The HPA is the second component of our stress response system.
Untitled Why stress sucks and how to escape it
Cortisol is used to help bring us back to homeostasis after a stressful event by managing our metabolic response. Cortisol production can get out of hand and when this occurs, some not so excellent things can happen:
  • Can cause a disruption to the circadian rhythm, or your sleep/wake cycle, due to hormones being released at the wrong time of day.
  • Weakens and depresses the immune system by ‘aging’ immune cells. That’s why chronically stressed individuals experience problems with fighting.
  • Can overwhelm the hippocampus (learning and memory center) and cause it to shrink. This makes it difficult to form new memories or recall old ones.
The more cortisol your body produces, the more difficult it is for your body to gain control over cortisol production. Can also shrink neurons in the brains Prefrontal Cortex (PFC) which is responsible for problem-solving, adaptation, and emotional regulation.
This doesn’t begin to scratch the surface, there’s stress induced: anxiety disorders, mood disordersheart disease… a veritable cornucopia of health issues caused by stress.
crying waterfalls Why stress sucks and how to escape it
Now that I’ve successfully increased everyone’s stress level, let’s figure out how to prevent is from destroying us?

Talk with other stressed out people

You might think this would go against logic, but alas, you would be wrong. It’s the double negative effect of stress (that’s not actually a thing, I just made that up).
Sharing your feelings with someone who is in a similar emotional state with you helps to buffer some of those stressed out feelings you have. Researchers found that individuals who shared similar stressors had reduced levels of cortisol in their system after sharing their feelings and emotional state.

Practice self-affirmation

Chronic stress makes it difficult for us to solve problems and hampers our creativity. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University found that just writing some self-affirmations you can help offset the negative effects of chronic stress. By affirming some of your personal values you can lower your cortisol levels.
unnamed1 730x711 Why stress sucks and how to escape it
Self-affirmation helps to stabilize our sense of self—whereas stress can represent a threat to the self. We can reinvest our positive self-resources (self-esteem) to help us mitigate the psychological and physical damage stress causes.

Laugh

Really, this seems obvious?
But even the anticipation of laughter can help reduce your stress levels. When we expect a positive event, like laughter, three levels of stress hormones are reduced.
Researchers found that when we anticipate laughter our stress hormones reduce by a pretty significant amount. The study participants cortisol levels decreased by 39 percent and epinephrine by as much as 70 percent.
“Our findings lead us to believe that by seeking out positive experiences that make us laugh we can do a lot with our physiology to stay well.”
This is perfect—especially for me—as I laugh at my own jokes 100 percent of the time. Though I’m not sure that counts.

Hug it out

You know how at the end of every Full-House episode there was usually a hug? Well, Danny Tanner and co. may have had the right idea.
Screen Shot 2014 05 05 at 1.46.48 PM Why stress sucks and how to escape it
Hugs help to reduce cardiovascular stress, improve our immune system, and encourages the release of the hormone oxytocin. Oxytocin is responsible for bonding, sexual pleasure and a mess of other human behaviors.
Hugging promotes such a positive response within the body that it can reduce our physical perception of pain—which is why your parents kissing your scraped knees really did seem to help.

Get physical

I know you’ve heard that working out helps to reduce stress, but have you ever wanted to know why? Exercise helps protect the brain from anxiety-inducing effects of stress by increasing GABA receptors (or chemical messengers) in the hippocampus. GABA inhibits the brain’s ability to produce what would be your normal stress response by blocking those receptors in the hippocampus. To get the maximum benefits of this, you’ll have to exercise for longer than a day (think at least a month here).
There are manymanymany other ways to reduce stress, but these are some that I use to help me deal.
If you were still wondering about my eyelashes, rest assured I no longer pluck them out. One day I looked in the mirror and said,
“Well, this is problematic.”
I now try to manage my stress in more healthy ways. I bake, I run, I make myself laugh by posting things to Twitter that only I find amusing. I have an arsenal of stress reducing techniques up my sleeve. I know I can’t be successful at reducing my stress 100 percent of the time, but just knowing that I have some tips to fall back on makes dealing with stress a helluva lot easier.

Did you know? Facebook has different notification icons depending on your location.

 you have an eye for detail, did you notice this subtle difference on Facebook?
The notification icon at the top of the desktop version of the service has a different world map depending on where you log in from, as the eagle eyes atTech In Asia spotted. The dual icons don’t appear to be new, they’ve been visible to some since at least November last year, but we suspect few people are aware.
Here’s what I get when I access Facebook from the US and countries in Latin America via a VPN:
Screenshot 2014 07 31 11.21.06 Did you know? Facebook has different notification icons depending on your location.
And this is the icon for countries in the Eastern hemisphere:
Screenshot 2014 07 31 11.20.21 Did you know? Facebook has different notification icons depending on your location.
It’s the small things in life that can make a difference, and this is a nice way to acknowledge that Facebook is a global service, not just from the US.

Facebook’s Internet.org begins offering basic internet services for free in Africa

facebook’s Internet.org group has kicked its mission to provide global internet access up a notch afterannouncing the launch of its first app in Zambia, Africa.
The app provides “basic access” to 13 different services — including Facebook, Facebook Messenger, Google search and Wikipedia — for free. Customers of Zambian operator Airtel will be the first to get their hands on it, but Facebook plans to continue to develop the experience and introduce the app in other markets in due course.
“With this app, people can browse a set of useful health, employment and local information services without data charges. By providing free basic services via the app, we hope to bring more people online and help them discover valuable services they might not have otherwise,” the company said in a blog post.
internet org app11 1 Facebooks Internet.org begins offering basic internet services for free in Africa
While this is far from the first deal that offers free access to services, it is notable for the significant tech industry backing that Internet.org has, and for the fact that the service will be free to users forever — unlike other ‘free data’ deals which are limited to trial periods.
Facebook says less than a third of the world has access to the internet, which makes its efforts with Internet.org — which was founded last year — potentially ground-breaking. The group’s first pilot initiative earlier this year saw educational materials provided to smartphones in Rwanda, another African country.


Wednesday, 30 July 2014

LOL. This Bearded Man Doing "Wrecking Ball" On Live Webcam Is The Greatest Youtube Video Ever

I don't think I've ever laughed, cried, and fell in love at the same time.

Heroic Rescuers Save This Elephant From 50 Years Of Spiked Chains And Misery

The only life an elephant named Raju ever knew consisted of spiked shackles and begging tourists for handouts while eating little more than paper and plastic. 

When North London-based charity Wildlife SOS heard about Raju's condition, they decided to make the trip to India to save him...right away.

Raju's conditions were reported to the charity by onlookers. Every day, Raju's owners forced to hold out his trunk and beg for coins from local tourists. They fed him nothing but sweets and garbage, which often included inedible materials like paper and plastic.

Elephants should never live in chains, but the fact that Raju's restraints featured medieval spikes reflects a peculiar and disgusting brand of cruelty on the part of his "caretakers." (If you even want to call them that!)

The first step of Raju's rescue involved removing the dangerous spiked chains from Raju's legs. Watch as Dr. Yaduraj Khadpekar frees this gentle giant for the first time in years:

The mission took place at midnight under the cover of darkness, so fewer people would be around in case the shackled Raju went wild when released.

Here's a shot of Wildlife SOS vet, Dr. Yaduraj Khadpekar, working to remove the evil restraints from Raju's torn-apart ankle.

Pooja Binepal, the charity’s UK spokesman, described the circumstances leading up to their daring midnight mission."‘Raju has spent the past 50 years living a pitiful existence in chains 24 hours a day, an act of intolerable cruelty"

According to Wildlife SOS founder Kartick Satyanarayan, "The chains around his legs had spikes which were cutting into his flesh - and each time he moved puss would ooze out of wounds. Pain and brutality were all he knew."

The rescue came roughly one year after the charity was alerted to Raju's plight by the Uttar Pradesh Forest Department in India. Not surprisingly, Raju's owner had no legal documents proving that he was the rightful owner of the elephant, so the charity was able to seize him. No one knows how Raju wound up living under such dreadful conditions, but the charity believes he was poached from his mom as a young calf.

Rescuers feared Raju would react with fear, perhaps attacking humans who were trying to help him, when he was at last released from bondage, but just the opposite happened.

Reportedly, Raju the elephant cried tears of joy as he was released from spiked shackles in the Uttar Pradesh area of India after fifty long years of torture. Elephants are typically referred to as majestic, but they're also highly intelligent animals, who have been proven to have feelings of grief, so we can only imagine what torture half a century has been like for him.

It took three professionals over 45 minutes to liberate him as they'd been wound round his legs to prevent their removal and to cause pain if anyone tried to take them off.

Once freed, he was loaded into an elephant-friendly van and driven 350 miles away from his evil owner to the charity's Elephant Conservation and Care Centre at Mathura.

His nails were severely overgrown, he had abscesses and wounds because of the shackles and repeated walking on a tarmac road has led to his foot pad overgrowing.

Thanks to the Wildlife SOS efforts, Raju received emergency medical attention to his wounds as well as a proper bath and food.

The charity has now launched a campaign to raise £10,000 to help Raju begin the start of his new life in a new enclosure which will allow him to roam with his adoptive family.

Right now, Raju is getting his first taste of freedom in his entire life. He'll live out the rest of his life in a safe compound, free of chains, with his dignity in tact...all thanks to a team of determined rescue workers who made saving this majestic beast their midnight mission!