Thursday, April 2, 2015

How to use Facebook's new Messenger sharing features

Facebook now lets you send content from other apps in your chats in Messenger. Here's how to do it.


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Facebook
Today at Facebook's developer conference, F8, the social network announced new ways to share via Messenger. The company built a sharing platform that lets outside apps share their content, such as videos, music and GIFs, through the Messenger apps, available for Android, Windows Phone and iOS. You'll be able to share with apps on iOS and Android, but it's unclear when this will be available on Windows Phone.
One of the first apps to take advantage of this is Ditty, which launches today and sends custom musical messages. You type in a message, pick a song, and the app sings your message to the tune of the song you chose.
JibJab, a GIF messaging app, is also partnering with Facebook to share through Messenger. Other apps that are using the sharing platform at launch are The Weather Channel, Fotor, Giphy, Bitmoji and ESPN, plus many more. For a full list, check out Facebook's developer site. Below, I'll give you a primer of how to use the new sharing features, available starting today.

Get sharing

First, you'll need to have one of the eligible apps installed on your phone. You can either just go straight to Google Play or the App Store, or you can check out the list of apps in Messenger. Just open a conversation and tap the More button on the menu bar (which looks like three dots) to see the list. Then you can tap any of the apps to hop over to your phone's app store to download it.
Once the app is installed, there are a few ways to share. I'll use Ditty as my example, but the process will be nearly identical with other apps.
Option one: Open a conversation in Messenger, and select Ditty from the menu bar toward the bottom of the screen. It's the same place where you can select stickers, emoji, photos and voice recordings to share in a conversation.
Ditty will automatically open, and you can create a new message by following the prompts on the screen. When you're done, tap the Messenger button to share your message, which will take you right back to your conversation. The message from Ditty will appear in line in the chat, where your recipient can view it just like any other message in Messenger.
Option two: Open Ditty and create a message. When you're done, tap the Messenger button, which will open that app. Pick one or more people to share your message with, and Messenger will send it to those people, either in an existing chat (if available) or a new one.
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Facebook
Option three: If someone has sent you a shared message in a chat, and you have the same app installed, you can simply tap the reply button in the chat to send a message back. You can see this example above.
This is the first time that Facebook is letting you share media from other apps into Messenger, and the process is seamless overall. In most cases, you'll need to tap the screen only once to share something to your Facebook chats. Facebook expects more apps to take advantage of this, so you may soon be able to share much more in a message than before.

Adjust preset reminder times in Inbox by Gmail

If the preset snooze options don't line up with your daily routine, you can change them. Read on to find out how.


Nicole Cozma/CNET
An update rolling out to the Inbox by Gmail app is allowing users to set a custom time and date for snoozed email reminders. But did you know that you can also adjust the preset time reminders in the app?
Let's say your day starts at 9 a.m., but the preset time for a morning reminder is 8 a.m. It can be annoying to get alerted early about a message that you're not ready to deal with. And the same issue may arise for your afternoon and evening schedules, since not everyone has the same workday hours. Here's how to change the preset times so you can easily snooze an email for the appropriate hour:
Note: Screenshots depict these steps on Android for easy viewing, but they can be done on the Web, too.
Main menu inside Inbox by Gmail.Screenshot by Nicole Cozma/CNET
Step 1: Open the left-hand slide-out menu in Inbox by Gmail and choose Settings (near the bottom).
inboxbygmail2.jpg
Settings menu for Inbox by Gmail.Screenshot by Nicole Cozma/CNET
Step 2: Choose the account you want to change the preset values for.
Set the times that work for you.Screenshot by Nicole Cozma/CNET
Step 3: Select Snooze settings and then adjust each to an hour that fits into your schedule.
Now you'll be able to instantly snooze a message without needing to fiddle with the time and date.

2016 Porsche Boxster Spyder: The lightest, fastest Boxster of them all


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NEW YORK -- Unique front and rear fascia, the streamlined tonneau cover and the minimalist bikini top should be your first hint that the 2016 Porsche Boxster Spyder is something special. The strongest and fastest Boxster of this generation, the new range-topping Spyder is also the lightest thanks to its "less is more" approach to tech and amenities.
The 2016 Boxster Spyder adds lightness by removing tech and amenities.Sarah Tew/CNET

Lighter

The Spyder jettisons the standard Boxster's power fold motors for the soft top. The new lightweight manual fabric roof is opened and closed by hand and features two fins that stretch back, snapping into the roadster's tonneau and completing the silhouette.
The Spyder is only available with Porsche's six-speed manual transmission; there is no automatic option, which saves weight and should appease purists. To those same ends, the Boxster Spyder also has no navigation, no radio, no speakers and no air conditioner in its stock form. Though Porsche is quick to point out that all of these bits can be added back in at no cost to the buyer and the entire range of Boxster audio upgrades and Porsche infotainment with navigation are also available as paid options.
The Spyder is available without navigation, a stereo or even air conditioning. However, it's telling that the only example on display was not so spartan.Sarah Tew/CNET
The driver (and up to one passenger) sits on a standard Sport Seats Plus and commands the Spyder's improved steering with a unique steering wheel that's 10mm smaller in diameter than the rest of the Boxster models'.

Stronger

The entire car sits 20mm lower than the standard Boxster thanks to a stiffer, sportier suspension. Sitting amidships is Porsche's 3.8-liter horizontally opposed six-cylinder engine making 375 horsepower. That output makes the 2016 Boxster Spyder the most powerful Boxster yet. (Though, it's still kept just a hair short of the more track-centric Cayman GT4's 380 horsepower.)

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