If you cried during the iPhone 4’s FaceTime commercial (directed by Sam Mendes), you might want to grab a huge box of tissues before checking out College Humor’s parody of the ad.

Yeah, FaceTime will likely be a great way for folks in distant lands to keep in touch (folks with an iPhone 4 and access to Wi-Fi, anyway) — and to discover that they have no friends to call — but this spoof on the extremely sentimental original spot does make an interesting point: It’s increasingly possible to substitute digital interactions with real human communication nowadays.

All deeper meanings aside, this is a pretty clever take on Apple’s advertisement — except for the fact that there appears to be no future iPhone iterations in whatever terrible Dystopia these people live in. For those of you waiting in AT&T’s horrific lines today, perhaps that would be a blessing.

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Viral phenom Bros Icing Bros might be dead in the sense that there’s tumbleweeds drifting on its homepage, but the meme lives on.

College Humor recently put together this cleverly cut video in which famous “reveal” scenes in movies are transformed into epic icings — think The Shining, The Fifth Element and Shawshank Redemption. My personal favorite icing in the vid is the one featuring Back to the Future Part II (my favorite Back to the Future film was III, though).

It appears as though the icing meme is soldiering on, if this vid is any indication. How long do you think it can rally before it blacks out for good?

More About: Film, humor, pop culture, viral video

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Thanks to the modern console, arcade games will never hold as large a place in gaming as they did in the 1970s and 1980s.

But there is some good news for reto-gaming fans, as many arcade classics are now available in the App Store just waiting for you to download. Here are five awesome games that have made the leap from coin-operated arcade machine to your iPhone’s screen.

So limber up your thumbs and let us know your favorites in the comments below.


1. Pang: Pocket Pong


The Atari classic arcade game Pong, is undoubtedly the seminal title in the modern computer game industry. While it might be hard to believe now, back in the mid-70s, a home Pong console was the modern-day equivalent of having a PS3 hooked up to your television. Being the only game on the market at the time made it an obvious success, but the game itself is surprisingly addictive.

No “official” Pong app exists, but this version is pretty faithful to the early versions of the game, complete with authentic sound effects. There are several modes of play, which include the classic two-player action, player versus computer mode, and “rebound” in which you rally against the “wall.” There’s also a kind of volleyball variant if you want to mix it up.

Available as Separate iPad App? No
Cost: $0.99


2. Space Invaders


Despite the price tag, this is a must-have app for true fans of the original arcade game. There are three different options for controls — tricky tilt controls, drag controls and the easiest arrows method — as well as the ability to customize the screen, although you may prefer the simple “color” option over other more convoluted choices.

This app is from Taito, the game’s original developers, and one nice touch is the inclusion of a gallery of rare artwork and materials from the game’s development. Whether you can remember playing Space Invaders in an arcade, or you’re just curious about the game rumored to have lead to a shortage of 100-yen coins in Japan, then this is the app to opt for.

Available as Separate iPad App? No
Cost: $4.99


3. PAC-MAN


Namco has brought back Blinky, Pinky, Inky and Clyde, and the eponymous hero for the iPhone with this excellent mobile version of the vintage gaming giant. Play the “Lite” version (just the first level) for fork out the cash, and you can gobble dots and eat ghosts to your heart’s content.

Like other arcade games ported to the iPhone platform, you get a choice of controls, as well as the choice of your own music from your iPhone that you can select to play. Download this app on the game’s 30th anniversary and you’ll still be playing it in years to come.

Available as Separate iPad App? Yes
Cost: $4.99


4. Frogger


Frogger is a classic and fan favorite, appearing on multiple platforms, including unofficial incarnations such as “Froggy” and “Hopper”, since its introduction into arcades in 1981.

Here, Konami manages to keep a more-or-less retro feel to the game, although the graphics are not arcade-original. It also includes up-to-date functionality, such as the ability to post your scores to Facebook.

There are three control options, but slide is the only one that really works – making guiding your little frogs across the roads, and past the various foes, a strange touch experience for anyone used to real-life controls.

Available as Separate iPad App? Yes
Cost: $0.99


5. Original Duck Hunt


Despite Nintendo’s dominance in the history of gaming, because they’re a rival to Apple as far as hand held games go, they haven’t been very keen to develop for the platform, meaning a severe lack of vintage Nintendo titles are available on the mobile platform.

So far its existence has escaped the glare of Nintendo’s legal department, so this app is perfect for those nostalgic for Nintendo’s golden days of gaming. You may think Duck Hunt just won’t be the same without a bright orange NES Zapper, but it’s worth giving the game a “shot” on a touchscreen.

The colorful 8-bit graphics and fun sound effects will have you reminiscing about the 80s in no time, while the gameplay is faithful as far as the one duck/two duck options go, and that adorably frustrating pooch giggling if you miss, or retrieving if you don’t. Unfortunately, the clay pigeon shooting option has not been ported.

Available as Separate iPad App? No
Cost: $0.99

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, manley099


More iPhone resources from Mashable:


- Top 5 DIY iPhone Stands [PICS]
- Top 10 Free iPhone Word Games
- 10 Free iPhone Apps To Learn A New Skill In 10 Minutes
- Top 10 iPhone Apps for TV Fanatics
- HOW TO: Give Your iPhone a Spring Clean


Reviews: App Store, Facebook, Frogger, Twitter, iStockphoto

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I reiterate my previous assertion that Google Street View was created for fun and fun alone. Google has added an awesome little Easter Egg to the service when one surfs through maps of South Africa: a vuvuzela clutched in peg man’s hot little hands.

We already know that the South African instrument has taken the world by storm (whether the world likes it or not) — hell, it’s even invaded the Google-owned YouTube. Still, this has to be one of our personal favorite appearances by the honking horn (being that it’s silent in this case).

Google also showed its excitement with regard to the World Cup by modifying its logo to read “Goooooooal!”, but personally I’m more into the vuvuzela-themed fare. Sports events may come and go, but random viral memes are… well… similarly fleeting, but infinitely more enjoyable to those who don’t get a kick out of footie.

[via Tech Radar]


Reviews: Google, World Cup, YouTube, sports

More About: Google, google street view, humor, pop culture, sports, vuvuzela

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Apologizing can be hard. There’s the admitting that you’re wrong… actually saying the words… and then the inevitable gloating on the part of the wronged party. Well, now you can cut out all of that awkward groveling, and voice your “Sorry!” to the Internet masses with The Forgiveness Engine.

The Forgiveness Engine was developed by Jesper Sparre Andersen (who also created Avoidr, which we wrote about yesterday). The premise is pretty simple — log into the app via your Twitter account and choose either to apologize to someone or forgive someone. Type in your sentiment (anonymously), press “enter” and the app updates your Twitter status to say that you have either forgiven or asked for forgiveness. Don’t worry — what you type into the entry box doesn’t show up in your Twitter status.

Next, you can read all of the other entries on the engine, and if you find two stories that seem to be parallel (i.e. “I’m sorry I ran over your cat,” “I forgive you for running over my cat”) you can match said stories. Then, the two people will be notified that they have been matched, giving them “the opportunity to read a stranger’s take on the opposite side of a similar situation–hopefully something that will help them develop compassion and empathy for the other person, facilitating a deeper understanding of what happened and helping both move on,” says Andersen. (Once again, this is all anonymous, so no worries.)

For right now, the matching function remains dormant, as Andersen still needs to collect enough stories to make it hum. So if you’re feeling guilty (or divine), head on over and spill your guts.

image courtesy of iStockphoto, mattjeacock

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While we’ve heard in the past that Twitter can be a killer box office predictor, the same might not be true for social media and television ratings.

Social media monitoring company Viralheat spent a month tracking social media mentions — a million of them, in fact — right around the time that nine major TV shows were airing their season finales. The company looked at data from Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Google Buzz and other sources, including the sentiment of all these mentions, comments and updates.

Then Viralheat compared the social media buzz with the Nielsen TV ratings for each show. Does chatter on the web equate to eyeballs on TV screens?

Not necessarily. Their research determined:

  • Online buzz does not always correlate with ratings.
  • Sentiment analysis of social media chatter casts those mentions in a new light.
  • Even when ratings are lukewarm (as was the case for the Lost season finale) social media chatter can be overwhelming in volume. But a lot of those mentions online expressed a negative sentiment.
  • Some shows, including Dancing With The Stars, saw good TV ratings but not many mentions online.

All in all, Viralheat found that Nielsen ratings combined with social media sentiment analysis provided the best snapshot of how a show’s season finale performed with viewers.

So, for you would-be social media gurus, next time you’re trying to measure a brand’s impact on the social web, remember to include some sentiment analysis along with your headcount, or you could be missing out on some critical information.

Here’s the infographic with more interesting factoids than you can shake a stick at; click to see the full version.


Reviews: Facebook, Twitter, YouTube

More About: Nielsen, ratings, sentiment analysis, social media, television, tv

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Those adorable kids from Staten Island’s P.S. 22 are at it again. In honor of the anniversary of Michael Jackson’s death (tomorrow), the tiny talents executed a stirring rendition of “Man in the Mirror.”

The viral video stars are on a roll lately, having scored an Artist of The Year Webby for their various and sundry versions of everything from Phoenix to Beyonce. (The chorus has been around since around 2000, but shot to fame in recent years thanks to the Internet). Now they’ll be appearing on CBS’s Early Show tomorrow morning to take part in a tribute to the King of Pop.

Check out the video above (as well as their Newsweek segment below). The hand gestures alone are worth repeated viewings.


Reviews: Internet, beyonce, michael jackson

More About: michael jackson, music, pop culture, ps-22, viral video


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Although many might think that Google Street View was created for navigational purposes, IMHO, it was created solely for our collective entertainment. That’s right, another apparition from the realm of weird has appeared on Google’s service: the mysterious, the elusive, the equine… Horse Boy.

According to the BBC, Horse Boy — who was captured on film standing by a wall in Aberdeen, Scotland — has become a phenomenon among Internet denizens in the country.

Apparently, dozens of users have e-mailed the BBC to assert that they know the identity of the mystery man-steed. Many have even sent in images of what they claim is the stallion.

Secret identities (and privacy issues) aside, we’re happy to see more weird stuff cropping up in Street View. Not that there’s a dearth of oddities or anything — but since that first kiss was removed from the service, we were aching for something new to entertain us. Thanks, Google Street View, and thank you, Horse Boy.


Reviews: Internet

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It’s something everyone dreads upon breaking up or having a falling out with a friend: the inevitable run-in. You’re out on the town and then BAM, a night can be ruined by a former friend’s face. Well, now you can circumvent all that heartache with a clever new web app that’s basically the anti-Foursquare: Avoidr.

According to New York Magazine’s Daily Intel, Avoidr was created by San Francisco–based technologist Jesper Andersen after seeing a bunch of his friends go through breakups.

Basically, the app works as a plugin for your Foursquare account (much like apps like Assisted Serendipity, but even more simple). You can label your Foursquare friends with a variety of colorful terms, and then choose to hit “Avoid.” Clicking on “Places to Avoid” will yield a list of venues at which your foes are currently present. Unfortunately, it appears as though this is only a web-based app. It would be much more useful if it e-mailed or pinged you alerts, like the aforementioned Assisted Serendipity.

Check out what it looks like below. I added Mashable Editor-in-Chief Adam Ostrow to my Avoid list — which is totally a joke, everyone. I’m sitting three feet away from him.

This isn’t the first app that’s acted as a kind of foil to social media — Please Rob Me functioned in a similar way, allowing one to scan a plethora of user checkins. And then there was Seppukoo, which allowed one to kill his Facebook profile.

Still, Andersen isn’t against Foursquare per se — just the awkward situations social networks present (i.e. unfriending someone is kind of a slap in the face). So if you’ve just split with a tech-savvy beau, you might want to check out Avoidr, so as to avoid a run-in via checkin.

image courtesy of iStockphoto, Zhenikeyev


Reviews: Facebook, Foursquare, iStockphoto

More About: App, avoidr, facebook, foursquare, humor, Mobile 2.0, pop culture, software

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Mashable’s Spark of Genius series highlights a unique feature of startups. If you would like to have your startup considered for inclusion, see details here. The series is made possible by Microsoft BizSpark.


Name: ShortForm.TV [Warning: Videos are set to autoplay]

Quick Pitch: Snack on an endless stream of short-form video.

Genius Idea: With more than 24 hours of video uploaded every minute to YouTube alone, it can be hard to find something to watch when you’re after a quick hit of humor or whimsy. That’s where Shortform.TV comes in.

Shortform.tv is a website and iPad, iPhone and iPod touch app [iTunes link] that launched today. It allows viewers to surf through a variety of channels housing a selection of short videos, which have been sorted and collected by both real-live human curators and aggregation software. Said software aggregates videos from sources such as Facebook, YouTube and Vimeo, and it categorizes videos based on criteria defined by the curators.

The playlist generator then organizes the videos based on trending data and user feedback — you can nix vids by clicking on the “thumbs-down” button next to the player, and you can save videos to “My Channel” by clicking “thumbs-up.”

To formulate your channel, you’ll have to sign in to the site via Facebook Connect. After doing so, you can share videos with your friends by posting them to your Facebook profile, and you can add videos you’ve viewed on Facebook and YouTube to your channel on Shortform.tv. You can also choose to share your channel with other users and friends. As more and more users makes their way to the site, the founder says you will be able to compete to have your channel featured on the main page, which should be an incentive for hardcore viral-video fans to join.

Shortform.tv is a great little time-waster in the tradition of sites like Redux and yeahyeahyeahyeahyeah, but it’s exclusively for video content — which makes it perfect for anyone who enjoys watching or sharing the latest viral flick.

Right now, the site has around six categories — Facebook Hits, HaHa Funny, Super Cute, Totally Weird, Feel Good and So Hollywood — which seems a little sparse. We would love to see them add more specialized channels, i.e. music videos, parodies, commercials and the like. Still, this platform is meant to entertain, and it has achieved that goal.

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, marcoscisetti

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Sponsored by Microsoft BizSpark


BizSpark is a startup program that gives you three-year access to the latest Microsoft development tools, as well as connecting you to a nationwide network of investors and incubators. There are no upfront costs, so if your business is privately owned, less than three years old, and generates less than U.S.$1 million in annual revenue, you can sign up today.


Reviews: Facebook, Twitter, Vimeo, YouTube, iStockphoto

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