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Kate Middleton's 'Duchess Effect' Is Making Brands Boatloads Of Money

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Kate Middleton Princess Duchess of CambridgeWhen Kate Middleton wears a brand, it quickly sells out. 

The fashion phenomenon has been dubbed, "The Duchess Effect."

While Middleton is also a fan of high-fashion favorites like Burberry and Stella McCartney, much of her wardrobe is purchased on High Street. 

From Zara to J Brand, see the labels that she's boosting sales for. 

Zara

Even with a baby bump, Kate Middleton has shown her love for this up-and-coming brand. 

The royal sweetheart reportedly wore a Zara cape out on the town during a London shopping trip this week, and she's been known to sport Zara dresses, tops and jeans to everything from children's charity plays to Olympic events.

A lacy Zara shift she wore to a charity event in December sold out on the website within hours. 



LK Bennett

Another sell-out, this time in shoes.

Kate Middleton's well-known LK Bennett nude heels have become an online sensation, with a company executive noting the platforms are by far the brand's best-sellers.

Middleton wore the heels again and again this summer at weddings, birthdays and during a cross-country Canadian tour. The publicity spurred a shoe shopping spree for the UK accessory chain.



Prabal Gurung

The duchess shot this brand to online fame after donning one of its floral frocks to a meeting with the president of Singapore

The Prabal Gurung dress was sold out in less than an hour, helping to rocket the brand to fame during fall's New York Fashion Week.

The designer shared his excitement on Twitter



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How America's Credit Reporting System Gets Away With 40 Million Mistakes

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steve kroftConsumer activists were rattled Monday after the FTC released a report on widespread credit reporting errors.

According to the agency, as many as one in five consumers have errors on their credit reports that could hinder their ability to apply for new credit or stick them with sky high interest rates.  

The report was highlighted in a fascinating 60 Minutes segment by CBS' Steve Kroft.

"Besides having financial consequences, the whole dispute process takes an emotional toll on people," Kroft said in an extended interview.

"It's just really hard sometimes to get these things fixed. You feel like you're up against this machine and there's no way to break through. After a while I think people sometimes start to question their own sanity.... so we decided to show the consumer what it's like." 

From what we've learned from his six-month investigation and two new reports on the credit reporting industry, it's more evident than ever that consumers are in need of real change. 

In a controversial new '60 Minutes' segment, Steven Kroft, an award-winning investigative journalist in his own right, has tried for two years to correct an erroneous line on his credit report.



Like most consumers who call the 800 number on credit reporting agency websites, he spent 15 minutes on the phone with a representative from India and was told to fill out a dispute online.



The problem with asking consumers to file complaints electronically –– or often by snail mail –– is that they're rarely reviewed by the agencies themselves.



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The Big Winners And Best Looks From The BAFTAs

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Marion Cotillard BAFTA 2013

You were probably too busy watching the Grammy Awards on Sunday night to even realize that the the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) Awards were also going on at the same time.

The BAFTA Awards, held at the Royal Opera House, are essentially the Academy Awards of the U.K.

Ben Affleck, Jennifer Garner, George Clooney, Anne Hathaway, Jennifer Lawrence and the rest of this year's usual-suspect nominees all flew across the pond to attend the prestigious awards ceremony.

See who won and who wore what.

"ARGO" won Best Film. Best Director winner Ben Affleck and producers George Clooney and Grant Heslov are on-hand to accept the award.



Ben Affleck whispered sweet nothings into George Clooney's ear.



As Ben Affleck's wife Jennifer Garner looked on.



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20 Ads That Changed How We Think About Race In America

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bold cold newport race ads

Today, it's unusual to see a major U.S. advertiser using only white models in its ads or using racist themes to promote its brands.

When that happens, the advertiser usually gets into trouble — as Abercrombie & Fitch has done, repeatedly, over its racist promotional efforts.

In fact the advertising business has a long, lousy history of racism.

But ads have also been used to change people's minds about race, and to make racism unacceptable in the media. Here's the story of race in America, as told through its ads.

Warning: This slideshow contains ads dating back to the 1800s, some of which are very racist. Readers may find them offensive or upsetting.

1875 onward: This ad for N.K. Fairbank Co.'s Fairy soap was shameless. (Fairbanks was founded in 1875; this ad probably appeared sometime after 1897.) The black child is presented as if she's devoid of any positive qualities whatsoever.

Source re N.K. Fairbanks.



1889: The Aunt Jemima brand was founded, just 26 years after the emancipation proclamation. Despite the obvious racism of this ad (which came years later), Jemima was always portrayed with at least one positive quality: Her food is good. The tone, however, is antebellum — blacks are domestic servants.



1900: At the turn of the century, Bull Durham tobacco still portrayed black Americans with exaggerated features..



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How Etsy Grew Its Female Engineers By 500% In 1 Year

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etsy officeEtsy, the popular e-commerce site full of one-of-a-kind trinkets, handmade jewelry, and other personalized high-quality items, has risen to become a formidable competitor to eBay and other web-commerce platforms.

Brooklyn-based Etsy is very popular among women, in fact 80 percent of its customer base are women and 50 percent of its staff are women.

Despite this, the company realized it was lacking in one place: female engineers.

The commerce site went from having just three female engineers in early 2011 to 20 as of late 2012.

The tech industry is infamously dominated by male programmers and engineers. So how did Etsy do it?

Etsy's CEO Kellan Elliot-McCrea shared this insightful presentation on how his company hired more qualified women in engineering. 

SEE ALSO: THE FAB WAY: How I Built A $600 Million Company In Less Than 2 Years

Here we go!





Historically, Etsy was just as lousy as any other company in the tech department.



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How The Most Ambitious Auto Venture In A Century Nearly Collapsed And Then Came Back From The Dead (TSLA)

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Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla Motors, poses with a Tesla car in front of Nasdaq after its IPO

Tesla Motors will soon announce its fourth quarter financial results. 

The stock was down Monday after a negative review from The New York Times, which prompted CEO Elon Musk to take to Twitter and appear on CNBC and Bloomberg TV to criticize the review. 

Tesla hasn't reported a profit since its IPO, it has over 50 percent short interest, and many analysts say it has to prove itself this time. Yet it continues to win awards and was named one of Barclays top stock picks for 2013.

Here, we take a look at the company's origins, the drama among its founders, its near collapse, and the development of its Roadster, Model S, and Model X cars.

Tesla Motors was founded in 2003 by five Silicon Valley entrepreneurs.

Tesla was founded by Marc Tarpenning, JB Straubel, Ian Wright, Elon Musk, and Martin Eberhard. The five collaborated after they tried to commercialize the T-Zero prototype electric sports car created by AC Propulsion.

When he was in college Elon Musk had said there were two important problems worth studying, one was how to make transportation environment friendly and the other was how to colonize another planet.

The company name after electrical engineer Nikola Tesla and aimed to "accelerate the world’s transition to electric mobility with a full range of increasingly affordable electric cars".

Source: Tesla / NPR



The Tesla Roadster prototype was introduced to the public in 2006 and general production began in 2008.

Tesla raised $60 million and spent about $25 million developing its two-seat Roadster vehicle that sells for $109,000. The Roadster goes from zero to sixty miles in four seconds and can go 250 miles on a  single charge. 

The Roadster came 10 years after General Motors introduced its two-seat electric car the EV-1, which GM eventually withdrew because it had a 100 mile limit on one charge. 

Source: The New York Times / Reuters



Tesla has maintained that it plans to get to the mass market by selling it to rich people first and kicking off production.

Martin Eberhard former CEO of Tesla was quoted by The New York Times:

"According to Mr. Eberhard, the way to get a new product into the mass market is to sell it to rich people.

"'Cellphones, refrigerators, color TV’s, they didn’t start off by making a low-end product for masses,' he said. 'They were relatively expensive, for people who could afford it.” The companies that sold those products at first, he said, did so “not because they were stupid and they thought the real market was at the high end of the market,' but because that was how to get production started. His company and others that have tried electric cars, he said, are too small to produce by the tens of thousands anyway."

And Elon Musk has always maintained that its goal is to create a mass-market electric vehicle that could be as cheap as $20,000 in third generation cars.

Until 2008 most car sales were done in person, over the phone or via the internet. 

Source: The New York Times



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The Crazy Story Of The Time When Almost Anyone In America Could Issue Their Own Currency

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Delaware_Bridge_Company_Dollar

The U.S. has been able to sit back and watch as Europe struggles to hold its currency union together.

Americans can safely assume there is no danger Illinois, as bad as its finances are, will drop out and issue its own currency in "Lincolns."

It wasn't always so.

For a quarter of a century, America's states and territories, and the institutions within them, began circulating their own currency, as the agrarian mistrust of centralized banking eventually climaxed in the destruction of the Second Bank of the United States in 1832.

This period is well known among collectors and numismatists.

But for others — even within the banking industry itself — this period remains mostly unknown.

We wanted to shed some light on this colorful but important moment in the country's growth.

The story begins in 1832. President Jackson, an agrarian and hard currency advocate, is reelected and vetoes the rechartering of the Second Bank of the United States.



Next, Congress passes legislation that the government's funds would be held by local banks instead of a centralized reserve.

Source: Krooss/Samuelson



This worked fine initially, but soon inflation begins to climb as the banks extend their circulation.

Source: Hammond



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10 People Who Can Get You The Best Jobs In Tech And Make You Rich

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morgan missen

The war for talent has never been hotter in Silicon Valley. Sometimes a key hire can make the difference in when a company launches a product—or lands its next financing round.

Think we're kidding? We know one late-stage company that waited to round out its management team before gunning for an eight-figure fundraising.

Even venture capitalists are taking a more hands-on role in recruiting, building up internal operations that keep their portfolio companies fueled with engineers, designers, and salespeople. Andreessen Horowitz, Google Ventures, and others now have in-house "talent partners."

So if you want to work for Google, Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter or the next rising star in tech, who can get you in the door?

SEE ALSO: THE ROAD TO 200 MILLION: Photos Of LinkedIn's Epic Journey

Oliver Ryan, Lab 8 Ventures

At Twitter, Ryan took the company from 50 employees to 500. He hunted down statistical geneticists for 23andMe. Now he's got his own firm, Lab 8 Ventures. It's quietly hunted engineers for Amazon as far afield as Australia.

"Most of the companies I'm working with are keeping a pretty low profile and tend to be small, but have generally been NEA-funded," Ryan tells us. (NEA, or New Enterprise Associates, is a venture-capital firm that's backed Juniper Networks, TiVo, and Diapers.com, among other companies; it raised a $2.6 billion fund last summer.)



Carrie Farrell, Google Ventures

Like many members of the Google Ventures team, Farrell is a veteran of the search giant. While the venture-capital arm is technically independent, its networks are thoroughly interwoven with Googlers—which means a huge depth of talent at Farrell's fingertips.

"We can give a founder 50 Java resumes in a day," Farrell told VentureBeat last year. Maybe yours could be one of them.



Ali Behnam, Riviera Partners

Behnam cofounded Riviera Partners. He's best known in the industry for placing Mike Abbott as Twitter's VP of engineering, a hire that helped slay the site's dreaded Fail Whale, the mascot synonymous with outages. (Abbott is now a partner at Kleiner Perkins.) Cloudera cofounder Jeff Hammerbacher also gives Riviera high marks.



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Meet The Four Little-Known Athletes Who Got Picked For This Year's Swimsuit Issue

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alana blanchard shower

The four athletes in this year's SI Swimsuit Issue are only famous in a few small corners of the Internet.

But after the magazine his newsstands today, they stand to get much bigger.

SI made great short videos of each athlete that you should watch.

We pulled out the key details.

This is Alana Blanchard

Watch the full SI video here >



She's a 22-year-old surfer from Hawaii who has been surfing since she was four

Watch the full SI video here >



Blanchard got to design special bikinis for the shoot

Watch the full SI video here >



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The Monster Military Vehicle That Appeared As A Decepticon In 'Transformers'

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Warning: Explicit Language
Video shows a different explosion than the one described here.

decepticon bonecrusher from transformers movie"I'll never forget it. The bomb was on the right side of the Buffalo," Ryan Tomlinson, a former Marine corporal, told BI.

Tomlinson was on Main Supply Route Michigan, near Ramadi. He'd attached as a photographer to a group of engineers on a route clearance mission, looking for IEDs — a mission which the Buffalo, a Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) was particularly well suited to do.

See the Buffalo > 

Reason being: it came with a 16-foot remote controlled arm. Troops called it, "The Claw."

"When the bomb went off, it scared the hell out of me. Three [155 mm shells] wired together. Blew the arm clear off the vehicle. Rear end was mangled. Huge pieces of shrapnel sticking out of the glass," said Tomlinson, who watched this from his MRAP, parked not too far away.

"[Later] all the Marines climbed out. Aside from being shaken up, nothing happened to them."

"Yeah," concluded Tomlinson, "It's kind of like a giant tank."

The giant Buffalo also appeared as the vehicle aspect of the Decepticon Bonecrusher in the "Transformers" movie series. Because of this, the movie "Transformers" has taken on a cult status with some U.S. Army Engineer Route Clearance units.

The Buffalo is used for one main purpose: route clearance — which means "getting rid of bombs buried near the road"



The massive six-wheeled truck weighs 76,000 pounds.



And it's not very inconspicuous: it's 13 feet tall and over 8 feet wide.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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Disgraced Designer John Galliano Dressed As A Hasidic Jew For Fashion Week

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John Galliano Paris Fashion Show Bucket Hat

Convicted anti-Semite John Galliano was seen on the streets of New York yesterday wearing what many would suggest was an outfit reminiscent of traditional Hasidic Jewish garb (via DNAInfo) (see the shocking pictures here).

Photos of the disgraced designer dressed in a large hat and long curled tendrils to attend Oscar de la Renta's 2013 Fashion Week show in New York surfaced on Tuesday (see them here). Critics pointed out that his curls looked like peyos, the curled sidelocks traditionally worn by Orthodox Jewish men.

"He’s trying to embarrass people in the Jewish community and make money on clothes [while] dressed like people he has insulted,” Isaac Abraham, a Williamsburg community leader, said to The New York Post. "It looks like the hairstyle he added was done purposely to insult.”

The outfit appeared to be right out of Galliano's 2013 Paris Fashion Week menswear show, down to the bucket hat and cropped pants. The curled hair, however, was a misguided deviation from the collection.

“If it was just anyone else, I wouldn’t know what to say," Brooklyn Assemblyman Dov Hikind told The Post. "But considering who this guy is, considering his background and what he’s said in the past, let him explain it to all of us: Are you mocking us?”

Galliano was famously fired from Christian Dior in 2011 after a video of him yelling, "I love Hitler!" and anti-Semitic slurs in a Paris café surfaced and went viral online. He was convicted in France of making racist public insults and fined €6,000. Subsequently, he was shunned by the fashion industry that had formerly embraced him.

You can see photos of Galliano's Hasidic-inspired outfit at DNAInfo >

DON'T MISS: The Rise And Fall Of John Galliano

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John Deere Says Agriculture Outlook Is Getting Brighter (DE)

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John Deere

It looks like things are going to slow down for American farmers after months of crazy receipts, according to John Deere's latest slides on the state of the farm world.

After a year of record profits, income is expected to flatline heading into the next planting year as weather moderates.

But outside of North America — and Europe, of course — the rest of the world looks pretty good, and Deere is actually revising its global growth outlook upward.

We pulled eight key slides from Deere's 38-slide presentation that explain what's going on.

Crop prices will come down starting next planting season.



That's in part because crop yields will go up as weather becomes more favorable.



As a result, revenues will also be down slightly.



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Since Microsoft Is Giving Dell $2 Billion, Let's Take A Look At Its Spotty History Of Investing (MSFT)

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Steve Ballmer hugging Ryan Seacrest

Last week, Microsoft announced plans to loan $2 billion to Dell, which is trying to take itself private in a $24 billion buyout. 

It's a pretty surprising move because it looks like Microsoft is playing favorites with one of its PC partners. However, Microsoft hasn't been shy about making investments, or big partnerships in the past.

Since Microsoft has been a fairly active investor through the years, here's a look back how good it is at picking winners and losers when it comes to investments and partnerships. (This slideshow excludes outright acquisitions, which are whole separate issue.)

A $221 million joint venture with NBC created MSNBC, but it turned out that content wasn't king.

Date: December 1995

Details: $221 million for 50% stake in MSNTV

Reason: Microsoft thought it needed partners in the traditional media business to help build attractive online services. Microsoft also invested in other content companies around the same time, including Dreamworks SKG and Black Entertainment Television.

Outcome: Fair. MSNTV is still around, and Microsoft has managed to build a high-traffic (if money-losing) network of Web sites, but it turns out that big content didn't end up ruling the Internet -- technology like search and social networking, and upstart do-it-yourself content like blogging and YouTube turned out to be mch more influential.

Microsoft sold its stake in MSNTV to Comcast and MSN last decade.



WebTV was one of Microsoft's many failed efforts to conquer the living room.

Date: September 1996

Details: Microsoft took a "minority equity position," but didn't disclose the investment amount.

Reason: To encourage the idea of delivering the Internet over TV, and to get WebTV to incorporate Internet Explorer.

Outcome: Bad. Seven months later, Microsoft bought the company for $425 million. It turned into Microsoft's first of many failed experiments in interactive TV.



Taking a $30 million stake in RealNetworks didn't prevent the two companies from becoming arch-enemies.

Date: July 1997

Amount: $30 million for a 10% stake (the company was then called Progressive Networks)

Reason: RealNetworks was founded by an early Microsoft executive, Rob Glaser, in 1995, and pioneered the delivery of streaming audio and video over the Internet. The companies were supposed to work together to define industry standards.

Outcome: Bad. The relationship quickly soured as Microsoft moved into direct competition with RealNetworks. Glaser testified in the Microsoft antitrust trial in 1998, and Microsoft sold its stake soon after that. RealNetworks later sued Microsoft for antitrust, and Microsoft settled with a $761 million payout.

 



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The 10 Best Photos From The Westminster Dog Show

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Banana Joe affenpinscher best in show winner

2,721 dogs, 187 breeds, but only one winner — last night, the tiny black Affenpinscher named Banana Joe was crowned Best in Show at the 2013 Westminster Kennel Club competition.

After two days of primping, prancing, and preening, the Best in Show and Best in Breed winners were selected at Madison Square Garden during the President's State of the Union Address. The 5-year-old Banana Joe was all tongue and tail wags as his owner Ernesto Lara accepted the coveted silver bowl.

Hailed by organizers as the second oldest sporting competition in America, the 137th Westminster Kennel Club dog show has taken place since 1877. However, the show didn't choose Best in Show winners until 1907, making Banana Joe the 86th holder of the prized title.

This lounging Saint Bernard with his huge paws.



Tigger, the most excited Pomeranian in the world.



This Bearded Collie running his heart out.



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Here's What The Future Of Cooking Will Look Like

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Nick Fauchald

When Nick Fauchald moved to New York in 2003, he worked full time at Wine Spectator magazine and part time at a law firm while attending the French Culinary Institute at night.

"Working seven days and nights a week was actually less insane than it sounds," Fauchald tells us. "It taught me how to juggle a bunch of projects at once without dropping any balls."

Through more hard work and some luck, he has made a name for himself in the foodie scene. He helped launch the popular online site Tasting Table in 2008, and within two years he shared his favorite cooking gadgets with Martha Stewart on TV.

But after working as editor in chief of Tasting Table for three years and growing it into nine different editions, Fauchald missed the print world. He decided it was time for a change.

"I wanted to try to find ways to connect print publishing and digital," he says. "I wanted to help people go back and forth between the two. I think there's room for both to work together and to really improve one another."

Last year he founded All Day Press, a publishing company bridging digital and print media — with clients including The New York Times, TENNIS magazine, and Gilt Groupe— and he started working on some food-related apps, including Sarah Jenkins's New Italian Pantry. The app is the first in a series where well-known chefs will make their style of cooking more accessible to fans.

We recently caught up with Fauchald to learn about his new gig and talk about the future of cooking. Here are the best parts from our conversation:

Let's start with your latest project — what is the New Italian Pantry? 

Sarah Jenkins (the chef at Porchetta sandwich shop, Porsena trattoria, and Porsena Extra Bar) approached us at Lazy Susan Media last year and said she wanted to do something digital with all of her cookbook recipes to get them in front of people. Just from talking to her, we realized she was very passionate not only about ingredients, but very specific ingredients. So we came up with the idea for an app that let's you select what you have on-hand via a pantry Sarah has pre-selected. It shows you what you need to buy and the recipes you can make with what you have.

New Italian Pantry

What does the future of cooking look like? Will ditigal completely change everything?

That's really what I feel very passionate about because a lot of folks seem to have chosen their side. I think there's room for both digital and print to work together and to really help one another. An app supplements the print cookbook, and it gives the readers a new way to connect with the brand.

People use cookbooks in many ways: They take it in the kitchen, and they want to cook from it, or they use it for entertainment and they want to look at the pictures on the couch. But I think there’s a third way where phones and small devices will come in as a very quick reference recall: "I cooked this recipe once, but I’m at the store and can't remember what I need to buy to make it again." And so I think cookbooks will evolve into these multi-format, multi-device tools.

So you don't think cookbooks are a dying breed?

We as a culture love cookbooks, we love the way they look, we love holding them — we're used to it. If you go back 15 years and watch how people migrated from magazines and newspapers and books to getting more of their recipes online, it's the same kind of leap that's happening with tablets and phones. But people never abandoned cookbooks. Anyone who's afraid that cookbooks are going to disappear should just look back 15 years.

What was the biggest challenge when creating a cookbook app?

Our New Italian Pantry app is so visual we wanted you to see the food first, and get excited about how it looks — like a cookbook does. You flip through a cookbook to look at the pictures, you don't flip through a cookbook to look at the fine print. To be able to fit in all of those beautiful photos, we originally were looking at an app that was going to be around a gig and a half, if not more. It was massive, so it took us awhile to figure out how to streamline our app so it was smaller. I think for the consumer that makes a huge difference — if you buy an app that's eats up a gig and a half of space in your device, that's going to be the first thing you get rid of when you reach capacity, but we still wanted to include those great photos, too.

New Italian Pantry

Where do most food apps go wrong?

Where I've seen food apps go wrong, and especially cooking apps, is that they either have 1) good content and good recipes, but not much else, 2) they are very tech savvy and made by folks who wanted to feature the technology and the bells and whistles, but not the recipes, or 3) they were just pretty and simple.

But I didn't see any apps that combined all three into one. So we wanted to create something that people could actually cook from where the iPad’s in your kitchen, but you don't have to touch it a lot. We also wanted the app to have little detail photos of what the chef means when she says "dark brown" or "finely chopped," which is one thing I think tablets or anything digital can do better with recipes.

What's next for you and New Italian Pantry?

This is actually the first in a series of similar apps. I want to find other chefs who, like Sarah, are really passionate about ingredients and who cook food at their restaurants that can be recreated at home.

We're also working on another app we built last summer that we're going to launch probably in the next few weeks called Daily Specials. It's a way for restaurants to let their customers know what their specials are by sending a push notification. A lot of what Yelp and deal sites like Groupon do is that they are meant to get restaurants new customers. But Daily Specials reminds customers who already know and love the restaurant why they want to go back, which is an area that's sort of yet to be explored on the market.

New Italian Pantry is available for purchase in the Apple store, and Daily Specials will be launching soon.

DON'T MISS: Top NYC Chef Explains How To Cook A Perfect Steak

SEE ALSO: Roadmap To The Future

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This Kitchen Table Nearly Doubles In Size In Seconds

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This is the expandable Capstan Table from the UK furniture maker Fletcher.

Why We Love It: This is one of the most innovative tables we've ever seen. The Fletcher Capstan Table expands from a standard 6.5 x 10-foot table to one that measures anywhere between 20 to 30 feet across.

The round tables come in four standard sizes, and expand by simply rotating the top 180 degrees manually or electronically by remote. UK furniture brand Fletcher was inspired by a similar patent dating back to 1835, and the design features a star shaped leaf at the center with six pie-shaped leaves that expand and fit together seamlessly.

Capstan table expanding

 

Capstan table expanding

Seriously, you have to see it to believe it:

Where To Buy: Through the Fletcher website, or email info@dbfletcher.com to order.

Cost: Tables are customizable, and range from $50,000 to $70,000.

Want to nominate a cool product for Stuff We Love? Send an email to Megan Willett at mwillett@businessinsider.com with "Stuff We Love" in the subject line.

DON'T MISS: The DoorBot App Is A Virtual Doorbell

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This Is By Far The Easiest Way To Fix Email Overload

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email overload

E-mail overload is a huge problem. 

In fact, the average employee wastes the equivalent of 73 days a year on email, reports McKinsey Global Institute ,and others argue that email is actually bad for your health.

A service called SaneBox wants to solve that problem, for a monthly fee. 

SaneBox is a web-based app that scans your inbox and determines what messages are important to you based on your reading habits. Messages that you aren't likely to open right away are filtered into a separate folder.

We've been using SaneBox for two weeks and our inbox has already gone down from 1,200 messages to 200.

Click here to see how SaneBox works >

What's great about SaneBox:

You don't have to do much.

After you set everything up, SaneBox's robots scan your inbox from the cloud and determine what is and isn't important. The software can guess what topics you're likely to read.

The less-important emails are filtered into a "Sane Later" folder for you to process in bulk. The more you use SaneBox, the better you can train it to know exactly which emails are important.

Besides sorting emails, SaneBox is packed with features that enhance the service and make it even more useful. One of our favorites is called SaneBlackHole, which lets you quickly unsubscribe from email lists by blacklisting those email addresses.

SaneBox works with major email services like Gmail and Yahoo. After it scans your inbox, you just access those service like normal. (The filtering folders are created automatically).

What's not so great:

The biggest negative with the service is training yourself to check your SaneLater folder. If you're not in the habit, there's a chance you could miss an important email. 

SaneBox also costs money, unlike the new free email app Mailbox for iPhone. (Although unlike Mailbox, SaneBox is completely automated).

How much does it cost?

SaneBox offers consumer and business pricing tiers for the service.

  • For $2.04 per month, the service will manage one email account, and let you send five messages to a "RemindMe" folder that will resend the message to you at a later date. You can also send up to five email attachments to your Dropbox account.
  • The $5.79 per month tier will manage two email accounts, send 250 RemindMe's per month, and automatically send 250 attachments to Dropbox.
  • The most expensive plan costs $19.54 per month and manages three email accounts, sends an unlimited amount of RemindMe's, and will forward an unlimited amount of attachment's to your Dropbox account.
Check out our tour of SaneBox to see how it works. 

Start by heading to SaneBox.com. The site makes it easy to sign up just pop in your email address and hit sign up.



You'll have to enter your email password too so SaneBox can access your account.



Next, enter a few details about yourself. Click continue when you're done.



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11 Strange Things You Need To Know About Your Heart

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rare earth hearts

Your heart isn't gold. It isn't sweet. And don't put in on your sleeve — you'll make a mess!

Just in time for Valentine's Day, here are 11 scientific facts about your ticker.

1. Heart attacks

The most common time for a heart attack: Mondays between 8 and 9 a.m. Really!



2. Heart Muscles

Your muscular heart puts juiceheads to shame. It's theoretically strong enough to lift almost 3000 pounds, and a single heartbeat could shoot blood 30 feet.



3. Thwarting early heart attacks

You know what they say about guys with long ring fingers...They're less likely to have early heart attacks.

The British Journal of Cardiology found that men with ring fingers the same length or only slightly longer than their index fingers have a higher risk of heart attacks in their thirties and forties than men with ring fingers much longer than their index fingers.

The reason is testosterone, which is responsible for lengthening ring fingers, protecting against heart disease, and professional football.



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People Still Live On The Incredible Floating Islands Of Lake Titicaca

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Titicaca Island Uros PeopleIt's a living situation unlike any other.

The Uros, a pre-Incan people in Peru, reside on artificial islands built out of totora reeds in Lake Titicaca. The manmade islands have been a major tourist attraction ever since photographs of the Uros were first published in National Geographic in the 1940s

Though it doesn't seem like it at first glance, life on the islands has changed drastically since tourism came to Lake Titicaca. Not only have the Uros lost their original language, they now earn most of their income through tourism and even use solar electricity to sustain TVs, radios, and lights in their homes.

This juxtaposition of the old and new is part of the reason tourists flock to the floating islands — or "Islas Flotantes"— in the first place. 

Flickr user Bruce Tuten was fortunate enough to visit the Uros in 2011 and shared his photographs of the unforgettable day trip with us.

There are 42 manmade islands floating in Lake Titicaca near the city of Puno, Peru. They are populated by the Uros, an indigenous group.

Source: Go South America




The islands are made of dried bundles of totora reeds that are common in the shallows of the lake. The larger islands house about ten families, and the smaller ones house only two or three.

Source: Inca Tourism



The islands float because of the gasses produced by decomposing reeds. Since the reeds at the bottom rot fairly quickly, new reeds must be added every three months. The islands typically last about 30 years.

Source: Go South America



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HOUSE OF THE DAY: Sacha Baron Cohen And Isla Fisher Are Selling Their Sweet Hollywood Hills Home

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Sacha Isla House of the Day LA

Sacha Baron Cohen and his wife Isla Fisher are selling their Hollywood Hills West home for $2.595 million, according to a report in the LA Times (via Estately).

The stars of The Dictator and Wedding Crashers are leaving behind the Mid-century property with four bedrooms and two and a half baths. It also comes with a lagoon-style pool, spa, and outdoor gym.

Rumor has it that the Cohens have been renting out the house for the past few years for $10,995 a month while living in a larger home nearby.

2950 Okean Place was originally built in 1959, and was recently renovated.

Source: LA Times



The house is a single-story, and has views of the surrounding canyon and mountains.

Source: LA Times



The beamed ceilings rise to 22 feet within the home.

Source: LA Times



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