rachellam
stone_soup
rachellam

A very destructive habit is watching MasterChef and programs of the sort at night. Or even looking at food porn. All those images used to really tempt me into snacking. Removing unhealthy snacks from the house also helps.

I wouldn't call Spaghetti and Veggie Meatballs an Asian dish. Neither is Waffle Burger. If you dislike it so much you can contribute your own.

Accurate.

It is a great destination, but given the heaps of tourists that visit this city, I'd hardly categorize it as an underrated vacation destination.

The Secret Life of Walter Mitty did a great job showing Iceland off to the rest of the world.

This article talks about 'streaming' the World Cup, not going to Brazil to watch it. As John Oliver says, football is an organized religion, and FIFA is the church.

Every sea turtle picture now reminds me of the stoner turtle in Finding Nemo.

Just came back from London and the Millennium Bridge would make for a great wallpaper too! Was hoping to see one here..

I love the trick with the Help menu. Use it all the time to find functions.

Totally agree with this! As a tourist, this has even proven to be more helpful than TripAdvisor in terms of advice on the best places to eat and shop.

But you can spend it in a way that brings you happiness.

To be fair, this is one of the few apps with a Windows Phone version being released before an Android version.

Singaporean represent!

Haha that is true. It is trying to morph into a social network universe of its own. Like a less restrained WeChat, which is already almost a full-fledged social network.

Arhhhh yes you are right! Nevertheless, brands like Rakuten and celebrities are using LINE and KakaoTalk as marketing tools. In a way, Viber is much closer to WhatsApp in its simplicity. And it has calls too.

As mentioned, adoption of these apps depend mostly on your friends. In that way it encourages a herd mentality or bowing to peer pressure.

WhatsApp's founders have said in the past that they are not interested in developing for the desktop. I can see why, given that much of the world is going mobile, especially the developing world, where the market is not yet saturated, and so WhatsApp has the greatest potential (it is one of the most lightweight

Thanks for this. The original was a little painful to look at.

I have both the mobile app and the Messenger app installed on my phone, and it's already forcing me to use the Messenger app to chat instead of on the mobile app. What I don't understand is that in older versions of the mobile app, the chat function was in the style of chat heads. Why aren't they sticking with that?