Nokia 6208c handset interesting is the fact that it runs on a Symbian Series 40 UI. This is a first for the mobile giant to have a touch screen handset with the S40 interface. Features include – Size: 109.8×49.3×13.3 mm, weight: 120.1 grams 3.2 megapixel camera with dual-LED flash 2.4-inch QVGA (240×320 pixels) 16 million color touchscreen Bluetooth 2.0 Standard 3.5mm headphone jack microSD card support Stylus for navigation and touch control Support for Push Email Voice recorder, FM radio, media player for audio and video Click for Image |
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
China Shows Nokia's S40 Touchcreen Handset
Windows 7 "Beta" Appears On Torrents
Windows 7 which was first demonstrated at PDC last month, has appeared as "Beta 1" on torrent sites. While this new build (build 6.1.7000.0.081212-1400) does not seem to be significantly different from the one showed at PDC, it never the less does indicate that Microsoft is making rapid progress on the new OS. More Here |
Sunday, December 28, 2008
Cygnus Systems Sue's Apple, Microsoft And Google
Cygnus Systems Sue's Apple, Microsoft And Google ................... Do you think, they will won against this IT giants.............I dont think ... and see why and what for they are filing this To this purpose they have patented a broad-base technology which states "a method and system for storing, navigating, and accessing files within an operating system through the use of a graphical thumbnail representing the video display of the active document within the active application." But, If this case goes to court and goes in favor of the company, they could very wind up as one of the richest on the planet. In such cases normally not only is the victor entitled to current expenditures and costs, it can also sue for past damages caused by the use of their patent. |
Dell Adamo laptop , really rivala to Macbook
The news about Dell's mystery Adamo laptop came into limelight this week. It was all related to a lifestyle website with Adamo advertised on it (as confirmed by Dell spokesperson) saying 'soon to come'. The tagline supporting the arrival of a new product reads "rival the Macbook Air." |
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Google App For iPhone With Voice Search Finally Available
Google is one of the world’s largest companies that specializes in Internet searches and most recently, software. Google has put a lot of hard work in designing an operating system for mobile phones, called Android. The operating system is used on HTC’s G1 phone, which is known as a potential “iPhone killer.”
Google is currently offering one of its mobile software for those who use an iPhone. The software is a voice recognition program, made especially for Apple’s phone, which will be available through Apple’s App Store. Tough the program is not yet listed in the store, it is said that it will become available very soon.
Google’s Mobile App for iPhone allows users to simply speak their search requests or commands. The app makes use of iPhone’s motion detector, which lets the phone know that it must record when it’s brought to the ear and stop the recording when the user puts the phone down.
Google has also implemented options for those who don’t want to use their voice but who would rather type in their searches. The software can also be controlled through the virtual keyboard that appears on the screen of Apple’s phone. The program can also detect the city you’re in and give relevant results according to this information. This is very helpful especially is one is looking for entertainment or plane tickets.
The app has been very well received by all and the little mystery surrounding its “delay” has actually raised the popularity of this software. Besides being very useful and fun, many might just get it to see what the hype is about.
The early reviews can be summed up in the headline offered by noted technology guru Rafe Needleman on the cNet news site: "Google 'Voice Search' hands-on verdict: Awesome."
"Wow. That's right, wow. I mean, yeah, it's that good," enthused Chris Maxcer of MacNews World. "I've been an iPhone owner since day one, and this is the first application that's inspired me to remove one of the four core bottom applications on my home screen and replace it with a third-party app."
Google hopes that the application will help it sell more advertising, and its ability to direct users to local businesses could prove a key attraction for advertisers. The application allows you to dial numbers included in the search results with a click.
Google said it plans to make the application available to other smartphones, with the next candidate believed to be T Mobile's G1 Smartphone, which is based on Google's open source Android software
Monday, November 3, 2008
Touching Windows 7
LOS ANGELES--In addition to getting to spend a few minutes playing around with Windows 7's new desktop, I had a chance to play around with its multitouch gestures.
The brief look came on a machine running a later build than the one Microsoft handed out to developers last week. More similar to the version that was shown onstage Tuesday, the machine I used had the new desktop featuring the Aero Peek and other features.
I thought it might help to show some of the features in a short video. (It was me holding a Flip video camera, so apologies for the jitters and less-than-ideal sound.)
Along with the gestures themselves, Microsoft has tweaked the desktop to support touch, doing things like spreading out menu lists to make the operating system easier to navigate with just a finger.
To scroll through a Word document, for example, users can run their finger anywhere in the Word window (not just in a narrow scroll bar). It has also added some visual cues, such as making a window bounce when one has reached the end or beginning of a document. That helps, because it can be a little hard at first to figure out which way to flick to head down a window.
The key question is going to be how much software developers take advantage of touch and how many computer makers include the necessary hardware in their laptops and displays.
Microsoft's approach with Windows 7 also highlights a key difference with Apple. The Mac maker has focused, at least thus far, on expanding the touch abilities of the laptop trackpad. Microsoft, meanwhile, seems aimed at touch on the screen itself--though trackpad makers such as Synaptics have added support for gestures that XP and even Vista laptops can take advantage of if their makers' wish.
One Windows PC maker, Hewlett-Packard, has been branching out on its own, adding its own line of touch-screen computers ahead of Windows 7. It has updated its TouchSmart PC a couple of times and is also targeting the technology for laptops. Last week, HP also opened up its TouchSmart interface to developers.
World's largest mouse scampers around the desk
Of course, given the limited desktop estate we have in our mousehole of a cubicle, this idea may look mighty cool, but may just not be so cool to use.
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Intel gave a quick preview of its next generation laptop
Intel this week gave a quick preview of its next generation laptop platform, which could shake up the chipmaker's mobile offerings.The company gave analysts and users a glimpse of the new platform, codenamed Calpella, at its fall Intel Developer's Forum (IDF) in Taiwan this week. Mooly Eden, corporate vice president and general manager of Intel's Mobile Platforms group, said during his keynote address at the forum that the platform focuses largely on energy efficiency and longer battery life.
Nathan Brookwood, an analyst at research firm Insight 64, said that if he was a hardware vendor, he'd be eagerly awaiting the 2009 arrival of Calpella. "It's a very different platform than anything they've done to date," he said. "When Calpella shows up, everything inside that laptop will be brand new."
The analyst explained that until now, Intel's laptop platforms have consisted of a CPU and a Northbridge chip, which holds the memory controller and the graphics chip. However, in Calpella, the memory controller has been moved onto the CPU itself. The graphics remain separate but will be packaged with the CPU, giving it better access to the memory controller and the CPU, he said.
"These are all good things," said Brookwood. "If I was a vendor, I'd be excited over this, but a little nervous because everything inside the platform is changing at the same time. With so many balls in the air, it's easy to drop one."
However, he added that since Intel is previewing the platform a year before it ships, most of his concerns are lessened.
The Calpella platform will be based on Intel's upcoming 45nm-based Nehalem architecture. The first Nehalem chips, which will be quad-core server chips, are expected to ship this fall. The rest of the Nehalem family -- desktop chips, dual-core, more quad-core and eight-core chips -- are slated to be released over the course of next year. Brookwood noted that the Nehalem chips for the laptop are scheduled to ship in the second half of 2009.
Intel execs showed off the first 8-core Nehalem chip at its Intel Developer Forum in August. A week before the forum, the chipmaker announced that it was naming the new family of chips Intel Core. The first Core chips to hit the market will get the added label of i7, making the full name Intel Core i7.
The Nehalem technology has a new modular architecture, which officials say will make it easier to scale from two to eight cores. The Core chips also are being designed to have two-way, simultaneous multithreading, use Intel's QuickPath interconnect, and have a three-level cache hierarchy.
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
GMail gets auto-replies
This is probably more useful than GMail's last experimental new feature (Mail Goggles): Canned responses (see Official GMail blog). You can now save a reply you're writing as a "canned response" and then quickly select one of these responses when you're replying to a future e-mail.
You can also have your GMail filters auto-reply to messages for you with these reponses. I quickly set up a filter, for example, to reply to people who send me an e-mail with "pitch" in the subject line with a message asking them to reach me on my work account.
The canned response feature is useful and nicely done. If you often have to send people the same (or close to same) e-mail, you'll find it useful. The auto-reply filter is a bit more complex and potentially dangerous, although it is useful. To set up an auto-reply, you have to first save the response as you're replying to an email, and you have to make very sure that your filters aren't going to get you in to trouble by sending out your message to the wrong people. Fortunately, GMail lets you pre-run your filter on your exisitng inbox to show who which messages would be swept up in your filter if it was already running.
If you use GMail to handle work-related e-mail with a lot of typical queries, it's worth trying.To turn on the Canned Responses feature go to Settings Labs. To use the auto-reply feature go to Settings Features.
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Windows 7 as an improved version of Windows Vista - Steve Ballmer
Speaking to a Gartner-sponsored conference in Florida on Thursday, Ballmer was asked what would make consumers and businesses buy Vista. The interview, held between Ballmer and Gartner analysts Neal MacDonald and David Smith, was published on the Gartner Web site.
Specifically, Ballmer was asked how Microsoft would sell users on an updated release without in some way breaking from current Vista operating system.
Ballmer responded that Windows 7 was more than just a minor release.
"It's a lot more work than minor release," Ballmer said. "It turns out you can do a lot more than a minor release in what essentially is a 2.5-year period of time. There's no reason to just do a, quote, a minor release, in 2.5 years.
"It's a release that I think will do a lot what people will want to do on performance, cleanup in very nice ways on the UI," Ballmer added. "We're going to pioneer some of things in the way touch and multitouch is used in the user interface. We've improved what people call the shell the basic tools users have to manage programs and applications…It's a real release."
Ballmer acknowledged that the company had made some breaks with compatibility to implement new security features with Windows Vista, that were "not without some controversy". "I think we made a wise call, but I realize it was a call that was not painless for the customers," Ballmer said.
According to Gartner, just 10 percent of enterprises have adopted Vista; Ballmer, however, said that 180 million users use the operating system. Moreover, he claimed that the adoption rate of Vista is higher, or faster, than the adoption rate of Windows XP after the first two years of its life. Moreover, there is a higher rate of adoption both in the enterprise and in consumer desktops, he claimed.
Ballmer seemed to acknowledge that Windows 7 was just an improved version of Vista.
Source : Read more
WiMax technology - Telecom companies gearing up to launch
NEW DELHI: Telecommunication companies are gearing up to launch the WiMAX (Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access) technology in India in a big way. The potential of this technology that allows wireless transmission of data using a variety of transmission modes is huge as the Indian wireless broadband market is estimated to touch Rs. 52,000 crore by 2012.
“The Indian WiMAX market including devices will be worth $13 billion (Rs.52,000 crore) in 2012. This market projection takes into account 2.75 crore WiMAX users, or 1.9 crore WiMAX subscribers in 2012,” C. S. Rao, Chairman of WiMAX Forum’s India Chapter told The Hindu. The WiMAX Forum is an industry-led, not-for-profit organisation formed to certify and promote the technology.
Stating that all big global WiMAX players, including Alcatel-Lucent, Motorola, Huawei, Samsung, all are setting up shop in India, Mr. Rao said the projected market included broadband wireless products as well as services. “Soon we will see WiMAX embedded notebook and other gadgets flooding the Indian market. The Government has already announced its rollout by this year-end; and within a year, the entire country is likely to be covered,” he added. In India, WiMAX represents a win-win proposition, benefiting network operators and subscribers at the same time. Broadband penetration being low, the opportunity for operators to gain large numbers of subscribers through WiMAX is incredible. Any service provider with innovative service offerings, attractive devices and go-to-market plans that maximise the utility offered by WiMAX technology to price-sensitive Indian customers can use this ready and proven technology to quickly gain market share,” Mr. Rao explained.
According to Mr. Rao, with the recent regulatory decisions, India has now joined other major developed nations like the U.S. and Japan, besides Korea, Taiwan and Russia in freeing up prime spectrum for mobile WiMAX deployments, which would proliferate the use of this technology. “The major rollouts of WiMAX technology in India will have a tremendous positive effect on the economy as it will greatly increase economic productivity by laying the groundwork for important initiatives, such as distance learning, telemedicine and e-governance,” he added.
Saturday, October 18, 2008
Microsoft's Steve Ballmer said a Web search advertising deal with Yahoo makes economic sense
Shares of Yahoo jumped 12 percent on the news, as investors hoped Ballmer's comments could lead to the two sides returning to the negotiating table. The share gains were pared back to about 10 percent after Microsoft issued a statement saying it had no interest in buying Yahoo.
Talks between Microsoft and Yahoo broke off in July after the Web company rejected Microsoft's proposal to buy its search business and enact a revenue-sharing partnership.
Yahoo had also rejected a full acquisition bid from Microsoft in May that was priced at $33 per share. Instead, Yahoo signed a search advertising pact with Web leader Google Inc, which is being scrutinized by regulators.
Source Read more
"Perhaps there will continue to remain opportunities to partner around search," Ballmer told a Gartner Inc conference in Orlando, Florida.
"We are not in any discussions with them. We'll see. They want to remain independent. There are probably still opportunities around search. I think it would still make sense economically for their shareholders and ours."
New iMacs in next couple weeks
(Credit: Apple)
Apple Insider kicked off the latest round of speculation with a report Friday that Apple is expected to refresh its 20- and 24-inch iMacs "in the coming weeks," entering the shopping season with "one of its strongest product portfolios ever."
As for details, there aren't many. Apple Insider and others expect a move to Intel's Centrino 2 platform. A bigger mystery is whether the next iMac refresh will include Nvidia chips like the new MacBooks have.
Despite the build-up, an iMac upgrade could take place with little fanfare, as it did last time around.
Adobe stands off rivals with Flash Player 10

Flash Player 10, a free download also available for Windows and Mac users from Download.com, includes a number of new features:
• Easier-to-use 3D graphics effects.
• Better text handling for more sophisticated layouts combining words and graphics, more refined typography, and better multilingual applications.
• Better sound handling, so that different audio signals can be mixed together--for example, a music sound track with a game's audio effects.
• High-performance visual effects using technology called Pixel Bender that also works with After Effects CS4 and Photoshop CS4.
Thursday, October 16, 2008
Google's second quarter, the company missed expectations for profit

In Google's second quarter, the company missed expectations for profit and issued a more cautious assessment of the online advertising market, sending the stock down to $478 or so. With the current economic pessimism, that price looks downright giddy: Google's stock closed at $353.02 a share on Thursday, and Collins Stewart analyst Sandeep Aggarwal pointed out that a full third of Google's employees have nothing but valueless "underwater" stock options that have greatly diminished incentive value.
"We had a good third quarter with strong traffic and revenue growth across all of our major geographies thanks to the underlying strength of our core search and ads business. The measurability and return on investment of search-based advertising remain key assets for Google," said Chief Executive Eric Schmidt in a statement. "While we are realistic about the poor state of the global economy, we will continue to manage Google for the long term, driving improvements to search and ads, while also investing in future growth areas such as enterprise, mobile, and display."
Using generally accepted accounting principles, net income increased from $1.07 billion in the year-earlier quarter and $1.25 billion in the second quarter to $1.35 billion in the third, the company said.
Google's Android may be a freely available open-source operating system
Android may be a freely available open-source operating system, but Google hasn't shied away from the idea that it hopes to profit by subsidizing its development. And with Google's first Android phone, the T-Mobile G1 built by HTC, nigh upon us, it's becoming clearer exactly how.Google executives have spoken about Android's indirect benefits: the company wants to use it to accelerate the use and sophistication of mobile Internet browsing. "If the Internet is widely available, that's good for us," co-founder Sergey Brin said.
But judging from my testing of a G1 phone, it appears Google wants a more direct benefit, too: more users of Google's online services. Although there's nothing stopping a G1 owner from using online services from Google rivals such as Microsoft and Yahoo, Google technology is built deeply into the G1 and featured prominently as well.
The tie-in to these personal services is telling. Google has trounced its competition when it comes to search, a relatively anonymous act, but it hasn't made as much headway when it comes to more deeply personal uses of its services such as e-mail, photo sharing, and social networking. With Android, Google apparently hopes to establish more of this direct contact with Internet users.
E-mail comes in two tiers on the G1. The upper tier is given to Gmail, which gets its own application; others get relegated to the generic e-mail application. I could connect fine to Yahoo Mail, but lacking a Plus account for free POP access, I couldn't try Microsoft Live e-mail.
Personally, I think the two-tier approach makes sense because Gmail fans (I'm among them) can get accustomed to features not commonly available in ordinary e-mail client software, such as conversation view, the ability to archive and star messages, and sophisticated search abilities. Other e-mail services don't need their own applications.
YouTube launches 'Video Your Vote'
YouTube is urging US voters to shoot video at the polls during the November 4 presidential election and upload it to a new channel on the popular video-sharing site called "Video Your Vote." "Shoot a video of your experience at the polls on Election Day. Document the energy and excitement, as well as any problems you may see," YouTube said in a message today on the website of the new channel, youtube.com/videoyourvote. YouTube said that the initiative, a partnership with the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), was aimed at educating voters while "enabling the world to watch pivotal moments in this historic election as they unfold." "This program aims to gather massive amounts of polling place video, with the Channel serving as an online library for Election Day footage," YouTube, a Google subsidiary, said in a statement. "On November 4, the Channel will serve as the premier online destination for up-to-the-minute coverage from voters contributing videos straight from thousands of precincts across the country," it said. YouTube cautioned, however, that recording video was not allowed at all polling places in the United States. |
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
AMD Spins Into Two Companies to better compete with rival Intel Corp.
During a press conference Tuesday morning, AMD said it would split into two, one company that focuses on microprocessor design and the other on the business of manufacturing them.
As part of the split, AMD is launching a new company, dubbed The Foundry Company, a pairing between AMD and Advanced Technology Investment Co. (ATIC). The pair will launch a new U.S.-based semiconductor manufacturing company in New York. The Foundry Company, which also includes a massive investment from Abu Dhabi-based Mubadala Development Co., will address the growing demand for independent foundry production capabilities, AMD said.
AMD said Mubadala will invest $314 million, more than doubling its current stake in AMD, reaching 19.3 percent from 8.1 percent.
ATIC, also based in Abu Dhabi, will invest $2.1 billion, assuming $1.2 billion of AMD's current debt, for a stake in Foundry. ATIC also expects to invest between $3.6 billion and $6 billion to the Foundry Company over the next five years to help AMD, the world's No. 2 chip maker, expand its capacity beyond the manufacturing facilities AMD initially contributes to the Foundry Company. The funds will be used by the Foundry Company to expand capacity at its fabs in Dresden, Germany and the construction of the new facility in Saratoga County, N.Y.
AMD said the New York facility will create more than 1,400 direct jobs and generate an additional 5,000 jobs in the region. Meyer said the New York facility will be the only independently managed, leading-edge semiconductor manufacturing foundry in the U.S.
The Foundry Company's board of directors will be equally divided between representatives of AMD and ATIC, with AMD owning a 44.4 percent stake and ATIC holding the remaining 55.6 percent.
The Foundry Company is expected to launch in 2009, with construction to begin on the new New York facility in the same year. The Foundry Company will also join the IBM joint development alliance, a collaborative group of leading semiconductor companies working on next-generation silicon technologies, for both silicon-on-insulator and bulk silicon through the 22nm generation.
AMD To Launch 45nm Chips Ahead Of Schedule
Patla recently replaced former server chief Randy Allen, who was promoted in May to head up AMD's Computing Solutions Group in a major executive reshuffle that presaged Dirk Meyer's replacement of Hector Ruiz as CEO in July.
AMD's quad-core Shanghai processors are achieving 35 percent increases in both power efficiency and performance in clock-for-clock competition over the chip maker's current 65nm generation of quad-core server chips formerly code named Barcelona, Patla said in a press briefing held Tuesday in San Francisco.
The server chief said AMD had reviewed its engineering processes ahead of the Shanghai validation process in an effort to avoid silicon glitches like the TLB errata that slowed the ramp of its Barcelona and Phenom chips in the first half of 2008.
WD Launches New 500 GB Portable Drives - Priced between Rs 9,000 to Rs 11,000
Weighing less than 7 ounces, the portable drives are small enough to fit in a pocket or backpack for easy portability. They are powered with an USB-bus that eliminates the need for an external power adapter. They also have synchronization software that lets users sync their changes and protect their information with 128-bit encryption. The plug-and-play capability with gaming consoles makes it easier to play music and view photos and videos on TV. The drives are available in bronze, titanium, westminster blue and cherry red color.
Priced between Rs 9,000 to Rs 11,000, the drives come with 5-year limited warranty and are available with authorized distributors of Western Digital.
Microsoft is extending again the time period for which PC makers can use 'downgrade rights'
In the face of demand for continued access to Windows XP and dissatisfaction with Vista, Microsoft has moved out the time frame for downgrade rights to XP from Jan. 31 2009 to July 31, 2009, The Register reported last week.
"Downgrade rights do not expire," a Microsoft spokesman confirmed Monday. "As more customers make the move to Windows Vista, we want to make sure that they are making that transition with confidence and that it is as smooth as possible. Providing downgrade media for a few more months is part of that commitment."
Microsoft elaborated on its intentions in a statement to Mary Jo Foley's "All about Microsoft" blog, saying: "What's changing is Microsoft is giving six more months where it will provide downgrade media for XP Professional for OEMs and system builders to provide to their customers who purchase Windows Vista Ultimate and Business editions " (which the company figures will be) largely going to be small businesses since that's the audience that would want/use XP Pro. So it's the same old downgrade right thing that was in the EULA (End User License Agreement) before; it's just Microsoft is providing the media to partners a few months more.
Source : http://www.crn.in/Software-007Oct008-Microsft-Extends-Windows-XP-Life-By-Another-Six-Months.aspx
Monday, October 13, 2008
Google Competitor Uses Google Tech To Take Email Offline
Zoho has been providing cloud-based productivity tools for quite some time, and, like Google, lets people access applications such as document creators and spreadsheets from any Web-enabled PC. Zoho had been holding back on offering a real competitor to Google's GMail, however.
Today, that changes. Zoho Mail debuted, and Raju Vegesna, Zoho evangelist, said, "Zoho Mail is an important application for Zoho as it plays a pivotal role in the evolution of our productivity, collaboration, and business applications. For an application like Mail, offline and mobile support are key. We wanted to offer these features right out of the gate."
Zoho Mail offers hierarchical folders and labels, serial and conversational e-mail listings, unlimited storage, Zoho chat, Zoho productivity suite, and Zoho Business.
The Next Windows Has An Official Name
Microsoft VP Mike Nash announced the new (old? same?) name in the Windows 7 blog today and reiterated that the kimono on Windows 7 would be opening wider during the Windows Professional Developers Conference and the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference, to be held in just a few weeks in Los Angeles.
Although Windows 7 is not an exciting name, it does avoid the problem of being associated with a particular release year. It also avoids the difficulty of picking a name that can appeal to consumers, small businesses, and corporations. No doubt we'll still see "editions" of Windows 7 tailored to appeal to all of those groups, but the main name won't turn off any of them. Perhaps the bland name signals that Microsoft intends to focus on features, functionality, and performance, which would be a very good thing.
Source:Information Week
Sunday, October 12, 2008
GeoEye Starts New Earth Photo Album With High-Resolution Pics
GeoEye-1 snapped the first location the satellite saw when the camera door was opened -- Kutztown University, located midway between Reading and Allentown, Penn. Viewed online, the image shows sharper detail than is typical of satellite work: The shot was collected at 0.41-meter ground resolution.
Academic buildings, parking lots, roads, athletic fields and the track-and-field facility were captured in the image. It was collected at 12:00 p.m. EDT on Oct. 7, 2008, while GeoEye-1 was moving north to south in a 423-mile-high orbit over the eastern seaboard, traveling 4.5 miles per second.
Microsoft to announce Silverlight 2.0 on Monday its rival to Adobe's Flash.
The software maker has scheduled a conference call for 9 a.m. PDT with developer division executive Scott Guthrie.
A Microsoft representative declined to comment on the impending announcement, but a source told CNET News that the completion of Silverlight 2.0 is among the topics of discussion. Microsoft released Beta 2 of the software in June, while a "release candidate" version was offered up last month.
Thursday, October 9, 2008
New Features in GMail
Gmail Labs today released an interesting feature to prevent you from sending mails that may you may regret later. It does so by asking you to confirm whether you really want to send that email. Also see: All Gmail Users Have Two Email Addresses So if you're writing a mail late on a Friday night, when you may not be as sober as you would like yourself to be, you can get GMail to ask you a few math problems before the message leave your Gmail outbox. |
Seagate - A new technology for HardDisk
The largest hard-disk drive maker is going solid-state. Slowly. Seagate will enter the market for solid-state drives in 2009, as it slowly embraces a technology that will, in some cases, replace its bread and butter: hard disks. "Our history is based on rotating magnetic media. But as solid-state comes online, we're embracing this new media type," said Rich Vignes, senior manager of market development at the Scotts Valley, Calif.-based company. Seagate's first target market will be large enterprise customers. Consumer SSDs from Seagate will come later. The challenge is to convince large enterprise customers that SSDs are safe. Although hard-disk drives have endurance problems of their own, corporate customers must be convinced that a technology as new as solid-state storage is reliable. "There isn't really a clear way of describing endurance or life expectancy of a solid-state drive. So, we're working on that as an industry standard," through JEDEC, a large standard body, Vignes said. Source: Read More |
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
Is this a cold war : iPhone 2.2 getting Google's Street View
Maybe iPhone users won't have to covet one of those shiny new features in Google's Android operating system after all: Google Maps Street View. The driver's-eye view is a prominent part of the first Android phone, T-Mobile's G1, which goes on sale October 22. But according to Mac Rumors on Monday, Apple has snuck Street View into the iPhone 2.2 firmware beta release. Other new features described in the report include the ability to disable the typing autocorrect feature and the inclusion of 461 small icons called Japanese emoji characters. |
Wait until October 22 or later to get an Android phone
Most of us will have to wait until October 22--or later, given that T-Mobile sold out--but if you have the right connections, you can get an Android phone now. Google co-founder Larry Page flashed his Android phone briefly in a meeting two weeks ago with reporters, but they're trickling farther down the ranks at the Internet giant, too. I snapped this shot of one Google employee surfing CNN.com with his Android phone while waiting for his chief executive, Eric Schimdt, to talk about energy at a San Francisco speech last week. Source : CNet |
Monday, October 6, 2008
Third Google co-founder - Hubert Chang - Cant Accept Now .....
The whole world cant accept this.... Hubert Chang may not be a name familiar to you but if his claims are true, then hold your breath: Google has three co-founders and not two. In a video message posted in Vimeo.com, a video-centric social networking site, Hubert Chang claims he is one of the co-founders of Google, alongside Larry Page and Sergey Brin. Chang said he helped Page and Brin come up with the name Google way back in 1997 and even helped them set up the PageRank, Google's business model. However, instead of jumping into the new venture, Chang said he chose to pursue his Ph.D. at New York University (NYU). Chang claims that in 2002 he got in touch with Page and Brin and told them of his interest in getting involved with Google. However, he said, he was rejected . Chang said he is aware that many people would think of him as insane or a gold-digger or as someone who wants his two seconds of fame. "After viewing this tape, some people might think I'm lying, some might think I'm crazy, some might be upset, while others will consider I'm honest. But the tape has to be made," In the video Change recalls how he was introduced to Page and Brin by Stanford computer science professor Rajeev Motwani in January 1997 and how the three of them began to work together on the search engine that would grow to become an Internet search giant in the modern world. Today, Google Inc. has a market capitalization of $138 billion and Page and Brin are worth $16 billion each, according to Forbes. Hubert Chang's video was uploaded way back in 2007 but has begun circulating tech sites recently in a big way after Google turned 10. Chang's claim, however, has been discredited by the Stanford professor himself. "To the best of my knowledge, his (Chang's) claims about being a founder of Google, coming up with the name and/or the business plan etc, are completely unfounded in reality. I am sure I would have noticed a third founder, if one existed, since I was working closely with Larry and Sergey at Stanford at the time," Prof. Motwani said. |
Theater View for Google's YouTube
Google Blogoscoped has unearthed a new YouTube feature that's pretty neat. Called "theater view," when clicked it both darkens the screen and increases the size of the player, centering it on the page and adding red curtains. For a leaned back viewing experience it's certainly not as useful as hitting the full-screen button, but I'd consider it a nice alternative--especially if you don't want to watch larger version of a grainy video just to cut out distracting page elements.
Firefox - understand and use geographic information on the Web
Geode details at this stage remain sketchy, but here's the example used in the alert about the project: "With Geode, a user who is looking for restaurants while they are out of town will be able load up their favorite review site and find suggestions a couple blocks away and plot directions there."
Geotagging most commonly refers to photos with geographic data stored within the file, but there are plenty of other cases, too. Many Wikipedia entries have geographic information encoded, and YouTube users also can geotag their videos.
Sunday, October 5, 2008
Bailout bill loops in green tech, IRS snooping
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Saturday, October 4, 2008
A bit old news: Amazon Kindle replaces Text books
| Excellent high-contrast screen does a great job of simulating a printed page; large library of tens of thousands of e-books, newspapers, magazines, and blogs via Amazon's familiar online store; built-in free wireless "Whispernet" data network--no PC needed; built-in keyboard for notes; SD card expansion slot; compatible with Windows and Mac machines.
Video : http://reviews.cnet.com/e-book-readers/amazon-kindle/4505-3508_7-32751890.html |
Thursday, October 2, 2008
Apple Drops iPhone 2.0 NDA, Developers Rejoice
After putting up a wall protecting its iPhone technology, Apple instead started a war with developers -- but now the company is waiving the white flag. In an effort to stop its technology and innovation from being stolen, Apple placed a non-disclosure agreement for its developers working on applications for the iPhone that went along with its iPhone OS 2.O before it was officially released. Apple has filed for hundreds of patents on the iPhone technology and said it thought the NDA would add another layer of protection. So the company kept the NDA with the release of iPhone 2.0. Wrong. Instead it made developers question Apple's control of communication between developers and made many developers angry. In about a week developers will receive an agreement without the attached NDA, according to the company, but unreleased software and features will continue under the NDA until they are released. |
Yahoo is contemplating another round of layoffs
Yahoo is contemplating another round of layoffs, according to a report in Silicon Alley Insider. Any carnage count would likely be less than 20 percent of the workforce, SIA notes, citing people familiar with the company's financial health. According to the report: While our Henry Blodget has called on Yahoo to can 3,018 people (that's more than 20 percent of the workforce), the odds that Yahoo will make cuts on that scale are very low, we're told by people familiar with the company's thinking. But we're also told that another round of layoffs are indeed on the drawing board, prompted by a grim financial forecast. Yahoo plans to report its third-quarter results on October 21. Yahoo's stock is already under great pressure, closing Thursday at $15.58 a share, down 8.14 percent over the previous day's close and dropping to a level that hasn't been seen since August 2003. While the broader markets were also down on Thursday, Yahoo's descent was particularly steeper toward the last hour of trading. Sen. Herb Kohl, chairman of the congressional subcommittee on antitrust, competition policy and consumer rights, sent a letter Thursday to the head of the antitrust division for the U.S. Department of Justice, requesting a close examination of the controversial Google-Yahoo search advertising partnership be undertaken. Kohl's antitrust committee held a hearing in mid-July to examine the nonexclusive agreement, which calls for Google to place some of its ads on Yahoo search page results. |
Sen. Barack Obama's presidential campaign launched an iPhone application
Sen. Barack Obama's presidential campaign launched an iPhone application on Thursday that turns the vaunted device into a political recruiting tool. The most notable feature "organizes and prioritizes your contacts by key battleground states, making it easy to reach out and make an impact quickly," according to the software. On my phone, the application ranked contacts in Colorado, Michigan, and New Mexico at the top; at the bottom was a friend whose cell phone has a Texas number, though she actually lives in California. The application anonymously reports back the number of calls made this way: "Your privacy is important: no personal data or contacts will be uploaded or stored. Only the total number of calls you make is uploaded anonymously." |
Wednesday, October 1, 2008
Microsoft still paying people to search ... wowwwwwwww
Microsoft's latest effort to get people to use its search service is something called SearchPerks, which gives people points for using the search engine that can later be redeemed for prizes. Users who agree to download a small program to track their usage get one "ticket" per day for every Live Search query, up to 25 per day. The program runs through April, at which point users can "cash in" the tickets that they get and trade them in for prizes or donate them to a charity. It's the latest in a series of financial incentive-related projects from Redmond, joining such efforts as Live Search Club, Search and Give, and Live Search Cashback, a program Microsoft introduced in May. The latest project doesn't just require one to use Microsoft's search engine, however. At least for now, it also requires Microsoft's browser (Internet Explorer 6.0 or higher) as well as a Windows PC. Microsoft said those latter restrictions are not necessarily permanent. "At this time, SearchPerks is a limited promotion, though we remain open to expending availability of the promotion to different browsers and operating systems based on consumer interest," Microsoft said. There's also the broader question of what it says about Live Search overall that Microsoft has to keep coming up with gimmicks to get people to try it. Not to mention the fact that Microsoft has continued to struggle to make inroads on Google in overall share, promotions notwithstanding. According to figures recently released by ComScore, Google increased its share of the U.S. search market in August--it's at 63 percent--while Yahoo and Microsoft both slipped a bit, to 19.6 percent and 8.3 percent respectively. |
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
AMD says new 'Shanghai' chip is ready to go
The No. 2 processor maker wants to make one thing crystal clear: Shanghai is not Barcelona. The latter chip was rolled out in September 2007 to great fanfare only to be delayed a whopping eight months (or more, depending how the delay is calculated) due to production glitches and bugs. The chip was also hampered by speed (core clock frequency) limitations. This gave Intel an opportunity to regain ground it had lost to AMD in the server chip market. "We had some mis-starts in getting Barcelona to market and wanted to bring as much velocity to Shanghai as possible. Learn from our mistakes and, as a company, never do that again," said Pat Patla, general manager of AMD's server and workstation chip business. Shanghai--a quad-core product targeted at servers--will be AMD's first 45-nanometer processor. (Barcelona is 65-nanometer.) Typically, the smaller the geometries, the faster and more power efficient the chip. Intel has been shipping 45-nanometer processors since last year and these processors now make up most of Intel's offerings. |
Reliance Money Enters Investment Banking ( Is this the next lehman brothers ?)
Even as global asset managers face a backlash in the wake of the credit crisis,this has not forced a few to retreat from their plans to foray into investment banking. Reliance Money, the retail brokerage and distribution arm of Anil Ambani's financial services firm Reliance Capital, is now expanding into merchant banking. The firm today announced that it has received Category I merchant banking license from the market regulator SEBI. The license allows Reliance Money to offer a range of investment banking services such as issue management, underwriting, private equity advisory & syndication besides corporate finance services in India. The company is infact eyeing atleast 50 fund-raising deals by the end of the current fiscal. Reliance Money director and CEO, Sudip Bandyopadhyay has indicated that one of the key target areas will be small and mid sized firms: "While the main focus of the industry has been on large caps, we see a huge opportunity in serving the small and mid-sized segment, currently being under-serviced." More : Source |
Monday, September 29, 2008
Adobe software threatens video security
NEW YORK, USA: A security hole in Adobe Systems Inc software used to distribute movies and TV shows over the Internet allows viewers to copy movies on some Web sites and avoid commercials on others, threatening the financial success of online video. The problem exposes online video content to the rampant piracy that plagued the music industry during the Napster era and is undermining efforts by retailers, movie studios and television networks to cash in on a huge Web audience. Amazon.com Inc by Friday had fixed a flaw that gave free access to record and copy from Amazon.com's video streaming service without paying. But screen-recording software can still make unauthorized, unprotected copies of Amazon online movie rentals, which could be viewed and copied beyond the rental limits on how and when to view. Adobe said it issued a security bulletin earlier this month about how best to protect online content and called on its customers to couple its software security with a feature that verifies the validity of its video player. "Adobe is committed to the security of all of our products, from our players to our server software. Adobe invests a considerable amount of ongoing effort to help protect users from potential vulnerabilities," it said in a statement. Amazon fixed its Video On Demand service, which offers as many as 40,000 movies and TV shows on its Web site, to stop completely free viewing of movies and television shows recorded with the Replay Media Catcher from Applian Technologies. |
Yahoo's Zimbra e-mail program exposes passwords
Passwords used to access Yahoo mail through the Zimbra client are sent over the Internet in clear text, a Canadian programmer says. Holden Karau stumbled upon this problem while participating in the Yahoo University Hack Day at the University of Waterloo last week. "The Yahoo imap server's used by the Yahoo Desktop don't support SSL and the password was being transmitted in plain text," Karau wrote in a blog post on Friday. "What does this mean for you? If you use Zimbra to access your Yahoo mail, you almost certainly need to change your password and stop using Zimbra immediately (especially if you've ever done so over wireless)," he writes. Not surprisingly, his hack didn't place in the competition. "In retrospect it probably wasn't the best forum to bring up the security defects, but it was the most convenient," Karau says. |
Android phone in Demand T-Mobile stops taking Orders
It looks like T-Mobile customers trying to get one of the initial models of the first phones powered by Google's Android operating system will have to wait a bit longer. "Sorry! Due to the overwhelming popularity of the new T-Mobile G1, upgrades are temporarily unavailable. Please try again later," the T-Mobile pre-order page told people who tried to sign up for the phone on Saturday, according to the Android Guys blog. |
Sunday, September 28, 2008
Is Apple worried of gPhone ? Apple selling unlocked iPhone 3G in Hong Kong
Apple has made an unlocked version of the iPhone 3G available in Hong Kong, letting consumers pick whichever carrier they so choose. This is in sharp contrast to Apple's policy for the almost everywhere else on the planet. Unlocked iPhones are rampant worldwide, but that isn't something that Apple has sanctioned. Freedom doesn't come cheap. The 8GB version is available for about $695 (5,400 Hong Kong dollars), while the 16GB iPhone costs about $798 (6,200 HK dollars), according to Apple's site. http://store.apple.com/hk/browse/home/shop_iphone/family/iphone?mco=MTE2NTQs |
Microsoft taps JQuery JavaScript library with its Visual Studio developer
Microsoft said Sunday that it plans to ship the JQuery JavaScript library with its Visual Studio developer tool suite. The software powerhouse said that jQuery would be one of the libraries used to implement higher-level controls in the ASP.net Ajax Control Toolkit, and would also have a role in new Ajax server-side helper methods. The 15KB JQuery JavaScript library will be distributed as is, with no forking, and files will continue to adhere to the JQuery MIT license. In addition, Microsoft said that it would contribute tests, bug fixes, and patches to the JQuery open-source project and that later this year it would extend product support to JQuery. The announcement came in a blog post by Scott Guthrie, a vice president in Microsoft's developer division, who described the library's attraction: A big part of the appeal of jQuery is that it allows you to elegantly (and efficiently) find and manipulate HTML elements with minimum lines of code. jQuery supports this via a nice "selector" API that allows developers to query for HTML elements, and then apply "commands" to them. One of the characteristics of jQuery commands is that they can be "chained" together - so that the result of one command can feed into another. jQuery also includes a built-in set of animation APIs that can be used as commands. The combination allows you to do some really cool things with only a few keystrokes. Guthrie also pointed to a newly posted tutorial on Scott Hanselman's Computerzen blog about integrating JQuery with ASP.net Ajax. |
Corporate war brewing in the Indian IT sector - HCL VS Infosys
Here is a high octane corporate war brewing in the Indian IT sector. Indian tech company HCL Technologies Ltd. has made a direct challenge to Infosys Technologies by offering to buy U.K. software consultant Axon Group Plc. Noida based HCL has offered to pay about 441 million pounds ($814 million) in cash to Axon. This is much higher than 407.1 million pounds which is what Infosys offered to pay Axon on August 25. Interestingly, Axon has issued a statement saying it welcomes HCL's intention to make an offer. "Board is pleased that HCL has recognised the quality of the Axon business and has decided to announce its intention to make an offer." It further said: "Axon has entered into an inducement fee agreement with HCL under which Axon could be required to pay HCL a fee of 1% of the value of the HCL offer." This means Axon will pay HCL Technologies 1% of the offered price if the deal fails. There will now be a 45-day period during which another company can make a bid. HCL has offered to pay 650 pence a share, 8.3% more than the 600 pence offer by Infosys. Infosys, on the other hand, made an announcement: It said it "is considering its position and urges Axon Shareholders to take no action at this time. A further announcement will be made in due course". |
Orkut blocks community supporting terrorists
Google's social networking site Orkut has blocked access to a community on the site that supports Indian Mujahideen, the terrorist group that claimed responsibility for bomb blasts in various Indian cities including Delhi. Google has said the company strongly condemns illegal activities and those that encourage terrorism and violence. |
Google allocates $10 million fund to support ideas that could improve people's lives
As part of its tenth birthday celebration, Google has launched Project 10^100 (pronounced Project 10 to the 100th), under which the company has invited users to send exciting ideas for ways to improve people's lives. Google has also committed $10 million fund to turn up to five of the best ideas into reality. The last date for submitting ideas to Google is 20th October 2008. could-improve-peoples-lives |
BCCI launches its official website BCCI.tv
Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has gone online with the launch of its official website BCCI.tv . The website will offer deferred streaming video and mobile content, live scoreboard, official photographs, player interviews, profiles, schedules, statistics, user interaction and newsletters.
BCCI.tv has been developed by Global Cricket Ventures, a joint venture between NetlinkBlue Holding and Live Current Media , as a part of the 10-year agreement signed between Global Cricket Ventures and BCCI. Under the agreement, Global Cricket Ventures was to build and manage the official IPL site IPLT20.com and the official BCCI site BCCI.tv. IPLT20.com, which is already live, is claimed to have received over 50 million page views during the DLF Indian Premier League season held recently. Read more : Source : http://www.alootechie.com/content/bcci-indian-cricket-board-launches-its-official- website-bccitv |
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Ahmedabad to promote entrepreneurship Govt ready to invest Rs 10 Crore Fund
pursuing their business ideas through incubation route at NDBI can now
avail this Rolling Fund support," said Kamal Nath, Union Minister for
Commerce & Industry.
"Rs 10 crore Rolling Fund at National Design Business Incubator (NDBI)"
this was announced by Union Minister for Commerce & Industry .
NDBI was started in 2005 and provides two kind of incubation options. First
is physical incubatees, who can pursue their innovative ideas to transform
them into business at NDBI, Ahmedabad.
The government has also agreed to permit the NID faculty to have a share in
their consultancy work.,
New MacBooks with aluminum.
little long in the tooth. The last time new details surfaced on the
notebooks, October 14 was targeted as the introduction date.
One interesting part of the report also suggests that Apple plans to drop
the Firewire 400 port and the DVI-I ports currently found on the MacBook
Pro in favor of a Firewire 800 port and a mini-DVI port..
The MacBook redesign is just around the corner, and further proof has
surfaced that it's going to look a lot like its siblings.
Source : Cnet . Read more :
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-10051086-37.html
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer : 'I don't like not being No. 1'
the only one with a chance to rival Google in search over the long term,
but acknowledged that it will take several more years and a whole lot of
money.
"It's going to take us a while," he said, during a speech at the Churchill
Club. "We've got a lot to do."
Venture Capitalist Ann Winblad, who was moderating the talk with Ballmer,
noted that when Ballmer addressed the club in 2006, he said search was a
five-year battle.
"It's a five-year task," he said, with a smile. "It's a long-term task."
To succeed, he said, the company will have to find a way to fundamentally
change the experience and the economics of search. "You have to redefine
the category," Ballmer said. "We've taken some steps in that direction."
"You don't really brute force your way into any market," he said. (I looked
around, but I didn't see anyone choke on their water over that one.)
On the antitrust front, Winblad asked Ballmer if he had any advice for
Google's executives. "I'd probably keep that advice to myself," he said.
Read more on Cnet : http://news.cnet.com/8301-13860_3-10051743-56.html
Wi-Fi a must for all . Free for
international holiday for the Internet. In San Francisco, teams of
volunteers fanned out across a low-income neighborhood with the goal of
providing free, wireless Internet access to 1,000 residents. CNET's Kara
Tsuboi tagged along and has the story.
Cnet : http://news.cnet.com/1606-2_3-50003853.html
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Yahoo!!!!! Changing its home page
the sense that Yahoo starts inviting people who are randomly selected.
Depending on the feedback , its will soon release its new face. Yahoo
claims that its home page is having the maximum hits in the entire web ,
approximately of 300 million / month.
The New page is some what customizable . Its planning to have all in a
single page, mail , messenger, social networking ...etc.The good this is
Yahoo also plans to let third parties produce little programs that can sit
in the application bar. The invitation is send to users from the UK,
France, India and the US
We hope they are in a new hope as , Yahoo rejected the bid even after it
was raised to $47.5bn . As Yahoo signed a deal with Google to use the
search giant's advertising technology, we can expect much more from Yahoo.
Hope the news page looks like this :)
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Warren Buffet having and ownership of 10% in Goldman ($5 billion)
Best time to Buy some thing from Goldman Sachs
Warren Buffet's Berkshire Hathway will invest $5 billion in Goldman Sachs. Berkshire Hathway will invest $5 billion in preferred stock at a 10 per cent dividend and Goldman has the right to repurchase the preferred at any time by paying Berkshire a 10% premium.Berkshire will also receive warrants worth $5 billion whch can be converted into common stock any time during the next five years at a strike price of $115 a share
Goldman Sachs will raise at least $2.5 billion in common equity in a public offering. The deal comes at a time when the Wall Street is going through the worst crisis in its history. Over the last month, Wall Street went through a series of events like the US government's taking over of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, 158-year old Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.' filing for the bankruptcy under chapter 11. Founded in 1869, the firm is headquartered in New York
Fake News that Expedia acquired majority stake in TravelGuru for $17 million
VC circle a News portal has earlier published a news that the Expedia , one of the leading Online travel company , for their operation in India they acquired majority of their stakes for an $17 Million . It seems as without having an authenticated report they published the same. As this news spread they have deleted the like ( Thats a Great thing they did)
Oh No... Google's Phone lacks support for Flash videos as iPhone
The G1, the Google's phone support for Flash videos – the sort of video clips we use on our Telegraph website, for instance – because of the type of processor chip used in the phone. And despite having a three-megapixel camera (still a paltry amount considering that Samsung recently launched an eight-megapixel cameraphone, but still a whole megapixel better than the iPhone, nonetheless), the G1, like the iPhone, can’t record videos.
Annoyingly, the G1 lacks a standard 3.5mm headphone jack, so I’m afraid you can forget about using your hideously expensive Bose noise-cancelling headphones with it – you’re stuck with HTC’s proprietary earphones.
The most interesting thing that I noticed , and which I liked is the GPS , and touch screen for Google's Application .
Android Market is still in the beta, or test, stage, there’s already a healthy selection of really excellent applications that suggest a great deal of innovation in this platform in future.
E-mail, photo programs stripped from Windows 7
e-mail, photo editing, and movie making, as was done with Windows Vista,
CNET News.com has learned.
The software maker included Windows Photo Gallery, Windows Mail, and
Windows Movie Maker as part of Vista, but later chose to offer separate
downloadable Windows Live programs that essentially replaced those
components with versions that could connect to online services from
Microsoft and others.
Microsoft told CNET News late Monday that it has decided to remove those
features entirely from Windows 7 and instead offer only the
service-connected Windows Live versions as optional free downloads. Earlier
on Monday, Microsoft had declined to say how it was handling things.
In a follow-up interview on Monday, Windows Vista general manager Brian
Hall said Microsoft made the decision to remove the tools from Windows for
several reasons, including a desire to issue new operating system releases
more quickly than it has in the past. The move also removes the confusion
of offering and supporting two different programs that perform essentially
similar functions.
"It makes it much cleaner," Hall said.
Lastly, he said, making the Windows Live tools completely separate from the
operating system paves the way for Microsoft to work selectively with
specific partners.
"We can do things with specific partners to enable really great experiences
that might be hard in Windows," Hall said.
Antitrust rules make it hard for Microsoft to tie operating system features
to specific services.
Microsoft last week rolled out the latest "Wave 3" releases of its Windows
Live programs, adding Windows Live Movie Maker to the mix of programs,
which includes Windows Live Photo Gallery and Windows Live Mail as well as
blogging tool Windows Live Writer and instant messaging program Windows
Live Messenger. While Windows XP and earlier releases had an instant
messaging program built in, Microsoft took out that feature in Windows
Vista.
Source : Cnet :
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13860_3-10048142-56.html?tag=newsLeadStoriesArea.0
Monday, September 22, 2008
Google co-founder Sergey Brin says he is at risk for Parkinson's disease
SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) - Google co-founder Sergey Brin has started a blog,
candidly telling of being at risk for Parkinson's Disease and plugging his
wife's genetic testing start-up firm.
SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) - Google co-founder Sergey Brin has started a blog,
candidly telling of being at risk for Parkinson's Disease and plugging his
wife's genetic testing start-up firm.
While Brin is no stranger to news-making webcasts and online press
announcements, he made a blogging debut Thursday by sharing personal
musings in a post at the Blogger weblogging website Google bought in early
2003.
Brin wrote of his mother being diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease and how
testing by 23andMe, a company started by his wife Anne Wojcicki, shows he
has a gene mutation that "markedly" increases his chances of getting the
illness.
"This leaves me in a rather unique position," Brin wrote.
"I now have the opportunity to adjust my life to reduce those odds. I also
have the opportunity to perform and support research into this disease long
before it may affect me."
Brin told of working with The Parkinson's Institute and the Michael J. Fox
Foundation to combat the disease and provided links to the organizations'
websites.
"I feel fortunate to be in this position," Brin wrote.
"Until the fountain of youth is discovered, all of us will have some
conditions in our old age, only we don't know what they will be. I have a
better guess than almost anyone else for what ills may be mine and I have
decades to prepare for it."
Brin wrote of comparing his genes with those of relatives and of checking
whether his DNA links him to others with his family name.
Founded by Wojcicki and Linda Avey two years ago, California-based 23andMe
offers genotyping for a price of 399 per person.
Google Android phone launch
To keep up with the news as it happens, check out CNET News where we'll be
blogging live from the press conference held by T-Mobile at 10:30 a.m. EDT
(7:30 a.m. PDT) in New York City.
T-Mobile USA will be the first mobile operator to offer a phone that uses
the open-source Google Android operating system. The device made by HTC has
been widely anticipated. And on Tuesday morning, T-Mobile and Google will
finally unveil the phone, which is expected to go on sale in October.
I'll be at the event, live blogging the announcement with a host of other
CNET folks. So make sure to follow all the action on the CNET News Wireless
Blog and come back to CNET News later in the day for video and photos of
the new device. CNET Reviews will also be posting a First Look of the
device, and I'll be joined by Natali Del Conte of CNET TV, who will also
share her initial thoughts on the big news.
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
The microchip turns 50
Consisting of a strip of germanium with one transistor and other components all glued to a glass slide, the first working microchip, or integrated circuit, was demonstrated at Texas Instruments by one of the company's newest employees, Jack Kilby, on September 12, 1958.
His rough device, measuring seven 16ths of an inch (11.5 millimetres) by one 16th of an inch, revolutionised electronics, and the world.
The microchip virtually created the modern computer industry, and the Internet would be unthinkable without it.
"Integrated circuits are so woven into our lives that it would be hard to imagine a world without them. The integrated circuit is the engine of the information age," TimesOnline quoted Jim Tully, chief of research at the technology analyst Gartner, as saying. (ANI)
Source : Yahoo : http://in.news.yahoo.com/139/20080912/393/ttc-the-microchip-turns-50-today.html
Government to issue guidelines to Internet service providers
New Delhi, Sep 16 (ANI): The Union Government is planning to issue guidelines to Internet service providers to secure wireless fidelity (WiFi) networks so that terrorists do not use it to send threatening e-mails.
"We are always in constant talks with the Department of Telecom on security issues. We might take some action soon," Department of Information Technology Special Secretary R Chandrashekar said.
The move comes on the heels of a group called Indian Mujahideen using an unprotected WiFi network to send emails almost at the same time of the serial blasts in Ahmedabad and Delhi.
"We cannot blame anyone if we forget to lock our own rooms. The ISPs should provide all these features of password and password protection," said a Ministry of Communication and Information Technology Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERTC-in) senior official.
CERTC-in is preparing detailed guidelines for Internet service providers, which will be issued soon.
"We will soon issue guidelines to the ISPs after consultations with DoT and DIT," the official said.
Source : Yahoo
Facebook fills photo security hole
"Today, we learned that certain photos could be viewed by unauthorized users who employed a complicated hack," a spokesman wrote in an e-mail. "Once we were notified of the issue, it was resolved within hours. These photos are no longer available to unauthorized users. We encourage security researchers examining Facebook to practice responsible disclosure."
Basically, someone who knew the serial number of a Facebook user, which is easy to get, and knew a trick for rejiggering the URL, could see private photos of that user. Small photos could also be changed to display in a larger size. The vulnerability only could be exploited with Firefox browsers.
Source : CNET
Monday, September 15, 2008
Hey what is this... HP to slash 24,600 jobs
The company expects to replace roughly half of these positions over the next three years to create a global workforce that has the right blend of service delivery capabilities to address the diversity of its markets and customers worldwide.
HP announced plans in May to acquire the computer services firm for $13.9 billion. The deal closed in August. The company said that, once it has finished with the cuts, it expects the moves to save $1.8 billion in costs annually. It said it does plan to reinvest in other areas.
Source : CNET
Microsoft's Social Networking say Bye Bye.....
"Wallop beta period will end on Sept 18th, 2008
Dear Wallop.com Member,
Thank you for being part of the Wallop beta social networking site. We really appreciate your feedback and support. The beta period will end on September 18th, 2008 – after that date you will no longer be able to access your account."
According to Microsoft, they hadn't invested in Wallop in the traditional sense.
Are they trying to do some thing else other than what Orkut,Myspace have.....
