Microsoft Bakes Xbox music

Microsoft plans to use the full force of its dominant Windows operating system to challenge iTunes and Spotify...

Now Tweet in limited charactor

Starting Wednesday, any tweet sent with a URL will be reduced to 118 characters, or 117 for https links.

Learn and Teach Codes....

Show the Code.org film in your school..

Hp Reviews its Tablet..

PC makers keep churning out tablet devices in the hopes of imitating Apple and Amazon's success...

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Learn & Teach Codes - Open for all



They need support for this website by all as a teacher or learner.

Show the Code.org film in your school
The film has been tested in many classrooms. It received rave reviews from students and has measurable impact.
For your convenience, we've made different versions. Please choose one, and play it for as many students as possible!

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Any student of any age now can learn codes. So be prepair for became a coder now, try, earn and apply it.

Login to http://www.code.org.

HP Revives Its Tablet Strategy With a New Slate

PC makers keep churning out tablet devices in the hopes of imitating Apple and Amazon's success, with HP being the latest thanks to Monday's announcement of the new Slate 7. HP, however, has a checkered past with tablet devices. What's different this time? An audio feature targeting music lovers, and a low price point that may be music to the ears of cost-conscious consumers.


The device will be available in April for US$169.
The company's previous tries at tablet devices -- and mobile operating systems -- have landed with loud thuds in the marketplace. The Slate 7 is an attempt at erasing those memories by gaining a lot of momentum in a hurry.

"They're chasing the low price point, so, if you want a 7-inch tablet, they'll have the cheapest in the market," Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group, told TechNewsWorld. "It's a way to get volume and maybe to get a seat at the table, because right now none of the PC makers is doing well with tablets."
HP did not respond to our request to comment for this story.

The Slate 7's Specs

The Slate 7 weighs 13 ounces and has a stainless steel frame. It runs Android 4.1 Jelly Bean on a 1.6 GHz ARM Dual Core Cortex-A9 processor.
It has a 1024-by-600 pixel LCD screen. It also has what HP calls a "high-aperture-ratio" field fringe switching panel, which offers wide angles for better viewing of content on the device, indoors or outside.
The tablet has a 3 MP camera on the back and a VGA camera on the front. The device has a micro USB port and a microSD card slot.
The Slate 7 comes pre-loaded with the HP ePrint wireless printing application. It also has a native printing capability that HP claims will let owners print directly from most applications.
It supports 802.11n 2.4 GHz WiFi and Bluetooth 2.1. It will run any app on Google Play, and comes preloaded with the standard Google services -- Gmail, Google Search, Google Drive, YouTube -- that are found on any Android device. The Slate 7 will also carry a suite of applications from HP that range from exclusive games to productivity tools.
HP has included Beats Audio in the Slate 7 in a bid to target music lovers, making it the first tablet ever to have this capability. Beats Audio is "spectacular on the HTC phones," Enderle said.

Pros and Cons

The device is competing with the Kindle HD and Nexus 7, he added. However, at that price point, "they may get revenues, but profits will be hard to get."
Another potential problem is its name; HP already offers Windows-based tablets called the Slate 2 and Slate 500, and "confusion is a possibility, so HP will need to be careful in branding exercises," Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT, told TechNewsWorld.
HP also offers a Windows 8 tablet for the enterprise called the HP ElitePad.
"I think HP's Slate and Chromebook simply demonstrate its recognition of the reality of the mobile market, where Microsoft's position is miniscule," King said. "If HP wants to play seriously here, Android, and to a lesser but still intriguing extent, Chrome, are the way to go."

Slate's Role in HP's Tablet Story

The Slate 7 "is just one piece of a larger strategy," King said. "It seems like a good first step but the road ahead is long."
If HP gets volume sales with the Slate 7 that "could give people the impression they're a player and with that belief they could get to create something else, so think of this as a process," Enderle said. "It could work."
Source : technewsworld.com
Related site : supportforhp.iyogi.com


Sunday, February 24, 2013

Now Tweet In limitation to 117 Characters



If you’re tweeting out a URL, your tweets just got a bit shorter.

If you’re tweeting out a URL, your tweets just got a bit shorter.
Starting Wednesday, any tweet sent with a URL will be reduced to 118 characters, or 117 for https links.
First announced in December, the reduction is due to a change in Twitter’s t.co link wrapper. It extends the maximum length of t.co wrapped links from 20 to 22 characters for non-https URLs and from 21 to 23 characters for https URLs.
In short, the condensed links now take up a bit more space, leaving you with a little less space to add commentary with them. In total, the update represents a two-character drop per tweet.
Applications that use t.co wrapped lengths are required to accommodate the new lengths starting Wednesday.
Will Twitter's new t.co length reduction change how you tweet? Let us know in the comments, below.

By : mashable.com

Friday, February 22, 2013

Apple Attacked By Facebook (FB) Hacker


Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL : 446.52, -2.02) has been reportedly been attacked by hackers who infected the Macintosh computer of certain employees with malicious software, similar to the one that hit Facebook Inc. (NASDAQ: FB : 27.34, -1.18) last week.

The malware had been designed to attack Mac computers by exploiting a flaw in a version of Oracle Corp.'s (NASDAQ: ORCL : 34.26, -0.76) Java software used as a plug-in on Web browsers, the company said in a statement provided to Reuters.

"We identified a small number of systems within Apple that were infected and isolated them from our network. There is no evidence that any data left Apple. We are working closely with law enforcement to find the source of the malware," Reuters reported quoting Apple's statement.

Apple intends to release a software on Tuesday, which it said customers can use to identify and repair Macs infected with the malware used in the attacks, the Reuters report quoted Apple as saying.

On Friday, Facebook disclosed that the social-networking site was also the victim of a malware attack last month many of which have been traced to China. It said the attack occured when its employees visited a mobile developer website that was infected.

"As soon as we discovered the presence of the malware, we remediated all infected machines, informed law enforcement, and began a significant investigation that continues to this day. We have no evidence that Facebook user data was compromised in this attack," Facebook said in its official blog.

AAPL closed 0.04% lower at $459.99 on Tuesday, while FB ended up 2.26% at $28.96.

By: Balaseshan
PNN46FN86AH7

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

You’ve seen them everywhere, even on some state license plates.  But what does all those http’s and .com’s mean.  Here’s the website that I referenced for the following information: 





http://www.googleguide.com/web_address.html

Here is simplified explanation of what makes up a web address:

We take sample URL 1st :  http://www.crsd.org/buildings/nj/index.html

http:// stands for Hyper Text Transfer Protocol and that basically tells the computer that we are looking to “Transfer” “Hyper Text” (a webpage) from the internet to your computer.  When typing a web address into Internet Explorer you usually don’t even have to type the “http://” because the computer assumes it.
www stands for World Wide Web which is the body of software rules and protocols that make up what we know of as the internet.  Just about every webpage you’ll ever view is a part of the world wide web.
crsd in this example stands for Council Rock School District and it is technically the “second level domain name”

.org is a an example of a “top level domain name”  “.org” is primarily used by Non-profits, “.edu” is commonly used by schools and universities, “.gov” is used by the government, and the now famous “.com” is primarily for commercial websites.  Togethercrsd.org could be described as the school district’s “domain name”

/buildings/nj/ if you remember the old old days of DOS (before we had mice and folders on the screen) you might remember switching folder levels using the “/”.  If you don’t remember its OK, but you should know that “/buildings/nj/” tells the computer to go to a folder labeled “nj” that is inside a folder labeled “buildings”.
index.html this is the actual file name of this webpage.  More specifically, “index” is the name of the file and “.html” is the file extension which tells the computer what kind of file it is.  “.html” stands for Hyper Text Markup Language which is the language most web pages are written in.

Now you know what the different parts of a web address are.

Know Anatomy of a Web Address:

You’ve seen them everywhere, even on some state license plates.  But what does all those http’s and .com’s mean.  Here’s the website that I referenced for the following information: 
http://www.googleguide.com/web_address.html
 


Here is simplified explanation of what makes up a web address:

We take sample URL 1st :  http://www.crsd.org/buildings/nj/index.html

http:// stands for Hyper Text Transfer Protocol and that basically tells the computer that we are looking to “Transfer” “Hyper Text” (a webpage) from the internet to your computer.  When typing a web address into Internet Explorer you usually don’t even have to type the “http://” because the computer assumes it.
www stands for World Wide Web which is the body of software rules and protocols that make up what we know of as the internet.  Just about every webpage you’ll ever view is a part of the world wide web.
crsd in this example stands for Council Rock School District and it is technically the “second level domain name”
.org is a an example of a “top level domain name”  “.org” is primarily used by Non-profits, “.edu” is commonly used by schools and universities, “.gov” is used by the government, and the now famous “.com” is primarily for commercial websites.  Togethercrsd.org could be described as the school district’s “domain name”

/buildings/nj/ if you remember the old old days of DOS (before we had mice and folders on the screen) you might remember switching folder levels using the “/”.  If you don’t remember its OK, but you should know that “/buildings/nj/” tells the computer to go to a folder labeled “nj” that is inside a folder labeled “buildings”.
index.html this is the actual file name of this webpage.  More specifically, “index” is the name of the file and “.html” is the file extension which tells the computer what kind of file it is.  “.html” stands for Hyper Text Markup Language which is the language most web pages are written in.

Now you know what the different parts of a web address are.

The iOS keyboard is overdue for an upgrade

Apple broke ground with the iPhone's virtual keyboard in 2007, but it appears to be stuck in time. It turns out iOS has lots of keyboard options but Apple and third-party developers have been slow to implement them.

When the iPhone was announced in 2007, people loathed the on-screen keyboard. Blackberry users panned it and even I hated it at first. Then a week went by and I loved it. Many people can type faster on a virtual keyboard then they can on a tiny chiclet keyboard, and most would agree that more screen real estate is better value proposition that a physical keyboard that takes up half the surface of a device.
The problem is that the iOS keyboard hasn't changed much since the original iPhone debuted in 2007 -- and it drives me nuts. One of the advantages of virtual keyboards is that you can change them on-the-fly in software. Or so the theory goes.
As of iOS 6.1.2 Apple only slightly modifies the keyboard in its first-party apps:
•    In Mail, it replaces the spacebar with a smaller space bar and dedicated "@" and period keys when typing an email address.
•    In Safari, it replaces the spacebar with period, slash and ".com" keys when you're typing into the address bar field. But at the expense of the microphone/Siri button (I guess that Apple doesn't want us dictating URLs).



Lower-case
iOS provides zero feedback over which case I'm typing in. The iOS keys display upper-case characters whether I'm typing in upper-case or lower-case letters. It would be trivial for iOS to display lower-case characters when typing them, yet the iOS keyboard always shows upper-case characters. The Android keyboard has displayed the proper case for as long as I can remember. (Pictured above is a lower-case iOS keyboard -- only available on jailbroken devices running theShowcase app from Cydia.)

Dedicated Number Row
Apple should add a dedicated number row across the top of the iOS keyboard. The lack of a dedicated numbers row makes it difficult to enter strong passwords in iOS because you have to switch back and forth between the text and number keyboards. This could easily be a preference in the iOS keyboard settings. (Pictured above is 5-Row Keyboard, a jailbreak tweak only available in Cydia.)
But it's not just Apple that's been lazy in implementing extra iOS keyboards, developers have been slow to offer additional keyboard choices too. Luckily, some iOS developers use the UITextField, UITextView, and UIView objects in the iOS SDK to customize their keyboards.

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Facebook facing problems with its "like" button and other features


Today in international tech news: Facebook is sued by a company that says it owns the patents for Likes; broadband fans in the UK fret about what EU budget cuts will mean for rural Internet access; VLC might someday be able to stream BitTorrents; and a British tech company is under investigation for its financial reporting before it was acquired by HP.

Rembrandt Social Media is suing Facebook for its use of the Like button, according to the BBC.
Rembrandt claims that Facebook's success is owed, at least in part, to patents belonging to Dutch programmer Joannes Jozef Everardus van Der Meer, who died in 2004.

Facebook declined to comment, but a lawyer for Rembrandt, which owns the patents, said that the patents "represent an important foundation of social media."

A lawsuit has been filed in a federal court in Virginia by Rembrandt Social Media.
"We believe Rembrandt's patents represent an important foundation of social media as we know it, and we expect a judge and jury to reach the same conclusion based on the evidence," said lawyer Tom Melsheimerfrom legal firm Fish and Richardson, which represents the patent holder.

Rembrandt now owns patents for technologies Mr Van Der Meer used to build a fledgling social network, called Surfbook, before his death in 2004.

Mr Van Der Meer was granted the patents in 1998, five years before Facebook first appeared.
Surfbook was a social diary that let people share information with friends and family and approve some data using a "like" button, according to legal papers filed by Fish and Richardson.
The papers also say Facebook is aware of the patents as it has cited them in its own applications to patent some social networking technologies.
Also cited in the same legal claim was another social media company called Add This.



Image. Source : http://www.bbc.co.uk

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Google wins High Court appeal over sponsored links



The High Court of Australia has dismissed a misleading and deceptive conducts case brought against search engine giant Google, ruling that Google does not create sponsored links.

The case centred around sponsored links in Google search results through its AdWords program by online trading company Trading Post and STA Travel between 2005 and 2008. In April last year, the full bench of the Federal Court ruled, on appeal from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC), that Google advertisements with the headline of "Harvey World Travel" or "Harvey World" that redirected to an STA Travel website were in breach of section 52 of the Trade Practices Act. Similarly, ads headlined with "Honda.com.au" that redirected to car-trading website Carsales, ads headlined "Alpha Dog Training" that linked to The Dog Trainer, and ads headlined "Just 4x4s Magazine" that redirected to the Trading Post website were also in breach of the Trade Practices Act.

Google appealed the decision to the High Court in September, and this morning the High Court ruled that Google did not create the sponsored links featured in search results.

"Google did not create the sponsored links that it published or displayed. Ordinary and reasonable users of the Google search engine would have understood that the representations conveyed by the sponsored links were those of the advertisers, and would not have concluded that Google adopted or endorsed the representations," the High Court said in the summary of its judgment (PDF).

"Accordingly, Google did not engage in conduct that was misleading or deceptive."

In the High Court hearing last year, Google's barrister Tony Bannon told the court that finding Google responsible for what it produces from an inquiry would have had wider implications.

"The ramifications for the Full Court's approach are not limited to online advertising, but would extend to any travel agent, for example, who, in response to an inquiry from somebody who wanders in saying, 'I want to travel somewhere' and says, 'Europe, is it — you might like these brochures' and hands out a string of brochures because they perceive it might be relevant to their area of interest — and because it is the travel agency's response, that makes them responsible for the content of everything in those advertisements," Bannon said.

"That is an untenable outcome, we respectfully submit."

Google praised the judgment in a short statement.

"We welcome the High Court's unanimous decision that Google cannot be held responsible for the ads that advertisers create for Google's search engine," the company said.

ACCC chairman Rod Sims said that the regulator took up the case to clarify the law around misleading or deceptive advertising online, and the court did not rule that the ads themselves were not misleading.

"The High Court’s decision focused only on Google’s conduct. In the facts and circumstances of this case the High Court has determined that Google did not itself engage in misleading or deceptive conduct," Sims said.

“It was not disputed in the High Court that the representations made in sponsored links by advertisers were misleading or deceptive. It remains the case that all businesses involved in placing advertisements on search engines must take care not to mislead or deceive consumers."

The ACCC has been ordered to pay Google's costs.


Source: zdnet.com