Monday, January 31, 2011

Plantronics Calisto 825 Speakerphone System


The Plantronics Calisto 825 Speakerphone System allows multi-device hands-free communications in the office. This device allows hands-free communications via Bluetooth. It can also seamlessly switch in between PC calls and mobile calls. A 2.4″ color display and touch dial pad allows easy dialing, caller ID viewing, switching and muting across different connected devices.
The Plantronics Calisto 825 also comes with its own remote answer,end and mute control for added convenience. Better audio quality is possible via the wideband audio feature in partnership with advanced noise cancellation technology. The Plantronics Calisto 825 Speakerphone System is available at Plantronics for US$260.
Image Source: Plantronics

Light Blue Optics Light Touch


The Light Touch is a device unlike any current device you might have seen. It also offers a function that may introduce lots of other uniquely innovative gadgets in its wake. The Light Touch, in simple terms, is an interactive projector that is capable of projecting a functional touchscreen display into any surface.
The Light Touch makes use of full color holographic laser projection technology to allow it to create an interactive display. With the Light Touch, a virtual keyboard can be projected into any surface that can be used for possible inputs. It can also be used into display videos as well as play projected games using its touchscreen function. The Light Touch is currently available only for exhibit purposes to show its capabilities and other possible uses. But it does provide an innovative approach that may someday add into the many ways that people may interact with the devices they use.
Image Source: Light Blue Optics

Google Clamping Down On Duplicate Content

According to a new entry on Google’s blog, they have been working on further improving the online search experience for users. Their focus on the recent updates on the Google search engine involved controlling content spam. The company has been working on reducing the amount of spam search results by focusing on copied content.
According to the google blog post, Google has been working on a redesigned document level classifier for indexed sites to detect spam content. But it has also been working on trying to shift its attention to so-called “content farms” known for coming up with low quality content. This led to the company instituting certain algorithmic changes onto the search engine that targets low-quality content sites.
Although it may be a relatively new set of changes for the online search engine, there are already some people who are getting concerned about this. Some are concerned whether the algorithmic changes may affect other legitimate content sites in the process. It has not been said whether Google has already tested this new feature change. But it may just affect some sites possibly because of the changes.
According to Google, they instituted the changes because of some increasing feedback from users regarding the issue. It was done not of their own accord, but as a result of feedback from concerned people who wish to see a more improved Google search engine. The changes made may or may not catch on. But it is Google’s way to further improve the features of their popular search engine to get in step with its main competitors for having the best Web search experience.

Friday, January 28, 2011

7 Things to Stop Doing Now on Facebook

Using a Weak Password
Avoid simple names or words you can find in a dictionary, even with numbers tacked on the end. Instead, mix upper- and lower-case letters, numbers, and symbols. A password should have at least eight characters. One good technique is to insert numbers or symbols in the middle of a word, such as this variant on the word "houses": hO27usEs!
Leaving Your Full Birth Date in Your Profile
It's an ideal target for identity thieves, who could use it to obtain more information about you and potentially gain access to your bank or credit card account. If you've already entered a birth date, go to your profile page and click on the Info tab, then on Edit Information. Under the Basic Information section, choose to show only the month and day or no birthday at all.
Overlooking Useful Privacy Controls
For almost everything in your Facebook profile, you can limit access to only your friends, friends of friends, or yourself. Restrict access to photos, birth date, religious views, and family information, among other things. You can give only certain people or groups access to items such as photos, or block particular people from seeing them. Consider leaving out contact info, such as phone number and address, since you probably don't want anyone to have access to that information anyway.
Posting Your Child's Name in a Caption
Don't use a child's name in photo tags or captions. If someone else does, delete it by clicking on Remove Tag. If your child isn't on Facebook and someone includes his or her name in a caption, ask that person to remove the name.
Mentioning That You'll Be Away From Home
That's like putting a "no one's home" sign on your door. Wait until you get home to tell everyone how awesome your vacation was and be vague about the date of any trip.
Letting Search Engines Find You
To help prevent strangers from accessing your page, go to the Search section of Facebook's privacy controls and select Only Friends for Facebook search results. Be sure the box for public search results isn't checked.
Permitting Youngsters to Use Facebook Unsupervised
Facebook limits its members to ages 13 and over, but children younger than that do use it. If you have a young child or teenager on Facebook, the best way to provide oversight is to become one of their online friends. Use your e-mail address as the contact for their account so that you receive their notifications and monitor their activities. "What they think is nothing can actually be pretty serious," says Charles Pavelites, a supervisory special agent at the Internet Crime Complaint Center. For example, a child who posts the comment "Mom will be home soon, I need to do the dishes" every day at the same time is revealing too much about the parents' regular comings and goings.
Source : YahooNewsFinance

iPhone Desktop Handset


This iPhone Desktop Handset can convert your iPhone into a desktop handset phone in style. This device plugs into the iPhone’s headphone jack. You can then use the handset of the device to answer calls while using the iPhone to navigate through the different apps and functions. This combination makes it a unique item to have on top of your desk. The iPhone Desktop Headset is available at Hammacher Schlemmer for US$60.
Image Source: Hammacher Schlemmer

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Desktop notifications for emails and chat messages

If you use Google Chrome, these days can be over since we just launched HTML5 desktop notifications which display pop-ups whenever a chat message or new email arrives.


To turn them on, click on the Settings link in the top right corner of Gmail and scroll down to the “Desktop Notifications” section. If you just want to get notified about chat messages, or if you use Priority Inbox and only want to get notifications for important messages, you can customize your settings from there too.


This functionality is currently only available for people using Google Chrome, but we’re working to make notifications part of the standard Web platform.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Introducing Nokia Reader 1.0 Beta for Symbian

Looking for a simple and easy to use RSS reader to manage news feeds on your Symbian^3 or S60 5.0 device? Nokia Reader pushes your favorite news feeds to your homescreen allowing you to quickly catch up on current events.





This useful application is easy to setup: Just select your favorite feeds from a pre-populated list of major news sources or add a new feed just by typing the website address.

And thanks to push notifications, battery consumption is modest and content is always fresh.

Main features include:


Uses push notifications

Content directory

Homescreen widget

Supports Nokia Account

Synology DiskStation DS411slim Compact 4-bay NAS server



Synology has officially launched their newest NAS server that called the Synology DiskStation DS411slim. New NAS device is a fairly compact body with measuring 120 x 105 x 142 mm.


The Synology DiskStation DS411slim is comes with 4-bay 2.5-inch SATA hard drives (HDD), solid state drives (SSD) or hybrid hard drives. It is offers total capacity of up to 4TB and pre-loaded with DiskStation Manager 3.0.


Synology DiskStation DS411slim NAS server is provides Gigabit Ethernet, one eSATA and two USB 2.0 ports, as well as support DLNA media server.


The Synology DS411slim NAS is delivers read and write speed up to 106.9 MB/s and 48.6 MB/s (in RAID 5 configuration).


Specs of Synology DiskStation DS411slim NAS device is a 1.6GHz processor (most likely, Intel Atom), 256MB DDR3 RAM, and 16.8W power consumption in use. The price of DiskStation DS411slim is not reported yet.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Tip & Tilt Internet Radio




The Tip & Tilt Internet Radio is quite unique in that it does not have the usual knobs and buttons for control. Designed as a portable and small box speaker, the Tip & Tilt Internet Radio features a built-in gyro sensor that handles the functions in absence of buttons. To control volume, users only have to sway the radio forwards and backwards to either increase or decrease loudness. Users can also preset four favorite Internet radio stations and simply switch from one station to another by turning the radio from side to side. The radio can get signals from a home’s WiFi connection. This unique Internet Radio is available at Firebox for 90 UK Pounds. That’s around US$144.

Image Source: Firebox

iPad App tells JFK's story

Fifty years after John F. Kennedy's inauguration, a new iPad application dedicated to the late president's life aims to be a multimedia museum for history buffs.

The app, by New York City-based historian and publisher Marc Schulman, includes a new biography titled "JFK History Maker - A Fifty Year Retrospective" as well as photographs, video and audio clips, the text of major addresses, letters, and his calendar.

"The paper book is limited, in that you can't see all the supporting documents, videos and photographs," said Schulman, who simultaneously created the app as he was writing the biography.

Schulman gives the example of someone wanting to learn about Kennedy and civil rights. The user could look into his meetings on the issue and how much time he dedicated to it, watch video clips and read the full text of Kennedy's speeches.

The app, JFK Historymaker, was released this month.

Source: Reuters

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Smartphone apps to help you spot singles

A whole new array of applications on the Web and smartphones are designed to help you spot singles near you.

Five sites out of these are:

Ratio Finder: It uses data from location-based social network Foursquare to map out local businesses based on where men and women tend to meet.

The site calculates Foursquare check-ins by gender and then visualizes the data on a map, currently only available in New York and San Francisco.

The New York map, for example, shows a giant pink dot over the rooftop garden cafe at the Metropolitan Musuem of Art, where it says there are 91 per cent more females.

MeetMoi: Uses your phone to update your location information in real time and send you alerts when potential matches are nearby.

It exists on iPhones and Android phones and uses GPS technology to help users meet people while they're out and about.

After you set up a profile, the service finds two nearby users with matching preferences; it sends each a message, opening the door for conversation.

Skout: lets users see nearby singles and reach out to the ones they want to meet. According to the company, it helps them connect with weekly emails on new singles in their area.

It doesn't disclose the exact street addresses of its users, so the only way others can locate them precisely is if they willingly provide their locations.

Grindr: bills itself as the "the go-to place for gay, bi, and curious guys to meet" and uses GPS technology to help users connect with other men in their area.

Users upload a picture and complete a profile and then use the service to see who's nearby. Accessible via Apple mobile devices and BlackBerrys, the service says its the largest all-male location social network.

PinPointsX: gives users what it calls a "Passion Map." The adult-oriented service says it's the leading application for hookups and can lead users to a night of fantasy and sexual fulfilment

Users upload a picture and complete a profile and then use the service to see who's nearby. Accessible via Apple mobile devices and BlackBerrys, the service says its the largest all-male location social network.

PinPointsX: gives users what it calls a "Passion Map." The adult-oriented service says it's the leading application for hookups and can lead users to a night of fantasy and sexual fulfilment.

Logitech's M515 Mouse is Built for the Couch



The newly announced Logitech Wireless Mouse M515 is designed for use on any surface, even textured ones like fabric and plastic. 

The M515 features a hand-detection sensor on the top so the mouse is only active when there's a hand on top of it, and saves battery life any other time. Logitech says that the mouse can live up to 2 years on one set of batteries, and uses their tiny Unifying Receiver to connect over 2.4GHz wireless. 

The top and bottom of the M515 is built with as few seams as possible and is closed up so it won't collect dust and fuzz. It'll be available in Europe first, arriving in April and retailing for approximately $79.99 USD.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Cloud Computing as Top Technology Priority for CIOs in 2011

The worldwide CIO survey was conducted by Gartner EXP from September to December 2010 and represents CIO budget plans reported at that time. The survey includes responses from 2,014 CIOs representing over $160 billion in corporate and public-sector IT spending across 50 countries and 38 industries.
A ranking of business strategies reported by CIOs (see Table 1) indicates that growth is a core expectation for 2011 and beyond. The move to growth appears to be more of a change in emphasis than a restructuring of business strategies and business expectations for IT, as prior top concerns for reducing enterprise costs and improving business processes remain important.
Table 1Top 10 Business and Technology Priorities in 2011
Top 10 Business Priorities
Ranking
Top 10 Technology Priorities
Ranking
Increasing enterprise growth
1
Cloud computing
1
Attracting and retaining new customers
2
Virtualization
2
Reducing enterprise costs
3
Mobile technologies
3
Creating new products and services (innovation)
4
IT management
4
Improving business processes
5
Business intelligence
5
Implementing and updating business applications
6
Networking, voice and data communications
6
Improving technical infrastructure
7
Enterprise applications
7
Improving enterprise efficiency
8
Collaboration technologies
8
Improve operations
9
Infrastructure
9
Improving business continuity, risk and security
10
Web 2.0
10
Source: Gartner EXP (January 2011)

 

Read More At Gartner Website

Sauna Boy USB Humidifier

This unique Sauna Boy USB Humidifier certainly can be a welcome option for those who hate dry heated air, especially when in front of a computer. The Sauna Boy is a small personal humidifier that is powered via USB just add water inside and it can humidify the surrounding air comfortable enough while you are using your PC. Quite an ingenious yet simple device, the Sauna Boy USB Humidifier is available for order at the Japanese OTAS site for 1980 Japanese Yen or around US$25, not including shipping.
Image Source: OTAS

Wowee One Portable Speaker

new Wowee One Portable Speaker that offers more than just being a standard portable speaker.
The Wowee One Portable Speaker is designed for use with other portable media devices with a headphone jack output slot. It features a standard speaker but also makes use of hybrid technology for added audio quality unlike any portable speaker its size. A standard speaker provides audio for mid to high frequency sounds. It also employs a unique Gel Audio driver that allows it to create a makeshift subwoofer to whatever surface the speaker is placed on. The special gel inside the speaker transfers the sound into the material it is placed on, providing a wide range of deep and low bass range sound options. The Wowee One Portable Speaker is available at the Wowee One website for 50 UK Pounds or around US$80.
Image Source: Wowee One

Samsung NX11 Digital Camera

New Samsung NX11 are designed to provide easy functions as well as better performance to help users capture those perfect images. These features are combined to give photographers more convenience as well as freedom to get the shot they require.
The Samsung NX11is the latest addition to the NX Series of cameras. Not only does it come with inter-changeable lens, the Samsung NX11 also features other functions that makes its use quite convenient. The NX11 Digital Camera features the i-Function system for the lens at a touch of a button. The camera’s i-Function lens can be controlled by using the i-Function button as well as the ring on the lens to control camera settings quicker and without taking the camera off its target.
The Samsung NX11 also has Smart Auto features, shooting modes, smart filters and others make shooting more convenient for the photographer. It is also capable of shooting and recording video in 720p HD quality. Its larger APS-C sensor allows for better quality videos and images. The new Samsung NX11 Digital Camera has just been recently introduced but may not be available yet on the market. Samsung has not yet stated how much it will cost.
Image Source: Samsung

Apple Sells 7 Million iPads In The Last Quarter

During the last holidays alone, the very first popular tablet was able to sell a staggering 7 million units.
According  iApple n announcing its financial results for the first quarter for fiscal year 2011 which ended on December 25, 2010, it sold a total of 7.33 million iPads. This is on top of a very profitable quarter for Apple that posted an overall revenue of $26.74 billion. This is enough to gain a net quarterly profit of $6 billion for the company.
Considering that the Apple iPad was just launched in the 2nd quarter of last year, it may be quite normal to expect such incredible sales. But then again, many competitors are slowly coming up with their own tablet versions that the market will be saturated with new tablets in no time. But it may be quite unfortunate for Apple to be the company to open up this new market for devices that previously hasn’t yet been established.
Credit should be given it to Apple for revolutionizing a tablet market that was once considered as a niche area with no big players and garnering only little attention. Now that Apple has paved the way for this market to enjoy explosive growth in just a span of less that a year, it is getting the attention it deserves with more and more tablet players coming in. It was a big risk that they took with various criticisms floating around concerning tablet devices and how it might not catch on. But they took the risk and are now reaping profitable rewards for it.
The 7 million iPads sold may just be the tip of the iceberg. It may just be an indication that consumers still hunger for such devices in the future. But then again the question remains as to whether people may be as quick to change their tablets for newer versions, just like what usually happens in the smartphone market. Competitors in the tablet market are also trying to obtain their own share and might pose a challenge to Apple and its iPad. It is still quite an interesting market to watch out with probably a lot of surprises in store for the rest of the year.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Tips Help Your Kids Become Better Readers

  1. Hunt for words wherever you are. Play “find the letter” games with your children in the car, at the park, wherever your day takes you. In New York City, it’s easy to find signs with all of the letters, so we take turns going through the alphabet. On the road we use license plates.
  2. Pick out books that interest your kids. This sounds obvious, but we all have biases regarding the topics we think our kids be interested in or what we’re interested in ourselves. While Power Rangers and Scooby Doo books may not be great literature, they inspire my son to become a better reader. We leave the “good stuff” for when we read to him.
  3. Bring books to life using “voices.” When you read aloud, “voice” the characters and add drama to the narration. In a pinch use a reading tool like the LeapFrog Tag or log on to a pre-reading website. Both resources will read books aloud.
  4. Ask questions. Ask them what the events in the story remind them of in their own lives and how the characters are feeling. Or have your child to come up with an alternate ending to the story. Check out Learning if Fundamental for more ideas.

PBS Launches Free Video Streaming App for iPhone

The new PBS streaming video app for iPhone. The free app offers more than 300 videos from 30 shows, including full-length episodes, segments and previews with new content updated daily.

Shows from some of PBS' most popular series are available, including: Antiques Roadshow, Great Performances, History Detectives, Julia Child, Nature, NOVA, and Secrets of the Dead.

While not all of the shows have full episodes available (PBS Kids is notably lacking), most have at least a handful. And some, like Julia Child's Cooking with Master Chefs series from the 1990's, are a real treasure. My favorite is the episode with a pre-celebrity Emeril Lagasse looking downright trim while cooking a classic shrimp etouffee.

The PBS app also lets you look up when future episodes will be airing on your local cable channel and set up reminders in your iCal calendar app.

The PBS app is available through iTunes, and there is a similar app for iPad, as well.

Top 10 Venture Capital Bloggers of 2010

Here is the list of top 10 - along with the blog URL and VC's Twitter handle - below:



  1.  Paul Graham (@paulg), YCombinator, Essays
  2. Fred Wilson (@fredwilson), Union Square Ventures, A VC
  3. Mark Suster (@msuster), GRP Partners, Both Sides of the Table
  4. Brad Feld (@bradfeld), Foundry Group, Feld Thoughts
  5. Chris Dixon (@cdixon), Founder Collective, cdixon.org
  6. David Skok (@bostonvc), Matrix Partners, For Entrepreneurs
  7. Charlie O'Donnell (), First Round Capital, This is Going to be Big
  8. Larry Cheng (@larryvc), Volition Capital, Thinking About Thinking
  9. Dave McClure (@500startups), Founders Fund, Master of 500 Hats
  10. Ben Horowitz (@bhorowitz, Andreesen Horowitz, Ben's Blog

Playboy iPad app coming soon

Playboy will be getting its own App, allowing access to the entire back catalog of the iconic girlie mag, uncensored. Quite how this fits with Apple's notorious censorship of content in other apps remains to be seen - beyond the obvious "Playboy is a really big name, so they get to do what they want" aspect - but, hey! Now you can read it for the articles wherever you go.
The app will be launched in March.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Zoho Books

Today Zoho is launching Zoho Books to the public.
Zoho’s 26th productivity app, Zoho Books, is an online accounting software that gives business as snapshot of money flowing into and out of accounts. The software allows you to send invoices for payments, receive online payments, record bills and expenses, monitor bank and credit card transactions, deal in a variety of currencies, manage contacts, and share data.

Users can generate custom estimates, quotes and invoices in multiple currencies-complete with company logos and other customizations. Users can also receive payments online, automate recurring invoices and other repetitive tasks, and send out payment reminders.
The software, which costs $24 per month, also allows business owners to track bank and credit card transactions such as deposits, fund transfers, credit card charges, refunds and expenses. Zoho Books is also launching with a designated app in the Google Apps Marketplace, which is free.

The Guardian Launches Its New Subscription-Based iPhone App

 The Guardian launches a new iPhone app today, which the paper touts as delivering more frequent updates and broader content. But the rationale behind the new app isn't simply to provide a better user experience, but to initiate the new subscription model that this digital version of the app will provide.
The Guardian already has an iPhone app, one that will be supplanted by today's release. Since it launched in December 2009, it's been downloaded over 200,000 times, and paper says it has a "significantly high" user retention rate, with 75% of those who've downloaded it continuing to use it on a monthly basis. 25% use it every single day.
The existing app will continue to be available, but only for the next six months when it will be shuttered.
With the introduction of a subscription fee, The Guardian's iPhone app joins the newspapers that are trying to find new ways to monetize their content for online readers. According to paidContent, The Guardian has "devalued itself on mobile to between four and 12 percent of its equivalent print subscription price." Whether or not that makes it seem like a good deal for newspaper readers, however, remains to be seen.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

ShareFile Introduces Cloud-Based File Syncing For The Enterprise

File-sharing services are getting pretty sophisticated these days, using the cloud to do a lot of the heavy lifting when it comes to not only transferring files, but managing them as well. ShareFile, a fast-growing company founded five years ago which is based in Raleigh, North Carolina, is releasing a new product called Sync today targeted at enterprises that want an easier way to sync files between desktops and servers. ShareFile competes with services such as Dropboxand Box.net, but is more focussed on IT departments.
Like Dropbox, ShareFile allows you to choose a folder on your computer (PC or Mac) to sync to the cloud. Where ShareFile differs from something like Dropbox is that it makes it easier to sync the same files with multiple users and other advanced workflows. For instance, you can set up one-way syncs just for updating files from a master source, as well as two-way syncs to capture updates from all machines. Also, ShareFile maps to your computer’s existing file structure, so you don’t have to place a file in a special folder to make sure it syncs. Once they are synced, the files are accessible via the Web and mobile as well.
Source: TechCrunch

Ultima Duo Coffee Machine


Different types of coffee creations is not something that any ordinary coffee maker can do. It is something reserved for the Ultima Duo Coffee Machine from Coffee Partners.
Technology lends a hand in the new Ultima Duo Coffee Machine. Aside from being able to provide a variety of different coffee mixtures, the Ultima Duo makes it more convenient by having a 7″ color touch screen for controls. Different coffee specialties can be prepared using the Ultima Duo. It can produce coffee specialties either by the cup or by the jug. The Ultima Duo is designed by Seiger Design and is available at Coffee Partners. It is not indicated how much this coffee machine costs.

Samsung Star II S5260 Announced Officially

Samsung has officially announced the new Star II smartphone, which is a successor to the Star that sold 30 million units recently. The new Samsung GT-S5260 Star II smartphone features a 3.0-inch TFT capacitive touchscreen display and is practically the same phone as the GT-S5230 Star. The Samsung Star II will release next month in Germany followed by other European countries, CIS, South America, India and Middle East. Although there is no word on the price of this smartphone, we expect it to be somewhere close to the Star model.


Korea IT Times reported about the announcement of Star II. In terms of specifications, Samsung Star II is almost the same phone like the Star handset but there are few changes in it. Star II GT-S5260 carries same 3.0-inch WQVGA capacitive touchscreen with TouchWiz UI 3.0 placed over it. Users can customize the interface by adding a number of widgets to the homescreen. For imaging, it offers a mediocre quality 3.2-megapixel camera. The Star II comes with Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n for wireless connectivity, which is the one feature missing from the Star.


Samsung boasts of the Social Hub support in Star II that offers integration of Social Networks like Facebook and Twitter with the phone data. Also, the multi-IM 2.0 offers flexibility to login into multiple IM accounts like Yahoo, Google Talk, AIM, MSN and Facebook Chat through a single app. It's very similar to what HTC started with its Sense UI on smartphones.


Avid social network users would certainly adore this full-touchscreen handset that offers integration of Social Networks and IMs with the phone data. Typing won't be an issue since Samsung has added its own QuickType T9 Trace Keyboard that is meant to be quite useful while chatting or typing text quickly on the phone.


Samsung Star II GT-S5260 also offers 3.5mm audio port to let you plug your favorite headphones and microSD card slot to add more storage.

Ingersoll Rand launches HandPunch 3000 -an innovative biometric security solution

Ingersoll Rand s security technologies sector has launched HandPunch 3000 - an innovative and convenient biometric security solution under its Schlage brand. Schlage HandPunch 3000 provides complete door access solutions and concurrently records time and attendance.

It is an affordable, accurate and precise security solution which saves money over card based attendance systems by eliminating badges and buddy punching, thereby reducing time theft and improving pay roll accuracy. Time Theft occurs when an employee is paid for time, which s/he did not work. Usually this happens through the falsifying of time records. Research indicates that time theft is not confined to any one type of person or industry.

Key Features of HandPunch 3000 are as follows:

User is verified in less than 1 second after analyzing over 31,000 points of hand geometry

Over 90 distinct measurements are taken or unique 9 byte hand template

Standalone unit or multi unit connections possible

Integration with other applications for authentication possible

Enables easy data collection and management

In addition to verifying that 'you are you' at an organization from one to many locations, the HandPunch 3000 meets the special needs of computerised time and attendance systems. HandPunch 3000 also defines 64 different employee schedules to restrict the times that an employee can punch and this reduces the unauthorised overtime as well as early 'in' punches.

Microsoft Mathematics is now free

Microsoft Mathematics application provides users with a number of different mathematical tools that can help students and those interested in maths, get their work done quickly and easily. It will help users learn to solve equations step-by-step instead of providing a straight answer, educating the user and allowing them to better understand the fundamental concepts in pre-algebra, trigonometry, physics, chemistry, and calculus.
Its graphing calculator works much like a handheld calculator, also helping to evaluate triangles, convert units and solve different equations.

The application  is now free, it also comes with a help file to explain its functionality and provides examples of different math problems. Microsoft Mathematics is supported on both 32-bit and 64-bit editions of the Windows OS but it  does require the Microsoft .NET Framework 3.5 SP1.

Facebook stops sharing your address and phone number with developers

Facebook has announced that the feature will be suspended while it makes “changes to help ensure you only share this information when you intend to do so”.

Facebook’s move led to warnings around the Web that warned of how rogue app developers could sell such data on to marketers. While the company’s terms of service for developers forbid this, it was indeed a real risk.
Facebook says that the ability to share your address and phone number with third-party apps will return once changes have been made, which should be in the next few weeks.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Nokia Booklet 3G (Black): Review!



After more than 25 years as a pioneer and leader in the mobile industry, Nokia will bring its rich mobility heritage and knowledge to the PC world with the new, Windows based, Nokia Booklet 3G

Powered by the Intel Atom processor, the Nokia Booklet 3G delivers impressive performance with up to 12 hours of battery life, enabling people to leave their power cable behind and still be connected and productive. Delivering the rich experience of a full-function PC inside an ultra-portable aluminum chassis, the new mini-laptop weighs 1.25 kilograms, measures slightly more than two centimeters thin, and has the features one would expect from the world's leading mobile device manufacturer.

A broad range of connectivity options - including 3G/ HSPA and Wi-Fi - gives consumers high speed access to the Internet, including Nokia's broad suite of Ovi services, and allows them to make the most of every moment and every opportunity.

"A growing number of people want the computing power of a PC with the full benefits of mobility," said Kai Oistamo, Nokia's Executive Vice President for Devices. "We are in the business of connecting people and the Nokia Booklet 3G is a natural evolution for us. Nokia has a long and rich heritage in mobility and with the outstanding battery life, premium design and all day, always on connectivity, we will create something quite compelling. In doing so we will make the personal computer more social, more helpful and more personal."

The mini-laptop also comes with an HDMI port for HD video out, a front facing camera for video calling, integrated Bluetooth and an easily accessible SD card reader. Other premium features include the 10-inch glass HD ready display and integrated A-GPS which, working with the Ovi Maps gadget, can pinpoint your position in seconds and open up access for a truly personal maps experience.

The Nokia Booklet 3G also brings a number of other rich Ovi experiences to life, whether its access and playback of millions of tracks through the Nokia Music Store, or using Ovi Suite to sync seamlessly from your Nokia smartphone, to your mini-laptop, to the cloud.

The Nokia Booklet 3G will widen the Nokia portfolio, satisfying a need in the operator channel, and bringing another important ingredient in the move towards becoming a mobile solutions company.

Further information, including detailed specifications, market availability and pricing, will be announced at Nokia World on September 2.


Booklet 3G full specifications:

Dimensions


Weight (max) 1250 g
Dimensions (max) 264 x 185 x 19.9 mm


CPU and Chipset


Intel Atom Z530, 1.6 GHz
Intel Poulsbo US15W, fanless design


Memory and Storage


RAM: 1 GB, DDR2, 533 Mhz, soldered down
HDD: 120 GB, 1.8'/5mmH/SATA, 8 MB cache, 4200 RPM

Display


10.1', 1280 X 720 pixels, glass window

Battery


16 cell, 56.8 Wh, Li-Ion prismatic, removable design

Connectivity


802.11 b/g/n, 2T2R
BT 2.1 + EDR
Inbuilt 3G modem (data calls only). Different variants: WCDMA: 850/1900/2100 or WCDMA 900/2100 or no modem.
All modem variants have GSM and GPRS
Assisted-GPS



I/O ports


1 x HDMI 1.2 out
3 x USB 2.0
1 x headphone out (OMTP 3.5 mm)with OMTP headsets also functions as audio in
1 x DC-in
1 x SD card reader
1 x SIM / USIM slot


Camera and microphone


1.3 MP front facing camera with integrated microphone


Keyboard


Frame keyboard
2 physical layouts: US (78 keys, 17 mm pitch, 1.8 mm stroke) and UK (79 keys, 16.7 mm pitch, 1.8 mm stroke)


Software


Operating System: Windows 7 Starter Edition, Home Premium or Professional
MS Office Small Business 60 day trial
MS Internet Explorer 8
HDD protection utility, Hotkey utility , Knock Control utility, Power Profile Switcher, Battery Life utility
F-Secure Internet Security 2010 trial


Features:


Up to 12 hours of usage time
A stylish, premium design with a chassis made from a single piece of machined aluminum
19.9 mm thin.
3G/ HSPA with hot swappable sim card.



Source: Nokia

The Computer History Museum

The  Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif.,finally finished a two-year, $19 million renovation and reopened to the public this week.

To mark the reopening, the museum installed a new permanent show called “Revolution: The First 2000 Years of Computing.” The exhibit showcases a number of groundbreaking and fascinating moments in nerd history, and it offers a visual timeline of the supercomputer.
The photos here show a few images from the show, which follows computing from the “abacus to the smartphone.” Also present when the museum reopened were computer luminaries, including Steve Wozniak, one of the co-founders of Apple Computer, and Al Acorn, inventor of the video game Pong.
 Source: nytimes

Travelmatch Debuts Travel Search Engine

Travelmatch.co.uk has officially launched a new travel search engine, enabling people to search for holidays based on requirements rather than the usual criteria such as destination, date, cost and period of stay.

Travelmatch includes videos, pictures, blogs, links to social networks and TripAdvisor reviews for completeness, but the million dollar question is if the site will be able to stand out in the crop of travel-related destination sites and search portals.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Memolane Makes Web Memories Last



Memolane is a venture-funded startup that hasn't opened to the public yet, but if you look around online you can find some invite codes that are still valid. This is really cool stuff.


The service makes it easy to scroll through your personal history, or the history of your friends who use it, and see a wide variety of social media activity data all bound together by time.


Memolane raised $2 million this Fall from August Capital and Atomico, the venture firm run by Skype founders Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis, according to coverage by Jason Kincaid on TechCrunch.


Hopefully an iPad version of this will be available, too. It looks like something made for the iPad.

WordPress 3.0 Surpasses 30 Million Downloads

WordPress has surpassed 30 million downloads today, crossing the barrier earlier this morning.
WordPress employs a counter on its website, counting each and every download of the WordPress software, and with WordPress 3.1 on the horizon its staggering to think just how many blogs there are in use, hosted in numerous countries around the world.

WordPress 3.0 broke the 20 million barrier in October, adding 10 million extra users in just under three months, but it isn’t the only WordPress property performing well for the Automattic, the company created by its founder Matt Mullenweg. WordPress.com, the commercially run arm of the popular blogging platform is growing incredibly fast, with 6 million new blog signups in the past year.

WordPress.com saw its total pageviews for the year stand at 23 billion, up an impressive 53% from 2009. Media uploads also doubled to 94.5 terabytes of new photos and videos, while new posts were up 110% to 146 million. Mobile WordPress blogging was as on the up also -the company’s userbase for its mobile apps increased 700% to 1.4 million in 2010.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Beware of Real kamasutra.pps.exe computer virus

Sophos computer security firm warned that hackers are spreading a nasty computer virus with a file promising a PowerPoint presentation of sexual positions from the Kama Sutra. 

"Be careful what you do with that mouse," Graham Cluley of Sophos said in an online post. 
"When you click on the file you do get to see a real PowerPoint presentation, but in the background a backdoor Trojan called Troj/Bckdr-RFM is installed which allows hackers to gain remote access to your computer." 

Once a computer is infected with the malicious software, the hacker can steal personal information and spy on users' activities or use the machine for nefarious deeds such as sending spam or attacking websites. 

 

In scant consolation, the booby-trapped file did present slides of more than a half dozen lovemaking techniques illustrated from the ancient Indian text, according to Cluley.


Thursday, January 13, 2011

Samson USB Meteor Mic


Samson Technologies introduces a new USB microphone just in time for the new year. The Meteor Mic, a foldable USB microphone, is designed like a retro ribbon microphone of yore, much like many similarly shaped USB microphones. It features a stereo-quality 1/8-inch headphone output, headphone volume control, a microphone mute switch, and tripod legs to support the microphone.
Interested buyers can grab one on Best Buy for only US$99.
Source: Engadget

Google Translate on Android gets experimental Conversation Mode

Google announced Wednesday that its experimental Conversation Mode is rolling out to users of its Google Translate app on Android phones and tablets.

Conversation mode is still in its earliest stages, wrote Awaneesh Verma, a Google product manager in a statement. This is a new interface within Google Translate that's optimized to allow you to communicate fluidly with a nearby person in another language.


The feature, first shown off translating from English to German and back again in September, will allow two people, who speak two different languages, to speak into a phone with the phone translating back to them so a conversation can be held.


The Google Translate update released Wednesday allows for Conversation Mode to only translate between Spanish and English, Verma wrote. Google does however plan to add more languages in the future as the feature moves out of its early public alpha stage.


Conversation Mode works by users pressing an icon on a Android device's touch screen for either Spanish or English and then speaking the sentence to be translated.


The app then translates speech out loud, playing through the device's speakers. Whomever the user is speaking to can then respond in his or her language, which the app will then translate as well, allowing people to -- converse.


The feature isn't always 100% correct, as with any current machine translation methods, but Google is working on improving the accuracy and the number of languages available to users.


Because this technology is still in an alpha stage, factors such as regional accents, background noise or rapid speech are a bit of a problem for Conversation Mode, Verma wrote. That too, one would imagine, would be polished as Google's Conversation Mode technology progresses.


The app currently supports text input for 53 languages and voice-to-text translation for 15 languages.

German firm develops Internet eraser for photos

GADGETS
»
NEWS
German firm develops Internet eraser for photos
AFP, January 13, 2011, BERLIN
A German firm is poised to launch software allowing users to have photos uploaded to websites such as Facebook, MySpace and Flickr erased automatically after a certain time, its head said Wednesday.

The software should prevent the increasingly frequent occurrence of someone being refused a job or running into other embarrassing difficulties after posting a photo that maybe should have been kept private.

Before the user posts the photo, he or she drags it into the programme which assigns it an electronic key that is valid for a limited time period, said Michael Backes, founder of X-Pire.

If someone wishes to view that photo later, the server checks whether the photo has "expired" and blocks it from being displayed if its time is up.

Internet surfers already have the power to delete photos from social networking websites like Facebook, but "experience shows that they don't get round to it," Backes said.

"Most Facebook users, for example, are passive users. They go on, they put on a lot of private information and almost never come back on or they forget their password," he said.

"The software is not designed for people who understand how to protect their data but rather for the huge mass of people who want to solve the problem at its core and not to have to think about it any more," added Backes.

The software will be available "in the next few days" and will cost two euros (2.61 dollars) per month, he added.

However, it will not protect cautious users against third parties downloading their pictures and saving them.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Google launches iPhone app for social place recommendations

Google’s recently launched  Places With Hotpot, has arrived on the iPhone.

Google Places With Hotpot allows you to search for locations nearby based on a number of categories like restaurants, coffee shops, hotels, ATMs and tourist attractions. As with services like Yelp, you’re able to see top-rated locations nearby, rating and reviewing directly from your phone.

The new iPhone app works exactly the same way to the Android app which launched in November. The release follows Google introducing Hotpot-based recommendations to Google Maps in the browser yesterday.

Places With Hotpot is available in the App Store now for free.

How To: Prevent Blurry iPhone Photos

Have a look at the below video to display a handy trick by people behind best-selling app Camera+





Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Dell introduce Latitude 2120 netbook with dual-core Atom CPU



Dell has expanded its netbook lineup with a new model, the Latitude 2120, which is designed with businesses in mind. The 2120 brings the same 1366x768 multi-touch display option as its predecessor, but with a new configuration that integrates a dual-core Atom processor.

The netbook features a rubberized casing for protection against drops, while the keyboard is built with antimicrobial material. Configuration options include 3GB of DDR3 RAM, a 320GB HDD or 128GB SSD, and 3G modem.

The 2120 is now available with prices starting at $474. Customers can choose from blue, red and black colors.

Lijit Hits 1 Billion Monthly Pageviews

Lijit, a four year old Boulder startup that enables publishers to offer a single search box for all their content across multiple sites and advertisers to track website visitors' cross-site interests and in-network search activity, announced today that it now sees 1 billion monthly pageviews across the thousands of sites that use its technology. The company said that 20 million searches were performed with its technology last month.
Lijit's technology is based on a beautiful idea: a search experience is created that includes selections of content across multiple different sites like your blog, your Tweets, your bookmarks and photos. It's not web-wide though, it's all about the constraints. There's no reason why use of the service would be limited to your own content, it could be a collection of any topical, trusted sources. Tens of thousands of sites around the web have implemented Lijit.

Verizon Wireless to sell $200 iPhone

Verizon's announcement on Tuesday that it would start selling the phone on February 10 puts an end to AT&T's three-year old status as the exclusive U.S. provider for the iPhone. Pre-orders start on February 3.

Verizon Wireless said the phone, a version of the Apple iPhone 4 designed to run on Verizon's network, will sell with a two-year agreement for $199.99 for the 16-gigabyte model or $299.99 for the 32-gigabyte model.

The prices are similar to what AT&T charges for those models.
-(Reuters)

Polaroid GL10 Instant Mobile Printer



The Polaroid GL10 Instant Mobile Printer is part of the new Gray Label line that Polaroid recently promoted with the help of pop star Lady Gaga. It features a means to help you print out those digital photos instantly instead of just having them stored on hard drives and other portable devices. The Polaroid GL10 Instant Mobile Printer is small enough to carry around in a bag yet good enough to print 3×4″ photos in less than a minute. The mobile printer uses Zero Ink Technology and prints photos that are smudge-proof and water resistant. The Polaroid GL10 Instant Mobile Printer is expected to be available by May of 2011 and may cost around US$150.

Gift Guide: Techie kids toys for every age group

Whatever your kid's age or personality, here's a short list of toys we think are worthwhile.

For the gamer:

Today's children probably won't remember Simon, the game in which players memorize an increasingly complex pattern of flashing red, green, yellow and blue lights.

Mattel Inc.'s electronic memory game Loopz ($30, ages 7 and up) is a loose remake of the classic. It invites players to follow music and light cues and then wave their hands over one of four areas to replicate the pattern the modern-day equivalent of smacking a color-coded button.

Wordy kids will enjoy Hasbro Inc.'s Scrabble Flash ($30, ages 8 and up), an electronic game that actually resembles Boggle more than it does Scrabble. The game includes five cubes with digital screens, each of which displays a letter. Players rearrange the cubes, clicking them together to form as many words as they can in the allotted time.

For the spy:

Children have long pretended to be playground secret agents, but over time their spy tools have grown more sophisticated. Jakks Pacific Inc.'s SpyNet Secret Mission Video Watch ($50, ages 8 and up) records audio, video and photos. Budding spies can play back video on the watch's 1.4-inch screen or upload it to the family computer.

The company also sells the Net Flex Snake Camera ($30), which sits in one place and beams live video of passersby to the spy watch. Other accessories include night vision binoculars ($50) and a recording pen ($20).

And while radio-controlled cars make for noisy gifts, Wild Planet's Spy Video Trakr ($130) records audio and video and is decidedly cool.

Even Barbie can go into stealth mode. Mattel's Video Girl Barbie ($50, ages 6 and up) has a hidden camera that records movies from Barbie's point of view. Kids can watch the movies on the doll's small screen or upload them to a Mac or PC and then use Mattel's software to add music, graphics and special effects.

For the musician:

The video game "Rock Band" isn't the only way for kids to live their rock star fantasies. ThinkGeek Inc.'s Electronic Rock Guitar Shirt ($29.99) looks like a plain black T-shirt with a picture of a guitar on it. (There's also a drum kit version.)

In fact, each of the buttons on the guitar's neck corresponds to a different pre-recorded chord, which kids can play using a magnetic guitar pick that comes with the shirt. The shirt also comes with a clip-on amp and tone knob so that they can play their music louder as well as adjust the sound.

Parents can remove the electronic components, including its AA batteries, before tossing the shirt in the wash. It comes in children's sizes small through large, which should fit kids ages 6 to 16.

For the bookworm:

If Apple Inc.'s iPad and Amazon.com Inc.'s Kindle are god-sends for grown-ups on the go, these e-readers will keep young children entertained in the backseat.

Fisher-Price's IXL 6-in-1 Learning System ($90, ages 3-7) opens like a book to reveal a touch screen. Kids can draw on it, play games, practice writing, read books and listen to a music sampler. The books are sold separately through Fisher-Price, a unit of Mattel.

VTech's V.Reader Animated E-Book System ($70, ages 3-7) costs less and has a particularly durable, rubber-coated design. It only offers reading games, though, and has a full on-screen keyboard, which might pose a challenge to young children because it uses the QWERTY layout more familiar to adults.

LeapFrog's Leapster Explorer ($70, ages 4-9) skews slightly older with a design that looks like a handheld gaming system. Indeed, it uses games to teach kids reading, match, geography, science and music. The Explorer also has a camera for taking photos and recording video.

For the robot-lover:

As far as toys go, 2010 is the year of robots, with animatronic friends taking the form of everything from astronauts to sanitation trucks.

We have a soft spot for Mattel's Prehistoric Pets Cruncher Interactive Dinosaur ($100, ages 6 and up), a small battery-operated dinosaur whose facial expressions and mean dancing abilities make him more endearing than most.

The little guy comes when you call his name and plays fetch using an included chew toy. All told, he can be trained to remember up to 30 actions and sounds, and is programmed to make 200 sounds and movements.

Meanwhile, Imaginext's Bigfoot the Monster ($100, ages 3-8) pounds his chest, throws things and moves his shoulders, elbows, hips and eyebrows with puppet-like charm.

Bigfoot comes pre-loaded with more than 30 phrases and noises and can be controlled by a remote control whose buttons correspond to different emotions he can express. However, kids can also forego the remote control and do such things as scratch his belly to tickle him.

Fans of this year's "Toy Story 3" will recognize Ultimate Buzz Lightyear ($150, ages 8 and up), the walking, talking astronaut who believes he's crash-landed on a strange planet.

Buzz has more than 100 sayings and is fluent in both English and Spanish. He responds to a handful of phrases, including his own catchphrase "To infinity and beyond!" Buzz can also shoot "lasers" from his arms and change his behavior when you repeat the phrase, "You're a toy." It comes with a remote control with a 20-foot range.

Designed for younger children, Matchbox's Stinky the Garbage Truck ($60, ages 3 and up) can stand on his hind wheels as well as sing and talk with the help of more than 90 built-in phrases. Kids can do things such as touch his head to make him shake it from side to side. Sometimes, he'll even demand food.

Cheap thrills:

Innovation First Inc.'s Hexbug Nano's ($8 each, ages 3 and up) make for cute, inexpensive gifts. These robotic bugs come in an assortment of colors and can fit inside a child's hand.

They move using vibrating technology, flipping onto their backs by themselves and finding their way through optional "habitats," or holding pens that include raceways and bridges (starting at $13, sold separately). Kids can register individual bugs online to unlock games.

MechRC's Dave the Funky Monkey ($30, ages 3 and up) is one of the most adorable robots around, and it costs just a fraction of what many others do. Available only at Toys R Us, this small, furry puppet is meant to be worn on, say, a shoulder or a backpack and is controlled by a remote control designed to be hidden inside a pocket.

He chatters and flails using 16 pre-programmed actions and sounds, and his eyes move. The designers also made other body parts interactive but won't say what they are, as they hope kids will discover them through play.