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Showing posts with label internet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label internet. Show all posts

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Firefox completely rocks: Firefox 4 Beta for Android and Maemo is Now Available

Firefox is going to in your mobile phone and will leave behind the Opera mini ! that's you will see in firefox's new mobile browser. 

 Firefox 4 beta for mobile is now available to download and test. It’s built on the same technology platform as Firefox for the desktop and optimized for browsing on a mobile phone. Firefox beta for mobile comes with many of your favorite Firefox desktop features like Firefox Sync, Add-ons and the Awesome Bar.

A major focus of this release is to increase performance and responsiveness. Two of the big architecture changes are Electrolysis and Layers. alpha contained Electrolysis which allowed the browser interface to run in a separate process from the one rendering Web content, resulting in a much more responsive browser. This beta brings the Layers pieces which improve overall performance and in graphics areas such as scrolling, zooming and animations. For more technical details, see Mozilla mobile engineer Matt Brubeck’s blog.




Firefox 4 Beta includes Firefox Sync to create a seamless Web browsing experience between desktop and mobile. With Firefox Sync, you can take your browsing history, bookmarks, tabs, passwords and form-fill data with you anywhere so you never have to retype passwords or long URLs again. Your Firefox data is completely encrypted end-to-end between your computers so that only you have access to it. (For those using Firefox Sync, be sure you’re up to date.)


This release delivers a rich set of features, including pinch-to-zoom, which is now supported on multitouch-capable devices, and the Awesome Screen, which instantly gives you access to your recent history, bookmarks and tabs just by tapping in the Awesome Bar. See the release notes for a full list of features included in this release.
Firefox 4 Beta for mobile is significant step forward in sharing a personalized, seamless and encrypted Web experience across devices. Developers have the power to use the latest Web technologies like HTML5, CSS and JavaScript to to build fast, powerful and beautiful mobile apps and add-ons that can reach millions of devices. We are excited to see the innovative and valuable mobile add-ons that developers will build for Firefox.
now you will be shocked when you will a firefox 4 beta has speed and all what is necessary for better to surf in mobile! this is the best browser ever I have seen. just go to firefox download page of mobiel and download to your phone and enjoy surfing and change the defination of browser in mobile! (source: Firefox)

BUT THIS IS FOR ANDROID AND MAEMO! that is bad news for us! I hope with seeing success of this two system Firefox will launch for Symbian and onther operating system!

Thursday, September 30, 2010

new service by google: Gmail threading a choice

GOOGlE! what do you think about Google ? this is the most profitable website and business in WEB area. Now I will not talk about it’s growing topic. 

Which E-mail account is using you? If you are not using Gmail (Google) than you are doing big mistake. Yes, that's right. Now a days most problem on E-mail account is 
To managing e-mail. Google is launching new service for Gmail. Google is addressing one of the biggest complaints new Gmail users have about the service: it's giving users a way to turn off threaded messages.

So, google is planning to letting start users toogle between Gmail's threaded "conversation" view which groups messages with the same subject in the in-box and an old-school in box style in which incoming e-mails are displayed in the order they were received.

And yes this service is for regular free users and also for  corporate google application users.

GOoGle has created G-mail as just for E-mail Account but as new technology and new science of WWW and WEB in computer science it  has changed some options and service provided in G-mail account.
Google has already given one option in gmail said “classic” option for unthreaded messages.

Now you will ask this type of questions: 

                                         How to turn off gmail threading?


                                         is there a way to unthread a "conversation"?

check out this "conversation" submitted by google users in forum

click here for How to turn off gmail threading?
click here for 
Is there a way to unthread a "conversation"?



Monday, September 27, 2010

google growing at all: Google Chrome 7.0.517.8 Beta

As you know google is most growing company in internet, it has more plan to make company great. so, google has started many services , And particular that I will talk about google chrome! 

Fastest browser ever !

first google launched its own browser and than seeing popularity, it has launched new google chrome 7.0517.8 beta version. YES, that's right. type in the address bar and get suggestions for both search and web pages. Access your favorite pages instantly with lightning speed from any new tab. Don't want pages you visit to show up in your web history? Choose incognito mode for private browsing. Google Chrome warns you if you're about to visit a suspected phishing, malware or otherwise unsafe website.
 that's all feature of google chrome, and chck out more features with more smart and of course more fastest browser of google. try it out today!

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Internet Explorer 9: From corporate memo to beta


SAN FRANCISCO--Just days after launching Internet Explorer 8 in March 2009, Microsoft's Dean Hachamovitch wrote a memo about what the company really needed to do with the next version of its browser.

"A browser is only as good as the underlying operating system," the head of the IE team said in an e-mail to his staff and others at Microsoft. "We have amazing opportunities to differentiate IE because of the underlying strengths of Windows. Our broad opportunity is making Windows the best place to experience the web."


 
Internet Explorer, he knew, needed to run much faster, be much more standards compliant, and really harness the power of the PC.
Fast forward 18 months and Microsoft now has a public beta of the browser that achieves several of the goals that Hachamovitch laid out in his memo. Internet Explorer 9 has better support for HTML5 and other Web standards, taps the PC graphics chip for hardware acceleration, and includes a much faster JavaScript engine.
On the visual front, the new browser has a minimalist approach. As first reported by CNET last month, the design principle for the new browser is the creation of a theater with individual Web sites as the stars of the show. Indeed, a good chunk of Wednesday's beta launch event will be focused on the work done by the various Web site creators that Microsoft has lined up to support IE9's new features.



Hachamovitch said it is fitting that the 10:30 a.m. PDT launch of the IE9 beta is taking place in the working-class, industrial South of Market section of San Francisco rather than a flashier locale like Union Square. The downscale digs reflect the fact that IE9 tries to do its job without attracting much attention. "This is not an Armani neighborhood," he said Tuesday in an interview at the launch site here.

The launch of a new version of Internet Explorer comes as the browser race has become increasingly competitive and more strategically important. Microsoft's browser, though still the market leader with about 60 percent of the market, has been ceding share for years, first to Mozilla's Firefox and more recently to Google's Chrome OS.

Beyond that, the Web has become the hub of much of people's computing experience and Microsoft is eager to show that the PC matters. By using hardware acceleration, Microsoft is hoping to give people a reason to choose Windows over other current choices and over emerging rivals such as Chrome.

Along with making the beta version available for download later on Wednesday, Microsoft is detailing the user interface and other features of the browser.

As compared with past versions of IE, the new version is far more streamlined, featuring a prominent back and forward button, a single bar for both searching and entering Web addresses, and surprisingly little else. Small icons on the far right let people access settings or their favorite sites, though neither option is given much prominence.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Now IE is worried about users: Download Internet Explorer 9.0 beta for Windows


Microsoft has been developing the Internet Explorer 9 for quite some time now, its only now that a first public beta of IE 9 has been made available, the IE 9 comes with latest browser technology featuring HTML 5, CSS3 support, hardware accelerated text, graphics and video rendering using respective engines, faster JavaScript execution for quick loading of web pages and a neat interface. Download the latest Internet Explorer 9 and check it out right now, download links after the break.



Download Internet Explorer 9 for Windows 7 [Direct Download Links]
IE9 Download Link 32 bit | Filesize : 19 MB
IE9 Download Link 64 bit | Filesize : 35.9 MB
Other versions of Internet Explorer 9 can be found at Microsoft Website

HTC Desire HD and Desire Z Unveiled

credit: HTC
HTC has finally revealed the next generation of Android Smartphones, named as HTC Desire HD and HTC Desire Z, both of them will be featuring Android 2.2 OS with HTC Sense UI running on top of it. HTC Desire HD is basically the HTC EVO 4G minus front facing camera and 4G, it has got the same 4.3 inch capacitive touchscreen, 1 GHz Snapdragon processor, 8 megapixel camera, dual-flash and sports impressive unibody design.


HTC Desire Z on the other hand features 3.7 inch capacitive touchscreen, 800MHz processor and 5 megapixel camera, it also has a slide out QWERTY keypad for easier typing.

Both of the HTC Android Smartphones support 720p video recording and playback capability along with HTC Fast Boot that reduces the time needed to make a call or for checking email.

 



 HTC Desire HD and Desire Z Release Date

October 2010, exact date to be announced later.

HTC Desire HD and Desire Z Price

To be announced later.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

The human process behind Google's algorithm !

Matt Cutts, Google's antispam search engineer and part of the team that decides the strategies behind Google's algorithms.
Matt Cutts, Google's antispam search engineer and part of the team that decides the strategies behind Google's algorithms.
(Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET)
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.--Google is famous for evangelizing the power of the algorithm. It spends less time talking about the several hundred human beings who influence its algorithm.
To work at Google is to believe in the power of automation. "We've found the best approach to search is algorithmic, it's the only thing that works at scale," said Matt Cutts, a principal engineer at Google responsible for keeping spam out of search results. "We want to use computers all the time."
The obvious reality that never seems to come up quite as often is that even algorithmic Internet search is very much driven by humans. Computers and algorithms may be what handle incoming queries and generate search results hundreds of times a second, but just as Porsche engineers design their engines with slightly different requirements than Ford engineers, Google engineers are constantly tinkering with the recipe for search results that can make or break Web businesses.
Earlier this year, Cutts said that Google "tends to make a change to our core search algorithms at least once a day." In a recent interview with CNET, he reiterated that that pace continues: just last week Google search engineers met to consider 27 separate changes to the more than 200 factors that Google uses to rank search results.
In many ways, this is a natural evolution of Google's quest to organize information. The Web changes quickly and dramatically, and a Google search recipe left unaltered would quickly grow stale and choked with spam. Yet the constant tweaks show that the internal debates conducted by a relatively small number of people can have a significant impact on the way the Internet is presented to millions.
Cutts and Google representatives wouldn't disclose exactly how many people work on search quality at Google, but he did say there are "hundreds" involved in the process at a company that employs more than 20,000 people. They are entrusted with making sure Google keeps its place atop the search world, which affords the company a steady supply of cash allowing it to pursue a seemingly limitless number of other interests.
They range from someone like John Mueller, a Webmaster trends analyst who patiently answers questions from confused site owners in Google's Webmaster Central forums, to Udi Manber, a legendary engineer listed next to Google executives such as co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin as the person "responsible for core search." They must balance the desire to provide the most accurate results with the griping of Webmasters knocked down a peg by algorithm changes: not to mention the constant battle by spammers to infiltrate search results.
The Webmaster forums are the first level of Google search where human representatives of the company make their presence felt. A lot of the content in the forums involves tips provided by volunteers for getting your site to rank within Google's search index, Google's trademark approach to customer service. However, representatives like Mueller wade into the discussion threads to provide a more official answer to questions about site tags or inbound links.
Mueller and his counterparts (Google is trying to keep the forums staffed around the clock) also serve as an early-warning sign for engineers higher up the food chain when considering what changes might need to be made to the way Google ranks sites. Cutts considers this a competitive advantage for Google, in that it has a constant human "debugging" system generated by the number of people who care passionately about where they rank on Google as well as engineers who closely monitor feedback in the press, social networks, and Google's forums.
Most of the time the feedback comes from those who could use a basic lesson or two in site design, ordinary small business owners who may know their business cold, but are out of their depth when it comes to search-engine optimization except that they know it's important to rank high in Google results. But on a fairly regular basis, issues generated by complaints from the outside world work their way up to Google's weekly search quality meetings. (Wired ran a good article on the behind-the-scenes process earlier this year.)
Before any such changes are formally proposed, they are tested among small groups of searchers to gather data on the impact, an essential part of the decision making process. A committee then discusses the impact of those changes: at the last meeting, 16 proposed changes required formal discussion while an additional 11 were considered uncontroversial enough to hash out over e-mail.
Each of those changes has the potential to affect search results in a big way. Take for example a recent change to present more results from a single domain when processing a search query like "apple iPhone." Google now presents results from Apple.com sites as six of the crucial top 10 results, believing someone searching that query demonstrated intent to find Apple-affiliated sites, whereas before it wanted to encourage "diversity" within that first page of results. Reviewers, retailers, and others with relevant content related to Apple's prize product suffer the consequences of being pushed farther down the page, or onto the second page.
Those affected by changes to Google's algorithms can file a "reconsideration request" if they believe they've done nothing wrong in seeing their rankings plummet, or if they've made changes to bring their sites back into compliance with Google's antispam rules. That, of course, requires a human to review the site in question and make a determination about the viability of the site.
So behind every algorithm, and therefore behind every search result, is a team of people responsible for making sure Google search makes the right decisions when responding to your query. Obviously, there's no other way it could have happened: Google is a living example of what's possible when brilliant people devise a smart algorithm and marry it to limitless computing resources.
But it also means that search results are dictated by far more than unemotional machines. No Googler sits there and responds to individual requests for "wedding venues in Lake Tahoe." They do decide, however, how Google's algorithms consider content to be relevant to such a query, and which sites are eligible to be presented in those results.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

from Australia's largest technology trade show: EO ultra mobile personal computer

Lia Timson rounds up the coolest gadgets at the latest technology trade show.


                                                                    Tech heads and early adopters must have had a field day at CeBIT, Australia's largest technology trade show. It wrapped up this week, clearing the way for the latest hardware and software to be embraced by consumers and businesses. Some of the gear is already available, other devices will arrive later this year. Much of it capitalises on the trend toward mobile work.
Among the stars of the show was the ultra-mobile personal computer (UMPC) - between a tablet PC and a personal digital assistant (PDA) - with full PC capabilities at half of the price of a tablet. The new $1650 EO from TabletKiosk is 50 per cent bigger than the average PDA, runs Windows XP and ditches Pocket PC applications in favour of full Windows software versions.
It's handier and lighter than a tablet or laptop and more useful than a PDA, primarily because of its 17cm touch screen. The UMPC will come with hard drives from 30GB to 160GB, and with memory up to 1GB. It is Wi-Fi and internet enabled, but does not have a mobile phone, although we are told one can be connected via Bluetooth.
Hugo Ortega, the principal of Tegatech Australia , distributors of the EO, says demand has already outstripped initial estimates, with 250 units sold in the first two hours of orders opening. It arrives in June.
"From what we've seen, there is demand for digital ink to take notes on the screen and have it transcribed to Word or other [program]," Ortega says. He says it will finally do away with paper notebooks carried around by students and note-taking professionals.
Samsung and Asus also have ultra-mobile PCs on the way soon.
Still on the portable stakes, a new credit card-size USB flash drive has arrived.
The compact Wallet Flash  has a double-sided USB port that sticks out and is small enough to fit snugly with other cards in your wallet.
Gilad Grinbaum, the director of G-Innovations , distributors of the Israeli-developed device, says it is waterproof, and starts from $30 for 128MB of storage.
If you're a mobile worker in tough and secret conditions, Panasonic's Toughbook CF-51 arrives in September. It is water and shock resistant and comes in a magnesium-alloy case. The 80GB hard drive is removable for security, and fingerprint and smart-card readers are optional. The series was designed to meet US military durability requirements.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Google makes it official: Phone calls now in Gmail !



Gmail isn't just about e-mail anymore: it's also a phone.
(credit:google voice blog)
Google launched the ability to make voice calls to any traditional phone number from a Gmail account Wednesday, which CNET had reported Tuesday was in testing. It's a blend of Gmail and Google Voice technology that allows users to dial numbers from their computers as well as receive incoming calls through one's Google Voice number.
Gmail users can link their Google Voice accounts with their Gmail accounts to have their in-boxes treated like just another line that will ring when people call their Google Voice numbers, and their Google Voice number will appear on the incoming call screen of those they are calling. A Google Voice account isn't required to use the service, but international calls will be funded through Google Voice accounts.
Calls to phone numbers in the U.S. and Canada will be free, and will cost 2 cents a minute to several other countries such as France and the U.K. The service should be rolling out to Gmail users in the U.S. on Wednesday, with international availability coming at an unspecified later date.
In a blog post announcing the feature, Google would only commit to offering free calls in the U.S. and Canada through the end of the year. Google's Craig Walker, product manager for real-time communications, said the company had no plans to raise rates beyond 2010, but it is still waiting to see if it will make enough margin on international calls to justify the free cost of U.S. and Canada calls. It will cost a little more to call mobile phones in countries outside the U.S., depending on the country.
Google Apps customers won't see this function just yet, no doubt disappointing some small-business customers looking to eliminate their phone bills. However, Google played it coy as far as plans for bringing out a business-friendly version of this technology, saying it wasn't ready as of yet but that it was interested in providing such a service.
The obvious target for such a service is Skype, the most well-known VoIP provider in the world with 124 million active users each month, according to data it released along with plans to raise money through an initial public offering. Google wouldn't confirm exactly how many Gmail users there are at present, only to say it was in the "hundreds of millions" according to Gmail product manager Todd Jackson.
However, Google has no plans to make this service available on mobile devices at the moment, which is an advantage for Skype and other VoIP companies. There are dozens of other mobile VoIP apps--including Skype--inside both Apple's App Store and the Android Market, although mobile VoIP is still a relatively new technology with performance problems from time to time. Google CEO Eric Schmidt has talked many times this year about the importance of developing applications for mobile devices, however, so it's not a stretch to assume Google is working toward making this feature available through either mobile browser or an Android application.
Google plans to promote the new service by installing Google Voice phone booths in various airports and universities around the U.S., where people will be able to step into the booths and make free phone calls.(bt cnet)

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