1 "TAKE NO AS A QUESTION "

Friday 3 May 2013

You could be suffering from 'sitting disease'


You could be suffering from 'sitting disease'



You could be suffering from 'sitting disease'
Staying in a chair for long hours causes ‘sitting disease’

Want to stay healthy? Please stand up. Experts have reported an alarming connect between sitting down and chronic disease.

So, if you have always been inactive and prefer to park yourself on a sofa for hours or just flop down into the office chair and stay there for eight hours, get moving. The butt-bound philosophy is causing a new epidemic that has been referred to as 'sitting disease' by researchers.


What studies have found

A recent study by Richard Rosenkranz, a Kansas State University researcher showed that compared to those who reported sitting four hours or less per day, those who sat for more than four hours per day were significantly more likely to report having a chronic disease such as diabetes, heart disease and high blood pressure. Those sitting for at least six hours were significantly more likely to report having diabetes. The study is relevant to office workers sitting at desks and those sitting for long periods of time such as truck drivers, said the researcher. The study has been published in the International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity.

According to another study last year, by reducing 'excessive sitting' to three hours a day, life expectancy could increase by two years.

Warning stats

-Chronic disease risk 6 per cent higher in men who reported sitting for between four and six hours a day, 10 per cent higher in men who reported sitting for between six and eight hours a day.

-Sitting between six to eight hours a day augmented the odds (15 per cent) of diabetes when matched with men who sat for less than four hours a day.

-Did you know? More than 70 per cent people spend six or more hours sitting a day.

It's all about bonding for Suresh Raina


It's all about bonding for Suresh Raina



It's all about bonding for Suresh Raina
Suresh Raina of Chennai Super Kings celebrates his century against Kings X1 Punjab during the 6th Indian Premier League Match at the M A Chidambaram stadium.

CHENNAI: Suresh Raina is the league's most successful batsman but the only thing that had eluded him over six years was a century. On Thursday at Chepauk, the wait finally ended as he scored a match-winning, unbeaten 100 against Kings XI Punjab. "It's a very good feeling. I missed out on a hundred in South Africa. And when the team needs and you deliver, that's the best feeling, so I am really happy," he said after the match.
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Such was his confidence that he actually seemed to celebrate on 99 because he knew with two balls to go he would not miss out this time. Raina paced his innings to perfection on Thursday. He was cautious but positive and once he reached his fifty, he was unstoppable. Speaking about his innings, he didn't forget to mention the people who he feels have helped make him such a successful batsman in the format.

"I had to be a bit cautious against the new ball. I have been spending a lot of time with Duncan (Fletcher) and (Stephen) Fleming. Michael Hussey has been my role model in this tournament. I am working on my shape with Fleming. Twenty20 is all about how you play your shots and, at the same time, keep thinking how the bowler's going to do," he said.

The left-hander also spoke of the great environment within the CSK team that he feels has contributed to their success, especially in close contests.

"When you have a positive dressing room, you learn a lot of good things. It's all about your attitude, all about your hard work. I believe in hard work, discipline and commitment. Apart from the players, our franchise owners and support staff have also been working hard. We have a team room where we spend a lot of time together. We play table tennis and pool together. So, we are very close and know each other well as a team."

Raina revealed that there was also another reason for the team's grit during tight situations. "I still remember the final against KKR last year where we scored 190 and lost. So there's still that concern. We don't want that to happen."

Bharti Infratel in talks with Reliance for tower sharing

Bharti Infratel in talks with Reliance for tower sharing

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Bharti Infratel, the tower arm of Bharti Airtel, Tuesday said it will talk to the telecom units of Reliance Industries to lease out its towers, a top official of the company said today."We would definitely be in talks with them, we would like to do more and more business with them. So as far as we are concerned they are very credible customer, so we would definitely be in touch with them," Bharti Infratel Vice Chairman and Managing Director Akhil Gupta told reporters here.
He was replying to a question if Bharti Infratel is in talks with Reliance Jio Infocomm for tower sharing.
Last week, energy-focused RIL took a step closer to launching 4G telecom services with a deal to lease undersea cable capacity from Bharti Airtel.
Gupta, however, added no contract is being signed at the moment.
"As a tower company, its my job to go to every operator, existing as well as prospective," he added.
Reliance Jio Infocomm will use Bharti's submarine cable network to provide data connectivity across Asia Pacific.
After announcing the deal, a joint statement had said that Bharti and Reliance Jio would continue to build on this "strategic framework" and consider other mutual areas of cooperation and development.

Bharti Airtel's quarterly profit drops 49 percent

Bharti Airtel's quarterly profit drops 49 percent

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India's biggest telecommunications company Bharti Airtel says quarterly net profit fell by nearly half to 5.1 billion rupees ($94.7 million). It blamed the steep drop in part on higher taxes.The company said revenue for the January-March final quarter of its fiscal year rose 9.2 percent from a year earlier to 205 billion rupees ($3.8 billion).
The company said it faced a tax increase of 1.3 billion rupees ($24.8 million) for the quarter over the previous year, cutting into profits.
India's mobile phone companies have been in a price war for several years that has dented earnings but Bharti said the situation eased in the latest quarter.
Higher operating expenses also brought per-tax profit down by about a quarter.

Cellphone thefts grow, but the industry looks the other way

Cellphone thefts grow, but the industry looks the other way

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When a teenage boy snatched the iPhone out of Rose Cha's hand at a bus stop in the Bronx in March, she reported the theft to her carrier and to the police - just as she had done two other times when she was the victim of cellphone theft. Again, the police said they could not help her.Cha's phone was entered in a new nationwide database for stolen cellphones, which tracks a phone's unique identifying number to prevent it from being activated, theoretically discouraging thefts. But police officials say the database has not helped stanch the ever-rising numbers of phone thefts, in part because many stolen phones end up overseas, out of the database's reach, and in part because the identifiers are easily modified.
Some law-enforcement authorities, though, say there is a bigger issue - that carriers and handset makers have little incentive to fix the problem.
"The carriers are not innocent in this whole game. They are making profit off this," said Cathy L. Lanier, chief of the police department of the Washington, D.C., where a record 1,829 cellphones were taken in robberies last year.
George Gascon, San Francisco's district attorney, says handset makers like Apple should be exploring new technologies that could help prevent theft. In March, he said, he met with an Apple executive, Michael Foulkes, who handles its government relations, to discuss how the company could improve its anti-theft technology. But he left the meeting, he said, with no promise that Apple was working to do so.
He added, "Unlike other types of crimes, this is a crime that could be easily fixed with a technological solution."
Apple declined to comment.
The cellphone market is hugely lucrative, with the sale of handsets bringing in $69 billion in the United States last year, according to IDC, the research firm. Yet, thefts of smartphones keep increasing, and victims keep replacing them.
In San Francisco last year, nearly half of all robberies involved a cellphone, up from 36 percent the year before; in the Washington, cellphones were taken in 42 percent of robberies, a record. In New York, theft of iPhones and iPads last year accounted for 14 percent of all crimes.
Some compare the epidemic of phone theft to car theft, which was a rampant problem more than a decade ago until auto manufacturers improved anti-theft technology.
"If you look at auto theft, it has really plummeted in this country because technology has advanced so much and the manufacturers recognize the importance of it," said Chuck Wexler, the executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, a nonprofit group focused on improving police techniques. "The cellphone industry has for the most part been in denial. For whatever reasons, it has been slow to move."
Carriers say they have faith in the database, which they created with police departments across the country. They also say they are taking independent steps as well to address the problem. Verizon, for instance, says it has its own stolen phone database, making it impossible for devices reported as stolen to be reactivated on its network.
"We do care very deeply about this," said Jason Young, T-Mobile's vice president of product management. "If you've ever lost a phone or had one stolen, it's a scary thing, it's a painful thing and it's a costly thing."
Apple provides some assistance in locating lost or stolen phones with its free software, Find My iPhone, which can find a missing iPhone or remotely erase its data. But the service does not work once the phone is turned off or disconnected from the Internet. To locate an iPhone, an Apple customer can log in to iCloud.com with a Web browser and see a map of its approximate location; then the user hits a button to erase its information.
Google does not include any software in its Android operating system to help people locate a missing phone, although some third-party Android apps offer the feature. Gascon of San Francisco said that is not enough. "What I'm talking about is creating a kill switch so that when the phone gets reported stolen, it can be rendered inoperable in any configuration or carrier," he said.
Some security experts say such solutions are possible. One is software to prevent a phone from working after it is reported stolen, said Kevin Mahaffey, chief technology officer of Lookout, a mobile security firm. There would be ways to work around that, he said, but if companies make it time-consuming and expensive to reactivate a stolen cellphone, then people would stop stealing them so much.
Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., has proposed a legislative solution. A week ago, he introduced legislation that would make it illegal to modify a phone's identifier, among other preventive measures. In the United Kingdom, it is illegal already.
In San Francisco, the resale market for stolen phones is thriving, with a new iPhone netting a thief $400 to $500 in cash, said Edward Santos Jr., a police lieutenant who investigates robberies. The starting price of a new iPhone 5, without a contract, is $650.
Often, stolen phones are moved to a house or storage facility where middlemen erase the phone's memory, Santos said. Clearing a phone makes it difficult for the police to prove a phone was stolen and to return it to its owner.
In at least one case, Santos said, suspects were found to be hacking the phones' unique identifying code, known as an International Mobile Station Equipment Identity, essentially erasing all digital evidence that the phone was stolen. This also makes it possible to reactivate a stolen phone, even after it has been entered into the database. Santos said he suspected that this kind of modification was widespread.
Some industry experts say consumers should have the right to modify their phones' identification features to avoid being tracked.
The right to change the identification is a "pro-privacy measure," said Seth Schoen, a senior staff technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a technology-oriented civil liberties group in San Francisco.
In the last six months, San Francisco police have broken up more than half a dozen large-scale stolen electronics operations, uncovering thousands of stolen smartphones as well as laptops in houses and storage units across the Bay Area. In one raid in November, the police found stolen electronics valued at $500,000. The suspects told the police they sold their entire inventory every two weeks through sales at flea markets in Oakland, Calif., and by shipping the phones overseas.
Recent cellphone theft cases in San Francisco suggest that many end up as far away as Mexico, Vietnam and China.
The international reach, huge profits and technological know-how of these black market operators suggest possible ties to larger organized crime networks, Santos said.
"It could be just a bunch of small groups, but these guys are very well organized, very tech savvy, well trained and well funded," he said. "I think it is just a matter of time before we find the mother lode, a warehouse that is just stacked to the ceiling with smartphones.

Huawei G510 review

Huawei G510 review

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While the market is mushrooming with phones or rather phablets from Indian brands that feature 5-inch+ displays and quad-core processors, many would prefer a phone that comes with a mid-size 4.3 to 4.5-inch display and offers a decent smartphone experience.

The Huawei G510 is an economically priced Android smartphone that offers a balanced specifications set with Android, Jelly Bean in a compact form factor. We try to find out if the phone is a decent buy at a price of Rs. 10,990.

Build/ Design
The Huawei G510 is a plain looking phone that doesn't arouse any emotion at first glance. The phone is a black rectangular slab with rounded corners. The front is dominated by the 4.5-inch screen, with the three capacitive buttons - Home, Menu and Back, for navigation just below it. The front facing camera, a notification light and proximity sensor sit above the display with the earpiece grill and a Huawei logo.

The phone has a removable back cover that wraps around the phone and even houses the power/screen-lock key and the volume rocker, that are located at the left side of the phone. Most smartphones feature the power button on the right side, so the arrangement feels a little awkward for someone who is used to it being otherwise. The Micro-USB port is also located on the left side of the phone, while the 3.5mm headset jack sits on the top. There are no ports on the bottom and on the right side of the phone. The back cover has a textured pattern making the surface rough and less slippery. A part of the back cover is also contoured with the edges giving the impression that it's removable, though the indented cut that's actually used to remove it is located further just below the screen. The back camera lens is located towards the top surrounded by a round ring-like contoured surface that's slightly raised. The LED Flash and a speaker outlet are located at either sides of the lens.

huawei-g510-1.jpgOverall, the device is not very aesthetically pleasing but the plastic material still feels durable and we didn't notice any creaks or wobbles while handling the phone.

Display
The Huawei G510 sports a 4.5-inch screen that has a resolution of 480x854 pixels and colour depth of 16 million colours. The screen has an IPS panel for wide-angle viewing. We found viewing angles to be good although the screen is very reflective which at times makes it difficult to view content. Under-sun legibility is also average.

huawei-g510-2.jpgThe screen renders text, images and icons sharply and the size makes it optimum for watching videos. We also found the touch response of the screen to be good.

Software/ Interface
The smartphone offers Android 4.1 Jelly Bean with Huawei's Emotion UI, a custom user interface layer added by the company. The custom UI modifies the default home screen-app drawer structure of vanilla Android and instead makes the phone a little similar to iPhone's layout, of course barring the fact that the latter's home screen cum app drawer can't keep widgets.  To users who're switching to the phone from another Android phone, the arrangement would be a little unsettling but otherwise it might not be much of a problem.

Huawei-g510-ui.jpg Users can add up to 9 home-screens that can be populated with widgets and app icons. There's a dock at the bottom where five of your preferred app shortcuts can be placed. This dock is static across all the home screens. One can customise the complete look and feel of the interface with themes that offer different icon sets, backgrounds, fonts and even notifications and ringtones. The phone comes with 5 themes with the option to download more from an online store. It even offers 9 different transition effects to choose from.

The notification tray includes toggles for settings such as Wi-Fi, Brightness, Rotation, Bluetooth, GPS, Data, Screen timeouts and profiles (for alerts, other notifications and settings). More toggles can be added to the panel.

The notification tray also features a settings shortcut and a clear all notifications button, along with expandable notifications (expanded with the two finger pull gesture). Android 4.1 Jelly Bean also brings in Google Now, which needs to be initialised for the first time, before use.

For the uninitiated, Google Now is a voice based information assistant and an extension of Google search. You can ask questions and the tool returns answers or search results. It uses 'cards' which are essentially small boxes that offer different sets of information ranging from weather forecast, directions, traffic information, scores, appointments, and currency conversion, among others. Google Now collects information based on the user's behaviour, location, and even e-mail, to offer information automatically.

The three capacitive buttons, Back, Home and Menu help in navigating through the phone, with the Home button also doubling up as an app switcher/ task manager on long press.

Among the widgets, Huawei offers a Me Widget that offers glance able information for time, and weather, in addition to two frequently used contacts, music player and picture gallery. The phone comes preloaded with Huawei's own app store - App Center, App Installer, Phone Finder, Backup, Cloud Sync, Flashlight, Movie Studio, Notes and Weather apps. Huawei's App Center features apps we've not really heard of, perhaps they're popular in China. At times the update notifications were also in Chinese.

We also noticed that the settings menu of the phone offers popular settings under the General tab and hides the complete set of settings under the All tab. This makes things simple for new smartphone users but increases a step for people familiar with the default Android settings menu.

The Emotion UI tries to make things simple for new smartphone users and makes the interface as different from stock UI as possible. At times it adds customisability and eye candy but at others we're not sure it's the best implementation, and we prefer the stock Android UI.

Camera
The phone features a 5-megapixel autofocus shooter that takes average images in daylight. Pictures taken indoors under artificial light were a little grainy.

Huawei-g510-camera1.jpgThe camera app is a little different from the stock Android camera app and also features the Panorama mode. The camera app features settings for white balance, exposure and ISO. The camera can only shoot videos in VGA mode and doesn't offer 720p recording. Videos captured through it were just about average.

Huawei-g510-camera2.jpgThe front camera is strictly functional at best but can be used for casual video chats.

Performance
The Huawei G510 is powered by a 1.2GHhZ Qualcomm ARM Cortex-A5 dual-core processor with 512MB RAM onboard and Adreno 203 GPU. There is 4GB of internal storage, however only 1GB storage is available to the user as a large part is occupied by Huawei apps that are not removable. Users can expand the available storage by adding microSD cards of up to 32GB capacity.

The overall experience of navigation through the interface was at times a little slow which might be due to the heavy skinning. We also noticed lag while running multiple apps in the background which could be due to the limited RAM.

We did not experience much lag while playing casual games or scrolling web pages but graphics intensive games don't run too smooth.

We were not able to play full-HD clips, and the phone's native video player doesn't support formats like .AVI and .MOV natively. The speaker on the phone delivers good quality sound at high volume levels. The headphones that come with the phone offer average quality sound output. The phone also featured FM radio.

Call quality was good, during our testing process but we faced network issues in weak signal areas.

huawei-g510-3.jpgThe phone comes with a 1,700mAh battery, and based on our experience, it will last more than a day with moderate to heavy usage including 1-1.5 hours of phone calls, two e-mail accounts with push notifications, screen at maximum brightness, playing some music and video clips, Twitter notifications and WhatsApp chats. It's also worth pointing out that we had turned off Wi-Fi and auto-brightness, and the phone was hooked to a 3G network. Altering these settings might help in running the phone for a longer duration, depending on your usage pattern.

Verdict
The Huawei G510 is a decent Android smartphone that offers good features in a budget of Rs. 10,990. However, it's not the best phone that money can buy at this price.

At the same price, you can buy the Karbonn S1 Titanium, which has a quad-core processor, and sports a 4.5-inch qHD (540x960) multi-touch capacitive touch display and runs Android 4.1 Jelly Bean. The XOLO A1000 is another phone to look out.

The Spice Stellar Pinnacle Mi-530 and Micromax Canvas HD are also great phones that offer a better smartphone experience, if you can bump up your budget a bit.

Price: Rs. 10,990

Pros
  • Above average performance
  • Decent display

Cons
  • Underwhelming camera
  • Boring design
  • Video recording limited to VGA

Ratings (Out of 5)
Design: 2.5
Display: 3
Performance: 2.5
Software: 3
Camera: 2.5
Battery Life: 3.5
Value for Money: 3
Overall: 2.5

Google Now comes to iPhone, iPad as an update to Google Search app

Google Now comes to iPhone, iPad as an update to Google Search app

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Google Inc is bringing its Google Now technology to the iPhone, where it will compete head-on with Apple Inc's Siri to serve as the primary service that smartphone users rely on to get everything from weather updates to traffic forecasts.

Google Now, which made its debut last year on mobile devices powered by Google's Android operating system, will be available as a feature in the new version of the Google Search app for iPhones and iPads starting on Monday.

Personal assistant technology such as Apple's Siri, Google Now and products created by various start-up companies aspire to play what could become a critical role on smartphones by helping users with daily chores such as looking up information on the Web, handling calendar appointments and managing travel plans.

Some analysts believe Apple's Siri, which comes pre-loaded on iPhones and iPads, represents a growing threat to Google, the world's No. 1 search engine. The information that Siri provides on common topics such as sports scores and nearby restaurants reduces the need to visit Google's search engine, the analysts say.

Johanna Wright, Google's vice president of Search and Assist for Mobile, described Google Now as the next phase in the evolution of search, in which answers are served up without a user needing to type in a query.

The technology taps into Google's various online services, from Web search to personal Gmail email and Google Calendar entries, to deliver relevant information throughout the day in pop-up windows that Google refers to as "cards." By accessing an email with a flight itinerary, for example, Google Now can automatically remind a traveler about an upcoming trip and suggest the best time to leave for the airport based on current traffic conditions.

Unlike the Android version of Google Now, in which users can swipe the phone's homescreen to quickly access the pop-up cards, the version for Apple's iOS will only display these cards when a user has opened the Google Search app.

The smartphone has emerged as a key battleground between Google and Apple as consumers increasingly access the Web with mobile devices instead of personal computers.

In September, Apple replaced the Google Maps app that once came pre-loaded on iPhones with a new maps app that Apple created in-house. The Apple maps service contained embarrassing errors, drawing fierce criticism from consumers and reviewers and forcing Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook to offer a public apology.

Latest Windows 8.1 build beefs up IE developer tools

Latest Windows 8.1 build beefs up IE developer tools

Build 9385 of the upcoming OS update revamps the developers panel that pops up in Internet Explorer when you press F12.
 
Developers who need to peek at the code behind Web pages in Internet Explorer will find more robust tools in Windows 8.1.
A leak of Windows 8.1 Build 9385 reveals an overhaul to the developer panel in IE. Pressing F12 in any current version of Internet Explorer displays a panel that allows you to examine the HTML and CSS code, scripts, and many other elements. Developers can use this feature to analyze the code behind third-party Web sites or to troubleshoot problems with their own Web pages.
Windows 8.1 has upped Microsoft's browser to Internet Explorer 11, which appears to show a slicker and friendlier flavor of the developer panel, which has remained unchanged for the past several years. A video of Build 9385 posted by Bavogames, a tech-focused channel on YouTube, shows the panel as easier to navigate and the code and other elements as easier to modify.
The screen itself also sports a more "Metro" or "Modern" design and resembles the look of the interface in Microsoft's Visual Studio.
A number of Windows 8.1 builds have dribbled out the past couple of months, each one revealing enhancements mostly to the Start screen and other select Windows 8 features. Reports have suggested that Microsoft will also add a Start button and boot to desktop option to Windows 8.1, which is expected to officially arrive later this year.

Twitter gives developers new embedded timeline options

Twitter gives developers new embedded timeline options

Embedded timelines can now have a specific number of tweets, and don't have to have a scrollbar.
Developers got a little more control today over how embedded Twitter timelines appear.
In a blog post Thursday, Twitter said it has made some minor modifications to the way its embedded timeline tool works.
For one, the post said, developers can now choose how many tweets appear, so long as they're happy with a number from one to 20.
Second, Twitter now lets developers decide whether they want a scrollbar to appear on an embedded timeline. Apparently, this is something that people have been asking about. But while Twitter is now enabling those who want to get rid of scrollbars to do so, the company cautioned developers to "consider the accessibility implications of hiding standard UI from users though, and where it's appropriate in the context of your site or application."

Microsoft boasts 400M active Outlook.com accounts

Microsoft boasts 400M active Outlook.com accounts

Microsoft has completed its Hotmail.com to Outlook.com migration and now is claiming 400 million active Outlook.com Web mail accounts.
Outlook.com 
Microsoft has completed moving its Hotmail.com users over to Outlook.com, and executives are now claiming the company has 400 million active Outlook.com accounts as a result.
Microsoft announced the completion of the Hotmail-Outlook.com transition on May 2. The company added that it's migrated 150 petabyes of e-mail over the past six weeks.
As part of the announcement, Microsoft also said it's adding two new features to Outlook.com: SMTP Send, making it easier to send mail from different e-mail addresses, and deeper SkyDrive integration.
The new SMTP Send support streamlines the process of sending from an alias, without recipients seeing a message saying, "Sent on behalf of..." And on the SkyDrive front, users can now insert files and pictures directly from SkyDrive.

In February of this year, Microsoft executives said they had 60 million active Outlook.com accounts. At that time, they said they'd be closing Hotmail and moving the hundreds of millions of existing Hotmail.com users to Outlook.com.
Of the current 400 million, 125 million Outlook.com users are accessing their accounts from mobile devices, Microsoft said.
To those Hotmail users who are struggling with the Outlook.com interface, I'd suggest you check out this video and frequently asked questions document. I've heard from many (many, many) of you that you can't find your calendar, contacts, etc. Hopefully, this page will provide some help.

Google Keep note-taking comes to Chrome

Google Keep note-taking comes to Chrome

Google Keep debuts as a Chrome Web app, bringing its simple note-taking features to Chrome browsers and Chromebooks.
Keep for Chrome.
Google Keep wants to be the app that you dump all your little notes and big thoughts into, and Google introduced a Keep Chrome Web app version on Thursday.
To install it, you must use the link above, as it's not yet available by searching the Chrome Web Store.

Like Keep in Google Drive and Keep for Android, it lets you write notes in a stripped-down interface that lacks all but the most basic features. In addition to standard note-taking, you can change the text color or insert an image.
Keep for Chrome launches in its own window, and it also works when you're not connected to the Internet. Offline may not be a big deal for Chrome as a browser, but for Chromebooks and Chrome OS it's been a poorly implemented feature. Being able to take notes and then have them sync once you're connected again could go a long way toward helping convince people that Keep is a keeper.

Intel has a new CEO: Now what?

Intel has a new CEO: Now what?

Brian Krzanich's appointment to the top job may mean bigger chip manufacturing deals -- with Apple, for instance -- but watch closely for subtle shifts, too.
Intel pitches itself as the sponsor of tomorrow, but it could lose that position if it doesn't break into mobile.
Intel decided to play it safe with its next leader. By going with tradition and tapping an insider, Chief Operating Officer Brian Krzanich, as its new CEO, Intel is signalling to the world that it has no intention of making any radical changes.
Nevertheless, Krzanich will need to make some big moves if Intel is to retain its dominant position in the technology world. The choices he makes in the coming months and years will have a big impact, not only on the company, but also on the future of the broader computing arena.
Krzanich takes over at a time when there are increasing questions about Intel's role in the mobile world and how it will handle the slowdown in the PC market. Yet, he isn't expected to abandon the x86 architecture -- the technology behind traditional computer chips that make up Intel's bread-and-butter -- in favor of the ARM technology popular in processors powering smartphones and tablets. What Intel likely will do under Krzanich's leadership is focus even more on its manufacturing prowess. It may push deeper into the business of building the processors for other chip companies, possibly even Apple, and it may look for ways to pull even further ahead of its rivals in the technology behind crafting those chips. It also could sell some businesses that are less important or lower performing.
"The question [the board members] asked themselves was as we look at the next five to eight years, what direction do we want to take the company and what do we want to leverage?" Evercore analyst Patrick Wang said. "When you ask that question, it makes sense that you stick with your guns here and flex your manufacturing muscle."
Krzanich was widely expected to nab the top job at the Santa Clara, Calif., company. Intel has never picked an outsider for CEO, and it typically signals a successor by naming that person to the role of operating chief. Krzanich has a three-decades-long history at Intel and a deep technical background, both factors that should help him steer the chip giant in the years ahead.
Manufacturing, Krzanich's wheelhouse, is where Intel could make its biggest moves. It currently serves as a foundry for a few smaller chip designers, such as Altera and Microsemi, but none are at the same scale as a company like Apple.
Brian Krzanich, the next CEO, currently serves as Intel's executive vice president and chief operating officer.
Intel has said it wouldn't strike a deal to manufacture chips for Apple, or any other big ARM-based processor designer, unless there's a pretty enticing incentive. But industry sources have told CNET that Intel and Apple have held such talks on and off for the past two years. And Krzanich may be more open to such a move than his predecessor, Paul Otellini, particularly if more of Intel's factories sit idle. A weak PC business -- the chief market for Intel's processors -- means less demand for chips out of Intel's factories. Manufacturing mobile chips designed by others, even those based on technology from ARM Holdings, could be a way to keep Intel's fabs full and generate a new source of cash. J.P. Morgan analyst Chris Danely estimated that Intel's foundry business could generate $4.2 billion in annual revenue by 2017, offsetting the loss of revenue from the slowing PC market.
Aside from manufacturing, an immediate top priority for Krzanich will be figuring out just what's going on in mobile and what Intel needs to do to really succeed in that market. The company has managed to get its chips into a handful of phone models, but it has yet to appear in any major handsets and volumes remain low. It's crucial for Intel to break into the smartphones and tablets as the growth of its core PC industry stagnates. Krzanich will have to determine whether Intel's current strategy is the right one or if it needs to change course.
"Job No. 1 is to break into mobility," Moor Insights & Strategy analyst Pat Moorhead said. "They have to do that."
Intel will also need to look at related markets, like the "Internet of Things." That industry encompasses products that have sensors and are always connected to the Internet, such as wearables and smart refrigerators. And it will need to figure out how to make PCs desirable again. That could include pushing "perceptual computing," such as gesture and voice recognition, or helping design more attractive products.
Intel also will need to defend its position in the data center chip business. The company provides processors for the majority of the world's servers, but some hardware partners have started designing low-power microservers that use ARM-based chips. Intel will have to fend off those competitors while also making sure it's not sacrificing its high margins to gain business.
Krzanich, who will assume his new role on May 16, is unlikely to detail his strategy for Intel until later in the year. Until that time, market watchers can expect much of the same for Intel. But you can bet they're waiting to see what's up next for the chip giant.

Windows 8 Wikipedia page vandalized

Windows 8 Wikipedia page vandalized

Why would anyone wish to besmirch the Windows 8 Wikipedia page? Hasn't Windows 8 got enough problems? Please don't say it's a fanperson from another brand. It seems that it might have been.
 
Every time I see a squirrel squashed, a house painted yellow, or a discarded condom on a sidewalk, I wonder what sort of human might have perpetrated such a deed.
Was it someone angry, someone merely tasteless, or someone who simply hasn't been educated in even the most basic elements of human decorum?
I found myself with somewhat similar feelings on discovering that a human being, or beings, took to the Wikipedia page for Microsoft's Windows 8 and attempted to pervert the course of truth.
For a random visit to this page revealed this notice from the Wikipedia masters: "Editing of this article by new or unregistered users is currently disabled due to vandalism."
In Wikispeak, vandalism means "any addition, removal, or change of content in a deliberate attempt to compromise the integrity of Wikipedia."
Clearly, the suggestion was that people were marauding their way onto the page in order to suggest falsities about Windows 8.
Microsoft's latest operating system hasn't ripped and roared its way to the summit.
Some regard it as a complete failure, believing it to be poorly designed. The difficult and rapid movement of people away from PCs doesn't help either.
The question is, therefore, what facts someone vandalizing the Wikipedia page wanted to alter.
Were the infiltrators Microsoft apologists who wanted to Microsoften the blow? Or might they have been gloating fanpersons of another brand who were desperate to jig at a Windows 8 wake?
It was inevitable, therefore, given my sense of pained confusion, that I would contact Wikipedia to ask whether Montagues or Capulets were involved.
I know that people like to alter the Wikipedia pages of real human beings, in order to make those human beings look better or worse.
It's the incursion onto something as theoretically innocuous as the Windows 8 page that seemed so very troubling. Especially when the page is remarkably thorough.
A spokesman from the Wikimedia Foundation helped me reach the core of the vandalism. Wikipedia keeps a record of it all.
Essentially, much of Windows 8 page was erased and replaced with this in the reviews section:
Everyone hated Windows 8. The interface was useless, it looked like a drag queen on steroids. And the operating system is extremely unstable on mobile devices, which would guaranteeing angry shoppers who has used a mobile device that ran on a Windows OS before. Save yourselves and use either an iPad or an Android mobile device.

You might imagine that this was swiftly noticed.
However, the vandal was undeterred.
He or she (and the IP address strongly suggests it's someone from a college in the Miami-Dade area of Florida) wiped the whole Windows 8 page, offering instead: "window 8 is a Flop Programme....All editors ki maa ki chooooot......saaley Rundi baaz."
Currently, the page is on a very low-level lockdown, just in case this wag (or any other) chooses to return to the scene once more to offer edited guidance.
The Wikimedia Foundation doesn't chase those who perpetrate such amusements. It seems to accept it as part of the encyclopedia of life.
Indeed, on occasion, there can occur truly witty forms of vandalism.
In March, for example, LeBron James rather humiliated Boston's Jason Terry with a dunk.
Almost immediately, Terry's Wikipedia page read: "Born September 15 1977. Died March 18 2013 9.01pm."
The poster added: "The cause of death is being viciously dunked on."

Hate Facebook mobile ads? Now you can hide them

Hate Facebook mobile ads? Now you can hide them

The social network lets users hide some mobile ads, with even more ad-nixing options on the way.
Facebook is letting mobile users hide ads in their News Feeds, the company confirmed today.
This applies to the ads that Facebook Pages share featuring photos or links, and is available on iOS, Android, and the mobile Web (Pages are Facebook profiles for brands or public figures). The feature, which was already available on the desktop, has been live for about six months now, according to a representative. Just click the "x" button in the top right of the advertisement.
The Atlantic noted this change after writing an article about how annoying the Facebook mobile ads were.

Additionally, more options are on the way. In the next two or three weeks, Facebook will start offering the "x" button for ads designed to get people to install mobile apps, and for ads that show up when your friends have "liked" a page.
These features will land on iOS first, followed by Android.
According to Facebook, it's about enhancing people's control over the content they see, while also letting advertisers better target customers. Targeting is important to Facebook, hence one of its latest ad products, custom audiences. That's a targeting tool that keeps "x-out" rates down by 15 percent, according to Facebook.

Thursday 2 May 2013

Today`s Quote

“You can't live your life for other people. You've got to do what's right for you, even if it hurts some people you love.”

HR believes in innovation and not management skills

HR believes in innovation and not management skills


HR believes in innovation and not management skills The role of an HR in startups is to drive the workforce through effective action and not by means of their position

Needless to say, both large and small companies face a number of HR challenges such as recruitment issues, communication problems, setting up of roles and responsibilities, processing of remuneration, etc. While in larger corporations HR is responsible for specific functions, in start-ups they take on multiple roles. The role of HR professionals in start-up companies is primarily to drive the workforce through effective action and not by means of their position. They have to play multiple roles and don various hats.
Some of the key processes that HR professionals in start-ups have to focus on:
-          Retaining right group of talent
-          Creating appropriate job descriptions
-          Dividing job roles/responsibilities
-          Set up proper communication between the team members
-          Working on the basics of recruitment
Being different…
“HR folks in start-ups are a different blend of individuals who keep challenging themselves to do more. They are driven and have enhanced skills in their domain which makes them different. Often they wear multiple hats and have to be more innovative to attract, retain and develop talent without adequate resources, especially during their foundation days,” says Vishnu Iruvanti, HR Manager, Myntra.com.
Manpower is inadequate, funding and resources are scarce; yet HR professionals in start-ups have to be able to create something big from almost nothing. As Iruvanti says, “Constraints always bring out the best in people.”
Innovation is key
The way HR manages people in a start-up makes all the difference, innovation is critical. According to Deepak Singh, general manager, Nature’s Feast (an e-grocery company), “In smaller companies the key word is not management, but innovation.”
He further adds, “In bigger corporations it is people management for HR, but in smaller companies it is a combination of passion and the ability to change the game as they go along. They need to identify the strength and the weakness of the human resource and set practical targets.”
HR in smaller companies has to think of out of the box solutions for everything from job descriptions to engagement of employees. Sahil Baghla, co-founder, Bluegape.com (online fan merchandising store), says, “In a start-up we do things which no one has done before, instead of people with 5 years of experience in something, we look for people who can learn fast and have a raw skill set. We look for raw intelligence and those who can perform well in a team.”
For a start up, people are the competitive advantage in the market, and HR can make all the difference by hiring and managing right.

Top 6 foods for your hair


Top 6 foods for your hair



Top 6 foods for your hair
Top 6 foods for your hair

Here's how paying a little more attention to diet can add to the shine of your mane.

It's not called the crowning glory for nothing. Deepika Padukone's hair in the movie Cocktail was a head-turner. Now that's what you call statement hair. Beautiful, lush thick hair is a symbol of your body's well-being. Hair care and maintenance goes beyond oiling them with exotic oils and using your fancy-schmancy shampoos, conditioners, serums and other products from your beauty arsenal.
What you eat can make your tresses even better or just worsen their condition. Here's a list of some yummy foods that you must add to your diet for the model mane.

1. Salmon:
Fish makes any diet healthy, salmon is the fish for hair. This oily fish is rich in omega-3 fatty acids, Vitamin B12 and iron. Clubbed together, these components can restore the shine in your tresses. Omega-3 fatty acids are essential to retain a healthy scalp. A deficiency of omega-3 fatty acids can leave you with a dry scalp and dull, lifeless hair. Can't get your hands on salmon? Substitute it with flaxseed instead.

2. Eggs and chicken:
You know dieticians and trainers always urge you to have eggs and chicken to increase your protein intake. Hair and nails are composed of protein. Needless to say, consuming chicken and eggs encourages hair growth as well as curbs hair fall and breakage. Eggs are full of vitamins from the B-group, especially B12 and B7 (biotin). Chicken is a rich source of protein and helps strengthen fragile hair.

3. Beef and oysters:
Beef and oysters are rich sources of zinc, which is why they are helpful in improving the appearance of hair. Zinc deficiency is a cause of hair loss, so do include beef and oysters in your diet. Zinc also helps combat premature greying of hair.

4. Nuts and almonds:
Chomp on nuts like walnuts and almonds which are rich in omega-3 fatty acids (hair regenerator) and zinc (hair loss preventer).

5. Lentils:
Lentils are full of folic acid. Folic acid is necessary in restoring the health of red blood cells that supply skin and scalp with much-needed oxygen. Folic acid is also essential for hair growth and cell renewal. If you are serious about having healthy hair, lentils are something you should just not skip.

6. Carrots:
Everyone knows carrots are an excellent source of Vitamin A. Vitamin A encourages the formation of sebum (oil) in the scalp. Sebum is important to keep the scalp and hair well moisturised and maintain their health. Just like overactive sebaceous glands cause conditions like acne, low secretion of sebum damages hair causes flaky scalp and dandruff.
Tips:

Vitamin C
Make sure you include Vitamin C in your diet as it is necessary for the absorption of zinc.

Hydrate
Water helps to maintain the moisture content as well as keeps the hair healthy and shiny.

Keep that body moving
Exercise releases happy hormones and helps combat stress, which is a major reason for hair fall.

Fad diets
Diets that promise drastic weight loss should be avoided at every cost. You might be successful in knocking off those nasty extra kilos but it adversely affects hair and skin.

Sony, HP slash prices of Windows 8 laptops


Sony, HP slash prices of Windows 8 laptops



Sony, HP slash prices of Windows 8 laptops
Sony and HP have cut prices of Windows 8-based laptops in India by up to Rs 2,000.
BANGALORE: Amidst slowing personal computer sales and lukewarm consumer interest in Microsoft's latest operating system, at least two device-makers have cut prices of Windows 8-based laptops in India.

This comes just days after PC-makers in the United States dropped prices to combat slow sales for such devices. Sony and Hewlett-Packard have dropped the prices of laptops based on Microsoft's touch-based operating system by as much as Rs 2,000 over the past two weeks, according to leading multi-brand retailers.

While Sony called it "routine," HP declined to comment citing the silent period ahead of its earnings announcement on May 21. But analysts said these price cuts are aimed at pushing sales.

"For PC makers, it is really a question of survival," said Sumanta Mukherjee, analyst at market research firm Cybermedia Research. "With all the money now being spent on smart phones, PC firms expect price cuts to generate some fresh demand. Additionally, there hasn't been a huge interest for Windows 8-based PCs."

Windows 8 is the biggest attempt yet by the Seattle-based software company, which has dominated the PC market, to make its operating system more appealing as consumers are shifting preference from computers to touch-based mobile devices.

PC shipments in India barely grew in 2012 to 11 million, from 10.5 million units in the previous year. Global PC sales fell 6.4% to 89 million units, according to technology market researcher IDC. Launched in October last year, Windows 8 comes with a common touch-based interface for laptops, tablets and mobile phones. Over the past few quarters, device manufacturers have been betting on the success of Windows 8 to spur PC sales, which has been falling in most of developed markets.

But analysts said there is little evidence yet that Microsoft's latest software has had much influence among consumers. "A touch-based laptop with full functionality, in the Rs 30,000- Rs 35,000 price range might just be the trigger for Windows 8 in India," said Kiran Kumar, research manager at IDC.

Kumar said prices of Windows 8-based PCs were kept artificially inflated for a while as vendors tried to sell Windows 7 stock.

Chennai Super Kings not taking it for granted


Chennai Super Kings not taking it for granted



Chennai Super Kings not taking it for granted
"I don't think we would really rest anyone (for the next game). I think it's important to continue playing your best XI," skipper Dhoni said after Tuesday night's win over the Pune Warriors. (TOI Photo)

CHENNAI: MS Dhoni's Chennai Super Kings go into their penultimate home game against Kings XI Punjab on Thursday knowing that a win will all but assure a playoff spot. With six wins on the bounce, confidence is high but the men in yellow are in no mood to take their feet off the gas despite sitting comfortably at the top of the pile with 16 points.


"I don't think we would really rest anyone (for the next game). I think it's important to continue playing your best XI," skipper Dhoni said after Tuesday night's win over the Pune Warriors.

His words made it pretty clear that CSK are looking to finish at the top to give themselves the best chance of making another final, rather than be content with a playoff spot.

CSK are being driven by their skipper himself and Dhoni's influence on games in this year's tournament can never be understated. He was, yet again, he was the game-changer on Tuesday with a 16-ball 45 that took CSK to a winning total.

Like CSK, Kings XI are also led by a wicketkeeper but the great Adam Gilchrist took a cue from fellow Australian great Ricky Ponting and dropped himself after a string of poor performances. David Hussey is expected to lead them again in Chennai.

The home team goes up against a Punjab side that can punch above their weight but their inconsistency sees them sitting in sixth place on 8 points. However, if a couple of key moments had not gone against them, they could have pulled off a stunning upset in their last game against the Mumbai Indians in Mumbai.

IPL 6: Mumbai choke in Hyderabad


IPL 6: Mumbai choke in Hyderabad



IPL 6: Mumbai choke in Hyderabad
Sunrisers Hyderabad player Shikhar Dhawan celebrates his fifty runs during their IPL6 match against Mumbai Indians in Hyderabad on Wednesday.

HYDERABAD: It is a formula that has served Sunrisers Hyderabad rather well in the tournament, the formula of forcing the opposition to play into their hands.
Watch IPL Videos | Scorecard | Match in Pics

MUMBAI: Indians were their latest victims at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium. The seven-wicket win on Wednesday was another statement that with 12 points from 10 games, home is where Sunrisers are at their best.

They easily negated the Mumbai bowling attack. Their own bowlers restricted the visitors to 129 for four after they chose to bat. Shikhar Dhawan (73 n.o., 84m, 54b, 9x4, 6x1) marshalled the chase brilliantly. Sunrisers overcame the loss of Akshath Reddy cheaply and skipper Kumar Sangakkara just as he was beginning to look dangerous and won the match by seven wickets with 12 deliveries to spare.

The southpaw had missed out in the last match but he stood firm after Harbhajan terminated the 37-run stand for the second wicket between Dhawan and Sangakkara (21, 21b,3x4) and in finding boundaries at will, ensured Mumbai Indians' three-match win streak ended with a crushing defeat.

GH Vihari (25 runs, 23b, 2x4) was an ideal foil and kept the fielders busy with their 74-run stand for the third wicket (57b).

Microsoft launches Skype Video Messaging preview for Windows users

Microsoft launches Skype Video Messaging preview for Windows users

skype-video-messaging-windows.jpg
Microsoft has launched the preview of Skype Video Messaging for Windows desktop version of the app on Windows 7 or above. However, the feature is not available yet on Skype for Windows 8, the Metro UI/ Modern UI version of the app.

Through Skype Video Messaging, users can record a video message of up to 3 minutes and send it to people on their contacts list any time, even when they're offline. The recipients will be able to watch the video message when they sign-in next time.

To get access to the Skype Video Messaging preview, users will need to download the latest beta version of Skype for Windows desktop on Windows 7 or above. However, Microsoft mentions that the beta version of Skype for Windows desktop with Video Messaging in preview may not be available in all markets and that it requires Adobe Flash player to be installed.

The video messaging feature is already available as a preview for users of Skype for Mac, Skype for iPhone, Skype for iPad and Skype for Android. It was first launched in February, initially available to Skype users in the US and UK. The Video Messages feature is part of Skype Premium, and users can send 20 free messages after which they need to subscribe to Skype Premium for a monthly fee of $4.99 (if subscribed annually) in order to continue using it.

While Skype for Windows 8 and Skype for Windows Phone users can also receive and view Video Messages, they can not record and send Video Messages, at this point in time. According to Microsoft, the functionality would be extended to these platforms in the near future.

Intel to announce first Atom chip redesign

Intel to announce first Atom chip redesign

Intel's redesigned Atom will offer performance that gets closer to mainstream laptop processors.
Asus may be eying new Android devices with Intel chips.
Asus may be eying new Android devices with Intel chips.
Intel will detail plans for the first redesign of its Atom processor since its launch in Netbooks five years ago.
On May 6, the chipmaker is expected to announce the Silvermont micro-architecture, which will spawn Bay Trail and Merrifield processors, for tablets and smartphones, respectively.
"Intel Executive Vice President Dadi Perlmutter will...talk about Intel's next-generation Atom micro-architecture targeted at a range of market segments from low power tablets and smartphones, to microservers, the data center, and much more," Intel said in a statement Tuesday.
The new Atom uses a higher-performance out-of-order design, just like Intel's mainstream Core processors, and uses a fast Intel graphics chip, also like its mainstream cousins.
In other words, this is a very different creature from the Atom chip that's been around since 2008.
And the new Atom will integrate up to four processing cores based on the company's 22-nanometer 3D transistor design -- all firsts for an Intel chip that's designed for tablets and small devices.
Maybe most importantly, it will (according to leaked slides) be just as battery friendly as the current Atom.
The redesign is a crucially important step for Intel. Windows 8 tablets will be undoubtedly faster and should be better at multitasking Windows 8 applications -- a sore point for the current Atom.
And this will also present new competition for ARM chip vendors like Qualcomm and Nvidia, which dominate Android devices. Laptops and hybrids from vendors like Acer and Asus are expected to run Android on Intel.
Products with the Bay Trail processor should appear in time for the holiday season. New Android phones using Merrifield processors should emerge by early next year.
The Atom processor debuted in 2008 in Netbooks, which were a a sensation for a while but faded in the face of tablet competition.
New Windows 8 tablets from PC makers like Lenovo should also tap Intel's Bay Trail chip.
New Windows 8 tablets from PC makers like Lenovo should also tap Intel's Bay Trail chip.

Facebook courts small businesses with new ad type

Facebook courts small businesses with new ad type

With Promoted Page Likes, the social network targets local merchants with smaller budgets and basic targeting needs.
 
Facebook is providing Page owners with a basic way to pay to garner more "likes." Promoted Page Likes is a new ad tool attached to Pages and is meant to more conveniently serve small businesses that don't have the targeting requirements, or budgets, of bigger companies. Tuesday marks the global rollout of the tool, first introduced in the U.S. in December, a Facebook spokesperson told CNET.
Page owners can make the simplified ad buys from the admin section of their Pages and choose between showing their ads to people nearby, or in the same city, state, or country. The like campaigns run inside Facebook's desktop and mobile News Feed.
Promoted Page Likes isn't a major advertising initiative, but the new tool could help Facebook sell units to a clientele, local merchants with little budgets for instance, who may not otherwise spend on the social network. The ad play also aligns nicely with Facebook's interest in getting members and business owners to think of the social network as a local search engine.

Yes, you can tweet from Google Glass

Yes, you can tweet from Google Glass

LeWeb founder Loic Le Meur confirms to CNET that he's been using a third-party tool called GlassTweet to tweet photos.Due to erroneous information provided by a source, the original version of this report misidentified the app as an official Twitter app for Google Glass. It is in fact an app produced by a third party.

There's no doubt about it: Google Glass is already being used to send tweets.
For now, however, it's not known for certain that anyone has done so with an official Twitter app for Google's wearable computer. What is known is that LeWeb founder Loic Le Meur has been testing out a third-party app called GlassTweet that offers users a rudimentary way to tweet photos but little else.
This afternoon, Le Meur tweeted a photograph taken in San Francisco using the hashtag "#throughglass."
Le Meur said that GlassTweet is "very simple, and it's very limited. Basically, you take a picture. You take it with your voice, which is cool, especially when you're driving."
He added that the app offers multiple ways to share a photo. First is Google+, which makes sense given Glass' provenance. Twitter is second.
Though GlassTweet is a third-party app, there's still reason to believe that Twitter has an official app in the works.
TechCrunch reported Monday on the likely appearance of tweets being posted in the wild from what seemed like a Twitter-created app for Glass. But Twitter wouldn't comment about it, and the tweet that spurred the report was quickly removed.
In its article, TechCrunch pointed out recent comments made by A-list venture capitalist John Doerr, who was heard to have dropped hints at a meeting of the Glass Collective that Twitter would likely soon put out an app for Glass.
What Le Meur's tweet showed is that Glass is ideal for tweeting photographs. But the question about such a device -- and Twitter apps, whether official or third-party, for it -- is whether it would be useful for more text-oriented purposes.
That's the obvious challenge for Twitter, and others jumping on Glass. Can they adapt to the device's voice and tap interface? Taking a picture with Glass and tweeting it is a relatively simple function of setting the Twitter app up for the device. Twitter, however, has traditionally been a text input service, used with a keyboard, even if that keyboard is usually on a mobile device.
Now Twitter service is starting to branch out, and Glass could well present its users with new use cases, such as video "tweets" from Vine and audio tweets with a limited time span, a kind of parallel to the 140-character limit. Presumably, Glass could enable users to dictate tweets to Glass, but voice recognition has clear limitations, and plenty of inaccuracy. So it remains to be seen how such applications will play out on the device, and on other similar wearable computing equipment that is sure to come along.

IE 10 doubles its share of desktop browser market

IE 10 doubles its share of desktop browser market

The latest version of IE now claims 6 percent of the browser desktop market, according to Net Applications.
 
Internet Explorer 10 doubled its reach last month thanks to its recent debut for Windows 7.
In April, Microsoft's latest browser won a 6 percent share of all traffic seen by Net Applications, a healthy rise from the 2.93 percent captured in March. Of course, the bounce isn't too surprising.
Up until recently, Internet Explorer 10 existed only in Windows 8 and RT. But in late February, Microsoft released it for Windows 7 users. Among all desktop browser versions, IE 10 is now in sixth place, trailing slightly behind IE 6.

Internet Explorer 8 is the top dog with a 23 percent share, followed by IE 7 with 18 percent. Google's Chrome version 26 holds 13 percent, while Firefox 20 is in fourth place with a 9.5 percent share.
Among the rival browsers in general, IE holds the overall lead with almost 56 percent of the market. Firefox takes second place with 20 percent, leaving Chrome with a little more than 16 percent and Safari with 5.3 percent.
In the mobile arena, Safari for iOS lost a bit of ground last month as its share dropped to 59.4 percent from 61.8 percent in March. At the same time, the stock Android browser and Google Chrome eked out minor gains, while Opera Mini saw its share jump to 9.9 percent from 8.4 percent the prior month.

LinkedIn turns online resumes into professional portfolios

LinkedIn turns online resumes into professional portfolios

Now users can upload videos, images, and other rich media to showcase their work and skills on the professional social network.
LinkedIn users can now upload images of their work to their profiles and have discussions about it with members in their networks.
LinkedIn is letting users take their online resumes to a whole new level. The social network announced Wednesday that people now have more options to visually showcase their work experience and talent with videos, images, and photos.
For example, graphic designers can show images of their past projects, photographers can show examples of their snapshots, and advertisers can launch videos of previous campaigns. With this new feature, LinkedIn is aiming to let users turn their text-only resumes into interactive lookbooks.

"You can illustrate your greatest achievements in the form of stunning images, compelling videos, innovative presentations and more," LinkedIn product manager Udi Milo said in a blog post Wednesday. "From the analyst who makes annual predictions on tech trends to the 3D animator who is looking to fund a new short film, the opportunities are limitless for how professionals can now use the LinkedIn profile to help showcase these unique stories in a visual way." To make changes to their profiles, users can click "edit" and then follow the prompts in each relevant section, such as "Summary," "Experience," and "Education." The social network is also boosting user interaction by setting up comment sections where people can like and discuss each other's work.
LinkedIn has been amping up its features over the last few months. Just in April, the site added mentions for English-speaking members to stimulate more conversation, launched a desktop and iPhone app to let users stay in touch with their most important contacts, and acquired the newsreader app Pulse to bring users more content.

Hey Google Glass, are you recording me?


Hey Google Glass, are you recording me?

The Glass display is on when in record mode, but it's not easy to detect from a distance or if you are unaware that someone with strange glasses is staring at you.


Google Glass display shows cards with information customized for each user. (Credit: Google)
Google's Glass is officially in the wild. There are sightings of Glass explorers -- a few thousand people who are paying $1,500 to be among the first to put Glass through its paces -- beyond Google's campus. The initial in-depth reviews are trickling in, assessing the new wearable computer as innovative, functionally limited and pricey.

The Google Glass display is visibly on when recording video or taking pictures.
While Google Glass has a cool factor, it may make some people on the other side of the lens uncomfortable. They could be concerned about being recorded without some indication that Glass has them in its sights. There is no tiny red LED light flashing when Glass is in recording mode. However, the Glass display is on when recording, and people in close proximity on the other side of the lens can see the tiny reverse image of what's on the display. But the act of recording video or picture taking may not be that obvious from a distance or to the uninitiated. It's clearly less obvious than someone pointing a phone in your direction.

Noble Ackerson, a business strategist and software developer in Washington, D.C., has been using Glass daily for the last ten days, and believes the privacy concerns related to surreptitious recording are overblown. "In my experience more people take a picture or video of me than anyone asking me if I am recording them. The privacy concerns are based around people not having the device in hand yet and not understanding the social signals."
At this juncture, however, Glass is more of a curiosity item than a well understood technology with established social norms.

Nobel Ackerson
In an interview with the BBC Eric Schmidt, Google's executive chairman, noted the privacy concerns.
"The fact of the matter is we'll have to develop some new social etiquette. It's obviously not appropriate to wear these glasses in situations where recording is not correct, and indeed you have this problem already with phones," Schmidt said.
Ackerson doesn't think that Glass will be of any use to those who want to play spy.
"It's a horrible snooping device. In order for me to record a person across the room I would have to be staring at them, which is very awkward," he said. "If you wanted to do something convertly, you could find a better device. People generally don't want to invade peoples' privacy, and there are better tools like CCTV cameras or Memoto life-logging camera."
Tech guru and Glass fan Robert Scoble shares Ackerson's view that privacy concerns are misplaced. In a post he wrote, "The privacy advocates have overplayed their hand and as more and more of you get Glass you'll see just how. Their fears of the future have led them down a bad path....if I really wanted to capture you, I'd just rent a 600mm lens and a parabolic microphone (which is what NFL Football does to make those cool movies where you can listen to the quarterback). I'd just sit across the street."
What's clear, no matter what rules of Glass etiquette evolve, is that the future will be recorded exponentially more than the past, and it will be increasingly difficult to stay out of the picture.

Apple remains tablet king, but Samsung climbs

Apple remains tablet king, but Samsung climbs

Apple comes in at No. 1 in the world's tablet market, but the share of No. 2 device maker Samsung grows quickly.
The iPad Mini isn't so easy to take apart. 
The tablet market has grown by more than 140 percent over the course of a year, with Apple continuing to reign as the No. 1 provider of tablets, according to a report published Wednesday by IDC.
That means Apple shipped 19.5 million of the 49.2 million tablets shipped worldwide during this past three-month quarter. Samsung, in comparison, shipped 8.8 million tablets, but it's a figure that's grown more than 280 percent since last year. Asus shipped 2.7 million tablets, thanks to the Nexus 7, and Kindle maker Amazon shipped 1.8 million tablets. Microsoft landed among the top five tablet vendors for the first time with its Surface PT and Surface Pro tablets. It shipped a total of 900,000 tablets.
IDC analysts attribute the growth of the tablet market overall to consumers' fondness for smaller screens.
"Sustained demand for the iPad Mini and increasingly strong commercial shipments led to a better-than-expected first quarter for Apple," Tom Mainelli, research director for tablets at IDC, said in a statement. "In addition, by moving the iPad launch to the fourth quarter of 2012, Apple seems to have avoided the typical first-quarter slowdown that traditionally occurred when consumers held off buying in January and February in anticipation of a new product launch in March."

Top Five Tablet Vendors, Shipments, and Market Share, First Quarter 2013 (Shipments in millions)

Vendor
1Q13 Unit Shipments
1Q13 Market Share
1Q12 Unit Shipments
1Q12 Market Share
Year-over-Year Growth
1. Apple
19.5
39.6%
11.8
58.1%
65.3%
2. Samsung
8.8
17.9%
2.3
11.3%
282.6%
3. ASUS
2.7
5.5%
0.6
3.1%
350.0%
4. Amazon.com Inc.
1.8
3.7%
0.7
3.6%
157.1%
5. Microsoft
0.9
1.8%
0.0
N/A
N/A
Others
15.5
31.5%
4.9
24.1%
216.3%
Total
49.2
100.0%
20.3
100.0%
142.4%

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