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Wednesday, 4 December 2013

Wii U Gaming Lounges in Airports This Month

Posted on 13:25 by Unknown

Southwest Airlines has partnered with Nintendo to provide Wii U gaming lounges for the busy holiday season at six major US airports. 

How to Install and Use the Google Experience Launcher on Any Android Device


Now Southwest passengers at Dallas Love Field, Chicago Midway, Atlanta, Denver, Tampa Bay, and Saint Louis airports have a new way to pass the time between getting through the security line and waiting to board. Southwest Airlines spokesman Dan Landson said, "These are some of the busiest places for holiday travelers and we want to make sure they are having fun while at the airport." Not just fun, but free fun! The lounges are open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. and are free to use. Each lounge has several kiosks which feature games like Super Mario 3-D World and other new and popular games. Each kiosk can hold up to four gamers. At each lounge there are attendants on site to assist gamers and answer questions. Another bonus is that there is no time limit for game players at the lounges, but passengers ought to be mindful of the time so they don't miss their flight because they were distracted by the games. 


These lounges were installed just before the Thanksgiving travel weekend and will stay at the six airports until December 22nd. On November 26th, more than 100 passengers on Southwest Airlines Flight 1883 from New Orleans to Dallas received a Wii U console as a gift to kick off the promotional period. Southwest is offering a sweepstakes that will end on Christmas Day. The sweepstakes will award 30 prizes, each consisting of two round-trip tickets on Southwest Airlines and one Wii U Deluxe Gaming System. The idea for a gaming lounge is not new, numerous airports worldwide offer year-round gaming options. 
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Friday, 29 November 2013

Sony Patents "SmartWig"

Posted on 03:33 by Unknown
Sony has filed a patent application for a new piece of wearable technology, the "SmartWig." 

Sony's SmartWig can be worn "in addition to natural hair" and be able to process data and communicate wirelessly with other devices such as smartphones. According to patent application, the SmartWig can be used as navigation for the blind and can also collect health information such as blood pressure. Wearable technology, from the smartwatch to Google Glass, is seen as a key growth area for tech companies and Sony does not want to be left behind. Google and Samsung have been the leaders in this sector up to this point. According to Andrew Milroy, an analyst at Frost & Sullivan, "Wearable gadgets are definitely going to be one of the big areas of growth over the next two years." 

Read:

How to connect to a wireless network in Microsoft Surface 2


The SmartWig could be made with a variety of materials including; horse hair, human hair, wool, feathers, or any synthetic material. The communication interface and sensors in the wig would be covered, or mostly covered, by parts of the wig so that they would be hidden during use. As a result, Sony explained, the device has the potential to be a "very popular" wearable tech item since it could be both a "technically intelligent item and fashion item." Although Sony has said that the SmartWig can be used in a variety of fields such the gaming industry, healthcare, and the business sector, the company has not yet decided on any plans for commercial production of the device. 
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Thursday, 21 November 2013

How To Create animated gifs out of your pictures

Posted on 03:00 by Unknown
homey

GIFyourself allows you to create funny animated gifs out of your pictures. The principle of use is quite simple:
  • Select your GIF.
  • Upload a photo of yourself.
  • Crop your face and it will be automatically added to the GIF.
Click Here To Continue........
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How To Check Your Feedburner Email List

Posted on 02:58 by Unknown
  • Go to> www.feedburner.com

  • Log in your> Id and Password


  • Go to>  my feed

  • Go to my feed title> click on your feed title name
Click Here To continue....
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How To Make “Reply-all” my default response in Outlook.com

Posted on 02:55 by Unknown
uuuuu

  • Sign-in to Outlook.com.
  • Click on Settings > More Mail settings.
. Click here to continue....
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Wednesday, 20 November 2013

Yahoo New Security Measures

Posted on 14:38 by Unknown

Yahoo is working on protecting its users' online activity by encrypting all communications and other information travelling into the company's data centers and promises to have encryption for personal data soon. 

Marissa Mayer, who has been very open about her dislike of the recent events with the National Security Agency, announced Yahoo's commitment to protecting its customers from any and all prying eyes on Monday. This announcement follows a recent report that the NSA had managed to hack into the communications lines of data centers run by Yahoo and Google. By doing so, the NSA was able to intercept and access information about what people are doing or saying online. Yahoo had previously promised to encrypt its email service by January of 2014 but has changed the timeline on that plan. Now, Yahoo promises to have all data encrypted by the end of March of 2014. 

Read:

A new Google filter that can lead to a manual action penalty


Google has been encrypting its Gmail service since 2010 and has added several security measures since then. Google promised to encrypt the links to its data centers as well, adding yet another barrier to keep out prying eyes. This process is still underway, at least officially, though one engineer said that this task has already been completed earlier this month. Faceboo is also joining in on encrypting users' data but has not yet said when this will be put in place. Yahoo, Google, and other Internet companies fear the government spying scandal will drive users away, especially those from outside the United States. These new security measures are one step the companies are taking to ensure that their customers feel safe and stick around. 
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Saturday, 16 November 2013

Facebook's failed $3 billion acquisition bid of Snapchat.

Posted on 05:35 by Unknown

Facebook's $3 billion acquisition bid was reportedly shot down by photo messaging company Snapchat. 

According to the Wall Street Journal, Facebook is not Snapchat's only potential acquirer; the company is being courted by several investors. Snapchat's co-founder and CEO Evan Spiegel is protective of his company and will not likely consider any offers until at least early next year.
Spiegel believes that Facebook's bid undercut what the company is really worth. Chinese e-commerce giant Tencent Holdings already offered to lead an investment that would value the company at $4 billion, $1 billion over Facebook's acquisition bid. Spiegel hopes that by waiting, the company's user numbers will grow enough to justify an even higher valuation of the company. 


See:

How to Connect a Hard Drive to the AirPort Extreme


Snapchat was founded in 2011 by Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy as a project for one of Spiegel's classes at Stanford University. The app, which is very popular amongst teens, allows the user to take a photo or video, add text and drawings, and send it to a friend for a limited period of time. After a few seconds, the image or video is deleted from the friend's phone and they can never see it again, unless they grabbed a screenshot prior to the image expiring. The service has yet to generate revenue but has a large following of teens and young adults. Due to the limited amount of time the image or video is available, the app has been associated with sexting; teens and young adults are more willing to send sexually explicit images or videos with the knowledge that they will not be stored on the recipient's phone. 

Visit: http://tech-mee.com/
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Lenovo Is Now World's Third Biggest Smartphone Maker Title

Posted on 05:27 by Unknown

Lenovo pushed LG aside in the third quarter to become the number three global smartphone maker for the first time. 

Lenovo's smartphone sales grew to 12.9 million units, up a whopping 84.5 percent year over year, thanks to a surge in sales from the Chinese market. In the same period last year, Lenovo had 4.1 percent of the global market but in 2013, the company brought down 5.1 percent of the market. "Lenovo continues to rely heavily on its home market, which represents more than 95 percent of its overall mobile phone sales. This could limit its growth after 2014, when the Chinese market is expected to decelerate," said Anshul Gupta, principal research analyst at Gartner. Earlier this year, Lenovo expressed interest in broadening its mobile sector by looking into acquiring BlackBerry. The Canadian government stepped in and stopped that bid before it even started citing security concerns over handing over BlackBerry to a Chinese company. 

See:

Xbox One Compatible With Windows 8


In the top two spots for smartphones were, unsurprisingly, Samsung and Apple in first and second respectively. In the third quarter, Samsung has 32.1 percent of the market, the same share it had last year, selling a whopping 80.3 million devices. Apple's share declined slightly from last year from 14.3 percent of the market to 12.1 percent but still shipped 30.3 million iPhones in the quarter. Other companies in the top ten were LG, Huawei, and Nokia at four, five, and eight respectively. In the overall mobile phone market, meaning more than just smartphones, Lenono ranked seventh. 

Visit; http://tech-mee.com/
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Monday, 4 November 2013

Firefox OS - Enable the Passcode lock

Posted on 02:35 by Unknown
To enable this option under Firefox OS, follow the below procedure:
  • From the homescreen go to Settings.
  • Scroll to Privacy & Security > Phone lock.

Read 

iPad Air biggest design change



  • Turn on Passcode lock
  • Enter a 4-digit passcode , confirm it and click on the Create button:
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Friday, 1 November 2013

Facebook Shares Leap After Mobile Advertising Boosts Earnings

Posted on 16:41 by Unknown
According to quarterly reports released on Wednesday, mobile advertising now accounts for just under half of Facebook's revenues, 

This announcement sent shares for the social media giant soaring in after-hours trading. According to its quarterly report, mobile advertising represents about 49 percent of Facebook's $1.8 billion ad revenue made in the third quarter of 2013. Last year, many thought Facebook would have greater difficulty adapting to the growing mobile market which impacted the company's share sale. It took the company nearly a year to surpass the $38 per share price its shares initially sold for. After Wednesday's announcement, Facebook shares leapt even higher. Shares jumped 10 percent to $53.88 in after-hours trading. Facebook is projected to account for a 15.8 percent share of global mobile ad spending in 2013, up from 5.35 percent last year. Mobile advertising is the fastest growing advertising category today with the overall global mobile ad market expected to grow a whopping 89 percent to $16.65 billion in 2013, up from $8.8 billion in 2012. 

Facebook saw more success in its quarterly findings than just mobile ad revenue. Facebook's overall revenues were over $2 billion for the third quarter, up from $1.26 billion for the same period in 2012. The social media giant's net income was $425 million; this is much improved from last year's loss of $59 million. Facebook founder and chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, said, "The strong results we achieved this quarter show that we're prepared for the next phase of our company, as we work to bring the next five billion people online and into the knowledge economy." 


Tech-Mee.com
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Thursday, 26 September 2013

Microsoft Forms Chinese Game Venture Ending

Posted on 02:36 by Unknown

Microsoft Co and BesTV New Media Co, a subsidiary of Shanghai Media Group, have joined together to for a video game venture to capitalize on proposed free-trade rules that would end the 13-year ban on imported consoles in China. 

The $79 million gaming venture was announced by BesTV New Media Co on September 23rd to Shanghai's stock exchange. BesTV will invest $40.29 million for a 51 percent stake in the venture while Microsoft will invest the remaining $38.71 million. After the announcement, BesTV surged past the 10 percent limit to 51.11 yuan in trading. With the ban in place, consoles such as Microsoft's Xbox systems, Nintendo's Wii consoles, and the PlayStation systems were banned in China in 2000. The ban was put in place to protect Chinese youth from the perceived corrupting influence of video games. The youths instead turned to online gaming like "League of Legends" to get their fill of video games. The ban will end when Shanghai's free-trade zone opens on September 29th, allowing systems to be liberalized. 

Though the venture was quoted at $79 million, the investment from both BesTV and Microsoft will most likely reach $237 million. Joanna Li, a Beijing-based spokeswoman for Microsoft said, "This is the first step of many to come for Microsoft and BesTV and we look forward to exploring new opportunities for bringing entertainment offerings to China." Some of these offerings will include new games and gaming-related products in addition to entertainment-related software and technical assistance services for the consoles. 

Source:  Tech-mee.com
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Windows: How to Create a Separate Data Partition

Posted on 02:24 by Unknown

Windows normally installs itself to a single partition on your hard drive. However, you can split your hard drive into several different partitions and store your data files separately from your system files.
This can be particularly useful when it comes time to upgrade or reinstall Windows — you canperform a clean install, wiping away your personal files from the main drive and leaving the secondary drive as-is with your personal files.

When Installing Windows

To create a separate data partition while installing Windows 7 or Windows 8, you’ll need to select the Custom installation option. Go through the installation process normally until you reach the “Which type of installation do you want?” screen and click the Custom option.
select-custom-installation
On the next screen, click the Drive options (advanced) link.
install-windows-drive-options-advanced
Create several partitions by clicking the New button and entering a size for each partition.
When you’re happy with your partition sizes, select the partition you want to install Windows to and click the Next button. Windows will install to that partition. The space on the other partition will be available as its own separate drive letter in Windows.
install-windows-multiple-partitions[4]

After Installing Windows

There’s a good chance you already have Windows installed to a single partition on your hard drive. If so, you can resize your existing system partition to make free space and create a new partition in that free space. You can do all of this from within Windows.
You’ll need to access the Disk Management tool from within Windows to do this. On Windows 8, press Windows Key + X or right-click in the bottom-left corner of your screen and select Disk Management. On Windows 7, press the Start button on your keyboard, type manage disks into the Start menu’s search box, and press Enter.
launch-disk-management-on-windows-8
In the Disk Management window, right-click your C: partition and select Shrink Volume.
Warning: Before messing with your partitions, you should always ensure you have backups of your important files. You shouldn’t encounter any problems while doing this, but data loss is always a potential threat when modifying your partitions.
shrink-c-partition
Enter the amount of space you want to shrink the partition by, in MB. For example, if you want a 100 GB data partition, enter 102400 into the box and click the Shrink button.
Of course, you must have enough free space on the partition to shrink it. If you only have 20 GB of free space, you won’t be able to shrink the partition by more than 20 GB. If you need to free up space but don’t want to delete any files, you may want to temporarily copy them to an external hard drive, delete the originals, and copy the files back over to your data partition afterwards.
windows-disk-management-shrink-dialog
After the process completes, right-click inside the Unallocated space and select New Simple Volume to create a new partition from the unpartitioned space.
create-new-partition-in-unallocated-space
Follow the wizard, assigning your desired drive letter to the new partition. When the process is complete, you’ll have a separate data partition.
assign-drive-letter-or-path

Using Your Separate Data Partition

To make the most of your separate data partition, store your personal data files on it. To make this easier, you can move your user data folders — your Documents, Downloads, Music, Pictures, and Videos directories, for example — to your external hard drive by right-clicking each folder in Windows Explorer (or File Explorer on Windows 8) and using the options on the Location tab.
move-user-data-folder-to-another-drive
There’s no point in installing most programs to the data partition, as they’ll have to be reinstalled if you ever reinstall Windows. However, some programs can be placed on the data partition and used even after you reinstall Windows. For example, Valve’s Steam service and Blizzard’s games all allow you to run their games from a folder without having to download and install them after reinstalling Windows. Just run the .exe file from the folder and you’re good to go.
When you reinstall Windows, you’ll be able to format your system drive cleanly and have all the files on your data partition in the same place. If you’re dual-booting several versions of Windows, each of them can use the data on the separate data partition without accessing each other’s system partitions.Of course, you can always get a separate data partition by adding a second hard drive to your computer. A second hard drive will appear just like a second partition in Windows Explorer or File Explorer, with its own drive letter.


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Thursday, 5 September 2013

How to Recover a Deleted File

Posted on 13:18 by Unknown
finger-pressing-delete-button
It’s happened to most of us. You delete a file and realize you need it back. This guide will explain when you can get that file back and how to go about it.
We’ve covered a variety of tools for recovering deleted files in the past, but this guide goes more in-depth. We’ll cover everything you need to know if you want to successfully recover deleted files.

Is it Really Deleted?

If you’re not sure whether you permanently deleted a file, be sure to look around for it first. In Windows, you’ll want to open the Recycle Bin and look for the file. You can search the Recycle Bin using the search box at the top-right corner of the window, which may help if you have a lot of files in your Recycle Bin. You can also right-click in the window, point to Sort By, and select Date Deleted to view files that were recently deleted.
Note that programs like CCleaner empty your Recycle Bin when you run them, so having CCleaner or a similar program automatically run in the background can prevent you from recovering files from the Recycle Bin.


If the file was stored in a cloud storage service like Dropbox, Google Drive, or SkyDrive, be sure to log into your account on the service’s website and check your trash there — you may find the file is still recoverable. This is the cloud storage version of the Recycle Bin.



If you’re not sure whether you deleted the file, perform a search for it using the search box in the Windows Explorer or File Explorer window. Hopefully the file was accidentally moved elsewhere and you can find it again.




Check Your Backups

You should be making regular backups of your most important files so you won’t lose too much critical data if they ever vanish on you. If you do have a backup, now’s the time to check it for a copy of the file you deleted.
Windows has built-in backup tools, so they may be able to help. Windows 7′s Previous Versions tool may have created a backup of your file, even if you haven’t set anything up. To check previous versions, navigate to the folder that contained your file, right-click it, and select Restore previous versions. You can view backups that have been created and click the Open button to browse them — you may find a backup copy of your important file.

Windows 8′s File History feature isn’t enabled by default, so you’re out of luck if you never enabled it manually. If you have enabled File History, you can visit a folder and click the History button on the ribbon to browse backup copies of files that were once stored in that folder.

Magnetic Hard Drives vs. Solid-state Drives

If you’ve made it this far and haven’t managed to restore your file yet, the only way you’re getting that file back is with file-recovery software. However, there’s some bad news: This may be impossible on some computers.
Traditional magnetic hard drives and solid-state drives work differently. When you delete a file on a magnetic hard drive, its data isn’t immediately erased from the disk. Instead, the pointer that points at the data is removed. The data can then be overwritten. It may be possible to scan the hard drive for leftover data and restore deleted files that haven’t yet been overwritten.
When a file is deleted from a solid-state drive, that file’s is immediately erased with the TRIM command to free up the space and ensure the SSD can be quickly written to in the future. That means that you can’t recover data deleted from solid-state drives — once it’s gone, it’s gone. Very old solid-state drives and old operating systems like Windows Vista don’t support TRIM, but modern solid-state drives and Windows 7 and 8 all support TRIM.

The Safest Way to Recover a Deleted File

If you deleted a file on a magnetic hard drive and you’re still using that computer, the safest thing to do is shut down the computer immediately. If you continue using the computer — even if you’re just installing file-recovery software — it’s possible that a program on your computer could write to the disk and that data could overwrite the deleted file’s data on your hard drive.
With the computer shut down, you should boot from a file-recovery live CD or USB drive or remove the hard drive from the computer entirely and place it in another computer as a secondary drive. The key is to avoid writing to the drive entirely. Use file-recovery software to scan the drive, and hopefully you’ll find the deleted file. If you deleted the file recently and haven’t written to the drive much, you have fairly good odds of recovering it. If you deleted the file two weeks ago and have written to the drive quite a bit, it’s very unlikely that the file will be recoverable.
We’ve covered using the ntfsundelete and photorec tools to do this from a Ubuntu live CD or USB drive.

The Quicker, Riskier Way to Recover a Deleted File

If you’d like to get a deleted file back but it isn’t extremely important and you don’t want to go to much additional effort, you can do it the easier, riskier way. Just install a file-recovery tool like Recuva, from the makers of the popular CCleaner application. Use that application to scan your hard drive for deleted files and restore the one you want back, if you can find it.
This is riskier because it involves writing to the drive. When you install a tool like Recuva on the drive, it’s possible that you could overwrite the deleted file’s data with the Recuva program data. It’s also possible that other programs running in the background could write to disk and overwrite the data. All it takes is for a portion of the file to be overwritten, and the file may become completely corrupt.

Professional Data Recovery

If the data was particularly business-critical, you don’t have any backups, and you failed to recover it, you may want to consider a professional data recovery service. First things first: Power off the computer immediately if it’s not already off. The longer the computer runs, the more data will be written to its hard drive and the less chance you’ll have of recovering it.
Professional data recovery services deal with everything from dying hard drives that need to be disassembled to recover data to deleted and overwritten files. These services can be extremely pricy and will cost you hundreds or even thousands of dollars, so they’re not the ideal solution. However, if you have extremely important data that you can’t recover or replace and you’re willing to pay up, this is an option available to you. Of course, these services can’t guarantee anything — they may be unable to recover your data. They’ll also probably charge you for their work even if they ultimately can’t recover your data.

Avoiding Deleted File Scares

The best way to ensure you’ll never have to recover a deleted file is to perform regular backups. Even just enabling the File History or Windows Backup functionality in your version of Windows will give you some peace of mind. If you store your documents in Dropbox or a similar service or have them backed up to an online location, you’ll also have a backup. All these backup options also allow you to restore previous versions of files.
It’s still possible for a file to be deleted, but if you’re performing regular backups, you won’t lose much data. You’ll have much more luck restoring backups than recovering deleted files. Backup services are cheaper than professional data recovery services, too.

Deleted files aren’t necessarily gone forever, but they’re not always easy to recover. As solid-state drives are used in more and more new computers, proper backup procedures are becoming even more important.



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Tuesday, 3 September 2013

Bill Gates Invests in Genetically Engineered Food Products

Posted on 02:08 by Unknown

Google co-founder Sergey Brin is in the headlines for his investment in the development of the world's first lab-grown burger, but he is not the only tech billionaire to fund genetically engineered food products. 

PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates are also funding efforts to find alternatives to livestock-sourced meat. Gates invested in Hampton Creek Foods, a startup company working on plant protein based egg substitutes, and has praised Beyond Meat, a meat substitute company. Thiel gave a grant to Modern Meadow, a company using animal stem cells in what it calls "tissue engineering" to create meat and leather via 3D printing. Brin invested in Mark Post, a professor out of Maastricht University, who used stem cells and a fetal serum to grow meat in his lab. 

These tech giants believe that meat alternative, lab-grown foods like these could be the future of food. Brin's reasoning for investing in the products was dual-pronged. One reason is animal welfare; he is "not comfortable" with the reality of the meat industry. The other is that he finds synthetic meat to be "transformative" technology on the "cusp of viability" despite the general public's perception that is sounds like something out of science fiction. Gate's reasoning for backing the product is different, but simple: "Put simply, there's no way to produce enough meat for 9 billion people. Yet we can't ask everyone to become vegetarians. We need more options for producing meat without depleting our resources." Worldwide demand for meat is not decreasing, only rising, and livestock is a substantial factor in the decline of the planet's health. Luckily, these tech giants see the meat problem as an opportunity and are well on their way to developing a solution. 
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Microsoft buys Nokia's mobile phone business for €5.44bn (£4.6bn/US$7.2bn)

Posted on 02:00 by Unknown

Nokia's Lumia 625 smartphone, which runs Windows Phone software. Microsoft will buy the Finnish company's mobile phone business. Photograph: Reuters
Microsoft is to buy Nokia's mobile phone business for €5.44bn (£4.6bn/US$7.2bn) and the Finnish firm has said its CEO, Stephen Elop, will join the software company as part of the deal.

Both Nokia, once the undisputed leader in mobile phones, and Microsoft have been struggling to respond to the challenge from smartphone makers such as Apple and Samsung.

Analysts say Elop's decision in 2011 to adopt Microsoft's untested Windows Phone software has yet to pay off.
The deal is expected to be finalised in the first quarter of 2014 and is subject to approval by Nokia's shareholders and regulatory approvals. Nokia partnered in 2011 with Microsoft and uses Microsoft's Windows software to run its mobile phones.

"It's a bold step into the future – a win-win for employees, shareholders and consumers of both companies," said Microsoft's outgoing chief executive, Steve Ballmer.

"Bringing these great teams together will accelerate Microsoft's share and profits in phones, and strengthen the overall opportunities for both Microsoft and our partners across our entire family of devices and services."

Nokia said in a statement it expected that Elop, along with senior executives Jo Harlow, Juha Putkiranta, Timo Toikkanen, and Chris Weber, would transfer to Microsoft when the deal was concluded. It did not say what roles they would take at Microsoft.
Elop, a Canadian hired by Nokia in 2010 from Microsoft, has been one of the favourites to take over as Microsoft chief when Ballmer steps down.
Nokia said its board chairman, Risto Siilasmaa, would take over CEO duties while the firm looked for a new CEO.
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Monday, 26 August 2013

Galaxy Announced Golden Android Flip Phone

Posted on 14:18 by Unknown

Galaxy Golden Android Flip Phone Announced
Samsung seems to have hitched a ride on the new-age retro bandwagon with its release of two flip phone/smartphone hybrids. 

The Samsung Hennessy flip phone was released last week for the Chinese market and one week later the tech giant announced a second flip phone/smartphone hybrid: the Samsung Galaxy Golden. Both the Hennessy and the Galaxy Golden are dual-screen phones that run on the Android operating system. The Galaxy Golden runs on Android 4.2 Jelly Bean and features two 3.7 inch Super AMOLED touch screens. The two screens are mounted back-to-back allowing you access the smartphone screen in both the closed and open positions the flip phone has to offer. 

Despite the Galaxy tag on the Golden, the flip phone hybrid is not on the same level as the Samsung Galaxy flagship phones in terms of specifications. The internal hardware on the Golden includes a dual-core 1.7GHz processor, an 8 megapixel camera, and LTE support. Like Samsung's other smartphones, the Golden does come with an "Easy Mode" for those new to the smartphone market. The Golden, not surprisingly, comes in a champagne gold color. The hybrid phone also features a pedometer, an FM radio, and Samsung's S Health application. The Samsung Galaxy Golden will most likely not hit shelves in the United States, similar to the China-bound Hennessy, but is expected to go on sale through South Korean carriers for the South Korean equivalent of $700, which is 790,000 Korean won. 
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Run Linux Software on Windows 5 Ways to so

Posted on 13:26 by Unknown
run-linux-on-windows
Linux users often want to run Windows software on Linux, but Windows users may want to run Linux software, too. Whether you’re looking for a better development environment or powerful command-line tools, you can run Linux software without leaving Windows.
There are many different options for running Linux software on Windows. It’s easier than running Windows software on Linux, as anyone can set up a virtual machine with a free Linux distribution — no need for software licenses.

Virtual Machines

Virtual machines allow you to run any operating system in a window on your desktop. You can install the free VirtualBox or VMware Player, download an ISO file for a Linux distribution such as Ubuntu, and install that Linux distribution inside the virtual machine like you would install it on a standard computer.
When you need to boot up your Linux system, you can do it in a window on your desktop — no need for rebooting and leaving all your Windows programs behind. Everything but demanding games and advanced 3D effects should work just fine, but you likely won’t want to use those, anyway.
If you’re installing Ubuntu in a virtual machine, you may want to try installing an Ubuntu derivative like Xubuntu instead. Ubuntu’s default Unity desktop uses 3D effects and the desktop interface doesn’t perform as smoothly in a virtual machine as past desktops did. Xubuntu uses Xfce, which is much more lightweight.
You could even try using VirtualBox’s seamless mode or VMware’s unity mode to run Linux applications directly on your desktop — they’ll be running in the virtual machine, but their windows will be present on your Windows desktop instead of trapped in a single virtual machine window.

Cygwin

Cygwin is a collection of tools that offer a Linux-like environment on Windows. It’s not a way to run existing Linux software on Windows — the software will have to be recompiled. However, much software has already been recompiled. Cygwin will give you a Linux-like terminal and command-line environment with many of the command-line programs you may already be used to.
We’ve previously covered installing and using Cygwin. You can even use Cygwin to install an OpenSSH server and get SSH access to a Windows system.
This solution is ideal for users missing crucial Linux utilities on Windows — it’s not a way to run a full Linux desktop.

Install Ubuntu via Wubi

This method is technically installing Linux, not running Linux software on Windows. You’ll have to reboot each time you want to use your Linux system just as if you had installed it in a standard dual-boot configuration.
However, Wubi doesn’t install Ubuntu in the normal way. Instead, it creates a special file on your Windows partition and uses that file as your Ubuntu drive. This means that you can install Ubuntu and use it without any partitioning and you can uninstall Ubuntu from the Windows Control Panel when you’re done.
If the partitioning aspects are what’s holding you back, give Wubi a try. Performance won’t be quite as good as a normally installed Linux system when it comes to disk read and write times, but it should be faster than a virtual machine.

Ported and Compiled Programs

Many common Linux programs have already been ported to Windows and compiled versions have been made available online. If you really miss Emacs, you’ll find versions of Emacs for Windows. If you want to run a specific program on Windows, perform a Google search for the name of that program and “Windows” — there’s a good chance you’ll find a version of the program that ‘s been ported to Windows.

coLinux-based Distributions

coLinux stands for Cooperative Linux. It’s a way to natively run Linux alongside the Windows kernel in a way that offers much faster performance than simply running Linux in a virtual machine.
This is a great idea, but there’s a problem. coLinux doesn’t yet support 64-bit versions of Windows, so you’ll need to be running a 32-bit version of Windows on your machine to do this — that’s increasingly rare. coLinux hasn’t released a new version in over two years, so development seems to be either stalled or moving very slowly.
If you want to try this out, you may want to try out Portable Ubuntu Remix. This coLinux-based distribution was last updated in 2011, so it’s a bit old — but other options like andLinux are even more out of date. andLinux, which we’ve covered in the past, was last updated in 2009.
coLinux-based distributions would be a great option, but they seem to be getting left behind. If you don’t mind using years-old Linux software and a 32-bit version of Windows, this option may work for you anyway.

There’s no one right option here. People who want a full Linux experience will probably want a virtual machine, while users of a few crucial shell utilities may prefer Cygwin. Others who just want to run a single program may find better luck with a version of that program ported to Windows.
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