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Saturday, April 22, 2006

Tips to Prolong iPod Battery Life

Posted by Harsha

The iPods battery life is a sore subject of conversation for many, and one that Apple continues to address and improve on. Here is a short list of things you can do to save some of that iPod juice, and continue rocking out to your favorite tunes.

1. Use the Hold switch. The iPod wheel is so sensitive that one small tap will activate your player. Practice using the Hold switch when your iPod is not in use.

2. Turn off power consuming features. Some examples would be the iPod's backlighting, equalizer and Sound Check features.

3. Audio Format. This is really up to you, but files in Apple's AAC and MP3 format are more compressed and use less power.

4. Keep at Room Temperature. Since the iPod runs on lithium-ion batteries, it's best to operate it at room temperature between 32 to 95 degrees. Climates that are too hot (over 95 degrees) could cause permanent damage, while freezing temperatures will render it less efficient. Also don't leave it in your car if the temperature is too hot outside and avoid exposing it to direct sunlight.

5. Charge it. Keep it on that charging cradle when you're not using it.

6. Software Updates. Ensure your iPod has the latest software updates which may help increase battery efficiency.

7. Changing Tracks. Restrain from overusing the Previous/Rewind or Next/Fast-forward buttons, and shuffle your songs instead.

8. Pause Button. Use the Pause button while you take a break, this will save you a lot of power.

If all else fails, and you continue to have battery problems, take it to an Apple Store and have your iPod checked out by a professional. It may be that your battery is defective and needs to be replaced. Apple will replace your battery for $59 or free if you're still under warranty.


source: Tips to Prolong iPod Battery Life


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PhoneGnome is fastest way to VoIP

Posted by Harsha

VoIP
PhoneGnome is the easiest, fastest, and safest way to upgrade to VoIP. PhoneGnome is an appliance that one buys and owns, with no monthly fees, no subscription, and no activation. Instead of switching to a new service, getting a new phone number, or going through a lot of hassle to transfer your existing number, you simply plug PhoneGnome in. You don't have to sign up to anything or perform any configuration. It works with your existing phone and your existing telephone service (ordinary phone line) to instantly and painlessly add FREE Internet calling and advanced VoIP features to your existing phone service.
VoIP
Even though there is no subscription or sign-up process required at all, PhoneGnome is fully plug and play. The first time you plug it in, it goes through a self-configuration process to associate with your phone line. This takes just a few minutes.
With that one-time purchase, owners immediately get three main benefits: 1. FREE calling (real free calls, with no monthly service fee), 2. Optional use of inexpensive Internet calling services for calls to plain phones, and 3. Advanced VoIP features, even for your non-Internet calls.


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Netgears new Skype WiFi Phone

Posted by Harsha

Get Unlimited free wireless calls to Skype users, no computer required NETGEARs Skype WiFi Phone SPH101 is the worlds first wireless Internet phone that can make free calls to other Skype users anywhere in the world, anytime you have WiFi access, without a Computer. All of your contacts are shown right on the phones color display so you will know exactly who is on-line.
You will also be more available for your friends to call you, because you no longer have to be on your Computer to be connected. You can even make calls to ordinary phones using Skype-Out for just few cents a minute and NO MONTHLY FEES. With the Skype WiFi Phone, NETGEAR makes true mobile wireless Internet telephony a reality.
Amazon and buy dot com is accepting pre-orders now, with the SPH101 phone going for a fairly steep $250, but at least it's marked down $50 from the $300 list price.
Features Include:
  • Call anyone else on Skype, anywhere in the world for free, no PC required
  • Make and receive Skype phone calls wherever you have WiFi, wireless Internet access
  • Call any phone worldwide for pennies per minute and with NO MONTHLY FEES
  • Manage your contact list and displays whos available to talk
  • Can forward your calls to your mobile, landline or to another Skype Name







  • Skype

    Skype

    Skype

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    Yahoo launch online video editor

    Posted by Harsha

    Yahoo has launched a new web based video editing tool to re-edit, re-purpose, remix and mash up an clips array from selected Festival films. Remixes are then posted back to the site for others to view it.
    Using the Yahoo Video tool, people can preview only the portions of films that in interest and can also extract snippets from the film and place them on to their clip bin. The clips can then be organized into a mini film.
    Google and YouTube enjoy a good hold in video sharing business but unfortunately, none of them offer any kind of video editing tools as Yahoo.
    Film directors from from around the world agreed to allow their films to be sliced and diced by the Yahoo remixers.


    Yahoo

    International Remixer | Yahoo! Remix Gallery


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    Friday, April 21, 2006

    Yahoo launch Yahoo Calendar

    Posted by Harsha

    Yahoo calender
    Yahoo Calendar can keep you on top of household and professional events and allow you to share appointments with others. This service deserves its standing as the most popular Web-based calendar, although it's increasingly facing competition in the form of dynamic services such as the Google Calendar beta.
    The free Yahoo Calendar is as simple as signing in to your Yahoo account from any Web browser on any PC, just visit here. You can also access the calendar from within Yahoo Mail and Yahoo Messenger.
    Yahoo Calendar offers a good, intuitive layout with well-organized grids and plenty of white space. You can pick from among 16 color combinations and four background photo themes. Yahoo offers more in the way of cuteness than its rivals; its holidays, weather, and horoscopes pop with bright graphics.
    Drop-down tabs across the top of the page let you skip to and from the Calendar and your Yahoo Mail messages, Address Book, and Notepad. A left-hand pane offers a tiny monthly view, as well as links for quickly adding events and tasks and searching scheduled appointments. The central pane features the calendar, viewable by lists of events and tasks or by day, week, month, or year. A printable view comes in handy if you need to slip a printout of events into a pocket.
    Yahoo Calendar lets you click a time in the day view or the Add link in other views to pop up the entry window and start typing an appointment, and its central pane offers a Quick Add Event box that accepts free-form text input before demanding the date and time. Microsoft Outlook allows you to click twice on a time to add an event. Google Calendar lets you add appointments faster by clicking once on a date, then immediately typing into a text balloon.


    Yahoo calender


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    PCs on standby to cost you

    Posted by Harsha

    computer
    Whether it is a computer, music system or the TV, most of these will be on standbuy, standby is to make equipment to sit in "half on" state, making it to wait to spring immediately back to life when we ask for.
    Microsoft Windows XP no longer tells the user when it is safe to shut down their computers. Sometimes people will leave their computers in Standby or Hibernation mode and forgets to turn them off completely.
    Shutting down the computer by hibernate or standby method is the same as leaving the computer switched on. A Computer or any other devices like TV or a printer will always use energy unless the device is totally switched off.
    According to BBC, Standby power can range between 10 and 15 watts, and occasionally beyond. On its own, this is not much. But if you get half a dozen devices on standby, it is the equivalent of a 60 watt bulb.
    As PCMag notes that even if a PC is not being used, the monitor, printer, and various Ethernet and FireWire devices running may waste energy. They suggest that people can use modern power strip like Smart Strip from BiTS. Smart Strip senses will automatically shuts off power supply to the devices connected to it once it sense that the computer connected to it had stoped drawing power, this way people can save more enegry.

    Related Article: Do you need to turn off your PC at night

    Source: Energy cost of PCs on standby | Turn Off Peripherals At Shutdown


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    Microsoft may soon launch Live Drive

    Posted by Harsha


    Microsoft is building a new online storage service, named Microsoft Live Drive, says Ray Ozzie in an interview.
    Microsoft is planning to use its gaint server farms to offer anyone huge amounts of online storage for their digital data. With Live Drive, all your information movies, music, tax information, a high-definition videoconference , and whatever it could can be accessible from any part of the world, on any device.

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    No Goodmail For Gmail

    Posted by Harsha

    Leaving AOL further out on a limb holding its Goodmail playbook, Google said it will not be instituting a payment system to ensure email delivery to Gmail users. The power of email filtering, said the company, should rest in the hands of its users.

    That is a major setback for Goodmail, Google has decided not to accept payment from approved bulk mailers to ensure their emails reach Gmail users Inbox bypassing any its email filters.

    "Gmail has a superior spam detection system that gives users ultimate control over the messages that are filtered into their spam folders," said Eileen Rodriguez from Google Corporate Communications.


    After AOL's controversial plan to implement Goodmail's CertifiedEmail system, one that would require approved bulk mailers to pay a small fee per email in order to ensure delivery to member inboxes. And Yahoo! made a separate announcement about the use of Goodmail, many had feared a domino effect in the industry that would cost bulk mailers millions of dollars per year. There were fear that Google would follow the same suit but didn't.


    Related: How goodwill process works


    source: here


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    AOL to launch MySpace killer

    Posted by Harsha

    aollogo
    The runaway success that MySpace has enjoyed after News Corp. (Research) bought it has the rest of the media world convinced of the value of social networking websites. Indeed, word on the street has been that Time Warner's (Research) AOL would use its AIM instant messenger as a platform to jump on the social networking bandwagon. The B2Day blog reported in March that the project was codenamed "AIMSpace" and was expected to launch in mid-April. AOL exec Tina Sharkey argued that AIM was already the "largest social network in the world."
    AOL program manager Armughan Javaid confirmed existence of AOL's MySpace killer, claiming the service "will be open for non-members, and it will be kick-ass!" A note to Javaid.


    source: here


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    Thursday, April 20, 2006

    VoIP comes to rescure Navajo NC

    Posted by Harsha

    In the 250,000-population Navajo Nation, a remote settlement known as White Rock Chapter House (pictured above) has never had any type of phone service up until now.

    Residents of the settlement 160 miles northwest of Albuquerque, New Mexico have been so isolated they had to drive six miles on dirt roads to use the nearest pay phone.

    Navajo Nation information technology director Harold Skow has tried to obtain standard phone line service, but was quoted a price of $100,000. And that would have been for a non-broadband service.

    Skow decided in favor of a 75-mile microwave connection capable of providing and supporting VoIP, Wi-Fi access points, and videoconferencing.

    The new infrastructure at White Rock is tied in with Cisco VoIP CallManager equipment already installed in the Navajo Nation's capital of Window Rock, Ariz.

    VoIP


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    Google asked to bring down Miro Logo

    Posted by Harsha

    Today, the family of Joan Miro was upset to discover elements of several works by the Spanish surrealist incorporated into Google's logo. Google has since taken the logo off its site.
    The Artists Rights Society, a group that represents the Miro family and more than 40,000 visual artists and their estates, had asked Google to remove the image early this morning.
    "There are underlying copyrights to the works of Miro, and they are putting it up without having the rights," - said Theodore Feder, president of Artists Rights Society.

    Google has changed the logo on its homepage to commemorate events such as the Olympics or Albert Einstein's birthday. Today is the anniversary of Miro's birth in 1893. He died in 1983.





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    How to Make FireFox browse Faster

    Posted by Harsha

    Here is a small settings that you need to make to make your firefox browser to browse faster.

    First Type "about:config" into the address bar and click go. Then Scroll down and look for the following entries and alter it as follows:

    Set "network.http.pipelining" to "true"(Already set in newer version)

    Set "network.http.proxy.pipelining" to "true" (Already set in newer version)

    set "network.http.pipelining.maxrequests" (to some number like 20 or 30, This means it will make 20 or 30 requests at once)

    Lastly right click anywhere on the screen and select New -> Integer.

    Name it as "nglayout.initialpaint.delay" and set its value to "0".
    (This value is the amount of time the browser should waits before it acts on the response).

    Once you do all these check the browse speed you will be surprised..


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    Wednesday, April 19, 2006

    Skype censored by China

    Posted by Harsha

    VoIP Skype
    Skype, the fast growing internet(VoIP) communications company admitted that its partner in China has filtered text messages originated from that country.

    Skype’s chief executive, responded to accusations that the company had censored text messages containing words like "Falun Gong" – a banned movement – and "Dalai Lama".
    He said that Tom Online, its joint venture partner in China, was complying with local law.

    He claimed that compliance with Chinese censorship was no different from obeying rules governing business in western countries. China, along with the US and Germany, is one of Skype’s three biggest markets in terms of active users of its free telephony service, which routes encrypted calls between computers via the internet.

    source: FT


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    Tuesday, April 18, 2006

    Windows XP Top 10 Tips Of All Time

    Posted by Harsha

    Despite all the hoopla about the introduction of Windows Vista, the truth of the matter is that the new OS isn't due for at least another seven to nine months — and it will probably be even longer before most of us start adopting it. Meanwhile, we've still got to deal with Win XP.

    Tip 10: Halt background services to improve performance.
    This tip is one of our favorites because it always works. Running in the background of Windows are scores of services, small processes used by Windows and many Windows applications. The thing is, you don't need all these services — especially for applications you never use — and many of them actually slow your PC down.
    Win XP power users have long known that you can easily eke a little extra performance out of your PC by disabling services that are completely unnecessary or that don't need to be running all the time. Here's how it works.
    1. Click Start > Run, type services.msc and click OK. This will bring up the Services management console. Click on the Extended tab at the bottom of this window; each background service running on your PC is listed here. Windows includes a fairly detailed description of each service; simply drag the Description column wider to read more of each description, or click on a service to see its full description in the left pane.
    2. Double-click a service to bring up a window with several options. In the Startup Type area, you can set the service to run automatically in the background at all times so it's ready whenever it's needed, or you can tell it to run manually, which means you'll have to go into this Services management console and re-enable it if an application needs it.
    You can also completely disable the service. In general, you want to disable services tied to applications and/or features you don't use or rarely use. You can find a great list of appropriate services to disable at the Elder Geek's Services Guide For Windows XP.
    If you're logged onto the computer as the administrator, you can also pause the service (click the Pause button in the Service Status area just below the Startup Type area), then see how the computer behaves. Danger signs include crashes or other erratic behaviors in your applications, such as running slowly or getting stuck on a query prompt. Click Resume to start up the service again.

    Tip 9: Increase available disk space by scaling back System Restore.
    It's not perfect, but Windows System Restore is a useful first step in recovering your PC or drive from a major system error. However, it can consume more than 10 percent of your total hard drive space.
    If you find yourself desperate for an extra few gigabytes — particularly on secondary storage drives — there's an easy way to reclaim data space by simply limiting the number of System Restore points Windows XP establishes. This one's a snap and there's no tangible increase of risk, which is why we love it.
    1. Right-click on My Computer and select Properties > System Restore.
    2. If you have just one hard drive, skip to step 3. Otherwise, select the drive on which you want to gain storage space and click the Settings button.
    3. Adjust the slider to the left to use less disk space, and Win XP will reduce the number of System Restore points by the appropriate amount.

    Tip 8: Scrub your hard drive clean.
    Windows Support Tools, provided free by Microsoft, are a suite of some 20+ separate applications that are extremely handy for a number of uses. Ordinary PC users probably won't use many of these apps — they're mostly used by IT pros to troubleshoot and analyze Windows XP. But even if you're not an expert, don't be afraid of using the Windows Installer Clean Up Utility, which will help you remove all leftover files from a failed uninstall of a Windows Installer application.
    Download Windows Support Tools from Microsoft's Download Center. (If you're curious about the other apps in the suite, check out the help file included in the Windows Support Tools Program group.)
    To run the Windows Installer Clean Up Utility, go to the command prompt (select Start > Run) and type msicuu.exe. You'll see a list of all applications with uninstall data. Select the ones you want to get rid of and click the Remove button. Obviously, you want to use caution here — don't clear the install data for an application unless you're absolutely sure you won't ever need it.

    Tip 7: Run two displays on the same PC.
    This tip is for the worker bee. Adding a second display to your PC won't quite double your productivity, but it will make your computing life easier. Walk around a cube farm these days, and you'll likely see at least a few power users doubling up.
    Thankfully, Windows XP makes it extremely easy.
    1. Plug the second display into your computer. (Many video cards today have a second Video Out port; if not, you'll have to install a second video card.)
    2. Right-click on your desktop and click Properties to bring up the Display Properties window. Click on the Settings tab.
    3. See the grayed-out box to the right of the black box? That's your second monitor. Click on it and then click the check box next to "Extend my Windows desktop onto this monitor" to enable it. From here you can adjust the resolution of the secondary display. The goal here is to have a desktop that spans both of your displays, so if your second screen is physically located to the left of your primary one, drag and drop the #2 monitor to the left of the #1 display.

    Tip 6: Force unresponsive applications to close at shutdown.
    When it comes to balky PCs, few things annoy us more than the moment when we try to shut down Windows and it tells us it can't because some crashed application isn't responding, and that we have to do it ourselves by clicking the End Now button.
    This registry hack changes that. Here's how it works.
    1. Launch RegEdit (select Start > Run, type regedit and click OK) and browse to HKEY_USERS\.DEFAULT\Control Panel\Desktop
    2. Find the string called AutoEndTasks. Right-click it, select Modify from the pop-up menu, and change the data value from 0 to 1. (If you can't find this string, create it by selecting Edit > New > String Value and set the data value to 1.)
    3. Close RegEdit and reboot.

    Tip 5: Automatically optimize your hard drive.
    One of the keys to system performance is an optimized hard drive. Typically, you optimize your hard drive using Windows' Defrag utility. But there's a great registry hack that will force Win XP to automatically optimize the location of files when your PC is idle. Here's how it works.
    1. Open RegEdit and browse to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\OptimalLayout
    2. Find the string called EnableAutoLayout, and change its data value to 1. (If this string doesn't exist, create it and set the value to 1.)
    3. Exit RegEdit and reboot your PC. Done!

    Tip 4: Set a custom resolution.
    Notice a trend in the second half of this story? If you answered, "They're all registry hacks," you are correct. Windows XP's registry loads an amazing amount of flexibility and customization in a fairly low-risk package.
    Tip number 4 on our list is another one of our favorite registry hacks. Windows XP allows you to specify a large number of set screen resolutions based on what types of images your display can accept. However, in a few rare instances, you may want to specify a non-standard resolution for a clearer or more accurate picture. This tip allows you to do just that. It's one of those tips that doesn't seem all that handy — until you desperately need it. Plus, it's just plain cool. If you have a wonky projector or TV screen you want to use with a laptop or PC, you might want to give this a try.
    Here's how it works:
    1. Open RegEdit and browse to HKEY_CURRENT_CONFIG\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\VIDEO\{the address of your primary video card...it often begins with "23A77BF7"}\00002. The Default Settings.XResolution data value is the horizontal resolution, and the Default Settings.YResolution data value is the vertical. Double-click the Default Settings.XResolution data entry, select the Decimal radio button, and in the Value Data field, enter your desired horizontal resolution. Then do the same with Default Settings.YResolution to change the vertical resolution.
    3. Exit RegEdit and reboot your PC.
    If you're scared of tweaking your registry on this one, a handy app called PowerStrip ($29.95, available for a free try-before-you-buy download), allows you similar resolution-changing functionality.

    Tip 3: Stay on top of registry changes.
    Given the power and flexibility of Windows XP's registry (and the large number of registry hacks in this Top 10), it's no surprise that the number 3 XP tip involves keeping track of any and all changes made to your registry.
    But given the prevalence of spyware, rootkits, and other malware these days, knowing what you've done to your registry is a secondary concern to knowing what other applications are doing to it.
    For peace of mind — and occasionally, for curiosity's sake — we consider SysInternal's Regmon an essential piece of our OS. It's a freeware application that allows you to browse through all the keys in the registry, filtering in a variety of ways to pinpoint specific registry changes.
    For example, you can quickly filter for certain applications. If you're having trouble with Windows Media Player, you click on the Options menu, then Filter. At the menu, type wmplayer into the Include field. When you see the resulting list, you can double-click any entry to open up its registry value.
    Because you can search and filter, Regmon is also an excellent method for tracking down hard-to-find registry items.

    Tip 2: Recover lost data.
    Everyone has accidentally deleted files from their hard drive, and very few feelings are as low as the moment right after you nuke 300 irreplaceable photographs of your kids/dogs/life. Actually, one feeling is worse than that: accidentally quick-formatting your entire drive.
    Even if you regularly back up your drives, mistakes happen. That's why this tip is paramount. It's also really simple. There's an excellent downloadable data recovery app for XP called Zero Assumption Recovery that can help. Don't waste another minute — download and install it now.
    When you run into trouble, here's what to do:
    1. The moment you delete your data, stop using your hard drive. Don't save or install any new applications — they'll be written over your recently departed data.
    2. Run Zero Assumption Recovery. You already had it installed, right?
    3. Select the hard drive you want to scan. Wait for the scan to finish. (This can take between one and two hours -- part of Zero Assumption Recovery's effectiveness is its thoroughness.)
    4. With any luck, you'll see a list of your missing folders and files. The freeware version of Zero Assumption Recovery allows you to recover up to four folders per scan. If you pay $100 for the full version, you get full recovery.
    Note: You can also use Zero Assumption Recovery to recover deleted photos from your camera's memory card.

    Tip 1: Automatically log when and why shutdowns have occurred.
    Love it or hate it, Windows XP is undeniably more stable than its predecessors. But it still crashes, and it still has occasional trouble shutting down. This registry hack logs all shutdown errors, telling you when, where, and why strange and annoying things have happened.
    Some folks have the luxury of packing their buggy PC off to a help desk. But if you like to get your hands dirty, consider this essential tweakage.
    Here's how to set up logging for unexpected system shutdowns:
    1. Open RegEdit and browse to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Reliability
    2. Set the ShutDownReasonUI data value to 1. (If this string doesn't exist, create it and set the value to 1.)
    3. Exit RegEdit and reboot your PC.
    To examine the log you've created, open up the Event Viewer, which you'll find by selecting Control Panel > Administrative Tools > Event Viewer. Click on the System subheading and you'll see a massive list of system events. Errors will be marked with a red X or a yellow exclamation mark. Double-click on the error and you'll see details that may help you unravel the mystery.

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    Microsoft Speech Server 2007

    Posted by Harsha

    microsft
    Microsoft just disclosed today the road map and first set of features for its upcoming release of Microsoft Speech Server 2007. Beginning in May, beta testers will have the opportunity to preview and provide feedback on Speech Server 2007, which should be released later this year. Speech Server is Microsofts next-generation speech and telephony platform to help contact centers and businesses meet the challenge of reducing costs while improving automated customer services on the telephone.

    Speech Server 2007 will provide full support for (SALT)Speech Application Language Tags and Voice Extensible Markup Language, which will let users choose the development standards that work best for them. Plus, Speech Server can easily plug into existing telephony infrastructures to deliver more cost-effective and integrated customer service operations. Contact center and business managers will also have access to new monitoring tools that can identify performance issues and opportunities to help ensure that the system is efficiently and accurately addressing caller inquiries.

    Speech Server will also include native support for VoIP, providing companies with a powerful platform that can grow with changing business and technology needs. The platform will natively support Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) and Real-Time Transport Protocol (RTP) as core communications protocols for out-of-the-box support for IP telephony and interoperability with leading VoIP gateways.


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    YPN Ad Placement Optimization Tip

    Posted by Harsha

    A new eyetracking study recorded showed how 232 users looked at thousands of Web pages. According to findings that user’s main reading behavior was fairly consistent across many different sites and tasks. This dominant reading pattern looks somewhat like an F and has the following three characteristics:

    1. Users first read in a horizontal movement, usually across the upper part of the content area. This initial element forms the F's top bar.

    2. Users move down the page a bit and then read across in a second horizontal movement that typically covers a shorter area than the previous movement. This additional element forms the F's lower bar.

    3. Users scan the content's left side in a vertical movement. Sometimes this is a fairly slow and systematic scan that appears as a solid stripe on an eyetracking heatmap. Other times users move faster, creating a spottier heatmap. This last element forms the F's stem.

    This study results offer some good insight for Web Masters who show Advertisments on their sites.

    users' scan patterns are not always comprised of exactly three parts. Sometimes users will read across a third part of the content, making the pattern look more like an E than an F. Other times they'll only read across once, making the pattern look like an inverted L (with the crossbar at the top). Generally, however, reading patterns roughly resemble an F, though the distance between the top and lower bar varies.

    google

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    ScanR - Turn your camera phone into a scanner

    Posted by Harsha

    Mobile scan
    ScanR supports 3 features, scanning, copying and faxing of documents via your mobile camera device. Using ScanR is very simple. All you have to do is Just take a photo of the document and send it to doc@scanr.com or to wb@scanr.com if you want white board images. When you do this you will get an activation link and a password sent to your email. Just click the activation link, enter the activation code and retrieve your scanned image. This version of ScanR is freeware.

    Most camera phones or digital cameras with at least 1 megapixel resolution will work with scanR. Smaller resolutions and VGA cameras will not work.

    Once you send your photo to the above email, soon you will receive a copy of your scan in your email as a PDF attachment. If you sent a fax, you will also receive a text message when the fax is successfully received. It takes less than a minute to receive an email and up to five minutes to receive a fax.


    Mobile scan


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    Men, Women and VoIP

    Posted by Harsha

    A recent survey about VoIP awareness in the U.S. and UK found this fact:- Men are more aware of VoIP than women by about a two to one margin. And, one would assume, from these numbers, they are much more likely to use VoIP as well.

    The findings are quite clear that men are far more aware of the technology. The report found,
    "Women are far less likely than men to have heard about VoIP in both Great Britain (28% of women vs. 57% of men) and the United States (34% of women vs. 62% of men)."


    Men, not surprisingly, have more knowledge than women about specific VoIP providers as well. Some 54% of men have heard of Vonage, for example, while only 34% of women have. And 58% of men have heard of Skype, while only 30% of women have.


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    Monday, April 17, 2006

    Microsoft XP and Vista to get media player 11

    Posted by Harsha

    Microsoft is on track to release a Windows XP version of Windows Media Player 11 before the end of June, So the Windows Media Player users won't have to wait until January 2007 to experience the new features of Windows Media Player Vista.

    Microsoft Windows Media Player 11 has a whole new look and feel. It allows Indexed searching so that the users can quickly find whatever they're looking for just by typing a few letters, again just like iTunes. Microsoft Windows Media Player 11 has the ability to alter protected music and video files to change their quality level. With this new software, protected Windows Media files can be converted to smaller file sizes for playback on mobile devices, where there is less need for very-high-quality video files.

    Microsoft Windows Media Player 11 still won't allow conversion of purchased Windows Media Songs into iTunes' proprietary FairPlay format. So songs bought from a Windows Media store still won't play on the iPod.

    Though the much awaited Windows Media player will be compatible with Microsoft Windows XP, it is not clear which of these new features will be part of the XP vesion of Microsoft Windows Media Player 11.
    Microsoft


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    Googles new Vocal Captcha for the Blind

    Posted by Harsha

    google
    Google introduced the new Word Verification "CAPTCHA" feature to prevent automated spam robots from abusing the system. The problem was that blind readers would not read the generated image text on the screen. Sometimes, the generated letters are so distorted or confusing that normal web users can't indentify the text.

    Google now has comeup with a solution. If you can't read the CAPTCHA text, Google has launched an alternate Audio CAPTCHA as part of their word verification process. Users can now click the small wheel chair icon and it will spell out the verifiaction text, so that the user can Listen and type the text.

    The Voice Captcha is currently available when you sign up for a new Google Account but it is also expected to be available soon in Blogger Comment.

    If you are not aware, CAPTCHA is an acronym for "completely automated public Turing test to tell computers and humans apart", trademarked by Carnegie Mellon University.


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    Oracle to adapt Linux Operating System

    Posted by Harsha

    Oracle
    U.S. software maker Oracle is considering launching a version of the Linux operating system and has looked at buying one of the two firms dominating the technology.

    Oracle has counted on Linux an open-source system whose code is open to anyone to view and adapt to act as a counterweight to Microsoft's Windows, which has expanded rapidly from desktop PCs into corporate IT systems. Oracle is also considered buying Novell which is one of the biggest distributors of Linux.

    Such a move would rewrite the software landscape and open a new front in Oracles long competition with Microsoft. It will also give a big boost to Linux adoption among the enterprise.

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    Click.tv - leave comments for Video

    Posted by Harsha

    ClickTv allows you could watch the news and also comment and converse with other about the video in the process makeing the video interactive.

    The really cool thing about ClickTv service is the feature they call a comments matrix. Here you can comment about specific portions of a video by relating your comments to those sections. Other cool features are the ability to share video on your blog in a compact mode and the show comments as subtitles for the video.

    Though It hasn’t been launched yet, but it does have a good demo site up that shows what the main functionality will include, the ability for the creator and those who watch the video to add comments anywhere in the video stream, and others later to click on those comments
    and jump right to that point in the video.


    ClickTV


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