Yearly Archives: 2011

369 posts

SanDisk Announces Ultra SSD

SanDisk Corporation has introduced the SanDisk Ultra® solid state drive (SSD) for the retail market. The new SSD can extend the life of desktop and notebook PCs, and offers greater performance, durability and power efficiency than a hard disk drive.

The SanDisk Ultra SSD is a convenient drop-in solution for technology enthusiasts looking to upgrade their own PCs for an enhanced user experience. The new SSD features:

* Fast performance: the drive’s up to 280 megabyte per second (MB/sec)1 sequential read and 270 MB/sec sequential write speeds deliver fast data-transfer rates; up to 3 Gb/s random speeds surpass other SATA II SSDs and enable faster system boot and application launch times
* Power efficiency: the drive’s low power consumption extends battery life, and with no moving parts, the SSD offers silent operation
* Long-term reliability: Mean Time Between Failure (MTBF)2 of up to 1,000,000 hours

“Replacing a computer’s hard disk drive with the SanDisk Ultra SSD is more cost effective than buying a new PC,” said Kent Perry, director, product marketing, SanDisk. “Our new SSD delivers greater speed and reliability than a hard disk drive at an affordable price.”

The drive comes in 60 gigabyte (GB)3, 120GB and 240GB capacities carrying MSRPs of $129.99, $219.99 and $449.99, respectively.

Mozilla Web Mobile OS

Mozilla has launched a new project called “Boot to Gecko” . The aim of the project is to develop a complete operating system for the open web.

“To that end, we propose a project we’re calling Boot to Gecko (B2G) to pursue the goal of building a complete, standalone operating system for the open web. It’s going to require work in a number of areas.

New web APIs: build prototype APIs for exposing device and OS capabilities to content (Telephony, SMS, Camera, USB, Bluetooth, NFC, etc.)
Privilege model: making sure that these new capabilities are safely exposed to pages and applications
Booting: prototype a low-level substrate for an Android-compatible device
Applications: choose and port or build apps to prove out and prioritize the power of the system”.

Read more: https://wiki.mozilla.org/B2G

Gerber Steady Multi Tool Includes Camera Tripod

The new version Gerber multi-tool the ‘Steady’ includes a pop-up tripod screw that will hold a small digital camera onto the top of the tool.

Its standard screw size will let you mount mini cameras, smartphones, and possibly light SLRs.

The tool has 12 other implements and a knife. The Steady will ship in 2012 sometime and will cost $65.

Gerbergear.com

Firefox and Chrome Extensions to Block Murdock Websites

After the recent (still ongoing) News International phone hacking scandal, developers have created free tools to help consumers stay away from websites owned by the Murdoch media empire., reports Mike Flacy writing on Digitaltrends

“A couple developers have created free tools to help consumers stay away from websites owned by the Murdoch media empire. A Firefox add-on called MurdochAlert creates a warning when users are loading one of 100+ sites. For instance, if a user lands on Fox News, an alert bar appears to warn the user of the “potential computer security risks of accessing Murdoch-controlled sites”. The add-on comes with a Greasemonkey script for any user that wants to alter the design.

A Chrome extension takes a more stringent approach and completely halts the user from loading a Murdoch property. Called Murdoch Block, the extension displays a warning before allowing the user to choose to load the site. Popular blocked properties include Hulu (31 percent owned by Fox), Fox News, MySpace, Wall Street Journal and the New York Post.”

Read more: http://www.digitaltrends.com/web/firefox-and-chrome-tools-block-murdoch-owned-websites/

MurdochAlert warns you whenever you visit one of the 100+ Murdoch Family-controlled websites.
Download: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/MurdochAlert-details/

Murdoch Block: Blocks websites owned and operated by News Corp
Download: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/moepiacmhnmbiilhpojodnaopndhddpg#

Apple OS X Lion Downloads Top One Million in First Day

Apple® today announced that in just one day, over one million users bought and downloaded Mac OS® X Lion, the eighth major release of the world’s most advanced operating system. Available through the Mac® App Store™ for $29.99 (US), users are buying Lion faster than any other OS release in Apple’s history.

“Lion is off to a great start, user reviews and industry reaction have been fantastic,” said Philip Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of Worldwide Product Marketing. “Lion is a huge step forward, it’s not only packed with innovative features but it’s incredibly easy for users to update their Macs to the best OS we’ve ever made.”

Lion introduces more than 250 new features to the Mac, including Multi-Touch® gestures; system-wide support for full screen apps; Mission Control, an innovative view of everything running on your Mac; the Mac App Store, the best place to find and explore great software; Launchpad, a new home for all your apps; and a completely redesigned Mail app.

Available in 123 countries, the Mac App Store brings the revolutionary App Store experience to the Mac so you can find great new apps, buy them using your iTunes® account, download and install them in just one step. The Mac App Store offers apps in Education, Games, Graphics & Design, Lifestyle, Productivity, Utilities and other categories. Users can browse new and noteworthy apps, find out what’s hot, see staff favorites, search categories and look up top charts for paid and free apps, as well as user ratings and reviews. The Mac App Store is built right into Lion and available for Snow Leopard® users through Software Update as part of Mac OS X version 10.6.8.

Apple designs Macs, the best personal computers in the world, along with OS X, iLife, iWork and professional software. Apple leads the digital music revolution with its iPods and iTunes online store. Apple has reinvented the mobile phone with its revolutionary iPhone and App Store, and has recently introduced iPad 2 which is defining the future of mobile media and computing devices.

800 Android Apps Leaking Private Information

Neil Daswani, the CTO of security firm Dasient, says that they have studied around 10,000 Android apps and have found that 800 of them are leaking private user information, according to Dgitizor.com

“The Dasient researchers also found out that 11 of the apps they have examined are sending unwanted SMS messages.”

Read more: http://digitizor.com/2011/07/21/android-malware/

Packt Announce jQuery Mobile First Look Book

Packt announce jQuery Mobile First Look, a new book which aims to show the features of the jQuery Mobile framework, what they do, and how they can be used. Written by Giulio Bai,this book covers all the factors that a developer needs to know before starting mobile web application development. The book also suggests the best practices and methods to accomplish things in an alternative way. For more details, visit: www.packtpub.com/jquery-mobile-first-look/book

jQuery Mobile is a Touch-Optimized Web Framework (additionally known as a JavaScript library or a Mobile framework) currently being developed by the jQuery Project team. The development focuses on creating a framework compatible with a wide variety of Smartphones and Tablets, made necessary by the growing-but-heterogeneous tablet and smartphone market.

jQuery Mobile First Look book starts with an introduction to jQuery Mobile. The book gives an overview of the key features of the framework and how they can be used to implement a mobile web application. The topics covered include everything the jQuery Mobile developer needs to know in order to create a full-feature web application for mobile devices. The book presents information about buttons, toolbars, dialogs, forms, and list views.

Using this book, readers will discover why jQuery Mobile is highly regarded when compared to other libraries and frameworks. The jQuery users will learn to display content to suit their needs and make everything look like a full-fledged RIA even on a mobile screen. This book will show readers how to enjoy programming by letting a simple yet effective JavaScript library handle the hassles that they would encounter otherwise.

Allowing existing users to get a look at the features of jQuery mobile, this book is targeted at jQuery developers who want to enter the exciting world of mobile web development. This book is an interesting and beneficial read to jQuery users. To read more about the book, please visit: www.packtpub.com/jquery-mobile-first-look/book

Internet Search Engines Changing Our Brains

Recent research by Columbia University psychologist Betsy Sparrow suggests the rise of Internet search engines like Google has changed the way our brain remembers information. The research was published July 14 in Science.

“Since the advent of search engines, we are reorganizing the way we remember things,” said Sparrow. “Our brains rely on the Internet for memory in much the same way they rely on the memory of a friend, family member or co-worker. We remember less through knowing information itself than by knowing where the information can be found.”

Sparrow’s research reveals that we forget things we are confident we can find on the Internet. We are more likely to remember things we think are not available online. And we are better able to remember where to find something on the Internet than we are at remembering the information itself. This is believed to be the first research of its kind into the impact of search engines on human memory organization.

Sparrow’s paper in Science is titled, “Google Effects on Memory: Cognitive Consequences of Having Information at Our Fingertips.” With colleagues Jenny Liu of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Daniel M. Wegner of Harvard University, Sparrow explains that the Internet has become a primary form of what psychologists call transactive memory—recollections that are external to us but that we know when and how to access.

The research was carried out in four studies.

First, participants were asked to answer a series of difficult trivia questions. Then they were immediately tested to see if they had increased difficulty with a basic color naming task, which showed participants words in either blue or red. Their reaction time to search engine-related words, like Google and Yahoo, indicated that, after the difficult trivia questions, participants were thinking of Internet search engines as the way to find information.

Second, the trivia questions were turned into statements. Participants read the statements and were tested for their recall of them when they believed the statements had been saved—meaning accessible to them later as is the case with the Internet—or erased. Participants did not learn the information as well when they believed the information would be accessible, and performed worse on the memory test than participants who believed the information was erased.

Third, the same trivia statements were used to test memory of both the information itself and where the information could be found. Participants again believed that information either would be saved in general, saved in a specific spot, or erased. They recognized the statements which were erased more than the two categories which were saved.

Fourth, participants believed all trivia statements that they typed would be saved into one of five generic folders. When asked to recall the folder names, they did so at greater rates than they recalled the trivia statements themselves. A deeper analysis revealed that people do not necessarily remember where to find certain information when they remember what it was, and that they particularly tend to remember where to find information when they can’t remember the information itself.

According to Sparrow, a greater understanding of how our memory works in a world with search engines has the potential to change teaching and learning in all fields.

“Perhaps those who teach in any context, be they college professors, doctors or business leaders, will become increasingly focused on imparting greater understanding of ideas and ways of thinking, and less focused on memorization,” said Sparrow. “And perhaps those who learn will become less occupied with facts and more engaged in larger questions of understanding.”

The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health and Columbia’s department of psychology.

http://news.columbia.edu/

Twitter Updates Android App

Twitter has updated its Android App, to version 2.1.0 bringing two key features to the mobile platform. Twitter’s service now offers push notifications and multiple account sign-in for Android phones. Twitter said “It includes some of the most commonly requested features from our users.”

Main features: Browse interests, Find & follow friends, Tweet, Retweet, Favorite, Direct Message privately with your followers, share photos, videos and web pages, real-time search, view maps, trends, and follow.

New features:
Push notifications.
Multiple accounts.
Updated home screen widgets.
Other improvements and bug fixes

More info: http://blog.twitter.com/2011/07/twitter-for-android-now-with-push.html

Download; https://market.android.com/details?id=com.twitter.android&feature=apps_topselling_free

Line2 Mobile Communication App Now on Android

Line2 app is a tri-mode VoIP/Cell calling app now available for Android phones and tablets. Toktumi, Inc., the company that developed Line2, announced today that its SMS-enabled VoIP app can now be downloaded in the Android marketplace. Line2 becomes the first VoIP app for Android to feature carrier-grade SMS texting combined with feature-rich calling functionality, allowing customers to use one number for both types of communication.

Customers use Line2 to add a second line to their smartphone or turn an iPod or tablet device into a fully-featured telephone. The app allows customers to make phone calls and send texts where they don’t have cell reception, reduce their cell bills, add a second line for business use, or get another number so they can keep their personal cell number private. Many customers take advantage of Line2’s free port-in offer, which lets them move an existing number to Line2 free of charge.

Line2 for Android includes all of the functionality and features that are currently available to Apple iOS users plus few Android-only features, such as the ability to speak their text messages and have them transcribed so they can text without typing.

Line2 is a free download that comes with a free trial. After that, service costs just $9.95/month for unlimited US/Canada calling and texting

www.line2.com

Samsung Chromebook Series 5 In Depth Review

Neil McAllister writing on InfoWorld has posted an in-depth look at the Samsung Chromebook Series 5 3G.

McAllister’s verdict; “The Chromebook is lightweight and inexpensive, and it offers a full-featured Web browsing experience. But its low-end hardware, lack of versatility, and primitive support for commonplace computing tasks such as printing, file management, networking, and media playback make it a poor choice for everyday use, particularly in a business setting.

All in all, the Samsung Series 5 is an average-quality netbook with a large screen and a higher-than-average price tag, while Chrome OS itself feels more like a proof-of-concept project whose time has not yet come. As a browser terminal it functions well, but for everything else it falls short — and despite all Google’s cheerleading, for most users that simply won’t be enough.”

Read more: http://www.infoworld.com/d/mobile-technology/google-chromebook-lacks-luster-purpose-796