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Thursday, April 17, 2014

The animated GIF as art: Google puts six loopy images on display


It's easy to sneer at the idea of artists piggybacking on the GIF craze, but Google is taking the whole thing pretty seriously, especially now that Google+ supports the animated file format. The search giant is collaborating with the Saatchi Gallery in West London to host a number of looped moving images, displayed on giant TV screens, which it feels are worthy of public recognition. There's a hint of competitiveness, as a panel of judges (including His Artiness, Baz Luhrmann) will select a single winning GIF tonight. In the meantime, we've embedded the finalists from six different image categories after the break, ranked according to how much we like them and whether any of the artists are mates of ours.


1. CATEGORY: "NIGHT"



2. CATEGORY: "LIFESTYLE"



3. CATEGORY: "LANDSCAPE"



oTHER ARE:

4. CATEGORY: "PEOPLE"

5. CATEGORY: "ACTION"

6. CATEGORY: "URBAN"







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Google's Project Ara wants to revolutionize the smartphone industry within a year



The night before Google's Advanced Technology and Projects (ATAP) division was supposed to show off the one and only functional Project Ara prototype to a room full of eager developers, someone dropped the phone and broke the display. At any other product reveal, this worst-case scenario would be a nightmare come true. Not to Google: The company made lemonade out of a lemon by turning it into a selling point for the modular smartphone. A year from now, painful situations like this might be easily fixed by simply buying a new display and swapping out the broken one.
Not that it would've made much of a difference if last night's fiasco never happened. Attendees at this week's Project Ara developer conference wouldn't have been able to boot up the prototype and play around with it like any typical smartphone -- in this case, "functional" is not the same as "functioning" -- but at least it would've made for a better presentation. Regardless of how it looked, however, we were able to briefly handle the Project Ara prototype and some of its first modules. To be clear, this is an extremely early model and there's a long way to go before it sees the light of day, but it at least allows us to get a good glimpse of what's to come over the next year as Ara continues to prepare for launch.




Project Ara brings the modular smartphone from concept to a reality; it almost seems like it should've made a cameo in The Lego Movie. The Ara consists of a metal endoskeleton, which is essentially the spine of the phone, and slots for replaceable components known as modules, which look a lot like tiles. (If you're reminded of Windows Phone when looking at the back, you won't be the first.) These tiled modules can include anything that makes your phone tick (processor, RAM, WiFi, power jack, baseband, display and battery, for instance), as well as plenty of other features like your camera, speakers and storage space.
Today, the division announced that it's planning to ship a "Grey Phone," which is simply a prepackaged device that comes with only a screen, processor and WiFi module. From there, users can easily add and take away components as they see fit. It'll be relatively cheap -- the product would cost Google $50 to make, though retail price hasn't been determined yet -- and users on a tight budget can easily add or upgrade modules whenever they can afford to do so.



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Shh, it's a Secret: The allure of the anonymous internet


"I'm terrified I might not actually be all that smart."
"I like taking the ferry because I get to drink in public legally."
This is just a small sampling of posts I've recently seen on Secret, an anonymous-sharing app that's part of a new trend in Silicon Valley. It's a little like Whisper, a competing app that's been around since 2012, except that instead of letting you broadcast your anonymous missives to the world, posts on Secret are limited to a network of friends based on your phone's address book.
When I first heard of these anonymous-sharing apps, I was intrigued, but confused about their popularity. Surely anonymity on the internet isn't difficult -- you can be whomever you want online, right? Just create a fake account or join the social network of your choosing, and you're free to say whatever you like. But as I spent time on Whisper and Secret, I found that their barrier to entry is so much lower than having to come up with a fake persona. There's no need for a username or a special profile page -- you just download the app, answer a few questions and away you go. You do need to enter in an email address, phone number and password to Secret, but the app guides you through it pretty easily. Secret uses your contact info to connect you to your friends (not to worry; none), but if you misbehave or are reported as a "bad actor," you and your associated phone number may be banned from the network.
Once you're in, the freedom to say whatever you want is strangely alluring, especially so with Secret, where your confessions are likely to be seen by those sympathetic to your woes. In a world where your real name is exposed and everything you say online is recorded for time immemorial, anonymous-sharing apps provide an escape that's all too rare.

When the internet was young, most of us used fake screen names to identify ourselves. Whether it was LazyCow18 or LonelyGirl15, a nom de plume was preferable. Not only was it an easy way to set ourselves apart online, but it also allowed us to separate our online existence from the real world. Some of us used this cloak of anonymity to try on different personas, while others simply enjoyed the ability to speak freely without the debilitating confines of a shy and awkward personality. These days, however, internet anonymity is not nearly as predominant.
Hidden personas still exist on forums like Reddit, 4chan and most message boards, but by and large, our public and online identities tend to be one and the same. Facebook's popularity shoulders much of the blame for this phenomenon, especially since the use of real names is core to how the social network works. After all, how else are your old high school mates supposed to find you on Facebook if you've named yourself GamerX4000? Real identities are also core to another area of interest for Facebook: targeted ads.
In a world where your real name is exposed and everything you say online is recorded for time immemorial, anonymous-sharing apps provide an escape that's all too rare.
And it's not just Facebook, either. Google+ came under fire a few years ago when it banned the use of pseudonyms. (It's since loosened that rule and now allows the use of "common names.") YouTube, long known for its cesspool of anonymous comments, recently encouraged real-name use with its integration with Google+. Even if you've held strong to your online pseudonym, it's still likely that you've used your real name somewhere on the internet, be it on LinkedIn, Twitter or your company's website. One of the benefits of this transparency is that you're held accountable for what you say. Incidences of trolling and bullying are likely to subside if people know their real names are tied to their online activities. Real names also make it easier for us to stay connected, and in the case of LinkedIn, they can also help you find a job. The consequence, however, is that everything you do on the internet can be traced back to you, which forces you to watch what you say.
When Chrys Bader and David Byttow developed Secret last year, their goal was to provide an avenue to let us express ourselves more honestly, which they felt was difficult to do with today's tools.
"Facebook created order out of chaos," Bader said in an interview with us. "But that order was very constricting. It trained us to share in a certain way, to curate our identities, to put forward things we wouldn't be judged for. ... It can be stressful after a while."
The first version of Secret was an app that let you send anonymous messages directly to someone in your phone's contact list. While this certainly obeyed their initial credo of encouraging people to open up, the subsequent engagement and response to these direct messages were poor. They eventually adapted the product to broadcast to your entire phone's contacts list instead, which improved interactions dramatically.
Here's a brief primer on how Secret works: Anything that you post on Secret can be seen by the people in your phonebook who are also on Secret. If someone "hearts" a post, that secret will then be shared to his or her contacts list. If those people "heart" it, it will spread to their contacts list and so on. Secrets in your immediate circle will be marked as from a "Friend," those one step removed are from a "Friend of Friend", while posts that are two or more steps removed are marked with the person's general location. Only friends and friend-of-friends can leave comments on your posts. The idea behind this relatively closed network is that you're more likely to share a deep secret if you know it's a safe space. Additionally, the fact that you might know the person on the other end makes Secret a touch more personal than the seemingly random confessionals on Whisper. Right now Secret is iOS-only, but the company tells us an Android version should debut soon.
"Facebook created order out of chaos," Bader said in an interview with us. "But that order was very constricting."
"We wanted people to use their address book as the source of the social graph," said Bader. "We didn't want you to find friends and follow people like all the other social services out there." Conveying emotion, he said, is something that's much easier to do when you're with friends. "Sometimes even in a close network, you restrain yourself. You never really discuss culturally taboo things like salary or sex."

In Secret, however, those topics proliferate. From just one week with the app, I've seen posts that include melancholy thoughts about life, salacious sexual adventures, controversial political ideas and just random confessions of unrequited affections and financial woes. Its stream of consciousness feels a lot like Twitter, except, well, you don't know who's on the other end.
The benefits of Secret go beyond just catharsis as well. Recently, for example, a woman who goes by the name of "Amy" opined on Secret that she was the only person out of a five-person company who wasn't hired in a recent acquisition by Google. Though she's still skittish about coming forward, Secret offered her a chance to speak up about what she perceived to be an injustice. We can imagine a scenario where anonymous-sharing apps are used to reveal a wrongdoing that might otherwise go unsaid. Still, because these posts are anonymous, it's difficult to corroborate their validity. In the early days of Secret, for example, there was a rumor floating around that Yahoo was acquiring Evernote. This, of course, turned out to be false. However, Bader said the incident was actually a good thing, as it created a healthy skepticism about what is or isn't real.
No matter what you think of these anonymous-sharing apps, however, it's clear that they have a sizable fanbase, at least in the tech community. Whisper, for example, has raised nearly $54 million to date, while Secret has already received early funding to the sum of$8.6 million even though it was only introduced in January this year. Secret in particular has something of a cult following, and frequently gets mentioned on Twitter and the media as a poster child for the anonymous-app movement. There's even something called anonyfish, a rogue spin-off service designed to let people on Secret message each other anonymously using throwaway usernames. It's no wonder then that there seems to be a glut of anonymous-messaging apps like YikYak, Blink and Confide flooding the market. There are even rumors that Facebook -- the originator of the real-name movement -- might be considering an anonymous service of its own.
"Secret is like being in a room with all of your friends, but you don't know who's saying what," Bader said. "You get to peer into your friends lives, to experience truth, sadness, loss ... raw human emotion. It's what makes Secret so addicting."





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Tuesday, April 15, 2014



The country's largest software services firm, Tata Consultancy Services, has tied up with social media giant Twitter to launch an app, iElect, to help users gain social insights into the ongoing Lok Sabha polls.
"The TCS iElect app is a completely new way to observe, analyse and participate in the social conversations around the world's largest general elections," TCS said in a statement.
The app harnesses the power of social media, big data, analytics and mobility to make sense of what seems to be a complex web of conversations, it added.
"TCS iElect will be new and engaging for them to participate through the entire process with its gamified and interactive features," TCS Vice President and Head Corporate Communication Pradipta Bagchi said.
Users of iElect app will have access to insights and trends on a realtime basis.
"iElect makes real time Twitter data and analytics around key political events and content accessible to every Indian. The app has opened up a unique engagement opportunity with Twitter content for our users," Twitter India Market director Rishi Jaitly said.
An iOS version will be launched soon, the statement said.
More that 814 million voters, including over 23 million in the age group of 18-19 years, are exercising their franchise in the world's largest democracy where polls are being held in nine phases up to May 12.
India has the third-largest number of Internet users at more than 238 million, with a majority of them youth. This includes over a 100 million people active on social media platforms including Facebook and Twitter.
Other tech firms are also using the online media to engage with voters. Tech giant Google revamped its election hub to include features such as Pledge to Vote campaign, a 'Google score' tool for politicians, search trend info-graphics, YouTube election playlists and Hangout details for users.
Social networking giant Facebook launched an election tracker and started a Facebook Talks series, at which political leaders including Aam Aadmi Party founder Arvind Kejriwal and RJD chief Lalu Prasad answered questions from users.




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Tuesday, January 14, 2014


Recently it seems like there has been a rash of renewable energy ideas for charging our gadgets, 
especially our cell phones, but this latest technology is probably my favorite. A team of 
researchers at University of Texas Arlington have developed micro-windmills only one-tenth the 
size of a grain of rice that could one day be used to charge cell phones.

Hundreds of the 1.8 mm-wide devices could be embedded in a sleeve for a cell phone and then wind, 
whether by waving the phone in the air or by holding it up on a windy day, would generate electricity 
and charge the battery.

The devices are made out of durable nickel alloy that in testing withstood high artificial winds 
without any fracture in the material. They can be made in a batch process where hundreds or thousands 
can be made on a single wafer, which would make them inexpensive to produce.

Beyond charging our gadgets, the researchers think that the micro-windmills could also be applied 
to flat panels mounted on the walls of houses or buildings to harvest energy for lighting, 
security or environmental sensing and wireless communication.

The researchers are already partnering with WinMEMS Technologies Co., a Taiwanese fabrication 
company, to produce the devices.
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Wednesday, December 18, 2013

How To Block Any Website Without Any 
Software:

Most of peoples use different software's for blocking webs which also decrease computer.
One of the basic step to increase your computer speed is that do not install so much software's in your computer because it will increase your running applications and also decrease your space in your hard derive. So i always try to share those tips and tricks which does not need to install any software.
there are many software in market which are used to block some sites but i am sharing a tips here.
Use this tips to block your webs sites.

Follow these steps.

1. Goto start and then goto run

2. Then write there "C:\windows\system32\drivers\etc" without inverted commas you can also go there by   

     opening My Computer then C drive> windows> system32> drivers>etc  http://bit.ly/X5xu0Q

3. In this folder you can see a file with name "Host"

4. Open notepad and drop this file in it or open this file in notepad



5. Go down in this file you will see "127.0.0.1" local host or you may find this by pressing ctrl+f

6. Now do the final step just add the web site you want to block blow the 127.0.0.1 enjoy this trick.








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