Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Facebook to offers zero data charges on Reliance & Videocon

0.facebook.com

In an attempt to expand its mobile user base in regions where wireless data charges are still out of reach for many, Facebook has launched a fast and text-only supporting version of its site, called 0.facebook.com, which can be accessed with zero data charges on Reliance and Videocon networks.

Facebook claims this version of its site will solve the “two main challenges” people face when trying to use their other mobile site, m.facebook.com, where “sometimes the experience is too slow to be fun and the cost of data plans and understanding them can be daunting” The company goes on to say that they “designed 0.facebook.com to help solve these two barriers” and “hope[s] that even more people will discover the mobile Internet with Facebook as a result.”

The text-only-friendly version, 0.facebook.com, will offer image content as well, but “one click away”, so as not to slow down the browsing experiences. Users will be charged regular data charges if they try to access images though. Otherwise, they can still “update their status, view their News Feed, like or comment on posts, send and reply to messages, or write on their friends' Wall”. Mobile users who are on other carriers than Reliance and Videocon can still utilise this fast version of Facebook, but will pay standard data charges.
 

Friday, December 18, 2009

Chrome OS: The Cloud's grand opening

Right now, on the computer you are using, millions and millions of lines of code are being executed to facilitate your operating systems operation, interface, services and installed applications; only a fraction of which are being used by your browser.

Right now, on the millions of computers in the world there is a sizable fraction of people who are doing the same. Resulting in perhaps of trillions of wasted computer instructions that render icons no one is clicking, running services few care about.

There are many among us who have bought a computer solely for the purpose of surfing the internet. Google Chrome OS brings these many just that, a simple computer which switches on like a TV, and lets you browse a website as easily as you browse TV channels.

By running just the bare essentials of the OS with a browser on top, your computer is now perhaps the most efficient consumer of internet. Yes, Google Chrome OS is reducing pollution by making computers more efficient. Sounds ridiculous? It probably is!

In all probability Chrome OS is Google's way ushering more people online -- by making the hardware simple and fast to use and cheap -- since those are the people they make most money off of. However, my point here is, Chrome OS is here, now what?

For an average computer user, it is almost protocol to mention creating documents, editing spreadsheets, viewing photos.  That is a stereotypical template for an average computer user, someone who runs the billions of lines of code which make up Windows 7 in all its 3D glory, just to type a few words, punch in numbers and chat with his friends.

Twitter HACKED, again

This year has been as bad for Twitter as it has been good. Filled with downtime, document leaks and now just a two weeks shy of a new year, it has been hacked again.

Earlier this year Twitter's Google Apps accounts were hacked leaking company data about partnerships, future plans etc. -- an incident which was more embarrassing than it was damaging.

This time, a group of Iranian hackers defaced the website by essentially redirecting Twitter to their own page. The attack was carried out by a group which calls itself the "Iranian Cyber Army" to reciprocate against the "interference" of Twitter during the election protests.

Twitter.com during that time was displaying the following message:--
Iranian Cyber Army
THIS SITE HAS BEEN HACKED BY IRANIAN CYBER ARMY

iRANiAN.CYBER.ARMY@GMAIL.COM

U.S.A. Think They are Controlling And Managing Internet By Their Access, But They Don’t, We Control And Manage Internet By Our Power, So Do Not Try To Stimulation Iranian Peoples To….

NOW WHICH COUNTRY IN EMBARGO LIST? IRAN? USA?
WE PUSH THEM IN EMBARGO LIST ;)
Take Care.

Native webcam support to come with HTML 5

HTML5 seems to be tackling plugins head on! Nearly all new features which have been introduced for HTML5 seem to tackle one or the other common scenarios where plugins are usually required.

With localStorage, geolocation, pluginless video and audio, canvas support, nearly everything is covered. However Flash still has a lot more to offer, and it seems HTML5 is going to slowly steal a larger piece of the cake.
 A new HTML5 "devices" specification will now allow web developers to enable video conferencing via HTML applications without the need for any installed plugins. The abstract of the new specification is simply "This specification defines the HTML device element, to enable video conferencing from HTML applications."

However the specification at WHATWG is a little more... evolved. The device specification adds an element to an HTML5 page which will allow one to select a device to get the data from, example: a webcam.
 
Taking a look at what this specification might have to offer, here is an example from the draft which allows the user to select a webcam and then displays the video stream from it in a video element:

<p>To start chatting, select a video camera: 
<device type=media onchange="update(this.data)"></p> 
<video>< /video> 
<script> 
function update(stream) { 
    document.getElementsByTagName('video')[0].src = stream.URL; 
}
</script>
 

Top 9 strategic technologies for 2010

1.       Cloud Computing. Cloud computing is a style of computing that characterizes a model in which providers deliver a variety of IT-enabled capabilities to consumers. Cloud-based services can be exploited in a variety of ways to develop an application or a solution. Using cloud resources does not eliminate the costs of IT solutions, but does re-arrange some and reduce others. In addition, consuming cloud services enterprises will increasingly act as cloud providers and deliver application, information or business process services to customers and business partners.

2.       Advanced Analytics. Optimization and simulation is using analytical tools and models to maximize business process and decision effectiveness by examining alternative outcomes and scenarios, before, during and after process implementation and execution. This can be viewed as a third step in supporting operational business decisions. Fixed rules and prepared policies gave way to more informed decisions powered by the right information delivered at the right time, whether through customer relationship management (CRM) or enterprise resource planning (ERP) or other applications. The new step is to provide simulation, prediction, optimization and other analytics, not simply information, to empower even more decision flexibility at the time and place of every business process action. The new step looks into the future, predicting what can or will happen.

3.       Client Computing. Virtualization is bringing new ways of packaging client computing applications and capabilities. As a result, the choice of a particular PC hardware platform, and eventually the OS platform, becomes less critical. Enterprises should proactively build a five to eight year strategic client computing roadmap outlining an approach to device standards, ownership and support; operating system and application selection, deployment and update; and management and security plans to manage diversity.

4.       IT for Green. IT can enable many green initiatives. The use of IT, particularly among the white collar staff, can greatly enhance an enterprise’s green credentials. Common green initiatives include the use of e-documents, reducing travel and teleworking. IT can also provide the analytic tools that others in the enterprise may use to reduce energy consumption in the transportation of goods or other carbon management activities.

5.       Reshaping the Data Center. In the past, design principles for data centers were simple: Figure out what you have, estimate growth for 15 to 20 years, then build to suit. Newly-built data centers often opened with huge areas of white floor space, fully powered and backed by a uninterruptible power supply (UPS), water-and air-cooled and mostly empty. However, costs are actually lower if enterprises adopt a pod-based approach to data center construction and expansion. If 9,000 square feet is expected to be needed during the life of a data center, then design the site to support it, but only build what’s needed for five to seven years. Cutting operating expenses, which are a nontrivial part of the overall IT spend for most clients, frees up money to apply to other projects or investments either in IT or in the business itself.

6.       Social Computing. Workers do not want two distinct environments to support their work – one for their own work products (whether personal or group) and another for accessing “external” information. Enterprises must focus both on use of social software and social media in the enterprise and participation and integration with externally facing enterprise-sponsored and public communities. Do not ignore the role of the social profile to bring communities together.

7.       Security – Activity Monitoring. Traditionally, security has focused on putting up a perimeter fence to keep others out, but it has evolved to monitoring activities and identifying patterns that would have been missed before. Information security professionals face the challenge of detecting malicious activity in a constant stream of discrete events that are usually associated with an authorized user and are generated from multiple network, system and application sources. At the same time, security departments are facing increasing demands for ever-greater log analysis and reporting to support audit requirements. A variety of complimentary (and sometimes overlapping) monitoring and analysis tools help enterprises better detect and investigate suspicious activity – often with real-time alerting or transaction intervention. By understanding the strengths and weaknesses of these tools, enterprises can better understand how to use them to defend the enterprise and meet audit requirements.

8.       Flash Memory. Flash memory is not new, but it is moving up to a new tier in the storage echelon. Flash memory is a semiconductor memory device, familiar from its use in USB memory sticks and digital camera cards. It is much faster than rotating disk, but considerably more expensive, however this differential is shrinking. At the rate of price declines, the technology will enjoy more than a 100 percent compound annual growth rate during the new few years and become strategic in many IT areas including consumer devices, entertainment equipment and other embedded IT systems. In addition, it offers a new layer of the storage hierarchy in servers and client computers that has key advantages including space, heat, performance and ruggedness.

9.   Mobile Applications. By year-end 2010, 1.2 billion people will carry handsets capable of rich, mobile commerce providing a rich environment for the convergence of mobility and the Web. There are already many thousands of applications for platforms such as the Apple iPhone, in spite of the limited market and need for unique coding. It may take a newer version that is designed to flexibly operate on both full PC and miniature systems, but if the operating system interface and processor architecture were identical, that enabling factor would create a huge turn upwards in mobile application availability.

        

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Know Your Future WEB Browsers


One of the easiest ways to get the jump on your fellow developers is to keep a close eye on upcoming versions of your favorite browsers. Here are three important browsers to watch: --

From  this November Internet Explorer team had started work on IE9, which is great news. IE9 is bringing about improvements in JavaScript performance, hardware acceleration for graphics, and some promising signs on the CSS3 support front. Chances are slim that IE9 will appear on desktops before 2011, but in the meantime,we can all look forward to get plenty of updates from the IE team as they work on the latest version. There is improve support in IE that site developers use, the score will continue to go up. A more meaningful (from the point of view of web developers) example of standards support involves rounded corners. Here’s IE9 drawing rounded corners, along with the underlying mark-up:

Firefox has also launched its latest version Firefox 3.6 and it's full of lovely new bells and whistles.This browser is made supportive with background images and gradients, and has support for HTML 5's local file access API. Firefox 3.6 was originally slated for a late 2009 release, but has yet to reach release candidate status -- so keep a close eye out.

Google Chrome Extensions are finally here. Will this help Chrome chip away at Firefox's market share in 2010, especially among those of us who love our Web Developer Toolbar and Firebug? We put this to our Twitter friends and responses were mixed indeed: some people absolutely can't wait, while other friends are fairly loyal to Firefox. One thing's for sure -- in 2010, as more extensions appear, there'll be more incentive to try Chrome.

    Thursday, December 10, 2009

    Expression Web 3 -- Your New PHP Tool Kit


    Good news for all Web Developers. Microsoft Expression Web 3 finally launched. In  this version of Expression Web you have provisions for  editing PHP codes.
                   Expression Web promises an intuitive and helpful web development experience. There’s support for code highlighting and completion for a number of different syntaxes; as well as the usual suspects—HTML, CSS, and JavaScript—you can also enjoy code completion for PHP, ASP.NET, and more. Testing tools include support for live viewing of PHP pages, a neat new way to test in Internet Explorer 6 through 8 (as well as Firefox), and lots of shortcuts for trying out other browsers you’ve installed. And in a really nice touch, you can even import content from a Photoshop document, making it easy to grab image parts from layers in your PSD to include in your pages.
                     Download your 60 days trial from Microsoft Expression Website.