Tuesday, 13 December 2011

Compress with a password set

Eager to protect your compressed files from data thieves
Steps

  1. Download PeaZip from peazip.com latest version 4.0
  2. After installation select files or folder you wish to compress with o password set.
  3. Tap right click and select              Add to archive---
  4. Select method of compression for example *.Zip,*.7z,*.rar
  5. Select a password for archive a strong one for better protection
Done enjoy your protected archive and don't forget the password

How to Choose a Strong "Password"

When choosing a password remember these points

  1. Don't use characters that are of personal significance 
  2. Mix letters, numbers and symbols, and use case sensitivity. Using this, it is almost impossible to "crack" somebody's password. ( instead of "password," try "pAsS34%(6*2woRd," etc.)
  3. Find a good way to remember. A good way to do this is to choose the first letters of a sentence that you will remember. e.g. "I have 2 dogs called Rover and Fido" gives: Ih2dcRaF
  4. Try to memorize the password, and avoid writing it down. Somebody could very easily find the slip of paper that the password is written on.
  5. The longer the better. Don't make a password that's less than 6 characters. Anything less can be cracked from brute force software.
  6. Take the street you grew up on, and your first pet/something hard to guess from your past, put a number sign in between, substitute some letters for numbers, and, voila! A great password. For example: Bill grew up on Ocean Avenue, and his first pet was Rocky. His password would be: 0c3an#r0cky You can add random capitals to make it more secure
  7. Do not use the same password for everything. If someone finds this password, they would have access to everything. At the very least, make at least one password for sensitive things ( online banking etc.) and one for everything else ( email etc.)
  8. Another way is using just numbers, but with an algorithm. You could take your birthday, for instance. For a random birthday, let's use 23/4/87. 2+3+4+8+7=24. 2+4=6. And so your password is simple. now, take 6 and.... 2x2x2=8 4x2x2=16. 1+6=7. 7x7=49. 49x49=2401. This way, you have a password,(2401) and a way to crack it if you forget it! 
  9. One other way is to use a word, for example, DeifyTech, and move your fingers up one row on the keyboard. Deifytech becomes e38r653dy.  
Check your password at http://www.passwordmeter.com/  this website give rank to your generated password now no one will be able to crack your password
Monday, 12 December 2011

Protect Your Computer With Simple Tricks

You are probably a home user and want your computer to be protected without spending a penny
Things you need
  • Antivirus
  • Firewall
  • Encryption
  • Antilogger
And some information about websites and how to install
I shall help you choose the right free antivirus Few free reputed antivirus are listed below
  • Avira Antivirus
  • AVG Antivirus
  • Avast Antivirus
  • Eset Antivirus
  • Panda Antivirus
These are best free antivirus available in market which can be updated freely

FireWall
ZoneAlarm Firewall is best free firewall available on the web and its alternative is Comodo Firewall

Encryption
Encrypt your files to make them unreadable the best application is True Crypt to encrypt Hard Disk and files and another alternative is Fencryption which is portable to which means you can use it from a flash drive or a compact disc.

Antilogger
Zemana Antilogger(paid) or any other antilogger will be fine


I am sure this will help u protect your computer from threats

    How to create a Social Networking Website




    The of dream of every developer to create a social networking website. I shall tell you the simpler way for novice. First of all you need a hosting space and a domain name you may buy domains form BigRock or GoDaddy or any other reliable website for domain and hosting from Hostgator, BlueHost OR Free hosting from 000webhost with 1500 MB free space and 100GB of bandwidth and 99% uptime. After you bought Domian and Webspace Download Elgg the free social networking script but there are also paid scripts but elgg is best for free because it is easily customizable and have lots of plugins in its plugin market. Upload the script to your hosting for example in the directory public_html Setup the script create a My SQL Database and create a administrator account for logging into your website. Your Website is now ready and you could drive traffic through various programs like Google Adwords, SEO Etc and good luck.You better be thinking that if this person know how to create a social netwoking website why he is sharing with us and why he is running a blog that is because I was a novice at a time and want novice to achieve some thing.
    Friday, 18 November 2011

    Not Just Nokia Lumia Have Windows

    5 Impressive Windows Phone Powered Smartphones

    main-179_6Microsoft's Windows Phone mobile OS has gained a lot of mileage in the last couple of weeks, courtesy Nokia unveiling its Lumia 800 smartphone. While the Lumia 800 is an impressive device, That’s not the beginning and the end of mobile phones based on Microsoft's Windows Phone platform. There are a couple of other Windows Phone powered smartphones just out in the market or waiting to get launched, which also deserve attention.

    Here we take a look at five such Windows Phone powered smartphones that aren't the Nokia Lumia 800.



    1. HTC Radar

    So far HTC has impressed with its Windows Phone smartphones. The HTC Radar looks set to join that club with impressive specs and performance. The Radar has a 3.8-in SLCD display with a resolution of 480x800 pixels and a 5MP autofocus camera. The Radar runs on a 1GHz Qualcomm Scorpion processor and Adreno 205 GPU and offers 8GB of internal memory.

    Price: Rs. 23,990

    Availability: Available in India right now.

    Why You Should Care: The Radar's 3.8-in SLCD display sounds like a very good proposition. The Radar is also DLNA compatible which is a great feature to have if you have multiple DLNA-compatible gadgets in your home.

    2. Samsung Omnia W

    Currently, the Samsung Omnia W is the only Windows Phone smartphone from the Korean handset manufacturer to get an official release in India. The Omnia W sports a 3.7-in Super AMOLED display with a resolution of 480x800 pixels and a 5MP autofocus camera. The Omnia W is powered by a 1.4GHz processor and comes with 8GB of internal storage.

    Price: Rs. 19,990

    Availability: Available in India right now.

    Why You Should Care: The Omnia W's 3.7-in Super AMOLED display hits all the sweet spots in terms of size and display quality. At 1.4GHz, the Omnia W's processor is also one of the most powerful you will find on a phone priced below 20K.

    3. Samsung Focus

    While the Samsung Focus was released a year back in the U.S. and was never officially released in India, it's surprisingly popular on eBay India. The Focus has a 4-in Super AMOLED display with a resolution of 480x800 pixels. It runs on a 1GHz Qualcomm Scorpion processor and an Adreno 200 GPU and has 8GB of internal memory. Imaging is taken care of by a 5MP autofocus camera. While the Focus was originally launched with Windows Phone 7, a 7.5 (Mango) update has been made available for it.

    Price: New unlocked models are listed from Rs. 14,800 to Rs. 20,770 on eBay India.

    Availability: Not officially launched but available on eBay India

    Why You Should Care: At that price, the question is: why shouldn't you? If you look past the fact that the Focus is a year-old phone, you will realize that it represents excellent value for money in terms of specs (4-in AMOLED display, 1GHz processor et.al).

    4. HTC Titan
    The HTC Titan is certainly a Titan when it comes to specs among Windows Phone smartphones. It sports a massive 4.7-in SLCD display with a resolution of 480x800 pixels and an 8MP autofocus camera. The Titan is powered by a 1.5GHz Qualcomm processor and an Adreno 205 GPU and has 16GB of internal memory.

    Price: Rs. 40,000 (approx. excluding shipping charges) from the U.S.

    Availability: No word yet on India launch. Launched in the U.S. in October.

    Why You Should Care: If you're a fan of the big numbers, then the HTC Titan will interest you. Everything from its screen size to internal memory to processor speed to battery capacity is the highest among Windows smartphones. Also, there aren't too many 8MP cameras on phones out there.

    5. Nokia Lumia 710

    With all the hype surrounding the Lumia 800, it's easy to forget that the Nokia Lumia 710 is also about to hit the market. Its specs make it appear to be an ideal candidate for a sub-20K Windows Phone. The Lumia 710 has a 3.7-in display with a resolution of 480x800 pixels and a 5MP autofocus camera. It runs on a 1.4GHz Qualcomm Scorpion processor and an Adreno 205 GPU and has 8GB of internal memory.

    Price: Expect it be around Rs. 19,000

    Availability: Launched in India but no concrete date on when it will hit stores.

    Why You Should Care: There is of course the hype surrounding Nokia's first Windows phones, so you probably already do. Nokia understands the mid-range market as well as the best of them, so the Lumia 710 already looks like a good VFM product. It's not miserly in terms of specs either as the 3.7-in display and the 1.4GHz processor proves.
    Tuesday, 15 November 2011

    Nokia Lumia Phones Launched in India:TI


    nokia-Lumia-800-and-Lumia-700-179Nokia has announced the launch of its top end Lumia 800 and budget oriented Lumia 710 phones. These devices are Nokia's first Windows Phone powered devices, and will be available in India by mid-December. The Finish Mobile giant has not yet announced the pricing for both these devices.

    Both the Lumia 800 and Lumia 710 devices run on a 1.4-GHz processor. Also both phones also support HD video playback.
    The Nokia Lumia 800 comes in a uni-body design, sports a 3.7-inch AMOLED display and weighs around 142 g. It will also have 512 MB of RAM, 16GB of internal user memory, and will feature an 8 MP camera with 28 mm wide angle lens.

    The Nokia Lumia 710, while featuring the same processor as its costlier cousin, the Lumia 800, has a plastic construction. It also features a WVGA LCD display, a 5 MP camera, 8 GB of internal user memory and weighs around 125.5 g.

    Nokia has bundled apps such as Nokia Drive, Nokia Music, into both the devices. It remains to be seen how well these Windows phone powered devices will do in a smartphone market that is pretty much dominated by Apple and Google.

    TI:Google Releases Ice Cream Sandwich Source Codes


    Google has just released the source code for the latest build of Android, deliciously titled "Ice Cream Sandwich." In a Google Groups post, Google engineer Jean-Baptiste Queru says "this is actually the source code for version 4.0.1 of Android, which is the specific version that will ship on the Galaxy Nexus."

    android-ice-cream-sandwich-179The source code is available for download right now from the Android Open-Source Project git servers, though Queru warns that it is a rather hefty file and can take some time to download. If you plan on checking out the source code yourself, I recommend waiting a bit for the servers to calm down.
    Clicking on the link from the original post sent me straight to a 404 page so it might be a while before people can actually get their hands on the full file.
    Interestingly, the code includes the previously unreleased source for Android 3.0 (Honeycomb). Queru admits that Honeycomb was unfinished and urges all developers to ignore it in favor of Ice Cream Sandwich.
    With another Google event happening on November 16th of this week, we can only hope that this source code release signals the imminent arrival of the Samsung Galaxy Nexus. We still have no official release date or price for the Galaxy Nexus, but with the source code out in the wild it's only a matter of time before the phone arrives as well.

    SandyBridge-E Debuts with Intel Core i7-3960X six-core Processor

    Today Intel announced what it called its fastest chip to date for PCs, the six-core Core i7-3960X Extreme Edition processor, which is based on the Sandy Bridge microarchitecture and designed for use in high-end desktops. The 3960X and 3930K processors will be the first to require Intel's new X79 motherboard, which uses an LGA2011 socket.

    The processor is targeted at enthusiasts such as gamers, who usually are early adopters of the latest technologies. More cores and faster clocks speed up PCs and are valued by gamers, who demand peak performance when playing graphics intensive games.
    The Core i7-3960X runs at a default clock speed of 3.3 GHz, cranking up to 3.9 GHz per core depending on performance required. The chip has 15MB of cache and supports four channels of memory, also the most available on Intel PC chips to date.
    The chip is about 52 percent faster in video editing than the Core i7-2600K chip, which is also based on Sandy Bridge and targeted at enthusiasts. The memory performance is up to 114 percent better, Intel said. The Core i7-3960X will succeed the Core i7-990X Extreme Edition, which was the fastest chip based on Intel's previous Westmere architecture.

    Intel Core i7 3960X Processor Die Detail
    The i7-3960X processor is priced at US$990 for 1,000 units. It will compete with the Advanced Micro Devices' eight-core (Bulldozer) FX-series processors, which started shipping last month and are also targeted at enthusiasts.
    Intel and AMD are adding cores and ratcheting up clock speeds in an effort to gain the chip performance crown. AMD in September demonstrated its eight-core FX processor running at 8.429GHz in a system, which the company claimed broke the world record.
    Intel also introduced the six-core Core i7-3930K chip, which operates at 3.2GHz and can be clocked up to 3.8GHz. The chip has 12MB of cache, four memory channels, and is priced at US$555 in quantities of 1,000.
    Of course, this means that the previously reigning king (Intel Core i7-990X) will have to step down in price. For a quick reference of what the new Sandy Bridge-E series will be competing against, at the top-end within Intel's family of desktop processors, see the table below. Note that all of the processors listed below support Hyper Threading, so they can simultaneously run twice the number of threads as the number of cores they have.
    Specifications:

    Nokia Lumia 800:TI


    Nokia recently launched their first Windows Phone powered smartphones in India- the Lumia 800 and the Lumia 710. Both the Lumia 800 and Lumia 710 run on a 1.4GHz processor and support HD video playback.

    Nokia-Lumia-800-Black-179I managed to get my hands on the Lumia 800 during the Nokia Developer Conference 2011 in Bangalore and tried it out for some time. Here are some of my initial impressions:
    1. Beautiful Display: The Lumia 800 sports a large 3.7-in AMOLED display with a resolution of 800x480 pixels. The specs sound pretty good but they don't do justice to how the display looks like in real life. In the little time that I had the device, the display looked like it could stand tall among the best. Colors (especially blacks) looked very rich and made the tile-based Windows Phone UI look even prettier. The only issue was that the display was very glossy which means that it would be a fingerprint magnet.

    2. Great Build & Looks: The Lumia 800 felt like one of the best phones I had ever handled. The phone has a polycarbonate body which was unlike anything I have seen on any other phone. The phone's body felt really solid and very smooth to the touch, similar to the aluminum casing on the Nokia N8 and the HTC Legend without compromising on slimness or weight.
    3. Windows Phone: The Lumia 800 comes with Windows Phone 7.5 Mango and if you've seen how it looks and handles earlier, there's not much new here. One great addition though is that the always-excellent free Nokia Maps comes pre-installed on the Lumia which means that you don't need to use the default Bing Maps.
    4. Touchscreen: The one issue that mostly hounded Nokia's earlier Symbian phones was that touch accuracy was inconsistent. Fortunately, with the Lumia 800 this problem seems to have been dealt with well. Scrolling through the various menus and screens was smooth and the keyboard was also accurate.
    The Nokia Lumia 800 and the Lumia 710 are expected to hit Indian markets by mid-December. Expect a more in-depth review by then.
    Friday, 11 November 2011

    ARM Mali-T658 Eight-core Graphics Chip Introduced Tech Infection


    The Mali-T658 graphics processor announced by ARM on Wednesday can be equipped with up to eight cores to help it deliver ten times the graphics performance of the company's existing GPU (Mali-400 MP).

    ARM-Mali-graphicsThe superior graphics performance is compared to the Mali-400 MP, which is used on a number of smartphones from Samsung Electronics, including the Galaxy S II and the new Galaxy Note. The chip also has four times the computing power of the Mali-T604 GPU, which has yet to appear in any available products.
    The performance boost will result in better HD gaming and help usher in new compute-intensive applications, such as augmented reality, according to ARM. Besides smartphones, the GPU will also be used in tablets, smart TVs and automotive entertainment systems.
    But don't expect products based on the Mali-T658 GPU anytime soon. Smartphones based on the Mali-T604 GPU will arrive next year, while products that use a Mali-T658 chip with four cores will arrive in 2013. Products powered by a version with the maximum eight cores are expected to be introduced in 2015, according to a chart from ARM detailing the evolution of its mobile processors.
    Samsung, Fujitsu Semiconductor and LG Electronics are among the companies that will partner with ARM on products, ARM said.

    The chip is compatible with a number of different of graphics and compute APIs, including DirectX 11 and DirectCompute from Microsoft; Khronos OpenGL ES and OpenCL; Google's Renderscript and OpenVG.
    Besides the new Mali GPU, this week also saw the introduction of Asus's 10-inch Eee Pad Transformer Prime tablet. It is powered by the ARM-based Tegra 3 processor, which has four cores, and will start shipping worldwide in December.

    Download FirstCloud OS


    Oracle has updated its Unix-based operating system Solaris, adding some features that would make the OS more suitable for running cloud deployments, as well as integrating it more tightly with other Oracle products, the company announced Wednesday.

    Oracle-Solaris-11"We looked at some of the big challenges that people were having in deploying cloud infrastructure, either in a private cloud or public cloud," said Charlie Boyle, senior director of product marketing. "In the release, we engineered out some of the complexity in managing a cloud infrastructure, and made it possible to run any Solaris application in a cloud environment."
    Cloud deployments require even greater levels of automation and streamlining than a standard IT infrastructure would, noted Markus Flierl, Oracle vice president of software development. While an organization may run hundreds of Solaris servers, as it moves its applications to a cloud infrastructure, it may run them across thousands of virtual Solaris instances.
    Solaris, a Unix implementation, was originally developed by Sun Microsystems, which Oracle acquired last year. While not as widely known for its cloud software, Oracle has been marketing Solaris as a cloud-friendly OS. In Oracle's architecture, users can set up different partitions, called Zones, inside a Solaris implementation, which would allow different workloads to run simultaneously, each within their own environment, on a single machine.
    Oracle Solaris Zones has 15 times less overhead than a VMware implementation, Oracle asserted in its marketing literature. The company also touted that Zones had no artificial limitations set on memory, network, CPU or storage resources.
    Many of the new features were designed to ease the administrative overhead of running a cloud-like infrastructure, Flierl said. One new feature, called Fast Reboot, will allow the system to boot up without doing the routine set of hardware checks, a move that can make system boot times up to two-and-a-half times faster, Oracle claimed. This feature can be handy in that an administrator applying a patch or software update across thousands of Solaris deployments can reboot them all the more quickly. "It allows you safely to upgrade your entire environment," Flierl said.



    The new Solaris also features a new software management system, called Image Packaging System, that will keep track of a program's dependencies, or the libraries and other software that the program needs to run. The Image Packaging System keeps all the software packages in a system up-to-date, including those in a virtual environment.
    Also adding to Solaris' cloud capabilities are new administrator controls that lock down the settings in individual Zones. Users can be limited in what changes they can make to the file system, or to the network settings. It can also limit the amount of network bandwidth each Zone can use. This is also the first version of the OS that allows users to virtualize networking resources, meaning supporting network cards can route traffic to appropriate virtual machines without any additional processing on the part of the server CPU itself.
    In addition to work Oracle has done to make Solaris cloud-ready, the company has also closely tailored other Oracle products so that they can be coupled more easily to Solaris, including the Oracle Database 11g, Oracle Fusion Middleware 11g and the Oracle Enterprise Manager Ops Center administrative software package. By controlling an entire stack of software, the company can make "holistic" decisions over which part of the stack would be best suited to tweak to gain performance improvements, Flierl said.
    Solaris 11, which complies to the Open Group's specifications for Unix implementations, can support any programs that were written for earlier versions of Solaris, dating back to Solaris 6. The company also runs the Oracle Solaris Binary Application Guarantee Program, which certifies more than 11,000 applications that can run on Solaris 6.
    Solaris 11, released Wednesday (9th October 2011), will run on both x86 and Oracle's Sparc-based processors. You can download Oracle Solaris 11 for free, for both x86 and SPARC architectures, targeted for various install media and methods from the vendor's site.

    Targus iPad 2 Cases Now Available in India

    US based Targus recently announced the launch of Targus 9.7” 360 degrees rotating case and stand for the iPad 2 in India.
    "Targus believes in innovation and develops products in line with latest trends in fashion and technology. Targus 9.7" 360 degrees rotating case,is developed using a patent-pending design that will not only protect the users precious iPad2 but also enhance its viewing experience," ­­­says Arun Goenka, Senior Manager - Business Development, Targus India Pvt. Ltd

    A patent-pending mechanism that frames the Apple logo rotates all the way around, allowing the iPad 2 to recline in either landscape to portrait mode. The hard-shell outer layer measures 9.84"L x 7.68"W x 0.71"H made to fit the slim iPad 2.


    Targus 9.7" 360 degrees rotating case and stand (Black) is now available at leading retail outlets in India and Apple outlets at Rs. 3099.

    No Further Development On Flash Player Mobile Version


    FlashPlayer-179
    It has been reported that Adobe will be discontinuing any further development of Flash Player on the Mobile platform. ZDNet provided the following announcement from sources who are abreast of these developments at Adobe:

    "Our future work with Flash on mobile devices will be focused on enabling Flash developers to package native apps with Adobe AIR for all the major app stores. We will no longer adapt Flash Player for mobile devices to new browser, OS version or device configurations. Some of our source code licensees may opt to continue working on and releasing their own implementations. We will continue to support the current Android and PlayBook configurations with critical bug fixes and security updates."
    While nothing has yet been announced on official channels, Adobe will henceforth be reportedly only focusing on Flash on Desktop and Adobe AIR and HTML5 for mobile platforms.  An official announcement from Adobe is expected soon.

    Steam Servers Hacked On 6 NOV

    steam_hacked-179On Sunday November 6, Steam servers got hacked, and the hackers gained access to the user database. Initially the attack appeared to be against the Steam forums, but Valve later discovered the attack had run deeper than the online community. If you're a gamer who plays titles that use the Steam platform from Valve, you may want to keep a close eye on your personal data.

    Details are still a little thin on the ground, but on Thursday Valve, the company behind Steam, posted the following message to its forums: “We learned that intruders obtained access to a Steam database in addition to the forums. This database contained information including user names, hashed and salted passwords, game purchases, email addresses, billing addresses and encrypted credit card information. We do not have evidence that encrypted credit card numbers or personally identifying information were taken by the intruders, or that the protection on credit card numbers or passwords was cracked. We are still investigating. We don’t have evidence of credit card misuse at this time. Nonetheless you should watch your credit card activity and statements closely. While we only know of a few forum accounts that have been compromised, all forum users will be required to change their passwords the next time they login. If you have used your Steam forum password on other accounts you should change those passwords as well."
    The compromise comes at a pretty bad time for PC gamers due to the imminent release of Skyrim: The Elder Scrolls V, which is supposed to be ready for download at midnight Friday morning.
    Valve suggests that you change your Steam password and keep a close eye on your credit card and bank statements. Now would also be a good time to look at using Steam Guard. Steam Guard is available to all account holders, and prevents others from accessing Steam from an unknown computer unless you enter a code, which is delivered to your email.
    Also, you should make sure your email address is verified with Steam in order to set up security features like secure questions. To get more tips on keeping your Steam account secure, visit Steam’s security page.

    Map My India App For Android iPhone and BlackBerry

    shownearby-179
    MapmyIndia, a company well known for making digital maps, recently announced the launch of ShowNearby, a free location-based places app for Blackberry, Android and iPhone, that allows users to search and discover all places of interest nearby, such as restaurants, ATMs, petrol pumps, retail brands, coffee shops, tourist spots, emergency services etc. The application is powered by the digital map data from MapmyIndia.

    The application works like any location based app which determines your position based on the GPS and based on that shows a list of places around your marked location. The user can view the place on MapmyIndia’s maps and get accurate directions to it, directly call up the place, save it to his contacts and also share the place with friends via email or SMS. The user can also see and request deals at outlets and brands in the application.
    Rohan Verma, Director MapmyIndia, says ‘We’re very excited to launch the MapmyIndia ShowNearby application in India as an easy utility for users to get information of nearby places and offers on their mobile, and an excellent platform for brands to help users discover their store and business locations and run location based offers and promotions. We are happy to collaborate with Douglas and his team at ShowNearby to bring this application to the Indian market.’

    The application is available free of cost to the user. It is currently available for Blackberry, Android and iPhone platforms and will soon have versions for mobile web and Windows Phone 7. The application can be downloaded through the Blackberry App World, Android Market and iTunes App Stores or by visiting http://m.mapmyindia.com/shownearby from the user’s mobile phone browser. More details about the app are available at http://mapmyindia.com/shownearby.
    Wednesday, 9 November 2011

    Modern Warfare 3 Now Avaliable on Stores

    modern-warfare-3-179
    Close on the heels of the launch of Electronic Arts much-hyped Battlefield 3, Activision’s hugely popular Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 (COD: MW3) hit stores Tuesday midnight. Thousands of devoted fans of the COD series lined up to grab a copy of the game.

    The sales figures of the game have not yet been released by Activision but the company claims that the pre-order of MW3 has already topped those of Call of Duty: Black Ops (previous iteration). The critics have given the game great ratings and the Metacritic score is 90 for the Xbox 360 version and 88 for the PS3 version.

    The Xbox 360 and the PS3 version are both available for Rs. 3079. If you are planning to buy a copy for the PC, Steam is the best bet for now because the retail copies are yet to hit the stores.
    Take a look at the official launch video below.


    Tuesday, 8 November 2011

    Siri: Alternatives On Android


    voice-activated-assistants-1-179Want Siri on Your Android Phone? Try These Apps

    Wouldn't you like to have your very own gofer dedicated to doing all the menial tasks you hate? That's a big part of the appeal of the iPhone 4S: Siri, the voice-driven virtual assistant, turns anyone with a couple hundred bucks into a CEO attended by a full-time lackey. But can you get the same kind of slavish devotion from an Android phone?

    I've spent the past week auditioning all manner of Android virtual assistants, most of them free, including Google's Voice Actions app, the awkwardly named Speaktoit Assistant, and a digital "intern" named Eva that interrupted my conversations to hector me about upcoming appointments.

    I've concluded that you can find decent virtual help on an Android phone, but the assistants available likely won't be as smooth and capable as Siri. Siri is like the classic executive secretary, always well-dressed and possessed of an elephant's memory and a dry wit. Android assistants are more likely to show up with their shirttails hanging out occasionally. They don't know how to do some things that Siri can do, and they usually won't get your jokes. But that doesn't mean they aren't helpful.


    More Than Voice RecognitionMany people think of Siri and apps like it as being primarily voice recognition programs. But while deciphering what you say is important, what differentiates virtual assistants is what they can do after interpreting your speech. That's especially true of Android virtual assistants because most of them rely on the OS's built-in voice recognition capability.

    Both Apple and Google send what you say to their servers, whose powerful processors decipher your speech and then send a text version back to your phone. Google's speech recognition is uncannily accurate. I found it superior to Siri's (though in fairness, I didn't spend nearly as much time with Siri as I did with my Android phone).



    So virtual assistant from another differ from one another primarily in their ability to execute your commands after receiving them from the server. I put all of the helper apps I tested through a series of 18 tasks, from checking the weather and stock prices to sending an email message, mapping a location, and tweeting. My favorite assistants: Speaktoit Assistant and Google's Voice Actions.


    Speaktoit AssistantI spent a lot of time last week talking to my phone and I found it oddly helpful that the free Speaktoit Assistant presented me with an actual (albeit animated) person that I could talk to. You can alter your assistant's appearance in myriad ways, including changing his/her sex, hair style, and nose size. Female assistants can wear anything from a formal gown more appropriate for a red-carpet event to a skimpy vest-and-tie combination that looks as though it belongs (temporarily) on a stripper.

    Speaktoit handled most of its assignments well, including checking the weather, making phone calls, and answering questions (for instance, "How tall is the Empire State Building?"). When I asked Speaktoit to search the Web or to find a location on a map, it brought the results up in a window of its own, rather than opening my default browser or mapping software. But you can touch an icon in the corner of the window to bring up the same information in the default apps.

    I liked the app's approach to sending texts and email. It would transcribe my message and then put it in the message field of my phone's default app. That arrangement left it to me to manually choose the recipient, add a subject (in the case of an email), and press Send. Though the approach isn't as hands-free as the way Siri handles the same tasks, it's superior to how many other Android assistants do it. Speaktoit also successfully tweeted and posted status updates to Facebook, which Siri can't do without a workaround.

    Speaktoit was one of the few Android assistants I tested that could figure out how to play music from my collection, with this limitation: Whether I asked it to play an album or an artist, it played just one song from the album or artist, a selection that it seemingly chose at random. Another idiosyncrasy: Speaktoit can tell you your agenda for today, but not for any other day.


    Google Voice ActionsMost virtual assistants claim that they can figure out what you want regardless of how (within reason) you phrase your requests. Google's free Voice Actions assistant--part of its Voice Search utility--demands a more consistent approach. To use this app, you must employ Google's set phrases. To play music, for instance, you have to say "Listen to Benny Carter" rather than "Play Benny Carter." Google's app is somewhat more limited in what it can do, too: In addition to playing music, it can send texts and email, make calls, map a location, give directions, write a note, search the Web, and go to a specific site.

    If you play by Google's rules, though, you'll find that the app is smooth and helpful. Perhaps because Voice Actions is a Google-developed app interacting with a Google-developed operating system and (in many cases) with other Google-developed apps such as Maps, the whole system works fairly seamlessly.

    For a number of tasks, however, Voice Actions wasn't quite as hands-free as I might have wished from a virtual assistant. When I asked for the day's weather, for instance, instead of reading me the day's forecast--as Speaktoit Assistant did--Voice Actions searched the Web for a weather report that I had to read off my screen; this arrangement isn't a problem if you're walking along the street, but it's definitely inconvenient if you're driving.


    VlingoVlingo is one of the few Android assistants that doesn't rely exclusively on Google's voice recognition system. You can choose to use Google's system or Vlingo's home-grown processing. My advice is to stick with Google. I tried Vlingo's voice recognition and found it generally disappointing.

    In fact, I was disappointed by this free app overall. It couldn't perform a number of functions--such as reading me my calendar or setting an alarm--at all. Even odder were capabilities that it had one day and seemed to lose the next. The first time I tested Vlingo, for instance, it did a competent job of preparing an email message. But the next time I asked it to "send an email," it simply offered to Google the phrase "send an email."

    Vlingo does have some bright spots. It can send tweets and update your Facebook status. Also, when you give Vlingo a command, it continues listening to you until you press Done. Many other systems stop listening as soon as they detect a pause, forcingyoutospeakreallyfastsothattheydon'tcutoffbeforeyou'redone.


    Jeannie
    Up until about a week ago, this app was called Voice Actions, just like the Google app. To end the confusion, the third-party developer, Pannous, changed the name of its app to Jeannie (it still shows up on my phone as Voice Actions, however, even though I've updated the app). Jeannie is free. Alternatively you can purchase a $3 (~Rs. 147) Voice Actions Plus app with the same capabilities. Pannous says that the Plus version of the app should process your speech more quickly.

    Unfortunately, signing up Jeannie as your personal assistant is a bit like hiring a slacker with a poor work ethic. When I asked Jeannie to send a text, for instance, it asked for the recipient's name, but then just switched me to my texting app, without starting the text or adding the name of the recipient. (Jeannie can be a bit passive-aggressive, too. It asked whether I wanted to leave it to go to my texting app. When I said "Okay," it responded "Okay by me, too." Ouch.)

    Other things Jeannie did were just mysterious. It set an alarm when I asked it to, and the alarm went off right on schedule, but I couldn't figure out how to turn it off because Jeannie hadn't set it using Android's built-in alarm system. When I asked Jeannie to take a note, it started recording me--but never showed me what it had transcribed. Instead, it simply said "Done," and then told me I could send the note by email "later." It wasn't clear to me how.

    One of my tasks involved asking each of the personal assistants to get me Apple's stock price. Many of them fell short in various ways--giving me a general market report, for instance. But Jeannie's response was the most surreal: It searched the Web for images of apples and presented those to me.


    Eva InternEva is like a job applicant who seems brilliant in the interview, but who you end up wanting to strangle after a couple days of frustrating collaboration.

    Eva is represented by a photo of a brunette who is attractive but (to my eyes anyway) has an underlying air of vapidity. A companion app called Evan gives you the option of ordering a guy around, if you prefer; he looks like a model from the cover of a romance novel. The list of things that Eva/Evan can theoretically do is impressively long: Bulletproof, which designed the app, says that it can create expense reports and journal entries, start applications, post to Facebook, make playlists, and manage contact groups. (Eva Intern is free only for the first 28 days, by the way; after that, you have to pay $9 - ~Rs. 442 - for the full version.)

    Unfortunately, Eva came across as both so dense and so afraid of making a mistake that it couldn't get much done. When I asked the app for Microsoft's stock price, it listed three possible interpretations: "give me microsoft stock price," "give me a microsoft stock price," and "giv me microsoft stock price."

    You might imagine that any one of those would be close enough for an intelligent assistant to figure out. But Eva's reaction was "I'm sorry, I heard what you said but I don't know how to interpret it. Please try again."

    Eva also had the annoying habit of popping up unsummoned--even when my phone was asleep--to read calendar entries to me. "Hi Ed, I'm reminding you about conference call with Stacey in CR-500 at 5 p.m." Even more annoying was that the app insisted on reading each calendar entry three times. Eva's instructions said that the virtual assistant would be quiet if I asked it to, but the ensuing peace lasted only until my next appointment, when Eva would again implore me three times not to miss the impending meeting. There may be another way to get Eva to shut up, but I never found it. The app's instructions are the longest and wordiest of any mobile app I've seen; and after plowing through them for a while in hopes of solving an immediate problem, I usually lost patience with trying to use them.

    Finally, I wrote a calendar entry reminding me to uninstall Eva as soon as I'm done with this story. That may be the only time I'll be glad to hear this virtual assistant's voice.

    HTC Phones To Get Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich in 2012


    HTC-Android-ICS-Upgrade-2012Owners of HTC phones will have to wait until early 2012 for their device's mobile OS to be upgraded to Google's Android Ice Cream Sandwich 4.0. In a post to its Facebook page, HTC wrote not just mobile phones with fast multi-core microprocessor chip architectures would get Android 4.0, but also HTC phones with fast single-core processors, such as the HTC Sensation XL.

    The HTC Sensation, Sensation XL and Sensation XE were named as the first HTC smartphones lined up for the Ice Cream Sandwich update early next year, as well as the HTC Rezound, HTC Evo 3D, EVO Design 4G, and Amaze 4G, which will receive the update over the air "through close integration with our carrier partners," HTC says. The new HTC Vivid is also on the upgrade list.

    HTC Rezound
    That will leave some HTC smartphone owners happy, but several models are missing from that list. Users whose phones aren't on the list shouldn't worry too much, at least not yet, and instead "stay tuned for more updates on device upgrades, timing and other details about Ice Cream Sandwich," HTC said.
    Android 4.0 is meant to be Google's OS that bridges the smartphone and tablet gap -- which is currently served by two different versions of the OS. Ice Cream Sandwich refreshes the navigation methods on Android phones by removing the need for the hardware navigation buttons, as well as a sleeve of improvements and gimmicks.
    The first phone to run Android 4.0 will be Google's Galaxy Nexus, manufactured by Samsung. The phone sports a dual-core 1.2GHz processor, a huge 4.65-inch curved glass display, and NFC capabilities. Google is also working on the update for the Galaxy Nexus S, but those with a Nexus One are out of luck.
    Motorola promised to upgrade the Droid Razr and Bionic, as well as its Xoom tablet to Ice Cream Sandwich, but the exact timing is unclear -- some six weeks after the official release of the update from Google. LG and Sony also hinted at Android 4.0 updates for their high-end phones, but no solid details are available on that yet.

    First Look At Symbian Belle


    Nokia_Symbian_Belle_179

    Symbian Belle hands-on

    It is easy to write off Symbian when you look at videos of N9 running Meego or even the WP7 based Nokia phones which are expected to ship next year. Little did I know Symbian had something big in the works in the form of 'Belle'? The moment we realised the Symbian Belle leaked software for Nokia N8 was doing the rounds of various forums on the internet we had to try it.
    So here is the first look of the improved User Interface (UI) of Symbian Belle on PCWorld India. Please note that Near Field Communications (NFC) is not available in India and as a result I could not test it.


    Pull-down Notifications Tab


    The first thing that struck me was the slick pull-down notification tab similar to Google’s Android. I guess if Apple’s iOS can ape Android, Symbian can too. But frankly I quite like the design of the Nokia one. It is indeed classy.
    Six Homescreens


    I’m not a fan of too many homescreens. But for those who can't stop arranging everything on your phone in homescreens they might appreciate the six that Symbian Belle provides. You have more real estate now for all your icons. I wonder if you'd ever need the menu button again. Oh I almost forgot to mention, there is a dim background in the menu screen as well.
    Better Customization Options

    I know you have been craving for this feature in Symbian^3 and Symbian Anna. Now you can move around your icons similar to the wobbly icons on iOS. Though it is very handy to move your icons around you cannot drag icons into folders directly which is a letdown.
    Improved Search Integration


    It is like that famous jingle that goes "wherever you go our network follows" the search button in Nokia follows you wherever you navigate on the phone. I totally approve this considering the fact that I have a lot of apps that I use and it is difficult finding a single app in the heap.
    Widgets

    Loads of widgets are now available at your disposal. The one that caught my attention, however, was the new music player widget.
    Conclusion
    It is too soon to say how Symbian Belle's final build will function on the soon to be released Nokia 700 and Nokia 701. On the N8, I can say it looks good despite the fact that it borrows a lot of design cues from the other mobile operating systems.
    Sunday, 6 November 2011

    Close Look To Features Of Android Ice Cream Sandwich


    ics_179Ice Cream Sandwich

    From its navigation methods to fonts, Android is redesigned and refreshed in its Ice Cream Sandwich edition to meet the tastes of its users. Google introduced the update to Honeycomb and Gingerbread Tuesday night alongside Samsung's debut of the Galaxy Nexus. Here are the highlights.
    The Lock and Homescreens
    The Android 4.0 lockscreen closely resembles the one found on Android Honeycomb tablets: a lock icon, surrounded by a circle, which you flick outward to unlock the phone. Home screens behave the same way as they currently do on Android (swipe left or right to navigate, open an app drawer, retrieve widgets, and so on) except you now get a customizable “favorites tray” that resembles the dock in iOS. Because the Galaxy Nexus lacks physical navigation buttons, the Back, Home, and Recent Apps icons are located at the bottom of the screen and lit up when touched. Google gave no word on how ICS will work on older phones with physical nav buttons, but future phones running Android 4.0 may lack them as well.

    The app drawer is updated to look more like the one in Honeycomb and you now scroll through apps by swiping left or right. Widgets have their own tab in the app drawer to make them easier to find. They look and work like the ones we have seen on Honeycomb, and are resizeable so you can fit them wherever you feel like.
    Taking another leaf out of Apple’s book, Android 4.0 lets you create folders by dragging one app onto another. Apps can be rearranged in folders by dragging them around and folders can be renamed to your liking.
    Recent Apps and Gestures
    If you tap the Recent Apps icon at the bottom right of the screen, a scrollable list of running apps pops up -- each with a thumbnail image of that application. You can close a particular app by flicking it away. The flicking gesture command is accepted throughout Android Ice Cream Sandwich, and is also used to dismiss specific notifications in the Notification Tray.
    Besides accepting gestures, the Notification Tray displays photos and supports music controls, so you don’t have to go into a specific app in order to skip a song or pause your music. The Notification Tray is now accessible without having to unlock your phone. Just drag down the tray from the lockscreen and you can quickly jump to new text messages or e-mail messages by tapping on a notification. I like the fact that you can quickly get into apps without having to unlock the phone first, but I hope Google puts a security measure in place so that not just anyone can access your private communications.
    Speaking of security, in Android 4.0 your face can be used to unlock your phone. Ice Cream Sandwich and the Galaxy Nexus support facial recognition, so the phone can be set to unlock only if it recognizes your face. When demoed on stage, the phone failed to recognize its owner and defaulted back to the traditional pattern unlock screen. Let's hope the Android team gets the kinks worked out before launch, and that other phone manufacturers support this feature in future handsets.


    Core Apps Updated
    All the core Android apps are getting a facelift and new features, though only the Browser, Calender, and Gmail were explicitly detailed at the introduction event.
    The Browser now supports incognito mode and your bookmarks from the Chrome browser on desktop are now synced to the Browser in ICS. Google adds support for tabbed browsing, and you can quickly view which tabs are open, each with a live preview of that page. As with the notifications and Recent Apps list, you can quickly close tabs by flicking them away.
    The biggest update to the Browser has to be the capability to save pages for offline reading. You can save web pages exactly as they are, and access them even when you don’t have a data connection. This is great for people who find an interesting article they want to read, but are going to be in an area with little to no data coverage.
    Gmail also received a substantial update and is now much faster to use, thanks to the new Action Bar at the bottom of the screen. The bar is context-sensitive and changes depending on where you are in Gmail. For example, when viewing your inbox you the Action Bar has options for composing a new message, searching for a specific message, and so on. However, once you select one or more e-mail messages, the Action Bar buttons change and offer options to Delete, Archive, or Move those selected messages.
    A new preview pane allows you to preview messages without having to open them, and you can now search through the last 30 days of your e-mail offline. It's unclear whether these updates are exclusive to the ICS Gmail app, or if the Gmail app on older Android devices will be updated to support these features as well. 
    The Calendar was mentioned only briefly, but you can now pinch to zoom in on your calendar events to see more details about specific events or you can zoom out to see all your events for that day. It's pretty cool, and beats tapping each event individually to find out more about it.
    Maps, Music, and other core apps were updated as well but weren’t demonstrated.
    Talk To Me
    Yes, the Android keyboard is updated for better text predictions, but the show-stealer was definitely the improvements that were made to the speech-to-text software.
    Previously, in order to dictate a text message or other text field, you had to manually press the voice command key on the keyboard to activate it. Now, you simply start talking to your phone and the software activates automatically. While it's not exactly on the level of Siri, this is huge for people who use their phones while driving, since it no longer requires them to fuss with their phones to activate the dictation software.
    Cut and Paste is improved upon even further as well. Now you can drag selected text to the position you want, and the controls for cutting and pasting text are more consistent throughout the operating system.
    Camera and Gallery
    The camera on the Galaxy Nexus has zero shutter lag -- and demonstrators proved it by rapidly taking a series of photos just seconds apart. We still aren’t sure if that is a feature of Android 4.0 or if it’s exclusive to the Galaxy Nexus, but it was impressive nonetheless.
    Once you snap a photo, you can quickly share it by tapping on it. A list of applications you could use to share the photo will pop up, and you can quickly select where you’d like to send the photo. If the photo could use a touch-up, ICS provides an impressive array of photo editing tools. These include various filters (which were lovingly described as “hipster”), the capability to adjust the image angle, red eye removal, cropping capabilities, and a few others that were not discussed. Any edits you make to a photo will create a copy, in case you ever want to go back to the original.
    ICS also comes with a simple-to-use panorama mode. You just set the mode to panoramic, then take the first picture. A slider at the bottom of the screen guides you so you know when to move the phone, and you can preview the image as the device stitches the pictures together. I would expect to see way more panoramic pictures on Facebook and Twitter once Android 4.0 launches.
    Video recording gains continuous focus as well as support for time-lapse and video snapshots.
    Like with the Notification Tray, you can quickly access the phone camera from the phone lockscreen by flicking the lock icon to the left. A small camera icon pops up and you can launch straight into the Camera app.
    People App and the Dialer
    The Contacts app is revamped as the new People app. The People app functions in the same way as the Contacts app found in Android 2.x, but it changes contact cards to show much more information at a glance. Nice big photos replace the tiny thumbnails, and you can quickly see a contact's recent photos or status updates. If that person is your friend on a social network, that data is automatically pulled so you can easily see their latest Tweet without having to open the Twitter app. Though described as an evolution of the current Contacts app, this felt more like a fine-tuning than a sensational leap forward.
    The Dialer also has a few tweaks here and there. You can now retrieve voice mails from inside the call log, and can speed up or slow down their playback. Those nice big photos in the People app take up the entire screen whenever someone calls you, and you can send a Quick Response to anyone whose call you decline. Quick Responses are customizable canned text message responses that you can send to a caller to explain why you declined their call. It's pretty neat, and I can see myself using them on people I want to avoid.
    Android Beam
    Google is really pushing Near Field Communications with its Google Wallet app, and Android Beam in Ice Cream Sandwich is just another reason to own an NFC-equipped phone.
    With Android Beam, you can share any contacts or content between two Android devices just by tapping them together. You can share webpages, maps, and even apps. It's handy if you want to give your friends directions or want to share an article you found while browsing the web.
    Odds and Ends
    Google mentioned tighter Google+ integration in Ice Cream Sandwich, but didn’t really demo anything. Representatives did, however, bring up the subject of data caps, and described a way for to better manage data usage.
    By going to Settings>Data Usage, you can see a chart of how much data you have used that month as well as an estimate of your expected usage. You can also set limits and alerts so that you know exactly when you exceed your data limit, so you don’t get hit with overages. You can also select specific sections of the chart to see which apps used the most data that day. The phone will show you a breakdown of how much data that app uses, and allow you to restrict the app so that it uses data only when you want it to.
    This is a huge step in giving users more control over their phones, and should help save people the headache of accidentally exceeding data limits.
    Android 4.0 adds a handful of new live wallpapers as well as a new font aptly titled "Roboto." The live wallpapers were kind of neat, but Roboto was interesting because it is designed to be used on high-density displays. Since Ice Cream Sandwich natively supports 1280-by-720-pixel displays, let’s hope it gets used a whole lot more often. Barometer support is also added, although its use is unclear.
    The first Ice Cream Sandwich equipped phone will be the Nexus Galaxy, which launches in November, but the SDK is available for developers now on the Android.com website. Now we wait to find out which phones are getting a tasty Ice Cream Sandwich update.
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