Aug 20, 2011

Now, smartphone apps for Anna’s movement

NEW DELHI: The fight against corruption is everywhere. Even in the virtual markets housing apps for smartphones. Several apps have popped up in Android and Ovi, the store used by Nokia smartphones, which claim to keep you in touch with Anna's movement in real-time.

Indian Against Corruption is one such app. According to Aswathi Muralidharan, who is associated with Arvind Kejriwal's Public Cause Research Foundation, the app was developed by a few volunteers. It was uploaded on Android Market on August 6.

A link has also been provided at www.indiaagainstcorruption.org.

The app has news feed, videos, Q&A on various aspects of the Lokpal and a list of events associated with the movement. It also allows users to give miss call or leave voice message at a Mumbai number to express their support for the moment.


The app is available in both Android and Ovi stores. Lokpal Messenger is another such app. This one, however, is available only on Nokia phones.

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What Google may do with Motorola smartphones

SAN FRANCISCO/NEW YORK: The ink on Google Inc's $12.5 billion plan to buy Motorola Mobility is barely dry, but speculation has already begun about its next deal -- expected by some to be the sale of Motorola's handset business.

That is because there is no shortage of interested buyers for Motorola's hardware, with analysts naming Huawei and Sony Ericsson as early contenders.

Google's primary interest is in Motorola's rich trove of technology patents, which the company needs to defend its fast-growing Android business from legal challenges mounted by rivals including Apple, Microsoft and Oracle, say analysts.

Analysts are divided on whether Google will sell or keep Motorola's handset business. Some think there is a good chance it could ultimately end up keeping the unit and try to mimic Apple's wildly successful strategy of marrying hardware and software.

Others, however, are convinced that Google will sell the division and stay true to its promise to keep Android as an open platform able to run on multiple hardware makers' devices. There are 38 other phone makers using Android software that Google could alienate if it pursues the former strategy.

"I think they'll likely sell it," said Deutsche Bank analyst Brian Modoff, adding that competing with the other Android providers would not make sense.

Analysts said a sale would attract many interested buyers. Valuations on the unit vary wildly, with one analyst suggesting a price as low as $1 billion and others saying it could fetch as much as $5 billion.

Huawei, which has long been trying to expand in the US market, and Sony Ericsson, which is strong in Europe but has so far failed to make any real inroads in the US market, would be among the potential buyers, analysts said.

"Sony Ericsson would be the perfect fit," said Avian Securities analyst Matthew Thornton, noting that Motorola needs to build up its business in Europe while it has a good presence in China, where Sony Ericsson is weak.

Sony Ericsson, a joint venture of Sony Corp and Ericsson, like Motorola also uses Android software. Asian phone manufacturers, such as Huawei, HTC Corp and ZTE, could also benefit from picking up Motorola's handset business because of its strong relationships with wireless carriers in the United States, say analysts.

"If you wanted to penetrate (the US) market and start from the ground up it would be extremely difficult," said Lawrence Harris, an analyst with C L King & Associates. Buying Motorola "would give anyone who purchases those assets instant credibility, instant market share," he said.

Moreover, Harris said that combining operations with Motorola could deliver valuable economies of scale in manufacturing and procurement of components, a key benefit in an industry that requires heavy spending on research and development.

While the past attempts by China's Huawei at acquisitions in the United States have been thwarted by the government because of security concerns, the fact that Motorola's patents would be owned by Google could help overcome objections.

"It could be more attractive to a Chinese purchaser because, without the intellectual property piece, there wouldn't be as much of an uproar from the US State Department," said Mark McKechnie, an analyst with ThinkEquity.

Google's planned acquisition of Motorola comes at a tumultuous time for the tech industry, as consumers increasingly buy mobile gadgets such as smartphones and Apple's iPad tablet instead of PCs.

On Thursday, Hewlett-Packard, the world's No. 1 PC maker, said it was considering strategic alternatives for its PC business and said it was discontinuing its efforts to develop mobile devices based on the WebOS software.

Charter Equity Research Analyst Ed Snyder said that if Google doesn't sell Motorola's handset business and keeps it as a bolt-on unit, it could end up dwindling away due to a lack of advantages over its Android rivals.

"You can't afford (for) them to do too well or you'll alienate the people you're dependent on to grow Android," Snyder said.

ThinkEquity's McKechnie went so far as to suggest that it would be hard for the Motorola brand to thrive under the Google banner. "If it stays with Google, in ten years kids wouldn't know who Motorola was." 

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Facebook Messenger rivals BlackBerry Messenger

LONDON: Social networking site Facebook has launched its own mobile messaging service to challenge the marketing space occupied by the Blackberry Messenger (BBM).

The app, called 'Facebook Messenger', launched in the US only, allows members of the social networking site send instant messages on their mobile for free to anyone in their 'friends' list.

In a direct bid to rival BBM, the new Facebook app, also allows people to send messages to friends on their mobile contacts list and push out group messages too, the Telegraph reports.


The free Facebook Messenger app is available on both Android and iOS devices, but there are no dates revealed for when it would be made available outside the US.

Facebook engineer Lucy Zhang wrote a blog post explaining the new service, "More and more of us rely on our phones to send and receive messages. But it isn't always easy to know the best way to reach someone on their phone. Should you send an email or text? Which will they check first? Did they even get your last message?"

"We think messaging should be easier than that. You should be able to write a message, click 'Send' and know that you will reach the person right away," he added.

BBM is understood to have over 45 million users around the world.

Facebook, having over 750 million users worldwide, might be able to steal away some of it market share in the growing mobile instant messenger market, the paper said. 

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Over 2.3 lakh MNP requests turned down in Delhi till July

Over 2.3 lakh requests for mobile number portability (MNP) have been rejected out of a total of 8.4 lakh requests till July 31 in Delhi licence service area on various grounds, the telecom ministry said Friday.

MNP, which is a service that allows mobile phone users to switch operators while retaining their phone number, was launched across the country Jan 20, 2011.

"Total 8,39,471 requests for MNP have been received in Delhi licence service area with all service providers till July 31 out of which MNP was allowed in 6,11,179 cases," Communications Minister Kapil Sibal informed the Rajya Sabha in a written reply.

The grounds for rejection of MNP requests included use of wrong unique porting code, subsisting contractual obligations and blacklisted subscriber numbers, among others.


The minister said that 32.43 percent of the requests were rejected because of using wrong porting code, while 23.84 percent were denied the service due to subsisting contractual obligations with exit clause in subscriber agreement to which the subscriber had not complied with.

Over 18 percent of the requests were denied at donor operator network with records that the subscriber number is either blacklisted or has unsettled overdue bills while 14.23 percent of requests had to be turned down as they requested for the service within initial period of 90 days.

As per the MNP regulations and instructions, the MNP requests are to be settled in 7 days except in Jammu and Kashmir, Assam, North East Licence Service Area for which the period is 15 days. Hence at a given point of time, certain number of requests are expected to be in process, the minister said. 


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RIM set to launch BlackBerry music service

Canada's Research in Motion (RIM) is developing a new service that would allow subscribers to play music on their BlackBerry smartphones, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday.

The option is "designed to work with RIM's BlackBerry Messenger," the newspaper reported, citing unnamed sources who had discussed the service with RIM executives.

The new service, to be known as BBM Music, could be launched "as soon as next week," and allow subscribers to access around 50 songs at one time for an as-yet unspecified price, the report said.


According to the paper, the company has already signed, or are preparing to sign, agreements with four music power houses= Vivendi Universal Music, Sony Music, Warner and EMI.


The move is aimed at attracting younger consumers to the product, which is facing tough competition from Apple's iPhone and others.

According to a study by ComScore published in July, the iPhone is now more widely used than the BlackBerry in the US market.

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New BlackBerrys improved, but lackluster

Well before the iPhone, BlackBerry gained its "CrackBerry" nickname for its seemingly vital place in users' lives. Lately, however, the surging popularity of Apple's gadget and smartphones running Google's Android software has made the BlackBerry seem less habit-forming.

In response, Research In Motion Ltd. is trying to spice up its product line by releasing several BlackBerrys with touch screens and new software for better performance. In a first for the BlackBerry, a few can run on super-fast "4G" cellular networks, which wireless providers are rolling out.

The phones will be available from the major providers over the next several weeks at a wide range of prices - $50 to $300, with two-year service contracts.

I checked out three: A new version of the high-end Bold, now sporting a touch screen, and two new Torch models, one keeping the slide-out keyboard from before, and the other ditching the physical keyboard.


There are some good features here that will appeal to BlackBerry fans. But chances are many are waiting for devices that run the more advanced QNX software used in RIM's PlayBook tablet computer, which could be coming fairly soon.

Newcomers, meanwhile, are likely to find the new smartphones too boring-looking on the low end and expensive on the high end.

The phones adhere largely to the familiar BlackBerry aesthetic, but with a few twists. They all have the latest version of RIM's operating software, BlackBerry 7. Although it appears quite similar to previous versions, BlackBerry 7 promises a zippier Web browser, voice search and better rendering of graphics.

The most noticeable change was the improved Web-surfing speed. I connected an old BlackBerry Torch with BlackBerry 6 and the new Torch 9810 with version 7 to the same Wi-Fi network. Generally, the new Torch rendered photos and text more quickly. I did notice, though, that at least with The New York Times' website, the older Torch would load entire articles on a single page while the newer phone only gave me the first chunk and forced me to click for the rest.

The browser supports HTML5 support for viewing rich multimedia content (like the iPhone, these BlackBerrys don't support Flash videos).

Also new is voice-activated universal search, which sounds good in theory but was pretty disappointing in practice.

The first step made sense: I tapped an on-screen button to get the voice software to start "listening." But when I was done I had to press another button to tell it I was finished. After a delay to process my request, the phone gave me some options, such as dialing a friend's number, searching for a profile on Facebook or doing a more general search on Microsoft's Bing. I'd have to tap some more to check the options out.

All this screen-touching defeated the purpose of voice search, which should be a largely hands-free endeavor. The feature looks even more dismal when compared with Google's voice search, which can reliably determine when you're done speaking and understands commands for tasks such as calling a friend. It's better than the BlackBerry at figuring out what I'm trying to do, without needing tons of taps to confirm.

Another problem is the lack of apps. The BlackBerry App World includes more than 40,000 apps - a smidgen of the more than 250,000 apps available in Google's Android Market and 425,000 apps available from Apple's App Store. And many of those 40,000 have yet to be updated for BlackBerry 7 phones. I couldn't get one for the review site Yelp when I checked the other day.

The phones all include standard BlackBerry features such as its secure handling of work email and an updated version of the BlackBerry Messenger program. Despite speedy processors and new graphics technology, they sometimes lagged behind when I opened applications.

Each new BlackBerry is equipped with a 5-megapixel camera with a bright flash and plenty of built-in settings for taking different kinds of shots. The cameras can take high-definition videos, too.

The photos I took were reasonably good and the camera performed pretty well in low light, but colors often didn't seem as vibrant as they could be.

In terms of the specific models I tested:

BlackBerry Bold 9900/9930

Despite having by far the smallest screen of the bunch (2.8 inches diagonally), the new Bold merges form and function well. The handset is RIM's skinniest thus far, and it looks like a better-quality handset than the other new releases. I also found its keyboard easiest to use among the three I tested.

The Bold is RIM's first to include an NFC, or near-field communication, chip, which could eventually allow the phone to work as a sort of wireless payment system.

Too bad the phone is so expensive. Sprint will start selling the Bold 9930 on Sunday for $250, while Verizon is hawking it online now for the same price. The Bold 9900, which can work on T-Mobile's high-speed 4G network, will be available Aug. 31 for an even steeper $300 (after a $50 mail-in rebate). You'll need a two-year contract to get any of these prices.

BlackBerry Torch 9850


RIM, a master of the physical keyboard, hasn't had much luck with phones that only include a touch screen. Its early attempts with the BlackBerry Storm were dismal. Although the keyboard-free Torch 9850 looks sleeker, I had a hard time typing, as I kept hitting the wrong letters and numbers.

The phone also seemed to lag behind, spitting out letters well after I'd typed them and not noticing that I was stabbing feverishly at the browser's address bar in an attempt to visit another webpage.

The Torch 9850 will be available Sunday from Sprint for $150 with a two-year contract.

BlackBerry Torch 9810

This phone is definitely the least attractive of the group, but it gets points for its ability to access AT&T's high-speed 4G data network, which makes it quick to download documents or upload photos to Facebook.

The Torch 9810 weighs in at a hefty 5.7 ounces, and its design, which is essentially identical to a previous Torch, looks tired compared with many other smartphones.

Its slide-out keyboard is more cramped than that on the Bold, yet it is still quite good for typing.

What the handset lacks in pizazz it makes up for in price: When AT&T starts selling it on Sunday, it will cost just $50 with a two-year contract.

All of the latest BlackBerrys add several good features, but RIM is still far behind the competition in ease of use and availability of apps.

There will surely be demand from business users whose employers demand BlackBerrys because of their reputation for security. Still, it's hard to imagine them wooing many consumers unless they're already die-hard CrackBerry addicts.


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Aug 17, 2011

Google launches custom tailored search feature

In a bid to trump Microsoft's Bing, Google will start to populate individual users' search results with posts that have been shared publicly by their connections on Google+.

The new feature, which works only when users are signed in to their Google accounts, aims to tailor results to individual tastes, the company said Friday.

The idea is if a user posts a note on Google+ about a link--be it to a restaurant's Web site, a news story, or a retail store's site--their Google+ connections are going to be more likely to want to see that site as well.

In a blog post, Sagar Kamdar, Google product manager, offered an example of a contact in one of his Google+ Circles posting a note about a Chinese restaurant in New York City.

When Kamdar searches for the restaurant, a note appears below the restaurant link saying his connection shared a post about the establishment.

"Now not only do I get some great reviews on the Web, I get a review from a friend about a restaurant, with recommendations about what dishes to order," Kamdar wrote.

"This is just the latest step in helping you find the most relevant information possible, personalised to your interests and the people you care about," he added.

In May, Microsoft's Bing rolled out a similar feature that elevates results that have received a "like" from a friend on Facebook. Bing's implementation requires users to be logged in to Facebook.

For both Google and Microsoft, the idea is to mimic the real world, where people often rely on friends for advice before making decisions about products, restaurants, hotels, and more, tech news website CNet.com said.

Read more at: http://www.ndtv.com/article/technology/google-launches-custom-made-search-feature-126638&cp




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Now watch licensed movies on Yahoo!


It is said that over 30 million internet users download and watch 1.7 billion videos every month across India and to tap that online portal Yahoo! has launched Movieplex, which will bring thousands of licensed Bollywood movies to the users. It'll also promote a piracy-free quality entertainment space.

Movieplex is a video space and users can enjoy licensed full-length movies for free. The portal has collaborated with production houses for the same and are offering movies like "Rock On", "Rann", and "Dil To Baccha Hai Ji".

According to a report by market research leader ComScore, the Indian audience is currently spending over 9.1 billion minutes watching online videos each month with entertainment as the leading category in online video content consumption ahead of news and sports content.

Arun Tadanki, managing director, Yahoo!, feels Movieplex would be successful in providing guilt-free entertainment to the consumers.

"Over 30 million internet users consume 1.7 billion videos every month across India. With the increasing demand for online video, both consumers and content providers are looking for a trusted destination where quality content can be consumed in a piracy-free environment at their leisure," he said.

"Movieplex is an example of how Yahoo! connects people to what matters to them the most and Indian movie lovers now have the best full-length movies available to them at their convenience," he added.

One can log onto www.movies.yahoo.in/movieplex to watch the movies without any commercial break!


Read more at: http://www.ndtv.com/article/list/technology/&cp

Aug 16, 2011

Motorola Mobility, Google's biggest buy at $12.5 billion

Mountain View, California:  Google Inc is buying cell phone maker Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. for $12.5 billion in cash. It's by far Google's biggest acquisition and a sign the online search leader is serious about expanding beyond its core Internet business and setting the agenda in the fast-growing mobile market.

Google will pay $40.00 per share, a 63 percent premium to Motorola's closing price on Friday.
Google's Android operating system runs smart-phones that compete with iPhones, BlackBerrys and Windows-based mobile devices. Motorola Mobility was separated from the rest of Motorola in January. The company has remade itself as a maker of smart-phones based on Android, but has struggled against Apple Inc. and Asian smart-phone makers.



"Motorola Mobility's total commitment to Android has created a natural fit for our two companies," said Google CEO Larry Page in a statement. "Together, we will create amazing user experiences that supercharge the entire Android ecosystem for the benefit of consumers, partners and developers."


The acquisition has the approval of both companies' boards and is expected to close by the end of this year or early 2012. That may be overly ambitious, however, as the deal is likely to face regulatory scrutiny. It dwarfs Google's previous biggest deal, the 2008 purchase of DoubleClick for $3.2 billion, which took a year to get approval.

What Google likely wants from the acquisition is Motorola's trove of more than 17,000 patents on phone technology. Google recently lost out to a consortium that included Microsoft Corp., Apple and Research In Motion Ltd. in bidding for thousands of patents from Novell Inc., a maker of computer-networking software, and Nortel Networks, a Canadian telecom gear maker that is bankrupt and is selling itself off in pieces

Motorola has nearly three times more patents than Nortel.

In premarket trading, shares of Motorola Mobility soared 60 percent, or $14.72, to $39.19. Shares of Google, meanwhile, fell $14.68, or 2.6 percent, to $549.95.

Aug 9, 2011

US rating downgrade may hit IT hiring by 1/4th


NEW DELHI: Hiring activity in the Indian IT sector, one of the biggest employers in the country, could fall by about one-fourth due to the downgrade of the USA's credit rating and the deepening economic crisis, experts said.

It might take at least 5-6 months for the recruitment activities of the IT sector to gain momentum, they said.

"We are expecting overall almost 26 per cent dip in recruitment in IT industries from first quarter of FY'12. It'll take at least 5-6 months to get momentum in hiring in IT industries," MyHiringClub.com Founder and CEO Rajesh Kumar said.

"Due to the economic crisis in the US, the Indian IT job market is also going to be affected badly. The major reason behind this is cost-cutting in Indian companies' US division. In the near future, Indian IT companies having offices in the US are going to face a surplus in their existing manpower strength," he added.

Echoing a similar view, Info Edge (India) Group President (Finance) and CFO Ambarish Raghuvanshi said, "Recruitment would be lagging in the IT space..."

The US accounts for almost 60 per cent of the revenues of the $60 billion Indian IT industry.

Experts believe that job activity in other industries would be negatively impacted as well.

"Apart from IT, hiring activity in other industries is also going to impacted," Concord HR Works CEO Sekhar Ghotgalkar said.

The reaction comes after the US lost its 'AAA' credit rating for the first time in history, as ratings agency S&P was not convinced with the efforts being made to tackle the country's debt problems. This resulted in a bloodbath in the Indian markets.

Most Indian IT firms agreed that while there are fears of another recession in the US and a debt crisis in Europe, it is still too early to know what is coming.

However, the country's two largest software exporters, Infosys and TCS, remain confident of withstanding another downturn.

"It is too early to say. There are fears of another recession in the US and a debt crisis in Europe," Infosys CEO and MD Kris Gopalakrishnan said.

 Read more:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/careers/job-trends/US-rating-downgrade-may-hit-IT-hiring-by-1/4th/articleshow/9531491.cms

Aug 1, 2011

Google Tips and Tricks.. Some crazy stuff

Go to " www.google.com " and type in any of the following and then press on ‘I’m Feeling Lucky button’

1) Type in “Google Gravity” and wait a sec to experience the effect of gravity.
2) Type in “French Military Victories” and press "I'm feeling lucky".
3) Type in “elgoog”and the Mirror effect is on.
4) Type in “Google Sphere” and see the spinning effect.
5) Type in “find Chuck Noris” (A must search keyword for al Chuck Norris Fans :D).
6) Type in “who is the cutest” and see who’s so cute and beautiful/handsome.
7) Type in “2204355” and see (You’ve been Chicken Rolled).
8) Type in “Google Loco” and see what’s moving.
9) Type in “ LOL Limewire” and see that you are as a pirate.
10) Type in “Epic Google, Rainbow google, Annoying Google, Google pacman,

Google Magic,Google color (Ex: pink,blue), Early Google, Google Heart
Page.

 
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