Wednesday, 30 May 2012

Apple CEO Tim Cook on Facebook: Stay tuned

Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook said he would like
 to see more of the company's products assembled
at home than in China and contain more US
components such as semiconductors.

Apple's chief executive Tim Cook has suggested that he could end the firm's long-running rivalry with Facebook in a bid to integrate more social networking features into the iPhone and iPad.
Cook said users should "stay tuned" to see the two firms working more closely.
"Facebook is a great company," he said during the D10 technology conference in California.
"And the relationship is solid. I saw Sheryl [Sandberg, Facebook's chief operating officer] earlier outside. We have great respect for each other," The Telegraph quoted him, as saying.
According to the paper, Apple and Facebook have had a strained business relationship for years.
In 2010 Steve Jobs publicly described failed negotiations with Facebook over the integration of Ping, Apple's iTunes-based social network, as "onerous".
Apple was also reportedly frustrated by the way it took Facebook until October 2011 to produce an app tailored for the iPad.
According to the paper, Cook appeared to suggest an entente could be in the works.
"We appreciate each other. For us, we want to provide customers simple and elegant ways to do the things they want to do," the paper quoted Cook, as saying.
"Facebook has hundreds of millions of customers. So, anyone that has an iPhone or iPad, we want them to have the best experience with Facebook on those platforms. So stay tuned," he added.

Pre-book the Samsung Galaxy S III on Snapdeal for Rs. 250

Will you buy it?
The Samsung Galaxy S III is now available for pre-booking via Snapdeal.com at a price of Rs. 250, which is significantly lesser than the Rs. 1,000 pre-order price tag that Infibeam had and a whole lot lesser than Samsung’s official pre-order listing. Samsung will be officially launching the Galaxy S III on the 31st of May in New Delhi but it’s still uncertain whether it will be a hard launch or a paper launch. The Galaxy S III is Samsung’s upcoming flagship smartphone that will replace the Galaxy S II. Currently, the S III will go on to compete with the HTC One X, the only other quad-core, ICS-running smartphone in the market.



A quick recap of the S III - the phone is equipped with some of the latest tech to make it out of the mobile phone sector. From a 1.4 GHz quad-core Exynos processor (1GB RAM) running on Android 4.0 i.e. Ice Cream Sandwich (ICS) flaunting the latest edition of Samsung’s TouchWiz UI, to NFC support, the device is quite feature-packed. Its 2100mAh battery should also provide users with quite a bit of usage as well. More than the design, Samsung is really pinning the success of the S III based on the new software tweaks that they’ve added. One of the main features of the S III is the Siri-esque voice recognition system called S Voice. It features Smart Stay, a technique that uses the front facing camera to track your eye movement so it keeps the screen on as long as you're looking at it. Pretty cool. Social Tag uses face recognition that scans the faces in your gallery and maps them to your friends on Facebook or other social media sites. S Beam lets you bond and share data instantly between two S III devices using a combination of NFC and Wi-Fi Direct. AllShare Play uses DLNA to share your photos and videos on compatible TVs. 

Here’s a closer look at some of the other specs revealed:
  • 4.8-inch HD Super AMOLED display with a resolution of 1280 x 720
  • 3G, EDGE/GPRS, Wi-Fi with, DLNA support
  • GPS with A-GPS and GLONASS,
  • USB 2.0, Bluetooth 4.0
  • 8MP camera with AF, LED flash, BSI sensor and 1080p HD video recording
  • 1.9MP front facing camera with a resolution of 720p for video chat
  • 16/32/64GB Internal memory, expandable up to 64GB
  • HDMI out

The Samsung Galaxy S III will be officially released tomorrow in India. 

Milagrow introduces seven-inch tablet for Rs. 10990

Milagrow Humantech has announced the launch of their 7-inch tablet - TabTop 7.4. At just 6.5mm thickness, company is dubbing it as India's thinnest tablet.
According to the company, it comes with over 55 most-used applications pre-loaded to provide out-of-box usability. TabTop 7.4 runs on Android 4.0.3, and features 1.2 GHz processor, 4000mAh battery, and 1.3MP front camera.
It has been priced at Rs. 10,990 for the 4GB variant and Rs. 13,990 for the 16GB variant.
Milagrow already sells variety of tablets in the country.
Key specifications
  • 7-inch (17.8 cm) display
  • 1.2 GHz processor with Dual Mali 400 MP GPU
  • Support for 4G/3G/2G with multiple dongles;
  • Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n;
  • Supports external hard disk upto 500GB & multiple devices via USB Host.

Monday, 28 May 2012

Looking to Cut Costs? Ditch XP for Windows 7


Microsoft this week continued to push for the demise of Windows XP, arguing that it is more expensive for businesses to remain on the aging OS than it is to upgrade to Windows 7.
Pointing to a report it commissioned from IDC, Microsoft's Erwin Visser wrote in a blog post that "staying on Windows XP is an expensive investment when Windows 7 provides dramatic savings."
Specifically, IDC said that base IT and end-user labor costs associated with Windows XP are about five times as much as those for Windows 7. "That's a significant amount of money IT shops could put towards modernizing their departments and adding value to the businesses," Visser said.
Those prices are also still on the rise. "IDC found the longer you wait, the pricier supporting Windows XP gets: IT labor costs go up 25 percent in the fourth year of continuing to run Windows XP past deadline, and user productivity suffers as well, with an increased cost of 23 percent," he said.
Microsoft celebrated the 10-year anniversary of Windows XP last year, and promptly called for its demise. Support for the OS will end on April 8, 2014, so Redmond is making a push for businesses to switch to more modern versions of Windows. "10 years is a long time to have the same old technology," the company said back in October.
Anything before Windows XP Service Pack 3 is already out of support. In an effort to encourage upgrades, Microsoft's own Internet Explorer 9 only runs on Windows 7 or Vista because of graphics acceleration support. Other software, like some of the latest video editors, are starting to have similar requirements.
As of April 2012, 46.08 percent of PCs in the world were running Windows XP, followed by 36.67 percent on Windows 7, according to data from Net Applications. That's only a slight drop from December, when Windows XP closed out 2011 with 46.52 percent of the global OS market, followed by Windows 7 with 36.99 percent.
Microsoft is currently putting the final touches on Windows 8, which is scheduled to be released later this year. For more, check out PCMag's Hands On With Windows 8 Consumer Preview and the slideshow below.

Bump for Android now transfers photos directly to your PC

Bump is one really handy wireless data sharing software app, available for iOS and Android platforms.

 Bump is one really handy wireless data sharing software app, available for iOS and Android platforms. Now the creators of Bump have announced yet another nifty feature for the Bump Android app which allows direct photo transfer to PCs. Hence now you don't need to physically connect your Android smartphone or tablet to your PC to transfer images.
The earlier functionality Bump Android app allowed users to transfer contacts, photos and even app recommendations among devices which had Bump installed on them. All one has to do is just simply tap/bump two Android/iOS devices with Bump installed on them and the data will be moved between them.
But now, Bump developers have gone a step ahead and now allow transferring photos from the Android based devices to a desktop web browser directly. All one has to do is open the http://bu.mp website on your PC. Then open up the Bump on Android app, select the photos you wish to transfer and gently bump your phone on the keyboard's spacebar of PC. Currently this method works on Safari, Chrome and Firefox web browsers.
This is one novel way to transfer your photos from phone to the web directly. Get the Bump for Android app from the Google Play Store.

Reputed websites under hacker threat: CERT-In

 Websites of reputed government and private organisations are under threat from hackers, the Computer Emergency Response Team India (CERT-In) has said, warning users to be extra cautious while using the internet

"It is observed that some hacker groups are launching distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks on websites of government and private organisations in India. The attacks may be targeted to different websites of reputed organisations," CERT-In, the national nodal agency for responding to computer security incidents, said in an advisory on its website. 

"These attacks are being launched through popular DDoS tools and can consume bandwidth requiring appropriate proactive actions in coordination with service providers," it said. 

The agency has asked users to deploy adequate security systems to deal with these attacks originating through DDoS. 
As a counter measure, it has also suggested that the users review traffic patterns and if there is any rise, this should be reported to the agency. 

In a recent written reply in the Lok Sabha, Minister of State for Communications and IT Sachin Pilot said 112government websites, including that of Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd ( BSNL), were hacked in just three months - Dec 2011 to Feb 2012. 

These hacked websites belonged to the agencies in the governments of Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Gujarat, Kerala, Orissa, Uttar Pradesh, Sikim and Manipur.

Facebook hoping to release its own smartphone by 2013

This past week, Google completed its acquisition of the hardware maker Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion, which could lead to the search giant's making its own smartphone. But another software titan might be getting into the hardware game as well: Facebook. 

Employees of Facebook and several engineers who have been sought out by recruiters there, as well as people briefed on Facebook's plans, say the company hopes to release its own smartphone by next year. These people spoke only on condition of anonymity for fear of jeopardizing their employment or relationships with Facebook. 

The company has already hired more than half a dozen former Apple software and hardware engineers who worked on the iPhone, and one who worked on the iPad, the employees and those briefed on the plans said. 

This would be Facebook's third effort at building a smartphone, said one person briefed on the plans and one who was recruited. In 2010, the blog TechCrunch reported that Facebook was working on a smartphone. 

The project crumbled after the company realized the difficulties involved, according to people who had worked on it. The website AllThingsD reported last year that Facebook and HTC had entered a partnership to create a smartphone, code-named "Buffy," which is still in the works. 

Now, the company has been going deeper into the process, by expanding the group working on "Buffy," and exploring other smartphone projects too, creating a team of seasoned hardware engineers who have built the devices before. 

One engineer who formerly worked at Apple and worked on the iPhone said he met with Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook's chief executive, who then peppered him with questions about the inner workings of smartphones. 

It did not sound like idle intellectual curiosity, the engineer said; Zuckerberg asked about intricate details, including the types of chips used, he said. Another former Apple hardware engineer was recruited by a Facebook executive and was told about the company's hardware explorations. 

When asked Friday, Facebook did not deny or confirm that a project to build a smartphone existed, but pointed to a previous statement it gave to AllThingsD last year that said in part, "We're working across the entire mobile industry; with operators, hardware manufacturers, OS providers, and application developers." 

For Facebook, the motivation is clear; as a newly public company, it must find new sources of revenue, and it fears being left behind in mobile, one of the most promising areas for growth. 

"Mark is worried that if he doesn't create a mobile phone in the near future that Facebook will simply become an app on other mobile platforms," a Facebook employee said. 

Facebook is going to great lengths to keep the phone project a secret, specifically not posting job listings on the company's job website, but instead going door-to-door to find the right talent for the project. 

But can a company that is wired as a social network learn how to build hardware? Mixing the cultures of hardware and software designers is akin to mixing oil and water. With the rare exception of Apple, other phone makers aren't very good at this. 

The biggest names in consumer electronics have struggled with phone hardware. Hewlett-Packard tried and failed. So did DellSony has never done very well making phones. 

"Building isn't something you can just jump into," explained Hugo Fiennes, a former Apple hardware manager for the first four iPhones who has since left Apple and is starting a new hardware company, Electric Imp. "You change the smallest thing on a smartphone and you can completely change how all the antennas work. You don't learn this unless you've been doing it for a while." 

He added, "Going into the phone business is incredibly complex." 

Facebook also faces hurdles, often of its own making, on mobile. Twitter, for example, is fully integrated into the Apple iPhone and allows people to seamlessly send Twitter messages with photos or article links. Facebook, which has had a contentious relationship with Apple, is still not integrated into iOS

One Facebook employee said the phone project had been rebooted several times because Facebook originally thought it could figure out hardware on its own. The company has since learned that it needed to bring in people with previous phone-making experience, several people said. 

So it is hiring hardware engineers to work with a phone manufacturer and design the shape, style and inner workings of a Facebook phone. Despite the difficulties, Facebook seems well positioned in certain ways to enter the smartphone market

It already has an entire operating system complete with messaging, calendar, contacts and video, and an immense app store is on its way with thousands of highly popular apps. There's also that billion-dollar camera app, in the form of Instagram

If Facebook fails with its own team of engineers, it could buy a smartphone maker. The company took in $16 billion from its bumpy IPO. 

It could easily scoop up an infirm company like Research in Motion, which is valued at less than $6 billion, and drop a beautifully designed Facebook operating system on top of RIM's phones. HTC is upset with Google for buying Motorola, which is worth about $11.8 billion and becoming cheaper by the day. 

Facebook would not necessarily challenge Apple if it enters the smartphone marketplace. Instead, it could be Facebook vs. Google, which makes the Android operating system, with both companies going after a huge number of buyers of lower-priced smartphones. 

"When you offer an advertising-based phone, you're targeting all the users on prepay that are budget-conscious of their communications costs," said Carolina Milanesi, a vice president and analyst for the Gartner Group. 

Milanesi said that at a mass market level, both companies could take the same approach as Amazon, offering low-cost hardware, like the Kindle, and subsidizing some of the costs through advertising. 

After all, both Facebook and Google make their money through advertising. If the companies have the opportunity to continually put ads in front of people on a smartphone screen, you would think the only question left would be to pick the right ringtone that makes that ka-ching sound. 

Sunday, 27 May 2012

Microsoft Windows 8: First impressions


 With the launch of Microsoft Windows 8 scheduled for later this year, the Redmond-based tech giant seems all set to warm up the developers' community to the product. And the Microsoft India Technology Summit- Go BIG event in Mumbai seemed to be a step forward in that direction.
We got a chance to check out the product at the event, and our verdict is that the new Windows 8 appears to have come with some significant improvements over its predecessor.
The new features include an efficient picture password, which ensures a faster and more feasible approach and the ability to reshuffle and rename apps.
Further, the picture image is edge-to-edge, rendering every minute detail visible to the naked eye. This can be synched with multiple PCs without data changing the data, making the process all the more convenient. 
Also, the Windows Store allows developers to submit their innovations and ideas. The software is available in various languages, which makes it accessible to developers and users from all across the world.
While we did come across certain drawbacks in the product including some loopholes in the software, Windows 8 is definitely very convenient to use. One can expect a better and a newer software in perhaps another couple of years.

In a video sent to the event, CEO Steve Ballmer apologized for his absence before going on to say, “We’ve always considered India to be this pasture of software developers. The talent base is rich, fresh and unbelievable.”
"Windows 8 is re-imagining from the ground up. From small phone screens to screens as big as a room! Pushing new form factors to make collaboration between personal and professional life. This will be in 100 languages and more, making its reach limitless,” Ballmer added.

Jean-Philippe Courtois, President Microsoft International, said, “Having a wide range of hardware, it caters to every individual’s different needs. From hybrid environment to Windows 7, technology has come a long way. There will be no compromise experience; it has the mobility of a tablet, and is as firm as any other hardware.”
“The economists are busy labeling India as a developing nation, but India is a developer nation, with 'IT' actually standing for 'India’s tomorrow,” added an IT professor present at the event. 

Saturday, 26 May 2012

Aged Windows XP costs 5x more to manage than Windows 7


 Microsoft yesterday added ammunition to its increasingly aggressive battle to get users off the nearly-11-year-old Windows XP by citing a company-sponsored report that claims annual support costs for the older OS are more than five times that of Windows 7.
Microsoft has been banging the Windows XP upgrade drum for years, but stepped up the campaign in 2012, including starting a "two-year countdown" to the demise of security support. Last month, Microsoft was blunt, saying "If your organization has not started the migration to a modern PC, you are late."
Windows XP exits all support, including monthly security patches, in April 2014.
In a blog post Thursday, Erwin Visser, a senior director for Windows, used data collected by IDC to make Microsoft's upgrade case.
"The bottom line...[is that] businesses that migrate from Windows XP to Windows 7 will see significant return on investment," said Visser.
Microsoft sponsored the survey (download PDF) conducted by IDC, which in turn interviewed nine enterprises or large organizations to drill into the support costs of XP and Windows 7.
According to IDC, an amazing 42% of the Windows "commercial" installed base, or anything other than consumers' home machines, was Window XP, making Microsoft's job of moving everyone off the old OS by its April 2014 retirement nearly impossible.
In fact, IDC projected that if current trends continue, 11% of the enterprise and educational Windows installed base will still be running XP when Microsoft stops patch delivery in 23 months.
And those XP machines costs organizations considerably more to support than comparable PCs running Windows 7.
One reason for the increased costs for supporting Windows XP is that it's typically running on older hardware that, independent of the OS, is more expensive to simply keep running.
The magic milestone is after the three-year mark, when "costs begin to accelerate" because of additional IT and help desk time, and increased user downtime due to more security woes and time spent rebooting, said IDC.
IT labor costs jump 25% during year four of a PC's lifespan, and another 29% in year five, IDC noted, while user productivity costs climb 23% in year four and jump 40% during year five. Total year five costs are a whopping 73% higher than support costs of a two-year-old client.
However, the operating system also plays a major role in the cost differences, said IDC, with XP more expensive to support in every category the research company surveyed.
Organizations reported that they spent 82% less time managing patches on Windows 7 systems than they did on Windows XP, 90% less time mitigating malware, and 84% less help desk time.
Benefits were also striking for Windows 7 users' productivity compared to XP. Windows 7 users wasted 94% less time rebooting their computers and lost 90% less time due to malware attacks.
On the IT side, the savings of Windows 7 mount dramatically, IDC said.
"IT activities account for 11.3 hours of time spent per PC per year when using Windows XP," the research group said. "Shops that have moved to Windows 7...spend 2.3 hours per PC per year on maintaining those systems."
IDC did the math, and concluded that for every 230 PCs running Windows 7 rather than XP, an organization could shift one full-time IT person to other work. Or conceivably do without him or her entirely.

Google sends virus alert

WASHINGTON: Search giant Google has issued a warning to its millions of users that they could lose the ability to connect to the Internet in July due to a computer virus. The problem began when international hackers ran an online advertising scam to take control of infected computers around the world. In a highly unusual response, the FBI set up a safety net months ago using government computers to prevent Internet disruptions for those infected users, but that system will be shut down on July 9, killing connections for those people. The FBI has run a campaign for months, encouraging people to visit a website that will inform them whether they are infected and explain how to fix the problem.

Anonymous hacks RCom servers, warns govt against web censorship

Users connected to web through RCom could
not access websites like Twitter and Facebook
today after hackers belonging to Anonymous
allegedly hacked company's servers.
Users connected to the web through the network provided by Reliance Communications (RCom) could not access popular websites like Twitter and Facebook on Saturday morning after hackers allegedly belonging to a group called Anonymous hacked the company's servers. When users typed www.twitter.com or www.facebook.com in the browser they were redirected to a page put up by the hackers that warned Indian governmentand internet service providers "not to mess with free speech and lesser with Anonymous".

On Friday, the hackers had released a list of websites and weblinks that were allegedly blocked on RCom network even though there was no legal mandate to do so. "We are investigating the matter and taking appropriate actions," a spokesperson of RCom told TOI.

Anonymous, a loosely-knit hacker collective, has been in the news for the last two years for high-profile attacks on government websites across the world to protest what it perceives as web censorship.

In the message to web users, the hackers said, "People We for 1 entire week attacked government websites, run by your money and no one in your government cared, then we decided to hit the Rich guys in the entertainment and IPL and Reliance and your government sprang into action. Shame on this government."

Last week the Anonymous hackers had attacked tens of Indian government websites, including the Supreme Court website, when several ISPs in the country blocked some file-sharing websites after an order against piracy by Madras High Court. These hackers were using a Twitter handle (opindia_revenge) to communicate with the world. However, after some time the account was suspended.

The hackers said that Twitter suspended the account after a request from the Indian government. "We tried to do a slow, non violent protest and government decided to cover out mouths we will not sit idle while our freedom is take away. When we started to speak truth, the government of India forced our online twitter account @Opindia_revenge to be suspended," noted the message on Saturday.

"We give you 24Hours at maximum to give our twitter account back and apologize... Give @OpIndia_Revenge BACK," the hackers said in the message. Now, they are allegedly using @Opindia_back on Twitter.

On Friday, the hackers had held a virtual press conference in an internet relay chat room. Apart from releasing the block list allegedly maintained by RCom, they also called people to protest against web censorship in the real world on June 9 by wearing Guy Fawkes masks.