Friday, September 25, 2009

Design Your world, Design Your Space


The world is yours, or at least that's the promise e-commerce offers. Get your products, services or information online, and you can gain customers anywhere. It can be challenging, though, to build an active worldwide customer base that buys and comes back for more.

It's a competitive world, and studies have shown over and over that people prefer to buy in the ways they are accustomed to, especially with information in their native language.
The first obvious customization is to provide translation of your e-commerce site, but this doesn't happen with the wave of a magic wand. There are steps that must be followed, from business planning to technical adaptation to facilitating the localization process and streamlining updates. This article provides an overview of these considerations, and suggests logical steps to help you move forward.

Business Case

While this article primarily addresses issues regarding site creation and adaptation, it's important to discuss the business drivers as well, as they strongly impact cost and time considerations.
Whether you work at a large or small company, your business case leads your budget and resource allocation in creating sites for global audiences. In most cases, this globalization strategy involves high-level management visibility and strategic commitment. There are revenue expectations and distribution issues to sort out, possibly local in-country representation to support, and a host of other logistics.
All that adds up to plenty of expectations for a return on investment. Getting a good plan in place -- including a strong understanding of the scope of implementation efforts, a technical and process road map, and some kind of measurement metrics -- helps you get the right funding and resources to be successful.
The costs of poorly globalizing your e-commerce site certainly include building expensive systems that don't have the needed functionality for an international customer base. Even worse are the delays in deployment that have rather painful and visible effects on your company's revenue stream, global aspiration objectives and, ultimately, the bottom line.


Internationalization: One Site, Many Adaptations

To the outside observer, internationalization (i18n) remains a hidden and often unknown attribute, but it is critical to leveraging your success from market to market.
When you internationalize your site, you adapt its technology to be capable not only of supporting any language, but also of supporting local formats and ways of doing business. Translators and regional stakeholders can alter content and more, but the site itself -- what presents and processes information -- remains consistent and leveraged for each market.
We often counsel our clients to think in terms of locales, and not languages. That's because you can't assign local purchasing behaviors to a language. It's more the other way around; a locale includes the language of the region as well as numerous other issues, such as character set support, date/time formatting, forms of payment, data/product sorting, phone/address formatting and more.
If you are using another company's e-commerce platform technology for your site, then you must find out exactly how it supports internationalization. If you are building a new site, be aware that some technologies adapt to internationalization and localization demands better than others. The technologies you choose should tread the balance of your current organization requirements and your business objectives.

If you are adapting your current site to support internationalization, consider these areas in your migration:


•Architecture -- The structure of your e-commerce system, including the software itself, the externally visible properties of the user interface, and the relationships between them. Consider your new requirements for international markets, finding the balance of what is not in your e-commerce site that needs to be added. Likewise, examine what is in your site's code that needs to be changed to support the markets.

•Code refactoring -- Unless you are developing a new e-commerce site with support for international markets planned from the beginning, it is likely that the internal structure of your e-commerce site will require modification to improve or change the code to better support international functionality. Typical code refactoring on internationalization projects includes the following:


◦Extract embedded strings from the code so that they can be easily accessed for translation;

◦Change locale-limiting functions, methods and classes;

◦Mark relevant business logic object-based, so it can be affected by locale requirements;

◦Enable character set support (Unicode) so that extended characters display properly;

◦Ensure that character encoding changes to pages, database and individual coding elements are implemented; and

◦Abstract transaction workflow on the site that may need to be dynamically customized to support locale requirements.


Content Management Systems

Another thing to take into account during the internationalization phase is the type of tools you are using for developing your content. For Web sites, there are plenty of good content management systems (CMS) that are available; however, there are differences among them that affect the support for international markets.
If you use one, you want make sure it is localization-friendly. It must have a way to export the translatable content in some kind of file format that translation tools can use. XLIFF (XML Localization Interchange File Format) or other variations of XML-based formats are good choices. The tool must also be able to merge back the translated exported data into the right places in the localized content.
Generating "delta" files -- which contain only the content "chunks" that need to go through the localization process for translation -- is a very efficient way to reduce the costs for localizing updates as your site is modified. It is often helpful to the linguists, though, to provide reference materials or to include the already-translated content around the new translatable chunks, so the translation can be done within a meaningful context.
Some content management systems also allow you to control the granularity of the chunks you create, and to re-use them across the whole published Web site. This allows for even more cost savings in localization.

Content Creation

Whether you are using a content management system or not, how you write the content and design your icons and graphics affects the ultimate localizability of the site. Taking into consideration the way the content is developed saves money during the localization process and results in better international sites.
Ultimately, it is much cheaper to create content correctly in the source language before translating the content into many languages for the target markets and having to address content issues for each market:


•Write in simplified English. In creating the source content, write in the active voice, avoiding complex sentence structures. Avoid the use of slang, colloquial expressions, and cultural references. This is even more important if you anticipate having some users from markets that are not covered by your globalization plan. They may end up using machine translation engines to get a gist of the content of your Web site.

•Reuse text. If you say the same thing at different places, then say it the same way, so the translation of the first occurrence can be used for the second one. This leveraging of text can significantly reduce the linguistic fees through the reuse of previously translated content. By all means, avoid minor wording changes as that just means more costs. Content management systems can help you to parse your content into "chunks" that are easily translated while facilitating the reuse of content throughout the site.

•Icons. Make sure all icons are understandable by your target markets. It is cheaper to have icons that "work everywhere" than to customize icons for each market. Identifying culturally acceptable icons can require a bit of up-front cost in assessing them for your target markets, but it avoids confusing (or worse, offending) your customers. Alternatively, you can design your Web site to easily substitute icons according to the market (e.g. by using style-sheets instead of hard-coding style changes in your pages).

•Graphics. While it is tempting to have complex graphics with layered text, remember that all text has to be translated. Translating text that is embedded into graphics is more expensive. If you have to use call outs on your graphics, then use numbers or letters that are then referenced in the text of the page rather than on the graphic itself. Whatever you do, make sure that you keep the graphic source files for your localization team (not just the collapsed JPG or GIF files).

•Search Engine Optimization (SEO). In creating the source e-commerce site, great care must be taken to optimize search terms so that the site appears readily in search engine matches. Extend your efforts to include SEO for each of your target markets, using appropriate search terms in the metadata as well as the content itself.

Ensuring Internationalization Success

A good internationalization effort should be validated with a careful review of the source site:

•Consider using pseudo-translation (where the content is passed through a small program to convert the text into extended characters so that display can be verified) of the content to verify that all modifiable elements of the site are indeed accessible and can be changed for the various translated versions.

•Verify that locale-sensitive data can be processed accordingly (date/time/numbers format, currency issues, measurement units, etc.) and that when needed, locale-specific content can be provided as well (end-user license agreements, privacy and confidentiality statements, 800-type numbers, part numbers, etc.)

To recap, the success of your site on the international scene comes from a combination of

•good development practices,

•well-adapted tools used during the development and the maintenance of the site, and

•content that is ready for localization, taking into account cultural differences as appropriate.

You can learn more by collaborating with industry colleagues (from your industry and the language services industry) through an impartial trade association, such as the Globalization and Localization Association (GALA).
Following these high-level guidelines will better prepare you for the localization and translation of your e-commerce site for each of your target markets

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Palm Pixi : Quite a Palmfull

Palm is expanding its line of WebOS smartphones -- and ratcheting up competition with Apple -- with the introduction of a new mobile device called the "Pixi."
The phone, meant to supplement the more serious Pre smartphone, will be available during the holiday seaon through its exclusive carrier, Sprint .
A lighter weight and thinner phone with a visible full keyboard, the Pixi is a natural mobile conduit for social networking sites and activities, according to Palm.
Palm Synergy lets users arrange information from Google , Facebook , Yahoo , LinkedIn and Exchange ActiveSync in a single view. There are also new integration capabilities for Facebook's contacts, phone, calendar and photo apps.
Pixi users can download applications from the Palm Beta App Catalog and use Palm media sync to customize the device with music, photos and videos from iTunes or the Amazon MP3 store.










Pricing Confusion
The Pixi's price hasn't been announced yet, but it's expected to come in around US$99. Here's why: Palm also announced that it is cutting the price of the Pre to $149, after rebates, with a two-year Sprint contract. That's essentially a $50 price cut.
Prior to the Pixi's unveiling, Sprint advertised a special offer for the Pre: For a just few hours, new customers were able to get a $100 service credit. However, Sprint yanked the promotion before the ink was dry.
It is unclear how the credit was to be applied to the Pre's final price for a consumer -- which after $350 in instant and mail-in rebates settled at approximately $200. It was widely assumed that the special offer was for a $99 Pre. Sprint reportedly said it would honor the deal for customers who signed new contracts during the promotion's brief window of opportunity.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Bhuvan - Google Earth the Indian Way.

Considering the fact that Indian talent is spreading around the globe like wildfire, it came no more a surprise when Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) recently launched ‘Bhuvan’, which is India’s answer to Google Earth. (Bhuvan in Sanskrit means ‘Earth’)

Bhuvan is web-based tool much similar to Google Earth which promises to give much better 3-D imagery of India compared to what is being offered by Google Earth. It will also include a number of other services like weather forecast and have administrative boundaries of all the states and districts in the country.
Users will be able to browse the content like any other website. It will also allow users to zoom in from space to street, grab, spin and narrow down to anyplace they want. However for safety purposes it will block the sensitive locations such as military and nuclear plants. Bhuvan currently has the best resolution over the entire subcontinent of India and is also very user-friendly and will run even on low bandwiths.
Bhuvan will be able to produce very local information which will be very much specific to India. Also it will enable us to address problems like floods, famines, education, Research and Development and Infrastructure.
Now owing to the recent goof-up Google Earth made by showing some parts of Arunachal Pradesh as Chinese Territory, the launch of Bhuvan will definitely get Google Earth on guard.

Wanna be a MSP!!! Check This out.

Selection Process


The Selection process for Microsoft Student Partners, India is now open. You are suggested to register and complete the formalities right away to avoid last minute rush and miss on very important announcements, which shall be made to registered candidates from time to time.

Here are the steps required to register successfully for the MSP Program.


· Register for Imagine Cup 2010 in any of the categories ( www.imaginecup.com). Please enter “MSP Selection” as referral code.

· Record a 120 second Video on any technical topic and upload it at www.youtube.com/indiamsp (This is not mandatory as of now. However, candidates who post their video will have an advantage). Suggested topics are:-

o Introduction to the .Net Framework

o Introduction to Microsoft Silverlight

o Microsoft Windows 7

o Microsoft Windows Vista

o Introduction to Microsoft SQL Server

o Any other Microsoft technology.


· Register at the link provided and provide all relevant details.Please copy paste the below URL in your Browser Window.
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=5IBYVECYqVCrTEKuhPRPcQ_3d_3d


Important- This year, we shall be carrying out on the spot MSP Interviews in a few cities as well. This will be in conjunction to any Microsoft events happening in your city. Announcements will be made on this page from time to time with event details like time, venue etc. All candidates who fall in that region and can attend the event are requested to do so. This will ensure speedy processing of your application. However, only pre-registered candidates will be given a chance.

In case you are not able to attend these in-person events, you can still become a Microsoft Student Partner. Just submit your video and fill the registration form and you shall get an interview call if we find you a suitable candidate!



Please note- Microsoft will not bear any travel expenses that you may incur in order to attend any such events. Only those events will have MSP selection in parallel which are announced on this website. Please check this space from time to time.



Vedant Arora
Microsoft Student Partner
Amity School of Engineering & Technology ;)

Friday, August 14, 2009

Nokia Office : The Office just got bigger

Microsoft, proprietor of its own Windows Mobile smartphone operating system, is partnering up with Nokia to offer mobile Office applications on the Finnish company's Symbian-loaded handsets. The move could come as a blow to third-party app providers who sell solutions to achieve document sharing between platforms, but how will it affect Microsoft's commitment to its own OS?

Nokia  and Microsoft  on Wednesday announced they are teaming up to create and offer mobile enterprise applications in a bid to tap the fast-growing mobile apps market.

Apps could constitute the next gold rush for the mobile industry, and carriers and smartphone vendors are both battling for a share of what could be a very lucrative market.
However, the Microsoft-Nokia deal could be stymied by a court ruling on Tuesday that bars Redmond from selling its Word application in the United States.

Slipping on the Mobile Dance Floor?


Unless and until an appeals court hands down a new ruling, however, the ban could stymie the agreement between Microsoft and Nokia.
This deal will see the two jointly design, develop and market apps that bring Microsoft Office Mobile and Microsoft business communications, collaboration and device management software to Nokia smartphones running its Symbian operating system.
Nokia's business-optimized E-series smartphones will get these apps first.
Next year, Nokia will begin shipping Microsoft Office Communicator Mobile on its smartphones.
Other apps to follow will include those that let users view, edit, create and share Office documents, as well as Microsoft Communicator Mobile apps for enterprise instant messaging, enterprise presence, conferencing and collaboration.
Users will also get mobile access to Microsoft SharePoint Server and enterprise device management capabilities through Microsoft System Center.
Microsoft and Nokia will also market the apps to businesses, carriers and individuals.

What About Windows Mobile?


The Microsoft-Nokia deal will not change Redmond's commitment to its own Windows Mobile platform, according to Microsoft.
"Mobility is one of Microsoft's top investment areas, and we are 100 percent committed to Windows phones now and in the future," Scott Rockfield, director of Windows Mobile communications business
"Microsoft is fighting a rearguard action until its Windows app store and [the next version of] Windows Mobile come out," Carl Howe, director of anywhere consumer research at the Yankee Group
Buyers may want to hold off buying either Nokia or Windows Mobile smartphones for a while, he advised. "Don't even bother with the Nokia and Windows Mobile platforms until the next releases, because those are the ones they're betting on," Howe said.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

myTouch 3G : The Kid Next Door

The nights for Android competitors were never the same after the Google OS was announced. The brand name and the publicity gave android the much needed hype and did set the stage for myTouch G1(the first in the Android Series) .Coupled with the smart marketing strategies of HTC and the name Google of course the Smartphone made record breaking sales. The G1 cashed on the crowd’s curiosity and love for Google and gave hints of something better in the pipeline.

Less than a year after the release of G1, the news of the myTouch 3G was confirmed. The myTouch 3G strikes as a hammer on hot metal and without the release started molding the public in their favor. Although it comes with a price tag of around 200$ (a little more than its predecessor) , it has made the world wanting for more. The release of videos of myTouch 3G intensified the craving for the 2nd android phone and gave its competitors a warning to prepare themselves, for an era which is all set to begin.
The myTouch 3G does not consist of a Keyboard (as its predecessor) and comes with an impressively interactive touch interface. The quality and the response of the next gen touch interface have already affected the markets for the sleek and trendy iPhone, especially when the myTouch 3G has much more to offer.
myTouch 3G comes equipped with an eye-widening 3.2 MP camera with an impeccable picture quality. A 3.2 mm touch screen makes it hard for the user to get his fingers off screen. myTouch 3G also takes cares of users with huge fingers. To make it easy for them, the concept of trackball has been reintroduced just to explore those heavily crowded web pages till the extent.
It’s quite obvious that it comes bundled with our favorite Google Maps for navigation, also comes along an interesting application Sherpa which remembers your favorite restaurants, and coffee houses and other eatable joints and helps you find them the next time you search for them.

What makes myTouch 3G stands out is the range of accessories its comes along with, which gives the phone owner a handful of chances to make his phone unique and different from others

With features like Navigation Pane, Search by Voice, One Touch Share and many more indeed makes the competitor really work hard to stay in the league and make the my Touch 3G stand out

FriendFeed : Facbook's warning sign for Google & Twitter


Facebook has bought itself a social media aggregation site, FriendFeed, that could help it compete better against Google and Twitter. It's a sweet deal for Facebook, according to Forrester analyst Jeremiah Owyang, but whether FriendFeed made the right decision is open to debate. Though relatively small, FriendFeed is popular with "uber social geeks," he said, and it could've been a contender.

In a continuing bid to make itself ever more relevant to advertisers and open its doors to the broader Internet, Facebook has acquired social media aggregator FriendFeed.

Terms were not disclosed, but The Wall Street Journal -- citing anonymous sources -- valued the deal at US$50 million in cash and stock.
The move comes as Facebook has begun to open itself up to the broader Internet, giving users vanity URLs for their profiles and making them more searchable on the Web.

FriendFeed Background

Founded in 2007 by four former Google developers, the FriendFeed service allows users to build customized feeds based on information they find and activities they engage in on the Web and other social media sites, including YouTube and Twitter . Users' friends can then see those feeds in real-time.
FriendFeed is a relatively minor phenomenon among mainstream Web users, but it is highly popular with early technology and social media adopters, Jeremiah Owyang, a social media analyst for Forrester, told TechNewsWorld. The site gets about 1 million unique visitors a month, a paltry sum compared to Facebook's 250 million visitors, Owyang said.

"These are the uber social geeks," he said.

Integrating the Services

Integrating the services opens up new avenues for Facebook to appeal to advertisers, and it also gives the company a competitive edge against Twitter, because tweets will be viewable directly on Facebook's platform once the integration is complete.
FriendFeed's services, while simpler to use than Facebook's, can be more daunting to set up, said Owyang, who is active in the FriendFeed community.
Facebook developers will likely make FriendFeed's services more easily configurable, he said, while retaining the ease of day-to-day use to encourage adoption among the site's millions of mainstream users.

Source : ECT News Network

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Microsoft & Yahoo : And they Lived happily ever after!!!


What does Microsoft hope to pump from Yahoo in their newly forged search agreement? Search data. Once the two combine powers, search queries that users send to Yahoo will be handled by Microsoft, which will also find out what users end up clicking after a search. More data means Microsoft can better sharpen its search power. However, will even that be enough to catch Google?

Microsoft is hoping that a long-term partnership with rival Yahoo will give it the size and insight it needs to bring in more traffic, more advertisers and ultimately more revenue.

By handling Yahoo's searches along with its own, Microsoft can learn more quickly what works and what doesn't. A smarter search engine might draw more Internet users, and more advertisers could follow, driving up prices.
Size, though, may wind up being far from the magic bullet that Microsoft is counting on in forging a 10-year partnership to power all Yahoo searches.
Search leader Google has had a head start in technical development, and Microsoft already has had plenty of search queries to analyze -- yet it remains stuck at No. 3. Adding more data might not make a difference.

Viewing More Querries


The software maker's stockholders so far have been guardedly positive about the deal, perhaps because it did not require a US$9 billion upfront payment to Yahoo, a condition of a similar deal proposed last year. If Microsoft can't use this partnership to improve its search finances, though, they will eventually run out of patience.
Microsoft expects to spend up to $700 million to get the arrangement up and running, something that could take two years to fully deploy worldwide. It may spend up to $200 million within the next 12 months alone.
But the company believes it's worth it.
With the partnership, Microsoft will funnel Yahoo's nearly 3 billion monthly Web searches. Add that to the 1 billion Microsoft gets on its own, and the software maker will quadruple the queries it processes, allowing its search engine to gain even more insight into how to improve the experience.
Every move a search user makes is fed back into the system, so when the next person comes along with a similar problem, the search engine is a little bit smarter about solving it. For example, if five people in a row click on the fifth link on the results page for "Seattle Space Needle," the search engine -- a sophisticated computer program -- might try moving that link up to the top.

Other Battles


Ultimately, the Redmond, Wash.-based software maker may have to settle for something less tangible.
Google has been making incursions onto Microsoft's home turf, the software that makes computers run and helps people get their work done. By stepping up its game in search, Microsoft may ultimately force Google to focus on its core search engine rather than its fledgling software business, including a recently announced Chrome operating system that could challenge Windows.

Microsoft may be able to claim victory even if it cannot turn size into dramatic search revenue growth.

Source : ECT News Network

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Hackers at it once again,this time its Twitter & Facebook

It appears that the outage suffered by Twitter and technical problems affecting other social networks were the result of a denial of service attack targeting a single blogger, an activist who intended to commemorate the anniversary of last year's battle between Russia and Georgia. The sites have mostly recovered, but the attack underscores the ability of hackers to clog communication channels, given the proper resources.

If you were unable to log on to Twitter or Facebook Thursday morning, you can consider yourself collateral damage in the ongoing conflict between Russia and Georgia.

Facebook has confirmed that a pro-Georgia blogger was the target of a widespread distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack that hit the top social networks and other Web sites. Facebook was able to fend off the attack, but Twitter was down for most of Thursday morning, and a company blog post indicates the popular microblogging service was still dealing with DDoS' after-effects Friday.
Media reports point to a blogger, known as "Cyxymu," who has named himself after a city in Georgia. Friday marks the first anniversary of the war between Russia and Georgia over the breakaway region of South Ossetia, and the attacks may have been timed to silence Cyxymu's use of his social media accounts to commemorate the date.
"Yesterday's attack appears to be directed at an individual who has a presence on a number of sites, rather than the sites themselves," as told by Facebook Spokesperson "Specifically, the person is an activist blogger, and a botnet was directed to request his pages at such a rate that it impacted service for other users. We've isolated the issue, and almost all of our users are able to enjoy the normal Facebook experience."

Defense Options for US-Based Social Networks


A post on the Twitter Status Web site mid-morning Friday indicated the social network was still parrying attacks. "Due to defensive measures we've taken against the ongoing denial-of-service attack, some Twitter clients are unable to communicate with our API (application programming interface) and many users are unable to tweet via SMS (short message service)," the post said. "We are working as quickly as possible to restore our full service."

Twitter's rapid user growth over the past year may have outpaced its ability to protect its infrastructure from DDoS attacks. Facebook and Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) are larger, fully developed companies and have more backup ability when it comes to server issues. Still, Burton said Thursday's attacks show just how much botnet power Russia and other countries may have at their disposal.

"To be blunt, our options are very limited," he explained. 'When a multinational corporation or publicly held company is going against the resources of a hostile foreign intelligence agency, they're greatly undermanned from a technology perspective. They simply don't have the bandwidth to do battle with a foreign intelligence service.

Source : ECT News Network

Thursday, August 6, 2009

No More Social Netwoking For Nations Heroes

The Department of Defense will conduct an overall review of the security implications of allowing members of the military to interact with social networks. In the meantime, rules are inconsistent. Marines have been banned from using military networks to access the sites, while the Army gets to tweet at will.
The U.S. Marine Corps has banned service members from using military computers to access social networking sites, and the Department of Defense is reviewing the services to see if they pose too great a security threat to allow.


Such sites are popular with young service members who want to keep in touch with friends and family at home, but the Marine Corps' chief information officer, Brig. Gen. George J. Allen, said in a memo issuing the ban Tuesday that such sites create "a larger attack and exploitation window" and increase the risk that service members will share information that should be kept under wraps.
The order, which expires in one year unless renewed or supplanted by other guidance, involves all social networking sites, including Facebook , MySpace and Twitter . It carves out room for exceptions to the policy based on operational needs, but calls for an extensive review process before such authorization would be granted. The policy does not ban Marines from using the services on personal computers.
The DoD review will address the security risks of social networking sites, as well as the value they provide in helping the agency communicate, according to statements posted to the agency's Web site. A new policy could be approved by October.

Source : ECT News Network

Friday, July 3, 2009

Let a simple presentation take you to fame and glory!!!

Microsoft Student Partners
&
Delhi Techno Gradz


“PowerPresentia”



Exhibit Your Presentation Skills

Win Exciting Prizes…!!!


Hey guys, you are welcome to join this one of its kind, basic yet typical competition to test both your technical and creative skills. “Delhi Techno Gradz” brings to you “PowerPresentia”, the most widely used presentation software into a competitive platform. From schools to corporates, it’s always a simple presentation that holds the key, with an upper edge over others. It will not only test your PowerPoint skills but also test your understanding of the source codes.

The Competition:

(1) The student must first choose a single project among the given, and prepare a PowerPoint presentation.


(2) Translate your concept into a multimedia presentation (PowerPoint) using text, pictures, graphs, animation, audio, and video.


(3) The completed presentation must be submitted as a PowerPoint presentation (.ppt or .pps or .pptx or .ppsx)


(4) Choose a project from one of the categories: C++, C #, JAVA, PHP, VB


(5) Projects will be supplied by us, no external projects allowed.


Judging:

(1) Proficiency in using PowerPoint. Does the presentation run smoothly using a variety of media, animation techniques, transitions, and timing.


(2) Imagination and creativity of presentation.



CONTEST BEGINS : 5th July
SUBMISSION DEADLINE : 12th July

The Victorious would be rewarded and all those who attempt it would not go empty handed



For further details and queries : delhitechnogradz.groups.live.com
or
mail us : delhitechnogradz@live.com

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

TechED on road to Delhi& NCR

Dear All,
Please register yourself for the Tech Ed On the Road, Delhi/NCR

Day 1 : 27th June, 2009: TechED on the Road for IT Professional's
Venue:
Microsoft Office, 5th Floor,
Eros Corporate Tower,
Nehru Place,
New Delhi - 110017

Timings: 10:00 AM - 05:00 PM

For registration of IT Professional's Session:
https://www.clicktoattend.com/register.aspx?eventid=139035

Day 2 : 28th June, 2009: TechED on the Road for Developers

Venue:
Microsoft Corporation (I) Pvt. Ltd.
9th Floor, Tower A, DLF Cyber Greens,
DLF Cyber Citi, Sector 25A,
Gurgaon (Haryana)

Timings: 10:00 AM - 05:00 PM

For Registration of Developer's Session:
http://teotr.eventbrite.com

Agenda for Day 1:
Timings Topics Speakers

10:00 AM – 11:00 AM Keynote Rishu Mehra (Co-Owner, Delhi IT Pro)
11:00 AM – 12:30 PM Windows Client & Windows Server 2008 NAP- Better Together Usman Zman
12:30 PM – 02:00 PM Virtualization 360 Gunish Rai Chawla
02:00 PM – 03:00 PM Lunch

(To be managed by participants)

03:00 PM – 04:30 PM Reducing the Size of your Database using Data Compression/Binary Compression in SQL Server 2008 Mohit Jain

04:30 PM – 05:00 PM Q n A & Prizes

Agenda For Day 2:
Timings Topics Speakers

10:00 AM – 11:00 AM Keynote Rishu Mehra
11:00 AM – 12:30 PM Windows 7 for Developers Aditya Mani
12:30 PM – 02:00 PM What’s New in Silverlight 3 Subodh Pushpak
02:00 PM – 03:00 PM Lunch

(To be managed by participants. )

03:00 PM – 04:30 PM Welcome to ASP.NET 4.0 with VS2010 Ravi Pahuja
04:30 PM – 05:00 PM Q n A & Prizes

Make sure you are there!!

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Wireless Gaming from MS!!!!


Microsoft is controlling the early buzz at the massive E3 video game convention with its Project Natal technology, which allows gamers to interact with their Xbox 360s without the need for handheld controllers.

Along with the publicity, though, the company is creating a lot of questions regarding its ability to deliver on the innovation and promise demonstrated on a Los Angeles Convention Center stage Monday.

It made sense for Microsoft to invite Steven Spielberg to help introduce Natal to the throng of media and industry insiders in the audience. Natal uses a full-body motion capture camera along with voice and facial recognition technology to let users do their best impressions of Tom Cruise's character from Spielberg's 2002 science fiction opus "Minority Report." Like Cruise, Natal players will use their movements and their voices to interact with games and, as Spielberg hinted, possibly other forms of entertainment.

Demo Is One Thing, but What About the Living Room?

Natal looked great in the E3 demonstration and on the video presentations, Rosoff acknowledged, "but of course, we're going to have to see how it works in the real-world environment. They are camera-based sensors, so light and the amount of light in your room might be an issue. It's just one of those products that until you start to see some hands-on reviews, it's going to be hard to know whether it works as advertised."

Natal is a good answer to the Wii-mote, which has helped Nintendo vault back to the top of the video game industry, said Rosoff. However, Xbox has come a long way from the 2001 introduction of its original console, and now its 360 version has reached a solid No. 2 position in terms of sales, ahead of former leader Sony and its PlayStation 3.

Source : ECT News Network

Monday, June 1, 2009

Lets Bing it!!!

Now that Bing is available for use outside Microsoft, here are some quick tips and tricks that will help you do more with Bing.com.


1. Use the full version of Bing

If you are using Bing outside North America, chances are that you seeing a localized version of Bing that may be missing some features. For instance, the Indian version of Bing.com doesn’t have search history and the image on the Bing home page here is not interactive as in the US version.

To explore the full version of Bing, go to this page and set English - US as your default region. You can now enjoy all the Bing features from anywhere

2. Track Companies from the IE Favorites Bar


If you search for a company stock (e.g. GOOG or MSFT), Bing will automatically create a web slice for that company which you may then add to IE 8 and track the performance directly from the favorites bar. You need Internet Explorer 8 to try this feature.

3. Watch Preview of Hulu Videos outside US


Hulu hosts some popular popular TV shows but the problem is that you can only watch these videos if your computer has US based IP address.

However, Bing lets you watch shot previews of Hulu video even outside US. Just search for any TV show episode on Bing Videos (see example) and hover the mouse over any of the video thumbnail to watch a short clip.

4. Save and Email search results

With Bing, you can save your search history on to a local folder inside Bing or to your Windows Skydrive account. Alternatively, you may send your search queries to a friend via email or publish them on your Facebook wall via Bing. You’ll need Silverlight to share queries in Bing.

Office 2010...out from the pipeline!!!!!!

Office 2010, the next version of Microsoft's successful office programs suite, has been in closed testing for a while now. With a public beta expected later in the year, development is stepping up before the program, previously dubbed Office 14, is finally let out into the wild.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

The Latest E 52


Nokia E52 offers you Email with ease. You can send and receive emails easily. The advanced predictive text engine helps you write faster, and the large, clear screen is ideal for reading messages and browsing company websites. Nokia E52 has exceptional battery life which means you can stay connected whether you are at home, at work, or travelling. The Nokia E52 gives you up to 8 hours talk time (GSM), as well as noise cancellation for excellent talk quality. Nokia E52 helps you to stay organised. You can use the calendar to keep organised, and keep work time separate from free time with the Business and Personal Home screen modes.


Feature Overview

•2.4" Display

•One-Touch keys (Home, Calendar, Email)

•3.5 mm Nokia audio connector

•A-GPS with compass

•3.2 megapixel camera

•Home screen Modes – Business and Personal

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Get your Pen and Paper ready and start drawing guys...

Delhi Techno Gradz - Logo Designing Contest

We invite all designers of Delhi and NCR to a unique opportunity to win FREE MICROSOFT CERTIFICATION vouchers by participating in the LOGO DESINGING CONTEST !

Guidelines :
· Register yourself at http://delhitechnogradz.groups.live.com/ . Submissions of only registered candidates will be considered.
· The logo must be identifiable directly to the Groups and its objectives.
· The logo must be original work of the submitter.
· The logo should be vector graphics of aspect ratio 1:1, not a bitmap image.
· Submission deadline : 5th June 2009 23:59:59 (IST)
· Announcement of Results: Within 10 days from end of contest.
· Participation : The competition is open to all students of Delhi and NCR only.




Prizes : Microsoft Certification Vouchers (each worth 50 $)




Submission format :
Each submission should include the following information and should be sent to delhitechnogradz@live.com with “DTG logo contest” as subject.


· Aspect ratio should be 1:1
· High resolution print-ready scalable vector format such as PSD, EPS or AI .
· JPEG or PNG thumbnail.
· Brief design concept / description.
· Participants full name, email address, College and contact number.


Any submissions not in the above format or from unregistered participants will be automatically ignored without any notifications.




For any queries mail us at delhitechnogradz@live.com , we will put the questions and answers on the group.




Vedant Arora
Microsoft Student Partner
Amity School of Engineering & Technology

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

No More Funny Names on Facebook!!!!

Facebook wants nothing to do with fake profiles or accounts created using made-up names. To that end, it'll boot profiles it deems suspicious. That's a problem for individuals with unusual names, some of whom say they've been cut off from Facebook without warning simply because the site suddenly concluded they were not real people.

Facebook's effort to purge its site of fake accounts, in the process knocking out some real people with unusual names, marks yet another challenge for the 5-year-old social network.
As Facebook becomes a bigger part of the lives of its more than 200 million users, the Palo Alto, Calif.-based company is finding that the huge diversity and the vast size of its audience are making it increasingly difficult to enforce rules it set when its membership was smaller and more homogenous.
Having grown from a closed network available only to college students to a global social hub used by multiple generations, Facebook has worked over the years to shape its guidelines and features to fit its changing audience. However, requiring people to sign up under their real name is part of what makes Facebook Facebook.
Facebook is available in more than 40 languages -- and growing -- and its user base is larger than Brazil's population.

However, financially it is still a startup.

Source : ECT News Network

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Windows 7 RC........Ready to Cook

Guys finally itz BYE BYE to beta and helloo to RC1.On 5th may MS Published Windows 7 RC for general public,but thazz not the real news
The real news is that its free for 1 year.Hoooraaay
If you have used the Beta Version then surely you will like RC1 as it has a better UI and is lil faster than the Beta Version.The ShutDown,Restart, and Hibernation time is almost the same!!!There are a lot of other changes after beta

1. Windows Flip (ALT + TAB) with Aero Peek
The thumbnails look/behave the same way as the taskbar thumbnails when you hover the mouse over them. It seems logical that they would exhibit the peek behavior, tooOne can still quickly flip between and cycle through running windows using the ALT+TAB keys, but when more window information is needed Aero Peek will appear. This is triggered by a time delay as you pause while keyboarding through running windows.











2. Internet access Icon
The new network experience from the taskbar’s notification area makes it much easier to find and connect to networks. The Indications were removed for some advanced scenarios. A new overlay icon has also been introduced to indicate a local connection without internet access
3. Control Panel Jump List
Right-clicking on the Control Panel icon on the taskbar in Beta revealed a noticeably sparse Jump List .In RC the Control Panel Jump List offers quick access to recently used items.
There are a lot many changes than those...to discover them Download Windows 7 RC Now and relive the expierence

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

iPhone Vs Windows Mobile!!!!!

When an iPhone fan picks up a Windows phone, his or her first impression may go something like this: "It's difficult to find various features, it's kind of ugly, the hardware doesn't quite match the software, and it's generally user-unfriendly."

Vice-versa, when a die-hard Windows Mobile user picks up an iPhone, he or she might think, "This is a locked-up, inflexible platform designed mainly to get you to buy more stuff from Apple , like movies, music and apps."


While Microsoft's Windows Mobile division may have seemed a bit stagnant for the last couple of years, the software giant is reinvigorating its mobile phone operating system. In February, the company announced that the next generation of Windows phones will be based on Windows Mobile 6.5, and we can expect to see Microsoft focus less on the old "Windows Mobile" moniker with a version number. Rather, it will tend to refer to the devices the platform powers simply as "Windows phones."

Consumers vs. Enterprise Users


The iPhone's intuitive touch interface, media-friendly integration with iTunes and a simple email setup and integration combine to make a big difference between it and Windows Mobile phones in the eyes of many consumers.
Some of the other big differences, however, result from Microsoft's go-to-market strategy and the history of Windows Mobile. For instance, Microsoft doesn't build its own hardware like Apple does with its iPhone.
"Windows Mobile is licensed to other manufacturers, and it has deep back-end development options," Ken Dulaney, an analyst and vice president of mobile and wireless research for Gartner  , told MacNewsWorld. Plus, while Apple has made great strides in attracting developers to the iPhone OS platform, there are far more developers for the Windows Mobile/Windows Phone operating system.


Does that make the Windows Mobile operating systems and the actual devices more flexible than iPhone OS and the iPhone?

"That depends on how you define flexibility," Dulaney said. "Windows Mobile has many more options for just about everything, [but] from a user standpoint, Apple has many more app options."
This, of course, brings up the idea that there are certain types of users who are best suited to an iPhone, and others who are better matched with a Windows phone.

Last but Not Least: Accessories


There is one last key angle of consideration, and that's accessories. In this space, Apple wins hands-down, largely thanks to the company's successful iPod line. The popularity of the MP3 player attracted a great deal of attention from accessory makers, many of which have expanded their lines to include iPhone accessories over the past two years.
"The iPhone taps into a huge -- and growing -- market of third-party accessories and [even] docks in cars and airplanes," Greengart said. "With iPhone 3.0 software, these accessories can directly interact with iPhone apps." Accessories for Windows Mobile phones, he said, are largely limited to cases.
All in all, the differences between iPhone and Windows Mobile are huge. However, they will clearly become smaller as Microsoft becomes more consumer-friendly and Apple becomes more willing to play with businesses -- assuming, of course, that Apple doesn't blow everyone away with something that turns everything upside-down this summer.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Book with over 200 million Faces

In less than eight months, Facebook has doubled its user base by signing up 100 million people from around the world, officially hitting 200 million on Wednesday.
Its population is now higher than Brazil's and Japan's.
The ubiquitous online hangout, available only to college students when it opened in 2004, has been growing rapidly since opening up to anyone who wants to sign up.
But how long can that continue?

After a meteoric rise, News Corp.-owned MySpace has petered off and now has roughly 130 million active users, according to comScore. Facebook could ultimately plateau as well. After all, while there more than a billion people connected to the Internet, that doesn't mean they all want to be on Facebook.
Still, even if it's inevitable that Facebook's growth will slow down at some point as the site runs out of prospects to convert, Facebook continues to change what it has to offer, meaning today's holdouts might decide later to join after all.
"What's striking to me is how Facebook has become a kind of dashboard for Internet users," said Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet and American Life Project.
He said Facebook, along with MySpace and other social sites like Orkut from Google or Bebo from Time Warner's AOL, have clearly changed the online experience for many people.

Source : ECT News Network

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

The Sun Rises Again:As Always


Sun Microsystems has rejected IBM's offer to acquire it for US$7 billion, a move that took the tech industry by surprise and sent Sun stock plummeting.

Speculation is rampant as to why Sun Microsystems spurned the offer -- a move critics view as downright foolish in this economy -- as well as what the two companies may do next, and who else might have pockets deep enough to take IBM's place at the negotiating table.
The rejection also prompted comparisons to the Microhoo fiasco last summer, when Microsoft attempted to buy Yahoo and was rejected. Yahoo, of course, has survived -- but the company was clearly battered by fallout following its rejection of the Microsoft bid.
Sun's rejection could trigger additional flashbacks to the Microsoft-Yahoo drama, said Vanessa Alvarez, information, communications and technologies analyst with Frost & Sullivan , with a hostile bid mounted by someone playing the role of Carl Icahn in the Microhoo saga.
IBM, of course, had its reasons for making the offer -- and there is no certainty that it will walk away now that it has been spurned.

For IBM, the acquisition was about buying market share and aggressively competing against HP , whose acquisition of EDS was a direct jab at IBM's services business, Alvarez continued.
It was also, to some extent, a jab at Cisco , which recently entered the server business and competes with IBM in the unified communications and collaboration space as well, she pointed out.

Source : ECT News Network

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Its not Coding,Its AJAXING

In the beginning, Tim Berners-Lee created HTTP and the Web. And the Web was without commerce, and void. And darkness was upon the face of retailers. And the spirit of commerce, Jeff Bezos, moved upon the face of the Web. And Bezos said, "Let there be electronic shopping carts, and one-click buying." And there were sales. And the computer gods saw the sales, and saw that it was good.

It's hard to imagine the Web without the electronic shopping cart. It was a seminal advance that transformed the Web from an information resource into a business platform. A fundamental shift is happening again, and this time, a programming technology is driving the change.
The technology is Ajax, or Asynchronous JavaScript and XML, and it's making the Web as engaging, interactive and, most important, as responsive as native desktop applications. Better still, Ajax does this without the deployment, management, or overhead costs associated with managing desktop environments.
That's good news for businesses looking to give their customers a better, more responsive online experience. Look no further than Google Docs, Gmail, Meebo, and Outlook Web Access for popular Web apps that get their mojo from Ajax.
Better app performance means a better user experience. In the world of e-commerce, that can be the difference between a sub-par user experience that leads to shopping cart abandonment, and a spectacular one that keeps people shopping and builds word-of-mouth referrals.
For example, Ajax-powered e-commerce apps can allow shoppers to hover their mouse over a product to get a pop-up window with the product's details, including photos. There's no clicking, no data transfer, no page refreshing. The information is at customers' fingertips.
Applications with a database back end, such as inventory control, accounting or shopping carts, can respond with the same look, feel and functionality as non-Web desktop apps. Software updates are painless, requiring no effort on the part of users, desktop IT, or database administrators (a big plus).
However, while Ajax is a win for users and marketers, it has a dark side for developers. It's an entirely new way to code applications, and the learning curve is steep. Compared to other programming paradigms, many more lines of JavaScript and other code must be produced, tested, debugged and maintained for Ajax apps to function.
As with all programming languages, Ajax has its advantages and disadvantages. For example, even skilled developers have built Ajax apps that -- due to their asynchronous nature -- end up overloading servers or bogging down databases.
For database-driven apps (meaning, all e-commerce apps), many Ajax development tools pose problems when dealing with updates. Typically, developers have to refresh the entire database, pull up all affected forms (screens), update each form's logic, rewrite the layout code, and test the changes before redeployment is possible.

Ajax: The Next Generation


Using codeless Ajax, developers don't have to be JavaScript or XML gurus to create polished Ajax apps. The GUIs are created visually, and the code to manage asynchronous presentation and database operations is generated, optimized and maintained automatically.
I estimate that eliminating manual Ajax coding can cut my development time by 40 to 50 percent. Based on the pre-betas I have seen (and am providing feedback on), anyone with a modicum of development skill and experience will be able to use this tool to create online solutions that look, feel and behave with the same quality we expect of an enterprise app.
That's a game changer. Try that with ASP.Net, Flash, Ruby on Rails, Perl, PHP or pretty much any other application development environment today. Contemporary development platforms have become squarely focused on professional developers, cutting out the entrepreneur, the small business, or the penny-pinching mid-sized organization.
Codeless Ajax could be the breakthrough that, like earlier generations of RAD technology, changes this equation.

Monday, April 6, 2009

Bright or Black,Here Comes the Cloud

Does cloud computing cause a dilemma for application developers? Does it present problems that devs would not face in building software for earth-bound applications?

Developers face common problems regardless of where their program's data is stored. However, the cloud environment presents a set of drawbacks that cloud application developers sometimes ignore to the detriment of users, according to Javier Soltero, CEO of Hyperic. His company provides monitoring and management software for all types of Web applications, whether cloud-hosted or on-premise.
"While the cloud is very exciting and extremely beneficial and super helpful in helping productivity, one of the things not getting attention is that things can still happen regardless of where you are storing your data," as sid by Soltero
Cloud computing, according to Soltero, imposes two dilemmas for developers. The first is that cloud app developers become responsible for all three phases of the application: building, deploying and managing. The second dilemma is rooted in service level agreements (SLAs) that developers must consider to avoid becoming trapped between a rock (the SLA the developer provides to customers) and a hard place (the SLA that the cloud provides to the developer).

What is the Actual Problem?
The problem predates cloud technology, according to Soltero, but it is an evolving conundrum.

"The idea that you are relying on services provided by a giant data center provider, whether it's Google or Amazon or some other large supplier, doesn't implicitly remove the need for some level of operation by the person providing the service," he argued.
The problem, as he sees it, is that developers like the cloud since it lets them bypass operations or control agents and serve their environment needs quickly. In contrast, the cloud lets developers build and launch applications themselves without waiting for hardware to be purchased, racked and stacked. The red flag is that few developers have an operations background, leaving application users to go it alone.
"The simplest mundane application to some critical business application is at risk if some IT team hasn't responded properly," Soltero explained.

The War is on again:Numeric Vs QWERTY

Goodbye, numeric cell phone keypads. You're going the way of the rotary dial. Touchscreens and QWERTY keyboards will take over from here, thank you.

At North America's largest cell phone trade show, held last week in Las Vegas, there were few new phones for the U.S. market that had a numerical keypad instead of an alphabetic keyboard. Touchscreens also were out in force.
These changes are a recognition of the popularity of text messaging and wireless Internet use. Industry organization CTIA Wireless, which hosts the show, said U.S. subscribers sent 1 trillion text messages last year, three times the 2007 volume. Meanwhile, the same people used 2.2 trillion minutes of voice calls, an increase of less than 5 percent.
This shift in how people use their mobile devices has overturned cell phone design. According to NPD Group, 31 percent of phones sold in U.S. stores in the fourth quarter of 2008 had full-alphabet keyboards, up from 5 percent two years earlier.
Retaining Overseas Appeal

Old-fashioned numeric keypads still will have a prominent place -- but largely overseas. In a twist of market dynamics, the demand for QWERTY phones is mainly a North American phenomenon, said Ross Rubin, an analyst at NPD.
Although touchscreens are gaining in popularity all over the world, people in other countries got into text messaging much earlier and "became acclimated to texting with a keypad," Rubin said. Meanwhile, the U.S. market has been influenced by high-end smartphones like the Treo and the BlackBerry that pioneered small versions of typewriter-style keyboards.
As a result, numeric keypads were still dominant at the CTIA booth of Nokia  , the world's largest maker of cell phones, which has a relatively minor presence in the U.S. The same was the case at the booth of Japanese-Swedish manufacturer Sony Ericsson.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

IE8:The Future or Just Keeping up with the Past

I procrastinated for nearly two weeks before installing Microsoft's new Web browser.

I'd been happy using rival products like Firefox and Chrome at work and Flock at home, and habits are hard to break, even though version eight of Internet Explorer, or IE8, has several promising features.
In essence, all browsers have gotten so good at delivering the basics that I find little reason to change. The frills are what set each browser apart, but getting unique offerings in one means giving up features in another. However thrilling IE8's new offerings may be, I'm not ready to give up Flock, Firefox or Chrome just yet.


Still, Microsoft should be applauded for trying.

Hit the Accelerator

Most notable in Microsoft's free, Windows-only browser are tools called "Accelerators," which are designed to better mirror how people use the Web these days. Accelerators help you share content and blend services from various sites.
You can install Accelerators written by Microsoft, Yahoo , Google , Facebook or any developer that wants to participate -- no one needs permission from Microsoft.
With a mapping Accelerator, I simply right-click on an address to launch an online map from Microsoft, Yahoo or Google. With a dictionary Accelerator, I right-click on a word to get the definition from Dictionary.com, Urban Dictionary or Microsoft's search engine.
There are Accelerators for email, news stories, currency conversions, eBay auctions, searching through Facebook friends, and more. This week, I counted more than 110 available through Microsoft's "Add-ons Gallery."
I can save a lot of time by not having to constantly copy and paste text from online stories into Gmail when I want to email the tidbits to friends. I simply highlight a few paragraphs and right-click on the Gmail Accelerator. Those paragraphs and a link to the full story automatically get added to the message. Accelerators are also available for email services from Microsoft and Time Warner's AOL.

By Comparison

IE8 also offers "Web Slices" to quickly alert users to updates on their eBay auctions, stock quotes, sports scores and other frequently viewed services. They appear on your favorites bar just like other bookmarks, but instead of static pages or text headlines, you get the latest photos and other goodies as well.
The new Microsoft browser also makes it easier to switch between search engines from the search box. It offers a "private" mode during which IE8 doesn't store the addresses of sites you visit or keep the small advertising data files called "cookies."
However, to use any of that, I'd have to give up one of my favorite things about Flock: the way it helps people share content and blend services.
On Flock, a Web clipboard lets me quickly drag and drop frequently used images and text, such as the Web coding I regularly add to my photo site to create links. A people sidebar lets me instantly see friends' Facebook updates, even when I'm surfing other sites.
Both Firefox and Flock let me quickly find information with an "Awesome Bar" that offers suggestions as I type, based not only on previously visited Web addresses but also the Web page's title, bookmarks and the descriptive tags I've added. Microsoft's new address bar is an improvement from previous versions but doesn't go as far.
Google's Chrome, which has a private browsing mode similar to IE8's, lets me enter search queries and Web addresses from a single box, so I don't have to pause before typing to remind myself which one to use.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Clash of the Titans!!!

I realise that we have been going on and on about the iPhone and the Nokia N96, but thats all what I can do since this is my job and specially when the two iconic phones launched together in the same week in India.


Price Comparision:
The Nokia N96 will cost you around Rs. 36,000 while the Apple iPhone 3G with 8GB memory will cost Rs. 31000 and 16GB about Rs. 36,100. On price points even though they are hugely expensive we give them equal rank.

SMS Forwarding, FM Radio:
These two features are the darling of any mobile phone user in India. Since Texting messaging is really cheap in this part of the world forwarding SMSes is a very normal thing for all users. FM Radio is the life of people whilst traveling this is your one source of entertainment on the roads of the Indian metro cities. The lack of both these features on the iPhone is a big minus as far as its Indian market is concerned.

Battery Life:
Nokia N96 wins on this hands down. There have been lots of problems with the battery drainage of the Apple iPhone and these don't seem to stop. You will have to charge your phone everyday or twice a day for that matter if you are a heavy user.

GPS:
This is not a huge factor for the Indian market, but still a talking point. On the GPS front Nokia again wins this pretty easily.

Video Calling:
Video calling is not possible on the iPhone and the Nokia N96 is pretty good at it.

Data Transfer and Bluetooth usage:
A major , major talking point regarding the iPhone. The bluetooth on the iPhone can only be used for hands-free calling. No data transfer allowed between handsets or even with a computer with bluetooth enabled.

Storage:
You thought the storage factor will play in for the iPhone ? That isn't true. The Nokia N96 comes with 16GB of internal storage plus you have the luxury of adding a 8GB memory card giving you a whopping storage of 24GB. The iPhone again loses here.

Design:
There is no beating the iPhone, as simple as that!
All in all, if you are looking for more bang for the buck, go for the Nokia N96. Lookwise and as a fashion symbol, we still say there is no beating the iPhone!

Google Here,Google There,Google Google Everywhere

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            Is Google  close to making a bid for Twitter ? Yes, according to a report from TechCrunch, though neither company has made an official announcement.

Google declined to discuss the issue. "We don't comment on rumor or speculation," Google spokesperson Rachel Nearnberg told the E-Commerce Times.
Twitter cofounder Biz Stone ducked the issue, telling the E-Commerce Times that he'd already addressed it on the company blog. "Our goal is to build a profitable, independent company and we're just getting started," he says in a post.
Though it's managed to kick up a lot of publicity and attract many users, Twitter has yet to make money. Still, it's growing rapidly, and there has long been speculation that its backers are pressing it to turn a buck or two.

Hungry Eyes

Two people close to the situation said Google is in late-stage negotiations to acquire Twitter and that the price will be more than the US$250 million valuation Twitter saw in its latest round of funding in February, according to the TechCrunch report.
That's not going to happen, Greg Sterling, founding principal of Sterling Market Intelligence, told the E-Commerce Times. "On 'The Colbert Report,' Biz Stone talked about expanding Twitter and growing it to a global network," Sterling said. "He also said he wants Twitter to be a strong, independent company."
For example, YouTube has more searches than Yahoo  does, Sterling said. "That kind of thing is what Google would look to pre-empt."
On Thursday, Twitter announced new features and adjustments it's making to its search capabilities.

Researchers Trace International Cyber-Spy Network to China


A cyber spy network based mainly in China hacked into classified documents from government and private organizations in 103 countries, including the computers of the Dalai Lama and Tibetan exiles, Canadian researchers said  Saturday.
The work of the Information Warfare Monitor initially focused on allegations of Chinese cyber espionage against the Tibetan community in exile, and eventually led to a much wider network of compromised machines, the Internet-based research group said.
"We uncovered real-time evidence of malware that had penetrated Tibetan computer systems, extracting sensitive documents from the private office of the Dalai Lama," investigator Greg Walton said.

Can't Pinpoint Source

The research group said that while it's analysis points to China as the main source of the network, it has not conclusively been able to detect the identity or motivation of the hackers.
Calls to China's Foreign Ministry and Industry and Information Ministry rang unanswered Sunday. The Chinese Embassy in Toronto did not immediately return calls for comment Saturday.
Students For a Free Tibet activist Bhutila Karpoche said her organization's computers have been hacked into numerous times over the past four or five years, and particularly in the past year. She said she often gets e-mails that contain viruses that crash the group's computers.
The IWM is composed of researchers from Ottawa-based think tank SecDev Group and the University of Toronto's Munk Centre for International Studies. The group's initial findings led to a 10-month investigation summarized in the report to be released online Sunday.

No Stopping Android

HP  has confirmed it is considering Google's Android operating system for use in upcoming netbook computers.

However, the company has not set a time line for deciding whether to offer Android exclusively or as one of several OS options for its products, if at all, according to Marlene Somsak, an HP spokesperson.
"We are studying Android. We want to assess its capabilities," she told LinuxInsider.
If HP decides in favor of using Android, it could well become the first major PC vendor to use Google's OS, currently deployed in smartphones.

Microsoft Waiting

Microsoft's  Windows operating system has had steady competition from various Linux distributions in the netbook line. Because Windows Vista is usually too bulky for the limited memory and storage capacity of many netbook models, Microsoft XP has been the designated OS for non-Linux netbooks.
However, Microsoft has said that it is preparing a version of Windows 7 to be compatible with netbook configurations. Windows 7 is expected to be released later this year after a strong showing in its beta release.
Microsoft suggested to LinuxInsider that it did not view HP's consideration of the Android OS as a threat to the Windows OS on netbooks.
"This has long been a competitive space," Ben Rudolph, senior manager of Microsoft Windows, told LinuxInsider. "We've seen Windows on these PCs in the U.S. go from under 10 percent in unit sales during the first half of 2008 to 96 percent as of February 2009, according to the latest NPD Retail Tracking Service data,"
Microsoft remains confident that Windows' out-of-the-box functionality will ensure its continuing popularity in netbooks, he said.
"The return rates for Linux machines are up to four times higher than Windows return rates. This is a significant additional cost for consumers and retailers," Rudolph explai

RIM Cuts Ribbon on BlackBerry App Store

BlackBerry maker Research In Motion  has launched an app store for its iconic device. BlackBerry App World went live Wednesday morning with some 1,000 applications available.
The site gives developers the option of setting up their own stores -- an interesting differentiator from other carriers' app stores, noted ABI Research Senior Analyst Jeff Orr.
A storefront application, App Center, lets developers pull content from App World to add alongside their own content, he told the E-Commerce Times.
Among the applications currently available are Salesforce CRM , AOL Instant Messenger, Yahoo Messenger, MySpace, Facebook, Windows Live Messenger, Bloomberg, ICQ, HRS Hotel Organizer, chat group VH1 Watch and Discuss, Lonely Planet French Phrasebook, Livestrong, Worldmate Live, Brain Challenge 2, and a few news and media applications such as a Web shortcut to the New York Times.
BlackBerry App World works with compatible BlackBerry smartphones running OS version 4.2.0 or higher, including the Bold 9000; the Storm; both the Pearl Series and Pearl Flip Series; the Curve 8300 Series; Curve 8900; and the 8800 Series. Trackwheel devices are not supported.

Yahoo Launches New Mobile User-App

Yahoo on Wednesday rolled out its new Yahoo Mobile service for smartphones. The company also announced Yahoo Messenger for the iPhone, which will be launched soon. Yahoo Mobile for the Web is available as a service on the mobile Web, accessible by cell phones with Web browsers. It's also available at Apple's (Nasdaq: AAPL) App Store for the iPhone and the iPod touch, Yahoo spokesperson Kate Sternberg told TechNewsWorld. The mobile service can be accessed on more than 300 devices equipped with mobile browsers, Yahoo said. These include smartphones from Nokia, Research In Motion, Samsung, Sony Ericsson and Motorola, as well as Windows Mobile devices. Users of Yahoo Mobile for the Web will have access to mobile search; news; oneConnect to stay in touch with contacts; email services from Yahoo, Google, AOL and Microsoft; social networking sites including Twitter and Facebook; and Yahoo's address book, calendar and instant messaging service. The Java smartphone version of Yahoo Mobile for the Web has additional features. These include voice-controlled search capabilities; access to maps; widgets for services from Yahoo and other brands that can be browsed, added or removed at any time; and an integrated version of the Opera Mini 4.2 browser.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

BOOT CAMP 09 @ Microsoft IDC Hyd


Boot Camp 09 was in Hyderabad.One of the coolest benefits of being an MSP(Microsoft Student Partner)
is that you get to meet a lot of people from all over India or i should say that you get to meet a lot of
people with a LOT OF BRAINS.
Boot Camp 09 was the largest ever MSP Boot Camp which saw over 150 MSP's .And did it go well???
HELL YA.
We were given the finest  of rooms in the finest of hotels(Ella Suites, Hyd) and interacted with people
who are responisble for taking technology to where it is today.When Microsoft comes into the picture
things HAVE TO ROCK.
The Boot Camp was held from 6th Mar - 8th Mar.Everyday we were taken to the MICROSOFT IDC
which even smells of technology.After entering the IDC campus we understood who we really are
we knew the meaning of being a MSP.So now lets see how things went on....

Day 1
Internship Test for 3rd yearites and a small competition for the rest.Also a small session by the MS recruitment team.I'll not say much about the first the day coz i missed a lot of it :-(. Don ask why?

Day 2
After sleeping at around 4:00 AM the previous day,we woke at 6:30 coz we had to catch the shuttels to MS IDC at 7:30(you know we hardly slept during the whole camp).After a refreshing breakfast,the day started.
After a enlightening speech & presentation on the MSP program(which really made us feel really GOOD ;-))
There was a session on SQL Server (waz good to ;-)).After that we were introduced to the world of MAD(Mobile Application Development) that rocked and was also a sort of eye opener(if you know what i mean ;-)).The MAD session was followed by a session on writing secure code which (if frankly said) was mind blowing.We were told how a unsafe site can be made a safe one and how stop a hacker(i hate them) from spoling all the fun.Then we were given an insight into the next generation of computing.We were introduce to the world of Cloud Computing and the next gen AZURE.The only thing which can be said about tha is WOW
In between we had lunch..and man that was really good.I mean personally speakin the food was really good(even thaz one of the Many benefits of an MSP ;-)).
During lunch we realised that we were really lucky coz we were given the chance to have are lunch we top class MS Employes in different MS Divisions(it sounds so cool...we had lunch with people working with MICROSOFT)
We had a chance to ask them all of sorts of questions and did we do it....i say VERY WELL
We squeazed out every bit of information they had(or we can).After that group photo of over 150 MSP's.
At the end we had are very own ( 3 Musketeers),Mohammed Reza,Siddharth prakash,Mark D'souza  giving us all the backside knowledge of IE8,Windows 7 and (very interesting) 9 lives of students.
The best part was the give away's which we got(yipee i have a VISITING CARD).
Then surprise which rocked us all ,after a tiring day,a pool side dinner and a DJ party was organised just for us(MSP's are pretty good dancers you know).
And the day ended at 5:00 AM when we decided to sleep(I did say we hardly slept)

Day 3(The Last Day :-()
After an AWESOME Day 2 we are at the Last day.The day saw a lot of technical sessions from people like us(MSPs) and we got to know that we are in a group of really realllllly brainy guys(does make you feel proud doesn't it).Sessions included ROBOTICS,MICROSOFT POPFLY,HOW TO EARN POINTS....
The Lunch again was really GOOD(m not too foody just a lil bit ;-)).
And then the worst part.....we had shuttels waiting for us to drop us back at stations so that we return to our normal lives(why does it happen ?????).

In all the 3 days rocked.We were amongst the group of people who have all the knowledge about almost evything ever made and still strive to know more.When you are an MSP you never tend to say ENOUGH you say THAZZ IT!!!!
The Boot Camp was truly Aw Aw AWESOME