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Showing posts with label New Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Technology. Show all posts

Tuesday, 8 May 2012

rochen host coupon

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Tuesday, 18 October 2011

Comment 15 inShare440 YouTube Now Allows Music Partners To Sell Merchandise, Digital Downloads And Event Tickets

We already know that YouTube is seeing 3 billion videos viewed per day day, but now the online video giant is now seeing a whopping 800 million people per month visiting the site, Google revealed in its third-quarter earnings report last week. And today, YouTube is also announcing the ability to sell merchandise, tickets and more via the site.
Through a feature called the Merch Store, YouTube partners will be able to sell artist merchandise, digital downloads, concert tickets and other experiences to fans and visitors. YouTube has partnered with a number of companies to launch these stores. Topspin is helping power merchandise sales, concert tickets and experiences; SongKick will help sell tickets for concerts; and iTunes and Amazon will power transactions for music downloads.
YouTube says be rolling out the Merch Store to music partners globally over the coming weeks. YouTube declined to reveal the specific nature of the financial split for these sales, but did say that the site takes a small percentage of sales just to cover costs. However, the artist gets the same revenue no matter if they go through the Merch Store or through the affiliate on other channels.
The ability to add merchandise sales, ticket sales, digital downloads and more to an artists YouTube site definitely gives these sites more of an engaging presence for artists with their fans. These destinations will now become more than just a way to discover music videos, but also a way to transact business and actually see the artist and buy their works.

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Tuesday, 11 October 2011

Nanotubes help cloak objects in a mirage

Underwater cloaking devices could be a step closer thanks to heated sheets of carbon nanotubes that deflect light from the surface of an object – just like a mirage.
Desert mirages occur when surfaces warmed by the sun bend light rays so that photons from the sky, rather than those reflected from the surface, reach an observer's eye – an effect known as "photothermal" deflection.
Existing invisibility cloaks use arrays of electromagnetic antennas to steer photons around an object, but these so-called metamaterials typically cover a narrow range of frequencies.
Ali Aliev and colleagues at the University of Texas in Dallas embedded a sheet of carbon nanotubes into aerogel, a foam-like material. When electrically heated, the nanotubes bent light waves to create a mirage, effectively cloaking the sheet and anything behind it.

Now you see it

Aliev says the mirage forms because the nanotubes transfer heat to the surrounding air more efficiently than regular metals, allowing a steeper temperature gradient to form near the device's surface. Because photothermal deflection depends on light's ability to propagate faster through hotter, less-dense material, the device works better when the temperature gradient is steeper. Plus, he adds, because carbon nanotubes do not store heat well, the mirage can be turned on and off quickly.
It works best when immersed in liquids, which tend to support steeper temperature gradients than gases. Aliev says it could also be used to create acoustical mirages using a similar effect, which might be used to hide future stealth submarines. The temperature required depends on the medium, but is less than the boiling point of most liquids.
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Wednesday, 3 August 2011

How To Set Up Live Streaming on YouTube


At www.youtube.com/live, you can watch Live Video Streams unlike the recorded YouTube videos, which majority of YouTube users are very familiar with . If you check the YouTube Live Stream page, you will see series of events that are been streamed Live.  If you are a content publisher, I am very sure you will be wondering how you too can start streaming Live Videos on YouTube, in real time.

Well, as at the time of publishing this, the service is still been rolled out slowly and currently available to some YouTube partners in good standing.

Wondering how you can become a YouTube Partner? well, If you meet the criteria, and are in a supported country, you can apply at youtube.com/partners


You can check out Requirements for YouTube Partnership here.


I just hope this service will be rolled out to all YouTube users soon.


If you are interested in how to create Live Streams at UStream.tv, feel free to watch the video tutorial below, which I stumbled on at YouTube:






Cheers!

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Thursday, 7 July 2011

Facebook Releases Group Chat

In a press conference at Facebook’s Palo Alto headquarters, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced that the social network is releasing Group Chat to its 750 million members.
The multi-person chat feature was inspired by the chat functionality inside Facebook Groups and will be incorporated in the new design of Facebook Chat. Group Chat will be rolled out to users beginning Wednesday.
“Now when your friends can’t figure out what movie to see, you can just add them to a chat and decide together,” Facebook video chat engineer Phillip Su says of the new feature. “To include more friends in your conversation, simply select Add Friends to Chat.”
More than 50% of users on Facebook are active in Facebook Groups, and Groups have an average of seven people, the company revealed Wednesday. The idea, then, is to make Group Chat more ad-hoc and accessible to all Facebook users.
In addition to Group Chat, Facebook is also releasing its highly-anticipated Skype-powered video chat feature Wednesday.

Source:Mashable.com
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Wednesday, 22 June 2011

Google translation is now available in kannada also...including 4 other indian languages.

At last five new languages from the Indian subcontinent have been added to Google’s language translation service, although on an “experimental" basis for now.

Google research scientist Ashish Venugopal said Google Translate now supports the Bengali, Gujarati, Kannada, Tamil and Telugu languages.



Venugopal said Indic languages differ from English in many ways, presenting several exciting challenges when developing their respective translation systems.

According to Venugopal, Indian languages often use the Subject Object Verb (SOV) ordering to form sentences, unlike English, which uses Subject Verb Object (SVO) ordering.

“This difference in sentence structure makes it harder to produce fluent translations; the more words that need to be reordered, the more chance there is to make mistakes when moving them. Tamil, Telugu and Kannada are also highly agglutinative, meaning a single word often includes affixes that represent additional meaning, like tense or number," Venugopal said.



for translating english to kannada just go through this link.
http://translate.google.co.in/?hl=en&tab=wT

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Friday, 17 June 2011

Google Mobile App with voice search -Must read

Google Voice Search was a tool from Google Labs that allowed someone to use their phone to make a Google query. After the user called (650) 623-6706, the number of Google Voice's search system, they would wait for the words Say your Search Keywords and then say the keywords. Next, they would either wait to have the page updated, or click on a link to bring up the search page the user requested. At the moment, both the demo of this service and the page have been shut down. Since the introduction of the service, products from Google, such as GOOG-411, Google Maps and Google Mobile App, have been developed to use speech recognition technology in various ways.
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Thursday, 2 June 2011

Counting your cash with counting ring


Counting cash manually can be slow and inaccurate at times. Although cash counting machines serve their purpose, individuals would rarely have access to such counting machines. To help people count cash rather quickly, a new concept named Counting Ring has been unveiled. It is a small ring that helps individuals count cash rapidly and precisely by hand by making use of infrared scanning. It features 4 main components including an LED display with a power switch, an infrared scanner, sheet-separating veins together with a battery slot. Counting ring is put on the thumb, which is then used to flip the currency notes.
The LED display acts as a power switch when pressed, showing the number of notes being flipped. The veins are set in such a way that it shows the accurate number of notes being flipped by the ring. Hidden onto the side of the ring is the battery slot that houses a button-shaped battery. The counting ring offers ease in handling and is cheap and portable as well. This greatly increases effectiveness and litheness in currency transactions.
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Thursday, 12 May 2011

Turn Your Android Phone Into A Remote

At its I/O developer conference in San Francisco on Tuesday, Google showed off a future where someone could use an Android phone to control home appliances-—to turn on and off the lights, the dishwasher or anything else they want to. The technology called Android@Home would be built into appliances so they could wirelessly communicate with Android devices; it would work similar to the way a Bluetooth headset communicates with a mobile phone. Developed as an open wireless protocol, Android@Home allows the OS to connect with any devices that are powered by electricity.

"Think of your phone as the nucleus that this all started with," Joe Britt, engineering director, Google said. "We're opening the platform up to everyone to do whatever they can imagine."

"We'd like to think of your entire home as an accessory, or better yet as a network of accessories, and think of Android as the operating system for your home," Britt added.

While demonstrating the technology, Britt used a Motorola Xoom tablet to control stage lights created by Lighting Science Group--Google’s first officially announced partner. By the end of this year, the LED manufacturer will release the first Android@Home-capable LED light bulbs.

Eric Holland, vice president--electrical engineering, Lighting Science opines that using Android@Home, any developer can write an application to control the lights; they don't need to learn any proprietary protocol from Lighting Science.

"Everything should be Android-ified," Andy Rubin, head of Android, told reporters. "The power of Android is that it can be used by a lot of people in a lot of different ways. We are going to see some pretty interesting stuff."

Google also previewed the Open Accessory toolkit at the conference for hobbyist developers, who don't make washing machines or light bulbs but can make other things that work with Android devices.

Source:efytimes.com
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Friday, 6 May 2011

QR code reader an interesting technology

CyberMedia's flagship publication on business computing, PCQuest, is driving the convergence of print media and mobile multimedia, with the introduction of QR codes for both editorial content and advertising.A QR (Quick Response) code is a barcode in two dimensions, with a black-and-white pattern of squares (standard barcodes are one-dimensional). Users scan them in a single click on their mobile camera, and the code points to a website or online multimedia content.

Coupled with a camera-equipped mobile-phone, the QR code brings rich multimedia to print.

It lets readers consume the base content in their comfort zone of print (for many) while smoothly moving back and forth to multimedia on their connected mobile, thus extending the print medium into a multimedia environment.

It lets advertisers enhance their print messaging with multimedia, such as with a short video feature or a TV commercial, offering a seamless experience across diverse media.

'We believe that timing the launch of QR codes with the 3G rollout will allow readers to move smoothly onto the next level of interactivity and convergence for print media,' said Mr. Pradeep Gupta, Chairman, CyberMedia, South Asia's largest specialty publishers.

'We expect this advertising and marketing innovation to lead to the rejuvenation of print--integrating print with rich multimedia on the mobile.

What does a reader need?

Any camera-equipped smartphone running a standard platform (Symbian S60, BlackBerry, Android, Java, etc). The phone needs to have a QR code reader app like Flick2Know (www.f2k.mobi) or i-Nigma installed; if not, the user can download and install one in a few minutes.

The user also needs a data connection, preferably 3G or Wi-Fi (2G will also work, but will be slow, and video will be slow). Without 3G or Wi-Fi, however, a user can still download videos to the mobile, to play later.

'QR codes need two things: an internet server somewhere; and a camera-equipped smartphone, preferably running 3G. With 3G just rolling out in India, this is a great time to bring interactivity to print, which was in danger of getting added.


How to Scan QR Codes?
1.Download Flick2Know Scanner App in your mobile if you don't have one.
2.Open the Scanner App and point your mobile camera towards the QR Code
3.Auto-focus feature having phone will automatically detect code.
4.For non-Auto-focus phones, press scan to capture QR Code and then it will show the result


Getting problems in scanning the code?
There can be following possible causes:

Code Centering
Please make sure that while scanning, you are capturing the complete code centering the mobile screen. Codes that are not fully captured(scanned) cannot be decoded.

Code Focusing
For proper and faster scanning of code, try to adjust the distance from the code so that the edges of the code visible in camera are least blurred. The sharper the captured code image will be, the more will be the success probability.

Improper Illumination
Make sure that you are scanning the code in adequate lightening. If a code is just visible to human eye doesn't mean that it will be detected by camera succesfully. A proper illumination is neccesary to scan the code smoothly.

For more information visit this site:
http://www.flick2know.com
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Thursday, 14 April 2011

NFC an emerging technology

What is NFC?

Near Field Communication (NFC) technology makes life easier and more convenient for consumers around the world by making it simpler to make transactions, exchange digital content, and connect electronic devices with a touch.

A standards-based connectivity technology, NFC harmonizes today's diverse contactless technologies, enabling current and future solutions in areas such as:

Access control
Consumer electronics
Healthcare
Information collection and exchange
Loyalty and coupons
Payments
Transport

Key Benefits of NFC


NFC provides a range of benefits to consumers and businesses, such as:

Intuitive: NFC interactions require no more than a simple touch
Versatile: NFC is ideally suited to the broadest range of industries, environments, and uses
Open and standards-based: The underlying layers of NFC technology follow universally implemented ISO, ECMA, and ETSI standards
Technology-enabling: NFC facilitates fast and simple setup of wireless technologies, such as Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, etc.)
Inherently secure: NFC transmissions are short range (from a touch to a few centimeters)
Interoperable: NFC works with existing contactless card technologies
Security-ready: NFC has built-in capabilities to support secure applications
Peer-to-peer communication
Payment & ticketing

How NFC works

NFC is a short-range, standards-based wireless connectivity technology, based on RFID technology that uses magnetic field induction to enable communication between electronic devices in close proximity. It provides a seamless medium for the identification protocols that validate secure data transfer. This enables users to perform intuitive, safe, contactless transactions, access digital content and connect electronic devices simply by touching or bringing devices into close proximity.
NFC operates in the standard unlicensed 13.56MHz frequency band over a distance of up to around 20 centimetres. Currently it offers data transfer rates of 106kbit/s, 212kbit/s and 424kbit/s, and higher rates are expected in the future.
For two devices to communicate using NFC, one device must have an NFC reader/writer and one must have an NFC tag. The tag is essentially an integrated circuit containing data, connected to an antenna, that can be read and written by the reader.
There are two modes of operation covered by the NFC protocol: active and passive. In active mode, both devices generate their own radio field to transmit data. In passive mode, only one device generates a radio field, while the other uses load modulation to transfer data. The NFC protocol specified that the initiating device is responsible for generating the radio field in this case.
The passive mode of communication is very important for battery-powered devices like mobile phones and PDAs that need to prioritize energy use. The NFC protocol enables such devices to be used in power-saving mode, so that energy can be conserved for other operations.
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Wednesday, 30 March 2011

QR codes

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