Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Microsoft Office 15 launched

Microsoft has finally released several consumer-focused versions of Office 365 and Office 2013 to 162 markets.


After Windows, Office is arguably Microsoft’s most important product and helps the company make a lot of cash. Office programs such as Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook are staples around the world for productivity, and while compelling alternatives do exist, these apps are still the standard for how we get work done.


But times have changed since Office debuted in 1990, and Microsoft is trying to adapt to how we work now. We’re much more mobile, we have more devices, and we’re more likely to subscribe to software at a reasonable price than pay a ton upfront. (Adobe has noticed these trends too.)


So Microsoft is offering different plans for the newest version of Office and trying to coax consumers and students with a relatively decent subscription deal. Or you can get into Office “the old way” and buy a single copy for a single PC.


Here are the details on how Microsoft is now offering up Office 365 and Office 2013.


Office 365

Office 365 Home Premium — $99/year — 5 devices


Programs: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Outlook, Publisher, Access


Microsoft is prioritizing Office 365 Home Premium as its top offering for consumers. With it, you can install a copy of the software on five different devices, including PCs and Macs. The software ties itself to one Microsoft account and lets you use that account to manage it in the cloud.


Office 365 Home Premium is cloud-connected in several ways. For example, when you save a document in Word or Excel, it saves simultaneously to SkyDrive and to the computer’s hard drive. That way, no matter where you access a document, you have the latest version of it. Office 365 subscribers also get 60 free Skype minutes per month and get a boost in SkyDrive storage from 7GB to 20GB.


Additionally, subscribing to Office 365 gets you an ingenious feature — Office on Demand. Essentially, whenever you are on a Windows 7 or 8 PC that is not one of your five installs (let’s say you’re at a friend’s house or a satellite office), you will still have access to Office. Microsoft actually streams a copy of Office from the cloud down to that computer and you can save your work to the cloud. When you are finished with your Office on Demand session, the copy disappears and removes all traces you were there. (We wish this worked on Macs too, but hey, can’t win ‘em all.)


“We want to drive the most demand for this,” Jevon Fark, senior marketing manager at Microsoft told. “This is easily the most ambitious version we’ve ever offered in the 25-year history of Office.”


Office 365 University — $80 for 4 years — 2 devices


Programs: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Outlook, Publisher, Access


The company will also offer a version of Office 365 aimed squarely at college students. It is basically the same offering as Office 365 Home Premium, but it comes at a better overall price and only lets you install the software twice. You’ll also get the convenience of Office on Demand, which could come seriously in handy in university computer labs, which may not have the latest version of Office installed.


Frankly, Office 365 University looks like a killer deal. Microsoft says it will let students re-up on the $80-for-four-years offer a single time, which helps if they need extra time to get their Bachelor’s degree or go to grad school.



Office 2013

If you’d rather pay a large amount upfront and not have to subscribe to get your software, Microsoft also is offering Office 2013 Home Premium in three other versions. Think of these versions as a more traditional approach to Office. If you just want a single copy that can only be installed on one PC, this is your software.


Keep in mind, Office 2013 is not as cloud-connected as Office 365. You don’t get Office on Demand and your documents don’t save simultaneously to SkyDrive and your hard drive. You can, however, save your documents just to SkyDrive if you want.


Office 2013 Home & Student — $140


Programs: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote


Office 2013 Home & Student will be the overall least expensive offering in the new Office family because you get the most basic Office programs and simply pay $140 for the life of the product. It offers the bare bones package though.


Office 2013 Home & Business — $220


Programs: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Outlook


Small businesses that want to approach Office from a more traditional perspective of buying a licence or two for those who need a new copy might want this version. Office 2013 Home & Business is targeted at smaller companies rather than medium-sized companies and enterprises.


Office 2013 Pro — $400


Programs: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, OneNote, Publisher, Access


If you’re a serious Office aficionado and need the full suite of Microsoft tools, Pro is your version. Unless, of course, you’d rather have the same programs and get extra goodies by subscribing to Office 365. Chew on this: Pro costs $400 and only lets you install on one device, while 365 Home Premium lets you install on five devices with more cloud features. If you use Office 2013 Pro for four years, only then do you make up your investment when you could have paid the same for four years of Office 365.


Interestingly enough, Microsoft isn’t shy to admit that paying $400 for Pro isn’t a good deal. “My understanding is that we don’t want people to buy Pro for $400 — we want people to subscribe to 365,” Fark told us.



How it runs

The final copy of Office 365 Home Premium runs quite similar to what we saw previously when testing Office 2013. This is the Office you’ve known (and maybe liked) for years, but it has a more compelling design and more features. One feature that really stuck out was PowerPoint’s new Presenter View, which lets you preview slides and other info on your PC’s screen while giving a presentation. (You can partially see Presenter View in the top photo.) Another feature is a new start screen that pops up when you start Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and more that shows popular template options.


What makes the latest version of Office a bit different besides the cloud-connected features is that it’s also built with touch in mind. Microsoft wants you to use this software on its Windows 8 tablets like Surface as well as Windows 7 and 8 PCs. You can change the settings that optimize icons and options for touch. But exclusively using touch can be a recipe for frustration — I found it challenging to input lots of numbers or prepare a presentation. I’d much rather use these programs with a mouse and keyboard.



More business support coming

Next up, Microsoft will launch the latest version of Office 365 for businesses on Feb. 27. The company hasn’t divulged details on how it will differ from Office 365 Home Premium yet, but we suspect it will offer various group editing and collaboration features in the cloud. When we find out, we’ll let you know.






Blowfish12@2013 blowfish13.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R




Saturday, January 26, 2013

Facebook: Data block for Replication

After cutting off data access for Wonder, a social search app from Russian search engine Yandex, Facebook explained today that if you’re building an app that “replicates” its “core functionality,” its data is not for granted


“For … apps that are using Facebook to either replicate our functionality or bootstrap their growth in a way that creates little value for people on Facebook, such as not providing users an easy way to share back to Facebook, we’ve had policies against this that we are further clarifying today,” wrote Justin Osofsky, Facebook’s director of platform partnerships and operations, in a blog post.

The company’s new Platform Policy section 1.10 now reads:
“Reciprocity and Replicating core functionality: (a) Reciprocity: Facebook Platform enables developers to build personalized, social experiences via the Graph API and related APIs. If you use any Facebook APIs to build personalized or social experiences, you must also enable people to easily share their experiences back with people on Facebook. (b) Replicating core functionality: You may not use Facebook Platform to promote, or to export user data to, a product or service that replicates a core Facebook product or service without our permission.”





Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.  Courtesy:  developers.facebook.com

Get your copy of Windows 8 before it is too late

While it’s easy to hate on Windows 8, it’s time to stop muttering about the changes and buy the upgrade before it gets way more expensive.


Windows 8 has sold more than 60 million licences to date, but Microsoft has not revealed how many of these copies have been activated. Still, these are generally good numbers, and it is keeping pace with initial Windows 7 sales. Microsoft has invested a lot of time and money into Windows 8 and will continue to update the software to make it run better.




1. The base price of Windows 8 will jump 300 percent on Feb. 1


As noted in the intro, the cost of Windows 8 goes up substantially soon. On Feb. 1, a licence of Windows 8 Pro jumps from $40 to $200. Microsoft is also offering a less feature-packed version of Windows 8 on that date for $120. So you can get the best possible version of the software now for $40, or you can pay $120 later and get fewer features.




2. You don’t have to install it now


Another compelling reason to spend that $40 now? Purchasing the Windows 8 update doesn’t mean you actually have to install it. Windows 8 is a 2GB download, and you can simply leave it on your desktop for whenever you feel like updating. But since the price jump happens on Feb. 1, you have an incentive to at least buy it now and upgrade it later after more updates are added.




3. Windows 8 will make your computer faster


Microsoft hasn’t done an amazing job of communicating this, but Windows 8 has a lot of under-the-hood improvements that will make your laptop or desktop run faster. An extensive study by PCMag indicated much faster bootup times, higher benchmark scores, and speedier web browsing. Basically, Windows 8 can make a big difference in the performance department — even on some old PCs.




4. Windows 8 is not the monster you think it is


We’ve been a little harsh on Windows 8 at times. We have a few Strange thoughts about the OS as a whole and think some average users will hate the changes. But while the OS is clearly designed with touch in mind, you can use the OS on a desktop PC or laptop as long as you mostly work out of the desktop. You can also install a Start button replacement like Pokki or RetroUI.




5. Windows 8 apps have a ton of potential


Although it might be good to avoid the Start screen much of the time and work out of the desktop, eventually Windows 8 will have lots of compelling full-screen apps. Some great apps are already in the store, and more will be coming down the pipeline as more people use Windows 8.






Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R. Courtesy: PCMag




Tug of War between Facebook and Vine [Twitter]

Vine users who attempted to find Facebook friends on Friday received an error message stating that Twitter's new mobile app is not authorized to make the request. This is the latest apparent rift between the two social media rivals.



Earlier this week, Twitter launched Vine, a free iOS app that allows iPhone and iPad users to create and post very short videos. Twitter hinted that an Android version could be in the works.


Twitter, which is primarily known for its 140-characters tweets, has supported embedded YouTube videos since 2008, but its launch of Vine marks the first time it will host video content directly. As with tweets, the videos will need to be short -- a mere 6 seconds.


"Six seconds is too short for anything truly substantive," said Greg Sterling, principal analyst at Sterling Market Research, "but there's more information that can be conveyed by video, even in that short time frame, vs. a still photograph."






Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.




Top 10 Internet clients 2013

Internet clients are software’s that are used to access the web to browse and get data across the net for other resources.


Let’s take a look at some internet client’s that has topped the list.




“Ranking powered by Alexa.com







Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Top 10 open source software's 2013

Open Source software's are used through out the world due to its accessibility and convenience. Let’s get a look of open source software product providers who have topped the list.


  • PortableApps.com

  • GNU Operating System

  • nginx

  • Audacity

  • MODx

  • Open source mailing list manager

  • Vanilla Forums

  • Sphinx – Free open-source SQL full-text search engine

  • Curl and Libcurl

  • poEdit


“Ranking powered by Alexa.com”




Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Top 10 BitTorrent sites 2013

BitTorrent is a file sharing community that has become popular for sharing various movies, songs, ebooks, etc,. Lets take a look at the providers who have topped the list.




“'Ranking Powered by alexa.com”







Blowfish@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Top 10 online games 2013

Online Games have become part of life for all age groups, let have a look at the top 10 games providers 2013




  • The Twilightus Universe

  • Myth-Weavers

  • Mafia Scum

  • RolePlayGateway

  • RolePlay inLine!

  • Omerta

  • Mizahar

  • FWrestling.com

  • Imythess

  • Roleplayer Guild


“Ranking powered by alexa.com”




Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Top 10 meta search engines 2013

A metasearch engine is a search tool that sends user requests to several other search engines and/or databases and aggregates the results into a single list or displays them according to their source.

The providers who have topped the list are,


  • WebCrawler

  • Dogpile Web Search

  • Info.com

  • Ixquick

  • Scour

  • Findelio

  • Mamma.com The Mother of all Search Enginer

  • Yippy.com

  • Qrobe.it

  • Geegain


“All results powered by alexa.com”




Blowfish12@2013 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Friday, January 25, 2013

Top 10 Cloud provider 2013

Let’s see the list of top 10 cloud service providers of the year 2013

“Ranking powered by alexa.com”




Blowfish12@2012-13 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Top 10 IM providers 2013

Instant messaging (IM) is a form of communication over the Internet, that offers quick transmission of text-based messages from sender to receiver.

Lest go for the list of top 10 IM providers of the year 2013

“ranking powered by alexa.com”




Blowfish12@2012-13 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Top 10 Email Providers 2013

Electronic mail, commonly referred to as email or e-mail, is a method of exchanging digital messages from an author to one or more recipients.

Lets see a list of top 10 email providers of the year 2013

“Ranking powered by alexa.com”




Blowfish12@2012-13 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Top 10 news blog 2013

News is the communication of selected[1] information on current events which is presented by print, broadcast, Internet, or word of mouth to a third-party or mass audience. lest see which one has topped this year

“Ranking powered by alexa.com”




Blowfish12@2012-13 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Top 10 websites of 2013

Another year has passed by lest see which site tops the list.

“Ranking powered by alexa.com”




Blowfish12@2012-13 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Top 10 search engines 2013

Most people don't want 290 search engines, especially people who are internet beginners.Most users want a single search engine that delivers three key features:

  1. Relevant results  (results you are actually interested in)

  2. Uncluttered, easy to read interface

  3. Helpful options to broaden or tighten a search


With this criteria, 10 Reader Favorite Search Engines come to mind. These 10 search sites should meet 99% of the searching needs of a regular everyday user.

“Ranking powered by alexa.com”




Blowfish12@2012-13 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Tug of war between Facebook and Yandex


Facebook shuts down data access for Yandex’s social search app



Facebook is giving no data love to Yandex, a Russian search engine that launched a social search iOS app today called Wonder. While Wonder lets you ask natural-language queries in a method similar to Facebook’s own Graph Search, the company said the app is not, in fact, a search engine but rather a personal assistant.


The app launched yesterday morning, and it only lasted three hours before Facebook pulled access to its data. The app lets you search across Instagram, Foursquare, Twitter, and earlier in the day, Facebook. You can ask questions like “What are sushi places my friends like?” and it will provide you with a list of restaurants approved by your buddies. The company warned that it was purely experimental and that you’d only be able to ask it questions about places, music, and news at this point.


But Facebook recently released it own search called Graph Search, which does exactly this, only it pulls exclusively from Facebook’s data.






Blowfish12@2012-13 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.




Thursday, January 24, 2013

Cheaper iPhone is iPod, Tim Cook

Tim Cook is pretty happy with Apple’s first quarter numbers for 2013, saying that “no technology company has ever reported results like these.” And with record quarterly revenue of $54.5 billion and record quarterly profit of $13.1 billion, you can understand why.


But yesterday is less interesting to investors than tomorrow, which is why Apple’s stock price is down, and one of the analysts on the call asked the Apple chief exec about market share and cheaper iPhones. That’s been a big concern lately, as most of the growth in mobile phones is in markets like Asia and Africa, which are much more price-sensitive than the U.S. or Europe.


“The most important thing for Apple is to make products that impact people’s lives,” Cook answered. “We don’t seek revenue for revenue’s sake.”


Those would not have been comforting words to investors who are looking for Apple to expand its market share by offering products that appear to a wider range of customers. But Cook did offer a ray of hope.


“We’ve had a great track record on iPod of offering different products at different price points,” Cook added.


That might be a hint that Apple will offer iPhones at differing price points, beyond the current strategy of offering old models at reduced rates. The iPod, of course, is available in the top-of-the-line iPod Touch, the still-existing Classic, and the cheap Nano and cheaper Shuffle.


But don’t hope for too much. Then Cook added, for emphasis:


“But our top priority is making a great product that enriches people’s lives.”






Blowfish12@2012 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.




Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Music with birds poop

A piece of music that was composed by waiting for bird droppings to fall onto giant sheets of manuscript paper has received its premiere. Artist Kerry Morrison


The positions of the laid manuscript sheets droppings represented on the ground in different musical notes


Liverpool parks and let birds deposit their droppings. Composer Jon Hering has transformed the bum notes into a full musical score. Morrison said the 20-minute Bird Sheet Music, which was performed at the Tate Liverpool art gallery, represented the role birds play in the environment. "They play a massive part in the ecosystem of the city through their droppings - they disperse seeds, also their droppings help the enrichment of the soil, so we get fertiliser," she said. "It's something people don't often think about. The whole thing about looking at detritus and waste tends to be quite negative. People think it's mucky or horrible, but of course it's critical to life on earth." Hering was told to remain faithful to the positions of the droppings on the score and the order in which they fell, Morrison said. Sound artist Helmut Lemke has also incorporated birdsong and the other sounds of park life. The composition was performed by the experimental Liverpool-based aPAtT Orchestra.






Blowfish12@2012 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.




Intel plans to stop motherboard production

Intel has taken the first steps toward dissolving its PC motherboard production. If all goes according to plan, the entire division will be nonexistent by 2016.

The company told PC World today that it will cease desktop motherboard production shortly after its Haswell ultrabook motherboards start shipping and will continue to support legacy hardware. The Haswell launch itself has been bumped up a few months, ostensibly to “save” the PC as well as the company’s PC-based business.

Intel has struggled to keep pace with its competitors in the PC motherboard category. It has also had to shift much of its focus to tablet and mobile computing devices. Currently, Intel powers seven smartphone designs and is also shipping chips for x86-based tablet computers, worlds away from where its business was even one year ago.

While its most recent earnings statements showed that the PC segment hasn’t quite tanked — not yet, at least — Intel spent the majority of its time at CES focusing on its future of bargain-basement-priced ultrabooks, gestural controls, and touchscreens, touchscreens everywhere.

In addition to keeping up with new form factors, Intel said it will focus on all-in-one system designs and will continue to advise manufacturers on motherboard design. Its PC processor business is still going strong.




Blowfish12@2012 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

[lol] Firefox os not Firefox browser

Mozilla debuts two Firefox OS developer preview phones ”

With most smartphone makers endlessly obsessed with high-end devices sporting bigger and better specs, Mozilla’s focus on low-end devices with Firefox OS is simply refreshing.

Today the browser maker unveiled two developer preview phones for Firefox OS that it’s offering in partnership with the Spanish startup Geeksphone, which is building the phones, and Telefonica.

True to its low-end focus, Mozilla is placing the spotlight mostly on the less-powerful Keon (above). It features a small 3.5-inch screen, a 1 gigahertz processor, 4 gigabytes of storage, and 512 megabytes of RAM. With those specs, the Keon would barely even cut it as a cheap Android phone in the U.S. today. But in Brazil, where Mozilla is debuting Firefox OS phones later this year, it’s representative of devices that many consumers will actually be able to afford.

firefox os dev phone peak

On the slightly more powerful end, Geeksphone is also working on a developer preview phone called Peak (right). It sports a 4.3-inch screen, 1.2 gigahertz dual-core Snapdragon S4 processor, and a much better camera than the Keon.

These aren’t phones meant to take on the iPhone — instead, they’re aiming to get developers comfortable with Firefox OS and its complete reliance on open web standards, which is Mozilla’s big selling point for the platform. Apps for Firefox OS are built entirely in HTML 5, but will have the same sort of functionality as native apps on iOS and Android. That means the apps will be easy to build, even for amateur developers.

“Developer preview phones will help make the mobile web more accessible to more people,” said Stormy Peters, director of developer engagement at Mozilla, in a blog post today. “Developers are critical to the web and to Mozilla’s mission to make the web accessible to everyone. Hundreds of millions of people worldwide use Firefox to discover, experience and connect to the Web. A web based on open standards and open technologies. We couldn’t have done this without web developers.”




Blowfish12@2012 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

[wow] Foreigners can use their own cell phones in N. Korea


“Foreign visitors to North Korea are for the first time being allowed to take their own mobile phones with them into the country, according to reports. ”



Previously, all foreigners had to leave their mobiles at the border and collect them when they left. Visitors can now buy a SIM card at the airport, which will let them make international calls. But they cannot make local calls or go online. Most North Koreans have limited or no access to the internet. China's state news agency, Xinhua, said the changes had been in place since 7 January this year. A report of phones being allowed in came from a China-based tour group, Young Pioneer Tours. A spokesman said they had been preparing to hand over their mobiles as they entered North Korea, but a border guard simply asked whether the devices were equipped with GPS and then indicated they should carry them through regardless of the answer. "He just motioned for us to put them in our bags. Zero explanation," said the company's managing director, Gareth Johnson. Mr Johnson said his North Korean counterparts later confirmed that this was "a new policy". An Associated Press report out of Pyongyang said the SIM cards would also allow foreigners to contact foreign embassies in Pyongyang and international hotels. Schmidt visit North Korea's mobile network is run by a joint state-owned and Egyptian company, Koryolink. An Egyptian employee of Koryolink told Xinhua the new policy was a result of talks between the company and North Korean officials. He said internet services would soon be made available to foreign visitors, adding that there was no technical issue preventing this. But he dismissed speculation that it was connected to the recent visit to North Korea by the head of Google, Eric Schmidt. Mr Schmidt visited North Korea in early January, though after the new policy is reported to have come into effect. He urged North Korea to end its self-imposed isolation and allow its citizens to use the internet. It is believed that only the elite in the country have access to the internet - few people have access to a computer and those that do can usually only access a domestic web service and not the internet.







Blowfish12@2012 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Monday, January 21, 2013

“vibrobelt” navigation made easy

[caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="300"]English: GPS navigation solution running on a ... English: GPS navigation solution running on a smartphone (iphone) mounted to a road bike. GPS is gaining wide usage with the integration of GPS sensors in many mobile phones. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)[/caption]

Think of it as belt for your waist. The "vibrobelt", a vibrating belt to help guide cyclists, has proven successful in early tests. It uses vibrating actuators that indicate left, right, backward and forward turn directions, and even tickles the user with coded buzzes that tell them how far they have to go to their destination.


Developed in a masters project by Haska Steltenpohl of the Intelligent Systems Lab at theUniversity of Amsterdam, the Netherlands, alongside supervisor Anders Bouwer, the system aims to give cyclists a "heads-up" navigator, allowing them to keep their eyes on the road after they have chosen their destination on a GPS smartphone. They simply set off and get directional nudges from the vibrators just before each turn.


To see if the vibrotactile navigation compared well with using a standard GPS map on a handlebar-mounted smartphone, 20 volunteers tried both methods on a variety of unfamiliar routes. While all the cyclists reached their destinations successfully, the researchers noted an important difference: when questioned about landmarks they had passed, the vibrobelt users proved much more aware of their surroundings en route than those who were constantly glancing at a GPS screen.


That's a key observation as concerns mount over the appalling death toll among cyclists. The researchers plan to reveal their system and research results at the annual Intelligent User Interfaces conference in Santa Monica, California, in March.


It's not the first time "vibro" navigation has been tried, however. The US military is trialling a system that guides ground troops to targets in a similar fashion.






Blowfish12@2012 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.




Sunday, January 20, 2013

[Security breached] Facebook’s graph search a review

Facebook has been greeted for its new feature ‘Graph Search’ for a few days ooops lets see some privacy issues on it –wait for it”

Graph Search is a feature Facebook introduced to allow users to enter parameter-based searches to find friends -- and friends of friends -- who share certain interests. A search for "friends who ski" or even more specifically "friends who ski in Arizona" will narrow the results within that field.

Concerns arose when Facebook changed its privacy policy to make way for Graph Search. The new policy made it impossible for users to hide their entire timelines from search results, although individual posts can be hidden one at a time by choosing the most restrictive privacy setting for that item.

Even CEO Mark Zuckerberg's sister, Randi Zuckerberg, was caught unawares by the new privacy settings. When a photo she posted -- which was intended to be private -- became public, she raised a stink and got it removed.

Those users who previously had opted out of having their timelines appear in search results then were forced to change the privacy settings for each post if they wanted it to remain out of sight.




Blowfish12@2012 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

Nokia phone user can design their phone cases

Nokia-Lumia-820-3ad-jpg


Nokia is releasing 3D printing files for its Lumia 820 handset so that owners can create their own covers.
Companies offering interchangeable covers or replacement shells for their smartphone handsets is nothing new, in fact it was Nokia that started the trend back in 1998 with the 5110 -- the first phone to feature Xpress-on covers. This, however, takes customization to a new level.


Writing in a blog post on Nokia Conversations, Nokia says: "We are going to release 3D templates, case specs, recommended materials and best practices -- everything someone versed in 3D printing needs to print their own custom Lumia 820 case. We refer to these files and documents collectively as a 3D-printing Development Kit, or 3DK for short."


In the post, Nokia also claims that it is the first major phone manufacturer to freely hand over these files but, as 3D printing starts to catch on and becomes more mainstream, it probably won't be the last company to do so.







Blowfish12@2012 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

[Updates]Electronic Devices banned on certain flights

Lithium-ion battery device are banned on certain flights starting this Monday after Boeing 787 fires”

UPDATED 1/20/2013: It appears  that  the ban only affects cargo. This story has been updated to reflect new information.

Just a few days ago, flights across the globe were canceled as concerns mounted over the January 7 Boeing 787 lithium-ion battery fire at Boston’s Logan International Airport. But starting Monday next week, you might not even be able to take your laptop, phone, or tablet onto some airlines’ flights, according to one expert.

“I received an IATA notification yesterday saying that Cathay Pacific is stopping all shipments of lithium-ion and lithium batteries on cargo aircraft,” battery quality assurance expert Kevin Elsdon told me tonight. “And then another one saying that British Airways was banning the shipment and carrying of lithium and lithium-ion batteries, period.”



Unfortunately, just about any electronic device you carry and use — your computer, your tablet, and your phone — uses a lithium-ion battery.

From reading a recent IATA statement, it appears the ban may apply only to batteries in cargo, and not batteries carried by passengers in devices such as tablets, phones and other computers — or even as spares. Here is the relevant text from that document; see bold (which we’ve added) for the part about how the prohibition does not apply to batteries contained in “equipment”:
. Lithium metal cells and batteries are prohibited from
carriage as cargo on Cathay Pacific Airways passenger and cargo aircraft. This applies to Section IA, IB and
Section II of Packing Instruction 968.
This prohibition does not apply to:
lithium metal cells and batteries packed with or contained in equipment (UN 3091) in accordance with PI
969 and PI 970 and lithium ion cells and batteries (UN 3480 and UN 3481) in accordance with PI 965 to PI
967; or
• lithium batteries (rechargeable and non-rechargeable) covered by the Provisions for Dangerous Goods
Carried by Passengers or Crew (see 2.3.2 to 2.3.5 and Table 2.3.A)

Also, this cargo ban seems to be limited to Cathay Pacific flights. The statement, originally published in December, is edited in yellow, with no specific date — thus adding to confusion about whether this is the latest version of the document.

Moreover, if you check the aforementioned “Provisions for Dangerous Goods Carried by Passengers or Crew,” you’ll find the reference to spare lithium batteries being allowed as carry-on as well.  Here is the key wording from those provisions:
You may have “Lithium ion battery powered equipment containing batteries over 100 Wh but not exceeding 160 Wh.” as carry-on, in checked-baggage, and on ones person.

You may have “Spare lithium ion batteries with a Watt-hour rating exceeding 100 Wh but not exceeding 160 Wh for consumer electronic devices. Maximum of two spare batteries may be carried in carry-on baggage only. These batteries must be individually protected to prevent short circuits.” Note that these are not permitted in checked baggage.

IATA is the International Air Transport Association, the trade association for most of the world’s airlines. IATA sends out bulletins regarding policy changes and updates for its member airlines to companies which manufacture, handle, and ship hazardous materials, one of which Elsdon works for. He asked that the name of the company not be revealed, as its client list includes defense agencies.

However, a British Airways PR representative that I contacted said there has been no change to airline policy regarding smartphones, tablets, or laptops, and asked to see the IATA notification. The representative did say that it was conceivable that a change had been made to British Airways’ cargo-carrying regulations — in addition to its passenger service, the company runs IAG Cargo, a commercial cargo shipping service – but had no personal knowledge of any changes as of early Sunday morning.

But in any case, “that is entirely separate,” the representative told me.

Elsdon had posted on Facebook that the ban would mean no iPads, no smartphones, and no laptop computers. In other words, it would be complete reversal of the last decade of in-flight electronics policy. And a recipe for very, very long flights, not to mention irate customers.

The Boeing 787 fire at Logan International was probably caused by an overcharge event in the aircraft’s lithium-ion batteries that power the plane’s electrical systems when on the ground. This is the first time that lithium-ion batteries have ever been used in a commercial aircraft, according to the battery manufacturer’s website. Overcharging any battery can cause overheating or even fires, but batteries are supposed to be designed with safety circuits containing an over-voltage cutoff. Somehow, apparently, that got missed in this battery.

Not all airlines — even cargo airlines — are adopting the new procedures. Fedex is the largest dangerous goods shipper in the world, and that company has no plans to change its rules.

“I talked to the head of their dangerous goods division and he shrugged this shoulders, says ‘I guess that means more money for us,’” Elsdon said.

And while it’s likely that any ban would be revised at some point, some people may be caught in the crossfire:

“My dad is back in England at a funeral,” Elsdon told me. “He has his laptop and iPhone, and I’m hoping he’ll be able to get them home.”

Lithium-ion batteries are listed as dangerous goods on Cathay Pacific’s and other airlines’ websites, and have been the cause of recalls for other products such as Fisker Automotive’s Karma electric vehicles. The Chevrolet Volt has had similar issues, and the batteries were blamed for a $5 million fire at a General Motors testing lab last year. Laptops are not immune, as a Dell laptop demonstrated in 2006 by burning and exploding at a conference in Japan.

That said, lithium-ion batteries are in just about everything we use, and are safe when designed and treated well.

“This is what I call a knee-jerk reaction from the airport authority,” Elsdon told me. “The amount of incidents is very small, and 90 percent of them are caused by the people loading them on the aircraft. There are only a very few cases where it’s actually happened in a laptop.”




Blowfish12@2012 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

[Tech] Electronic ring or USB drive as password

Google Plans to implement a secure way to login into your accounts by using USB drives or electronic rings as password rather than the traditional text passwords.

As revealed by Wired, Google VP of security Eric Grosse and engineer Mayank Upadhyay have outlined several ways to rethink the traditional password. The two are responding to the problem of password security. Passwords often don’t provide enough protection as we saw when tech journalist Mat Honan had many of his accounts hacked last August.

“Along with many in the industry, we feel passwords and simple bearer tokens such as cookies are no longer sufficient to keep users safe,” Grosse and Upadhyay write in an upcoming paper for IEEE’s Security & Privacy magazine.

Two ways the Googlers imagine changing the password?

  • A smartphone or smart-card ring that you wear that can authorize a new computer to give you access to certain sites or to the machine itself.

  • Plugging a customized USB drive into the computer while you are browsing that automatically logs you in to sites. When you take out the USB drive, the sites no longer give you access.


While these are just a few ideas, it’s hard to say if they will see the light of day soon or far in the future. In the meantime, security experts agree that you should turn on multi-factor authentication (if you’re offered the chance) to protect your accounts.




Blowfish12@2012 blowfish12.tk Author: Sudharsun. P. R.

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