Monday, 29 August 2011

Zynga Co-founder Andrew Trader Joins VC Firm Maveron As A Venture Partner

Maveron, a VC firm with offices in Seattle and San Francisco, this morning announced that it has named Andrew Trader (who is often referred to simply as A.T.) as a partner. Trader actually joined Maveron back in 2010 as Entrepreneur-in-Residence, but is now taking on a more expanded role at the firm.

According to its website, Maveron’s portfolio includes companies like Groupon, eBay, Shutterfly, Drugstore.com and SAY Media.
 
In 2007, Andrew Trader was a founding member of Zynga, where he managed business operations including revenue management, marketing, user acquisition, business development, and strategic partners.
He was unceremoniously ousted from the company around March 2010.

Before Zynga, Trader was the CEO of Utah Street Networks, the operator of Tribe.net, one of the first social networking sites (acquired by Cisco in 2007). He was also the co-founder of Coremetrics, (acquired by IBM last year).

Trader recently joined the board of freshly funded game developer Kixeye. Ironically, Kixeye isn’t backed by Maveron (at least not yet).
Last but not least, he was also involved in a lawsuit. Last year, Abu Dhabi-based investment company Alpha Investments sued Zynga for restricting a share sale on SecondMarket.

Trader had attempted to sell close to $13 million in Zynga’s stock (1 million shares) to Alpha Investments, but the social games developer later said it would only allow the transaction if the firm agreed not to sell the shares until 180 days after an initial public offering.

According to some media reports, the attorney for Alpha filed to dismiss the case in June 2011.

Source

Today’s Top Headlines in Tech & Social Media

Welcome to this morning’s edition of “First To Know,” a series in which we keep you in the know on what’s happening in the digital world. We’re keeping our eyes on four particular stories of interest today.


Samsung Announces LTE Versions of Galaxy S II & Galaxy Tab 8.9

Ahead of the IFA trade show in Berlin beginning Friday, Samsung has announced LTE variants of the Galaxy S II smartphone and Galaxy Tab 8.9 tablet. The new versions of these devices will have fast wireless data transfer capability with download speeds as fast as 100 Mbps.

Apple Patent Claims Delays Galaxy Tab 10.1 Launch in Australia

The launch and advertisement of Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet has been delayed until at least September 30 after Apple stepped up its patent infringement battle in Australia’s federal court.

Eric Schmidt: If You Don’t Want To Use Your Real Name, Don’t Use Google+

Google+ was meant to be an identity service, Google Chairman Eric Schmidt said this weekend, shedding some light on Google’s reasoning behind Google+’s controversial real-name policy.

Social Media-Related Libel Cases Double in UK

According to research from UK legal firm Sweet and Maxwell, libel cases resulting from posts from social networks such as Facebook and Twitter have doubled in the last year.

Further News
  • Samsung is set to enter the mobile messaging market with ChatON, a free texting, group chat and video/image sharing app compatible with multiple smartphone and feature phone OSes.
  • The City of New York has launched a Google Maps-powered application to help residents report on damage caused by this weekend’s tropical storm. 
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Samsung Announces LTE Versions of Galaxy S II & Galaxy Tab 8.9

Ahead of the IFA trade show in Berlin on September 2-7, Samsung has announced LTE variants of Galaxy S II and Galaxy Tab 8.9. The new versions of these devices will have fast wireless data transfer capability, with download speeds as fast as 100 Mbps. 

The Android 2.3-based Galaxy S II LTE will have a humongous 4.5-inch Super AMOLED screen and an 8 megapixel camera. 

The Galaxy Tab 8.9 LTE will be one of the most portable tablets around, being 8.6 mm thin and weighing only 455 g. Both devices will feature a 1.5GHz dual core processor.
The price and availability for both devices is still unknown, but we reckon we’ll know more when the IFA kicks off. 

Source

Sunday, 28 August 2011

Irene Looks Tame In NASA’s Latest Satellite Photo [PIC]

To the relief of everyone on the Eastern seaboard and the rest of the world, Hurricane Irene has now been downgraded to Tropical Storm Irene. Throughout the time the storm soaked the eastern seaboard with blustery winds and a deluge of rain, NASA’s GOES-13 satellite has been sending magnificent pictures back to Earth. This latest shot was taken at 8:32 A.M. EDT on Sunday morning, 28 minutes before Irene’s landfall near Coney Island in New York City.

Notice how the storm lacks the tight organization showed in the Hurricane Irene pictures NASA sent back to earth yesterday, with today’s Irene lacking that ominous eye that peered out from its center as it moved up the coast as a Category 1 hurricane. By the time it had reached New York City, its maximum sustained winds were a manageable 65 mph.

That’s not to say there wasn’t suffering involved in the enormous storm, where officials have attributed at least 9 deaths to Irene’s massive amounts of rainfall, wind, flooding and its associated calamities. Even though millions of people are without power today and flooding is a serious problem in numerous cities and towns, Irene didn’t turn out to be the monster most observers anticipated.

Saturday, 27 August 2011

Razer Blade: "the world's first true gaming laptop"


... Or is this self-styled Razer. The specifications for, Razer Blade is indeed very powerful way, in 2.24cm thick and weighs 3.16 kg of the body, the load of the 2.8GHz Core-i7, NVIDIA GeForce GT 555M graphics card (2GB video memory), 17.3 " The Full HD screen, 8GB RAM, 3 δΈͺ USB (one of the USB 3.0) and HDMI output. Indeed, these are good, but many gaming laptop probably has such a specification (even if not so thin), the pride that in the end Razer Blade in which the person? The answer is that it is to replace the trackpad multitouch vice 480x800 resolution screen and touch-screen above the ten keys that are displayed can be customized. 


And ten key touch pad is customized to run the Switchblade UI, like its hair on display at CES over from the Switchblade Concept 7-inch laptop, but play to master editing machines only run Demo movie, did not way to see the actual operation of the look. Touch Pan on the right is a rather strange configuration, but think about it is not surprising - the touchpad and below is easy to operate above the left-hand fight, in that case the right to go into more convenient. To increase the number of games or you can customize the screen buttons are not anything new (Logitech G15 keyboard and the Optimus Maximus is the most obvious two examples), the real key to success is to have support for software, games, will play their effectiveness. Razer Blade have a chance to do it? I am afraid that first breakthrough, the US $ 2,800 off the price of this bar! 

Olympus PEN E-PM1 value price listed in September!

Remember that the station in June released the M43 system camera? Yes, we have just received PEN E-PM1 will be listed in next month's news, and the price of the Mini also only US $ 500, about NT $ 14,500, HK $ 3,900. This includes 14-42mm f/3.5-5.6 or the Kit lens group too! Olympus 12-megapixel this station M43 camera, positioned so that the user to easily shoot cameras started the "easiest to use PEN camera" (but small series of PEN film clearly remember clearly there is more "silly", and good friends ... not to mention the film ...), thanks to this easy to use with 23 scenes to choose a new interface. Not to mention E-PM1 is a lens can be exchanged for digital cameras (ILC), the lens Prodigalsupport absolutely is quite adequate! Although the mini size, but size can not be underestimated, with its 3-inch, 46 million points of LCD, 1080i for HD video recording capability, and can shoot in RAW image files up to the ISO 12,800 sensitivity of the realm, but also supports full manual exposure mode Exposure, Aperture Priority and Shutter Priority. Colors are purple, pink, brown, white and black, is really feeling the sea and cheap package hills and light it almost have it all! But do not know why seeing smaller units interchangeable lens camera, seems they want to give him the placement of a cannon to try ... (quickly fled).

ASUS MARS II gets reviewed, deemed the fastest single graphics card on the market

Well, that insane ASUS MARS II card we got to feast our eyes on back in June has finally started rolling off the assembly line. That means it's time for the hardware fanatics and gaming freaks to start putting them through their paces. HotHardware said the dual GTX 580-packing card was "quite simply the fastest single graphics card we have ever tested, bar none." And everyone else seemed to agree. Now, obviously there are drawbacks -- the 3GB card is an absolute power hog (requiring 600-watts all by itself) and insanely pricey at $1,499. You could even buy three separate GTX 580 cards for slightly less, use the same number of slots and get better performance, but the MARS II has one other thing going for it -- status. Only 999 of these beasts will be made. After they're all snatched up you'll have to head to eBay, and pay a hefty premium over it's already absurd price. But, if you absolutely have to have the best performance you can out of a single card solution, this is the clear choice. If you need more detail about just how badly this spanks the competition check out the reviews below.

Read - HotHardware
Read - PC Perspective
Read - techPowerUp
Read - TweakTown

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HP TouchPads Slated For Return To Best Buy?

It was widely reported that Best Buy was sitting on over 200,000 TouchPads before HP enacted their drastic price cut, but the fire sale has come and gone, and that would normally be that. Instead, a notice in Best Buy’s Employee Toolkit system shows that their contentious relationship with the TouchPad may not be over just yet.


The image, sent to Droid Matters by a Best Buy insider, indicates that Best Buy stores will once again begin to receive TouchPad shipments. Due to the swarms of bargain-hunters last time round, employees are being instructed to stick to a ticket system and take down the information of the interested parties that come their way.

While it’s possible the notice has been pushed out just in time to make a big splash on the front cover of the Sunday circular, you shouldn’t hold your breath. Different areas tend to have different shipping schedules, but if this holds true, it’s more likely that the units will begin trickling back into stores during the middle of the week. At this point, it’s still unknown whether the notice only applies to some stores or the whole lot of them, but thanks to a bit of corporate foresight, your nearest store may soon have a new recording in their phone system that could clear up the specifics.

It’s a bit of a surprise, to be sure: 16GB TouchPads are selling for nearly double the going rate on eBay, a testament to the fact that people have all but given up on more traditional sales outlets.


HP’s own site admits that they are only “temporarily” out of inventory, and that coupled with news of a major retailer suddenly receiving stock gives me pause: how many of these things does HP have left? And more importantly for some, how many are shipping with Android inexplicably preloaded? The answers, it would seem, may come later this week.

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DELL ALIENWARE MX11 GAMING LAPTOP


VERDICT: Serious gaming on a 11.6-inch laptop.


FOR: Great for gaming, excellent multimedia experience, extremely portable.


AGAINST: This model is exorbitantly priced, very little value for money.


Alienware gaming notebooks are known for their rugged build, powerful hardware, excellent performance, and exorbitant price tags. The new Alienware MX11 gaming notebook offers all of this, except for the high price. Let’s find out how. Gaming notebooks are a dime a dozen, and usually, they are large (about 15 inches), they weigh at least 3 kgs, and off ervery little battery runtime.


The Asus G51J and the previous Alienware models - M15X and M17X, are perfect examples, but the Alienware M11X has changed everything. It weighs almost half as much and is slimmer, hence easier to carry. So gaming is no more restricted to desktop replacements, but even ultra-portable laptops can handle serious gaming; that too at a good price.


This new entrant has a 12-inch form factor with a 11.6-inch creen and weighs less than 2 kgs. In terms of aesthetics, if there’s anything about this notebook that’s different from other Alienware gaming notebooks, it’s the size and weight. It is essentially a smaller version of the M15X. The lid and screen frame are thankfully the only parts on the entire unit with a glossy finish. Typical of Alienware notebooks, you’ll find lights all over, and the keyboard and power button are backlit. Then there are lights in the front and even underneath the unit. Speaking of underneath the unit, turn the laptop upside down and you’ll notice an inlet fan (with LEDs) on the bottom. This fan enables effective air circulation by pulling in air from below, which is then expelled from the side-vent.


Ergonomically, it matches up well with other Alienware notebooks. The entire wrist rest and the textured touchpad have a matte finish, and the mouse buttons are quite comfortable to use. All the ports are at either side and the only connection at the rear is the DC power connector. In terms of build quality, the overall package, including the chassis and hinges, is rock solid. This machine is built around an IGP chipset; an Intel G45, which features an Intel GMA X4500 HD onboard GPU. It also has a discrete GPU - an Nvidia GeForce GT335, so you can toggle between the two when required. Coming back to the low-voltage

processor; it uses an Intel Core 2 Duo SU7300, which is common to ULV laptops. The other hardware includes 4 GB DDR3 RAM, a 256 GB SSD, and a 11.6-inch glossy screen with a native resolution of 1366x768. If you notice the hardware, specifically the processor and the absence of an optical drive, it’s hard not to compare it with laptops belonging to the ultra-portable laptops category. But gaming,something that this machine is good at, has never been a forte of ULVs. And perhaps that’s the USP of the M11X.


The ports on this machine include VGA, three USB, FireWire, HDMI and a display port. Connectivity options include 10/100 Ethernet, Wi-Fi N and Bluetooth. The machine comes pre-loaded with Windows 7 Home Premium, and the bundle doesn’t include much side from an OS recover disc. It’s funny that they supply optical media, when the machine doesn’t have an optical drive to read it. Typical Alienware features BINARY GFX: Common to all Alienware gaming notebooks, this option allows you to manually toggle between discrete and onboard graphics, and it’s very useful, especially when you’re using the machine on the go and when you aren’t using it for gaming.


STEALTH MODE: This is another common feature, which puts the machine into a mode that helps maximize the battery runtime. ALIENFUSION: This is a separate interface for power management of the laptop. It offers the same features as those found in Windows’ power options. ALIENWARE ALIEN FX: This option let’s people who hate those light effects to turn them off completely using the AlienFX button on the top-right corner of the keyboard. Also, for those of you who love the lights, you can change the colors from the AlienFX control Panel. The Alienware Command Center lets you access these features. Alienware has smartly used a low-voltage (weaker) processor and a good discrete GPU, which is an ideal combination for gaming notebooks, while it also keeps the price in check. It’s very crucial that you configure this machine properly, to get the best value for your money. The M11X with a standard 500 GB hard drive costs Rs 70,000, which is a good price, considering the ultra-portable form factor,and, the gaming and multimedia experience.


However, the model we tested features an SSD that adds Rs 28,000 to the cost. So the total cost of this machine comes up to Rs 98,000, and this price tag forces us to compare it to a gaming laptop in the same price range, like the Asus G51J, which costs Rs 99,000, but off ers much more in terms of features. An Intel Core i7 QM (which is a powerful quad-core processor), 4 GB DDR3 RAM, two 320 GB hard drives and good discrete graphics are on offer in the Asus G51. Over and above, its screen is 3D compliant and the machine bundles with it Nvidia’s 3D vision kit.


So why should you spend so much money on the M11X? The standard M11X variant, which costs Rs 70,000, is not very bad, especially since it allows you to play demanding games on the go. It makes almost no sense to spend Rs 20,000 extra to get an SSD in this machine. To test performance, we started by playing a 720p HD movie on this machine and the playback was flawless and completely stutter-free. Although the sound wasn’t very loud, the clarity was excellent. Coming to games, we ran most of the game benchmarks at the native resolution and with some settings at high. This was mainly to see how the machine performs under stress. In Crisis Warhead, we got playable frame rates in the performance and mainstream modes, and the gamer’s mode was playable at lower resolutions. The same was the case with Left 4 Dead, where at 1366 x 768 and medium settings and no AA, we got over 40 fps, which is good enough.


This laptop targets a very specific audience. It’s only for someone who wants an affordable laptop that can handle demanding games and is extremely easy to carry around. But the M11X only meets those criteria if you opt for the Rs 70,000 variant. The Rs 90,000 machines, which we tested, is completely over the top.

Thursday, 25 August 2011

Skype Launches Third-Party App Directory

Skype appears to have launched a new app directory in the cloud, allowing users to access all the third-party apps for both consumers and businesses built on top of Skype’s API.

The site is fairly simple in functionality for now, but Skype has sorted both consumer apps and business into groups by genre (call recording, video, desktop sharing etc.), and featured the top downloaded free and paid apps, top rated apps and the newest apps across the board and by genre. For example, Skype recording app VodBurner is the most downloaded app across all categories.

For each app, Skype provides a landing page that gives more information about the application, release date, star rating and comments, features, requirements, screenshots and more. You can choose to download the app, and Skype will take you to the developer’s landing page. Skype users can also search for apps by cost, language, keywords, OS and more.

As VodBurner CEO and founder Jeremy Hague tells us, giving Skype users the ability to rate apps, comment about apps, is totally new to Skype and will really help app developers get their apps out to the massive Skype community…having a directory makes live easier for us. He says until now there hasn’t really been a great way to publicize third-party apps.

Another helpful feature of the directory is that Skype is ‘surfacing’ the apps within the Skype client. So in the newest version of Skype for Windows, you can access the app directory under Tools.

It’s good to see Skype providing features like an app directory so third-party developers can showcase their apps that make Skype better. Skype hasn’t had the best history with developers in the past, but this seems to be a step forward. Perhaps the influence of soon-to-be parent company Microsoft is helping steer things in a developer-friendly direction.

Source

Jobs Quits as Apple CEO


Steve Jobs, the ailing tech visionary who founded Apple Inc., said he was unable to continue as chief executive of the technology giant and handed the reins to Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook.

Apple said Mr. Jobs submitted his resignation to the board of directors on Wednesday and "strongly recommended" that the board name Mr. Cook as his successor. Mr. Jobs, 56 years old, has been elected chairman of the board and Mr. Cook will join the board, effective immediately, the company said.
"I have always said if there ever came a day when I could no longer meet my duties and expectations as Apple's CEO, I would be the first to let you know," Mr. Jobs said in his resignation letter. "Unfortunately, that day has come."

Art Levinson, chairman of Genentech and an Apple board member, said in a statement that the board "has complete confidence that Tim is the right person to be our next CEO." He added that Mr. Jobs will "continue to serve Apple with his unique insights, creativity and inspiration."
After a brief halt, Apple's shares slid 5.13% to $355.70 in after-hours trading, after closing at $376.18, up $2.58, at 4 p.m. on the Nasdaq Stock Market Wednesday.

Mr. Cook, 50, has been widely considered as the leading candidate to succeed Mr. Jobs, who has been on medical leave since January. The 13-year Apple veteran, who joined the company shortly after Mr. Jobs took over for the second time in 1997, has been running the day-to-day operations during this period as he has done during two prior medical leaves of absence by Mr. Jobs in the last seven years.
The announcement likely marks the end of one of the most extraordinary careers in U.S. business history. Mr. Jobs not only co-founded Apple—and the personal computer industry along with it—but decades later played a central role in reshaping the music, movie, animation, and mobile-phone businesses.
"Steve Jobs is the world's magic man. No compromises," wrote John Sculley, who led the company from 1983 for a decade, in an email. Mr. Sculley was recruited by Mr. Jobs in 1983 as CEO, but ousted him in 1985 after a power struggle.
Mr. Jobs—widely known for his mercurial, demanding management style—drove his company relentlessly to make products that consumers lusted for, unveiling them in heavily rehearsed events that earned him a reputation as high-tech's greatest showman.
It earned him a fortune that he said he wasn't interested in. The company pays Mr. Jobs a salary of $1 a year. He also has Apple shares worth about $2.1 billion, and is the single largest Disney shareholder, with stock worth about $4.4 billion.
Even after his health began to fail, Mr. Jobs insisted on turning up at key product launches—including the introduction of the iPad 2 earlier this year, where he was greeted with a sustained standing ovation.
"I think his brilliance has been well-documented, but what gets forgotten is the bravery with which he's confronted his illness," said Howard Stringer, Sony Corp.'s chief executive. "For him to achieve this much success under these circumstances doubles his legacy."
Perhaps more than any other CEO, Mr. Jobs has developed a cult-like following among both employees and customers who hang on his every word at press conferences and vigorously defend the executive from those who might question his products.
Former Apple employees say he created a unique culture inside the company, and affected how other Silicon Valley companies think about innovation.
"Steve inspired an entire generation of entrepreneurs and creative people to think about things in terms of innovation and design," said Dave Morin, the CEO of start-up Path Inc. and an Apple employee from 2003 to 2006.

The announcement focuses attention on the health of Mr. Jobs, who was diagnosed with a rare form of pancreatic cancer in 2004 and underwent a liver transplant two years ago.
Mr. Jobs hasn't commented on it since he said in a letter in January that he was taking another leave of absence to "focus on my health." He appeared thin at Apple's annual developers' conference in June.
People familiar with the matter say Mr. Jobs has continued to be active at Apple and closely involved in the company's product strategy. To the extent his health permits, some Apple watchers think that involvement is likely to continue even after Mr. Cook takes the CEO post.

Some Apple employees Wednesday were in a state of disbelief, people familiar with the situation said. One person noted that Mr. Jobs had been seen less frequently around the company's campus lately.
The transition to Mr. Cook has been widely expected and many are determined to move forward, starting with the launch of the fifth-generation iPhone, which is expected in October.

Mr. Cook, an Alabama native who previously worked for International Business Machines Corp. and Compaq Computer Corp., is known for his operational acumen. He was instrumental in wringing out inefficiencies in Apple's manufacturing and setting up its supply chain in China.

Since then, he has gradually increased his responsibilities, becoming chief operating officer in 2005. He has also ably led the company during Mr. Jobs's absences in the past.

Unlike Mr. Jobs, Mr. Cook has tended to stay outside of the spotlight apart from quarterly earnings calls with analysts.

Mr. Cook faces a daunting task succeeding Mr. Jobs, who proved his managerial mettle by bringing Apple back from near bankruptcy when he returned to it in 1997. And Mr. Jobs relentlessly pushed through his vision of the tech business, reviving the Macintosh computer business and developing new products like the iPod, iPhone and iPad.

Apple faces a particular challenge in that Mr. Jobs has had an unusually strong influence in setting Apple's corporate culture and strategy, said Charles O'Reilly, a management expert at Stanford University's Graduate School of Business "Great companies rarely go from strength to strength," he said.

"I believe Apple's brightest and most innovative days are ahead of it," Mr. Jobs wrote in his letter Wednesday. "And I look forward to watching and contributing to its success in a new role.

"I have made some of the best friends of my life at Apple, and I thank you all for the many years of being able to work alongside you," he added.

The news of Mr. Jobs's resignation quickly became the talk of the Internet. Overwhelmed with traffic, the blog Cult of Mac temporary went offline. "This thing is melting down," said editor Leander Kahney, about an hour after the news broke on Wednesday.
Wall Street reacted with little surprise. "This was a 'when' not 'if' moment," said Mike Binger a fund manager for Thrivent Asset Management in Minneapolis, which owns Apple shares. He added that he had no plans to change his holdings, saying that the stock is still "really cheap for the kind of operating fundamentals they've been putting up."
The value of the company, however, has been skyrocketing as the success of products like the iPhone, iPad and ultra-thin Macintosh computers keep setting records. At close to $350 billion, Apple is second only Exxon Mobil in market valuationat the moment, recently eclipsing the oil giant for a brief period.
Tim Ghriskey, chief investment officer for Solaris Asset Management in New York, which holds Apple shares said he has confidence in Apple's executive team even without Mr. Jobs, but is hoping for more details on who will be Apple's "creative force" now that he is gone.
While Mr. Jobs's resignation is a blow to Apple, the company has a solid pipeline of products, churning out new versions of its Macs, iPhones, iPads and iPods every year.
A person familiar with the situation has said in the past that the board spends most of its time discussing product development and there is a roadmap in place for the next several years. Its next iPhone is expected in mid-October.

"This definitely marks the end of an era," said Michael Gartengerg, an analyst for Gartner, but he added that "there's much more to Apple than Steve Jobs."

Source




Wednesday, 24 August 2011

NASA Gets Into Sci-Fi Literature Game

Many a science nerd has been born while reading science-fiction novels. As a way to hook those kids early, NASA has partnered with a book publisher to develop sci-fi–themed books.

The line of books, which the space agency is calling “NASA Inspired Works of Fiction,” will be created with Tor-Forge Books. Through the partnership, NASA will pair its space geeks with the publisher’s writers to create books intended to spark interest in engineering, mathematics, technology and science.

“This agreement will benefit the public, as we look for innovative ways to communicate our past and current achievements, while focusing on the needs of the future,” Nona Cheeks, the director of Innovative Partnerships at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, said in a statement.


NASA isn’t the only organization looking to tap writers to create inspiring prose. Intel recently asked writers Scarlett Thomas, Douglas Rushkoff, Ray Hammond and Markus Heitz to write short stories about what the future would look like. Those stories are available for free download on Intel’s website.

Perhaps one day in the near future, these stories will get optioned for movies and Hollywood can get yet another chance to shoot the moon.

Source

A Perfect Circle: “Friends”

I was impressed by Facebook’s updated privacy announcements today. Finally, after years of menus – and menus filled with menus – and menus filled with menus filled with drop-downs — we’re getting simple, direct privacy options right on the page. I’m sure some people will still bitch and moan because well, it’s Facebook. But at least on the surface, these changes look good.

The changes also tie into something I’ve been thinking about for a long time — it’s a subject that has become red-hot again thanks to Google+ and its Circles concept: simple social sharing. With today’s changes, Facebook has whittled six sharing options down to three. And really, there are only now two that actually matter: “Public” and “Friends”.

When you used to share things on Facebook, you had the option to share with “Everyone”, “Friends of Friends and Networks”, “Friends and Networks”, “Friends of Friends”, “Friends”, or a customized group. Read that list over again. It’s ridiculous. And it’s actually still in place right now (the new changes haven’t rolled out just yet).

Again, now those options have been reduced to “Public” or “Friends”. A million times better. And more or less exactly what I’ve been asking for for the past couple of years.
Yes, on the surface the sharing controls are less granular. But “Custom” remains for the power users. In their post on the matter, Facebook also alludes to expanding the sharing options and possibly adding other Groups or Lists you create over time. For most users, hopefully they won’t do this. Again, “Public” and “Friends” are all that matter.

Now that we’re exiting the Google+ post-launch hype cycle and we’re starting to see if the service will actually be useful, a realization about the Circles feature seems to be setting in: Circles, like all lists, are a pain in the ass to maintain. Sure, Google perfected a way to get users to create these lists. But managing those people once they’re in there is just not something people are going to do.
“But but but it will be different with Google+!” No it won’t. And I’ll go a step further. I would bet that because Google+ forces users to put people in at least one Circle, eventually, most users will just add everyone they want to follow into exactly that: one Circle. A smaller subset will create two Circles: “friends” and “family”. Even smaller subsets will create Circles for their co-workers. And that’s it. That’s the harsh reality of list creation online.

That’s too bad because lists, when you take the time to create them and maintain them, are very useful. That’s why everyone — Facebook, Google, Twitter, etc — has tried to tackle this problem. But I think all plans have been too grandiose. Most lists are ephemeral. That’s why they actually do work well on mobile with services like group messaging. And I would bet that we’ll see a lot of startups spring up around the idea of group creation on the fly based on location.

But on the higher level for these massive social networks, you need to keep it simple for the vast majority of users. One list: “Friends”.

That’s what Facebook has just essentially done. While they give you two sharing options (again, not including “Custom”), “Public” is actually not a list at all. It’s everyone out there in the world, potentially. The only actual list is “Friends” and it’s a list that has always been the fundamental building block of Facebook. You don’t have to go out of your way to make that list, it’s how Facebook works. If you accept or extend a connection, those people are your “Friends”.

Google+ has gotten everyone all excited again about granular controls. But there’s a reason the idea keeps failing, and I don’t believe it’s simply a design challenge.

This is the point where some people will get upset and say that I’ve lost touch with reality in the San Francisco hipster bubble. “How dare you tell me I shouldn’t share personal moments with my family!” I’m not saying that. That’s why all of these services have — and will continue to have — custom sharing options. I’m simply saying that the way I see this playing out — the way lists scale — is by giving the majority of users one list. And by having everything else be public.

Facebook’s new system isn’t perfect. I’d still love to see them more directly implement the concept of a “follower”. That is, someone who is not your “friend” but wants to follow along with the public things you post. This sort of exists when you ignore friend requests (or on fan pages), but it’s still not ideal. It needs to be far more explicit on both ends. Eventually, this will have to be addressed one way or another — “Public” sharing doesn’t make a ton of sense without it.

While just about everything I share on Facebook, Twitter, and now Google+ is public, I definitely see the need for more selective sharing. I just think we have to be realistic about how it can and will be done. For most people, that will be with one list. “Friends”.

Source

Social Gaming Network PapayaMobile Hits 25M Users

Today, PapayaMobile, the social gaming network for Android, is announcing a new milestone: it has topped 25 million users, which represents over 940% growth since the beginning of last year. The company attributes the increase to both the growing demand for mobile social games as well as the rapidly expanding Android install base worldwide.

Papaya also released several other network statistics along with the user milestone figure, including the following:
  • More than 11 million paid transactions have occurred using Papaya’s virtual currency.
  • ARPPU (average revenue per paying user) on the Papaya network is $22.60/month.
  • ARPPU across all Papaya Game Engine games is more than $10.00 per month.
  • On average, 1 in 5 users purchase Papaya’s virtual currency in social games that use Papaya’s Game Engine.
  • Popular titles earn on average over $20,000/month.
  • The most spent by a single user on the Papaya network is $4,440. <– Who is this crazy person?!
  • 93 million pMails have been sent to users across the Papaya network.
  • Users have engaged in over 874 million game sessions.
  • Regionally, the fastest growing market for Papaya is China which has experienced over 500% growth since January 2011. Europe is close behind at 224% and then the United States at 222%.
The company showcased a few of its top-performing applications on the network, too, like Treasure Fever which sees a monthly ARPPU of $10.33, and X-City, whose ARPPU is $9.17.

Source

Tuesday, 23 August 2011

The new 100 most useful sites

Two years ago most Britons didn't have broadband and Web 2.0 was barely a twinkle in a developer's eye. Things have changed - as our cream of the crop for 2006 shows

In 2004, the internet was a different place: there was, for example, no YouTube, and most Britons online didn't have broadband. That's changed dramatically: now, more than 75% of users have broadband, and the arrival of Web 2.0 has brought sites where the interaction is as fast as if it were on your machine. So we've revisited the "cream of the crop" that we brought you two years ago.

Some of the crop is brand new; some has stood the test of time. As before, we have 100 sites in 20 categories. That of course means that your favourite might not be here (even if you suggested it on our blog). Email us with your suggestions for the ones we should have included.

Many of the categories here are new since the last crop. Many of the sites from that time still exist, of course - and are still hugely useful.

One category that's missing is mobiles, where data speeds haven't kept up with broadband. Maybe in 2007?
Contributors: Charles Arthur, Kate Bulkley, Michael Cross, Bobbie Johnson, Vic Keegan, Jack Schofield, Keith Stuart

Applications
Why have an application to run in your browser? Because for tasks shared between people at different locations, it makes sense to access password-protected sets of work. 37signals offers Backpack (note the domain is backpackit) for simple tasks and the bigger Basecamp for grown-up projects. Tadalist is simpler, being just to-dos (but isn't that what it's about?), while Google's Documents & Spreadsheets requires a Google account (they're free) and doesn't try to compete with Microsoft Office. Wikicalc is a free online spreadsheet, and developing smartly.

backpackit.com
basecamphq.com
tadalist.com
docs.google.com
softwaregarden.com/wkcalpha

Blogs: reading
There are millions of blogs out there; you need to pick the best. Step forward RSS (aka web feeds) and blog search engines to simplify things. Technorati is occasionally flaky, but generally a reliable indicator of what's being blogged about. Icerocket runs it close. And you'll need an online aggregator to keep abreast of the feeds you're most interested in: Newsgator and Google Reader are good choices. Bloglines is an excellent alternative feed reader.

technorati.com
icerocket.com
newsgator.com
google.com/reader
bloglines.com

Blogs: writing

To do it rather than read it, you need a good set of tools. The open-source and free software project Wordpress has risen to prominence, elbowing aside many rivals with its blog creation, management and (importantly) spam-beating tools. Wordpress.org is the free software; wordpress.com offers paid-for, managed versions of the free package. Blogger is the best of the rest; Vox is neat, easy and free, and plugs into lots of social applications. Statcounter counts, well, statistics for your site; the free Google Analytics (if you can get an account) is good too.

wordpress.org
blogger.com
vox.com
statcounter.com
google.com/analytics

Email
Google's Gmail has become the web-based email system of choice for those who can get access. Its main drawback is that it's still an invitation-only system in the UK. However, Yahoo's free email service is a decent competitor, and Microsoft has Live Mail. Unlike Microsoft's old Hotmail service, none will delete all your old emails if you fail to log on every 30 days. Among the dozens of free alternatives, Bluebottle is a decent option for its focus on spam filtering. The free version offers 250MB of storage and supports the POP3 and SMTP standards, so you can use a proper email program as well as web access. There's also TempInbox, which provides free, temporary, throwaway email accounts with no registration.

mail.google.com
mail.yahoo.com
mail.live.com
bluebottle.com
tempinbox.com/english

Gaming
There are far too many videogame news sites on the internet today; you need an aggregator like Gametab to filter through to the best. Pocketgamer specialises in handheld games, while Gamasutra is absolutely unmissable. Gamesfaqs has FAQs and walkthroughs (plus cheats, reviews and previews) for loads of games. And the ESRB lets you search by age rating.

gametab.com
pocketgamer.co.uk
gamasutra.com
gamefaqs.com
esrb.org/ratings/index.jsp

Maps
Maps matter, but once you're past Google's maps and satellite detail, everyone's thrown back on the Ordnance Survey's data, which means there's little to choose between them. Ordnance Survey has improved its site, and can at least now tell you which map to buy for an area; its placename search is nifty. Meanwhile, the New Popular Edition site shows how the country looked in the 1940s. Delightful.

maps.google.co.uk
streetmap.co.uk
multimap.com
ordnancesurvey.co.uk
npemap.org.uk

News: mainstream
The BBC marches on, adding more media forms while also letting users add their comments. The New York Times site is vast (though it has shut off some of its content behind a "paywall"). Both sites' (short) RSS feeds can be read on a mobile at bbcriver.com and nytimesriver.com. Google News extends its reach, though the top headline is still whichever site last updated rather than the one which is most accurate. Nowpublic is a US rival to OhMyNews and claims 52,000 (and counting) "mojos" - amateur journalists with mobile phones whose location can be figured out from GPS or phone triangulation.

news.bbc.co.uk
nytimes.com
news.google.co.uk
english.ohmynews.com
nowpublic.com

News: recommendation
One thing that Web 2.0 is really good at is letting lots of people vote on things. It can be (and is) abused, but generally the system works. That's seen the rise of sites which let people vote stories up, or which news stories (and how) bloggers are talking about (at memoerandum).The biggest is Digg, which overtook Slashdot earlier this year. Reddit was recently bought by Wired magazine. Findory is slightly different, learning what you like the more you use it.

digg.com
reddit.com
memeorandum.com
megite.com
findory.com

Offbeat
Snopes checks out unbelievable tales, scams and urban legends and debunks (or confirms) them. Slightly less useful is the 100-strong webring of Unusual Museums of the Internet. These include the Virtual Toilet Paper Museum, the Old Calculators Web Museum and Signalfan's museum of traffic control signals. You can find links to lots of other offbeat sites via the Weird Site's Other Weird Links page. The Onion is the web's leading satire magazine, though with an American bias. Otherwise, for five minutes of fun, try browsing B3ta. This UK site sends out a weekly newsletter of cool links and runs a message board where people post amusingly manipulated pictures. But be warned: it's often offensive - that's part of the point - and most definitely rated NSFW (Not Safe For Work).

snopes.com
ringsurf.com
theweirdsite.com
theonion.com
b3ta.com

Politics
The MySociety team remains unbeatable for turning Hansard inside out with Theyworkforyou and Publicwhip, but bloggers have begun to expose the unwritten workings of politicians to greater public scrutiny too. Guido Fawkes' blog has the inside gossip from Westminster, while NO2ID agitates on arguably the most important political and technological issue around, while NHS 23 is a wiki outlining the problems with the political, technological and medical drama of the NHS computer- isation programme.

theyworkforyou.com
publicwhip.org.uk
5thnovember.blogspot.com
no2id.net
editthis.info/nhs_it_info

Public action
Now, it's time to bug someone in power. The idea that the web can make a difference is growing; politicians are on the web and there's an online petition site at No.10. Pledgebank and HearfromyourMP are both part of the excellent MySociety (mysociety.org) family of sites enabling citizens to connect to decision-makers - and, one would hope, vice versa. Netaction includes The Virtual Activist, a manual for anyone looking to build and promote a cause online. Those interested in helping out in their area might try Timebank, which finds organisations to which to donate spare time.

pledgebank.com
petitions.pm.gov.uk
hearfromyourmp.com
netaction.org
timebank.org.uk

Radio
Radio now travels over wires, at least to our homes. The BBC dominates here, but there are thousands of stations to choose from. AOL's Shoutcast is interesting: find whatever's on right now (you can tune in via iTunes or any internet radio-enabled player.) Radio-locator and Live-radio list broadcasters worldwide, so you can find something new to listen to. Reciva does the same, but if you buy its internet radio you can add your own favourites online and they show on the gadget; or just listen online.

bbc.co.uk/radio
shoutcast.com
radio-locator.com
live-radio.net
reciva.com

Recommendation: music
Another new category: being able to find stuff that's similar to music you like is increasingly important, both to listeners and to record companies trying to profit from niches. Last.fm requires an application that runs on your machine, and shows what other people with the same music like. Pandora says you need a US postcode; so give it one, then enjoy its expert-chosen stations. Liveplasma can search relationships in films as well as music. Tuneglue is a relatively new venture between last.fm and EMI, using data from Amazon and last.fm. Goombah requires a small download and only works on music in an iTunes library, but has been at it for some time.

last.fm
pandora.com
liveplasma.com
audiomap.tuneglue.net
goombah.com

Reference
Wikipedia now dominates the reference side of the web, partly because its pages are ranked so highly in Google. User-written, it's not always reliable, but is usually a good place to start. It competes with the Encyclopedia Britannica, which isn't free. However, another traditional alternative is the HighBeam Encyclopedia, which searches more than 57,000 articles from the Columbia Encyclopedia. Otherwise Jim Martindale's Reference Desk, started in 1994, provides an astonishing collection of links to reference sources. For words, try Onelook, which indexes more than 7.5m words in 931 dictionaries. It also has a reverse lookup to find words from their meanings. Finally, Teldir (on the infobel site) has links to the world's online phone books.

en.wikipedia.org
encyclopedia.com
martindalecenter.com
onelook.com
infobel.com/teldir

Science
Alphagalileo gives a view of public-facing science in Europe and is a counterpart to eurekalert, the American Association for the Advancement of Science's press announcements forum. Space.com remains fascinating for all things spacey. Nasa contains a wealth of information. The growing importance of climate change makes the RealClimate blog written by climate change scientists important.

alphagalileo.org
eurekalert.org
space.com
nasa.gov/home
realclimate.org

Search
Google continues to tighten its grip on our hunt for information (it now gets half of all searches) but that doesn't necessarily mean it's the best. Search can now encompass your hard drive, blogs (a separate category - see above), images, peer-to-peer and even what used to be out there. Blinkx remains unique with its focus on video, while Ask (now without Jeeves) has made great strides recently, though it only gets a tiny portion of searches.

google.co.uk
search.yahoo.com
search.msn.co.uk
blinkx.com
ask.com

Social software
The browser has grown up: now it's the path to meeting people of similar interests and creating your own personal space online in a shared area. Social networks have become a cliche, but that hasn't stopped MySpace becoming the biggest site online. Bebo is popular, Habbo is more tuned to the kids, while Friendster and LinkedIn will appeal to the older user.

myspace.com
bebo.com
habbo.com
friendster.com
linkedin.com

Video
The crowds are all over at YouTube, the poster child of online video (a category too niche to merit mention two years ago; YouTube was founded in February 2005). But it's not the only place to find video. Revver offers a revenue-sharing system (people pay to watch your video, you get some cash). You can also start your own TV station at brightcove and currenttv. And Videojug has demonstrations of how to do lots of possibly useful tasks.

youtube.com
revver.com
brightcove.com
currenttv.com
videojug.com

Virtual worlds
The key distinction from social sites like MySpace is that virtual worlds give you an avatar - your representation of yourself in the online world. The advent of broadband allied to faster machines has made them usable. When the BBC held a concert in Second Life, it seemed like an anomaly; then IBM's chief executive got an avatar, and suddenly everyone's there. Habbo Hotel is booming with teens. World of Warcraft has millions of users; Everquest, its own culture. Or you can play the Sims online. Whether an influx of new users will make these worlds more antisocial remains open.

secondlife.com
habbohotel.co.uk
worldofwarcraft.com
thesimsonline.com
eqplayers.station.sony.com/index.vm

Source

Apple Planning 8GB iPhone 4 for Cheapskates

According to “two people with knowledge of the matter,” Apple is set to release an 8GB iPhone 4 aimed at the low end of the market. Currently, the iPhone 4 comes in 16GB and 32GB versions.

The story, from Reuters, comes by way of a Korean manufacturer that is supposedly making the 8GB flash drives for these phones. The source refused to name the company concerned.

The thinking goes that there will be a low-end iPhone to complement the new iPhone 5, or iPhone 4S, or whatever it is called. There is some precedent for this: Apple always keeps last year’s model around as a cheap option. In the U.S, the iPhone 3GS can be had for as little as $50. In the rest of the world, you can get it free with a contract.

Dropping the iPhone 4 back to 8GB and 16GB makes sense. After all,if you don’t care enough to buy the new model, then you probably don’t care about a lot of storage, and it keeps the manufacturing price low enough to still turn a profit.

In other “news,” next year will bring a slimmer, faster iPad, and the Sun will rise every day.

Monday, 22 August 2011

Cisco To Buy Comptel’s Axioss Software Assets For $31 Million In Cash

ciscoCisco this morning announced its intent to purchase service fulfillment software assets and associated employees from the UK subsidiary of partner company Comptel, for 21.3 million euros or roughly $31 million in cash. Axioss is a fulfillment solution developed by Axiom Systems, a company that Comptel acquired back in 2008. 
With the acquisition, Cisco hopes to extend network and service management technologies across its IP-based network platforms and enable service providers to more quickly launch new video, data, mobility and cloud services to their customers, using a single management architecture.
The AXIOSS software suite will also enhance Cisco Prime, which enables service providers to better manage their networks and network services, the company says. 

Upon the close of the acquisition, which is expected to occur in the third quarter of calendar year 2011, the AXIOSS team will be integrated into the Cisco NMTG and Cisco Advanced Services Group.
Gareth Senior, Comptel CTO and member of its Executive Board, will also be transferring to Cisco.

Comptel and Cisco will continue their cooperation across other areas of OSS/BSS, e.g. cloud mediation and charging. Comptel says it will continue in fulfilment business developing and selling its Comptel Fulfillment Solution, retain its existing Axioss customer relationships and continue to support these customers.

NextDocs Raises $10.3M To Provide Microsoft SharePoint Software To Life Sciences Industry

NextDocs, a company that sells Microsoft SharePoint based software for the life sciences industry, has raised $10.3 million in a Series A financing from OpenView Venture Partners. 

NextDocs helps life sciences companies of leverage SharePoint-based document and management software.The company actually customizes SharePoint for companies in the pharmaceuticals, medical device and biotech industries. NextDocs actually has over 100 customers across the life sciences industry (including five of the ten largest pharmaceutical companies in the U.S.).

And the company is growing at an impressive clip. NextDocs expects to pull in $15 million in revenue this year, and has doubled in size over the past two years. NextDocs says that it will put the new funding towards product development, customer service and support, and expansion into new markets.

Sunday, 21 August 2011

FACEBOOK CAN BE GOOD TO YOU OR VERY BAD DEPENDING ON HOW YOU USE IT


With over 400 million users, Facebook surely deserves all the hype it’s enjoying, but there’s almost always a flip side to such big successes, or is there? Almost a year ago, Brian Osborne, at Geek.com, reported about a study conducted by Aryn Karpinski of Ohio State University. This exploratory research suggested that Facebook was affecting the grades of students, because they devoted a large chunk of their time to Facebook as opposed to dedicating it to studies. Now, as Brian pointed out, and I agree, this research was limited to certain universities, which obviously doesn’t account for the other gazillions of Facebook users around the world.

A recent post on Facebook’s official blog explains how there is no correlation between the amount of time users spend on social networking sites and their grades. But again, even this study, since it was conducted amongst one lot of students in one part of
the world, seems too narrow. So, it’s difficult to actually pin-point whether students, who use social networking such as Facebook,
are losing out on their grades as a result.

Yes, what matters is whether a student is using the platform in a productive way, or whether online socializing is turning into an unending obsession. Be it for making resourceful professional contacts or simply for making friends, Facebook has proven to be
a very powerful platform, where individuals connect with one another. Also, they use all sorts of fun online applications and play games online, which is one of the reasons why Facebook is so addictive. But, unless you misuse it or get addicted to it to the point of neglecting your priorities, there’s no reason to believe that it has negative effects. On the contrary, there are many ways in which social networking can be truly leveraged. You’ll find many professionals, online businesses, and entrepreneurs using this powerful medium to grow and expose their businesses. Also, a unique example of why social networking is helpful is how reinforcement agencies in the US are leverage social networking to track and fight crime. The point is, there are certainly more positive points than negative ones. This doesn’t mean that you put your guard down and think nothing could possibly go wrong. All sorts of people are lurking on the Web, and while the medium is genuine, the person using it might have something up his sleeve. Privacy is a major concern when it comes to online networking. I’d like to point out an example that regular users will relate to. While Facebook urges its users to keep their privacy settings in check, ignoring them could cause serious consequences.

Let’s say that you don’t want to approve of a pending friend request. Now, if even one of your friends on Facebook has this stranger on their friends list, then through your friend, this stranger can access at least part of your information. This can be avoided by making appropriate settings on your privacy settings page. The message is quite clear - if used responsibly, social networking can prove to be helpful, and even profitable. Otherwise, things can get ugly.

HTML5: The new language


The current HTML standard 4.01 is ten years old. In this time, the Internet has become rich with multimedia and interactivity. So it’s definitely time for change!

Videos are really popular on the web, so it should come as no surprise that sites like YouTube, Dailymotion and Vimeo are among the first few sites to integrate the new HTML5 standard. HTML stands for Hypertext Markup Language, the language in which the basics of the Internet are written. The standard specifies rules according to which this happens. Since Web browser engines need to be adapted to this, four of the big browser manufacturers (not including Microsoft), developed HTML5 comprising of numerous new functions that help close the long gap between being a document-oriented markup language as it has traditionally been, to becoming an application-oriented one, as the modern web demands. Many can now dream of a revolution on the web.

Videos without Flash

The core of HTML5 is better integration of multimedia content. So far, browser plug-ins such as Adobe’s Flash Player has been needed to play video and music. But these consume resources, are prone to crashes, and most importantly, and are a safety risk. lash, in particular, allows a lot of malware to creep into a PC. In spite of this, almost all big websites use it to incorporate video, interactive applications, and other imaginative content. HTML5 intends to make a difference here - the new <audio> and <video> tags enable integration of media files directly with a web page. A Simple, integrated player plays these files directly on the page without a plug-in.

All that the browser needs are codecs. The hitch here: - HTML5 does not specify any particular codec. Firebox and Opera have chosen the licence-free Ogg Theora (video) and Vorbis (audio) codecs, in order to promote open standards and keep the web free of any one company’s license terms. Hence, these browsers cannot display the HTML5 videos on YouTube because these require the H.264 codec, which is only used by Chrome and afari. H.264 works well at higher resolutions, and is more effective at compression than Theora. Internet Explorer does not currently support any HTML video codec. Another disadvantage of the video implementation is the lack of support for acceleration using the graphics card. The Adobe Flash Player has this capability as of version 10, and thus remains a better choice for HD video on the web, especially on weaker PCs such as the popular netbooks.

The HTML5 “Canvas” function is an interesting and considerably problem free innovation. It defines an area on the website where the browser engine can create its own graphics in real time. Thus, a browser can be instructed to draw crisp, scalable vector graphics. Your website can thus contain an integrated drawing program, games, or beautiful animation all without requiring the user to install Flash or the like. This function will become more attractive as soon as it starts supporting 3D graphics. At present, browser manufacturers are working on the WebGL standard, which will enable the Canvas function to render even complex 3D scenes in real time, using the OpenGL graphics library. Quick and easy surfing HTML5 supports multi-threading to avoid slowdowns that might be caused by Canvas scripts or other functions. Scripts and web applications run in parallel in separate threads. This will enable quicker rendering of sites on your screen, and eliminate jerks while scrolling or delayed text input on heavy pages. HTML5 also brings something new when working with user data. So far, such data has been stored in small cookies. As opposed to that, the new Web Storage mechanism stores data of up to 10 MB on the user's computer, either permanently or for as long as the browsing session lasts. While cookies are limited to plain text files, Web Storage uses a database that can stores even whole applications for offline use. However, this gives hackers new invasion options, which would affect all operating systems. HTML5 will, however, provide more protection in other areas. One of the biggest safety risks on web sites today is that of iFrames; sections in which the content of external sites are displayed. iFrames infected with dangerous code can hide on pages, contaminating visitors’ PCs. To avoid this, web developers should use the Sandbox attribute in the future, instead of iFrames. This will disable or limit external sites from implementing scripts, accessing cookies and inserting or manipulating inputted data. Further innovations include Web Forms 2.0 (forms which process text input better), new tags for page structuring, and the GeoLocation attribute. This last one is not an actual part of the HTML5 standard but can still be implemented in the browser engine. GeoLocation is a programming interface which a Web site can use to locate a computer without plug-ins. It accesses the IP address as well as Wi-Fi or Bluetooth wireless data and can display the location on a map, opening up new social interaction methods, for instance. Soft upgrade, loud effects Whether and when these new functions will become  widespread is still unforeseeable. One of the obstacles is that Internet Explorer, the most entrenched browser, barely supports these features. The lack of a universal codec to replace Flash will also dampen momentum. The other functions will definitely be accepted and make surfing more comfortable, but will also take time to creep into the mainstream for both web developers and end users.

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