This Latest i mac is realease with the some rocking feature

The new iMac features nearly twice the processing speed, advanced graphics, and ultrafast Thunderbolt I/O. You don’t usually find something this fast and sleek on a desk.

The latest tablest

The tablet it going to the new trend in the technology events it is the all of the record sales and the most sales in the this chrimas and the new year seson it going to the trend of the net book and the some other thing

The New iphon 4 is the best one

The new iphon4 is creating the waves in the sales fileld it make the record sales on the market the 4G is the one of the new genaratin make with best technologies it will make the good tomorrow.

Mac Book

The mac book is the world one of the number one laptop brand it have the most slim laptop in this world it done the most of the speed full laptop the apple maid the one of the best in this field

Nokia smart phone

The nokia smart phons makes the today phone technolagy they are .the world one of the best leading in the smart phone and the all type of the phones they maked the today smart phones

Glider Content

Tuesday, 29 December 2009

firefox going more speed up on the android device


Today one of the most leading web browser  their interface to the speed up the thir browser on the androd device also they giving the most advanced feature on the their  webbrowser they giving the most advance options on the their browsers to interface from other browsers
 Mozilla has decided that when it comes to Android devices, performance is more important than the wealth of add-ons that can be used to customize Firefox.
Yesterday, Mozilla Director of Firefox Engineering Johnathan Nightingale announced on a mailing list that Firefox will move to Android's native user interface, ditching the XUL technology that's been in use by Mozilla since before there even was a Firefox.
"Firefox on Android is a critical part of supporting the open Web, and this decision puts us in a position to build the best Firefox possible," Nightingale said.
Firefox is widely used on personal computers but a rarity on mobile phones, where--unlike Apple's Safari or the unbranded browser Google builds for Android--it's not installed on any phones by default. Firefox is the chief way Mozilla tries to implement its vision of empowering users of the Web and keeping that Web an open technology.
Firefox with a native Android interface should mean faster start-up, less memory usage, and smoother zooming and panning, Nightingale said. The native UI project page for mobile Firefox, aka Fennec, also listed better battery life as a benefit.
It's not clear when the rebuilt version will arrive, but it won't be for either the beta or Aurora versions currently in testing, Nightingale said.
Start-up time is a big deal when comparing Firefox with the built-in browser on Android, especially since Firefox often gets kicked out of memory when not in use, forcing another sluggish load when a person taps a link and needs the browser again.
"After substantial discussion, we have decided to build future versions of Firefox on Android with a native UI [user interface] instead of the current XUL implementation," Nightingale said.
Only the user interface will change; the browser will still use the underlying Gecko engine for processing Web page elements. But leaving XUL behind will be a big deal for anyone who built Firefox add-ons using the technology, and it complicates the process of translating Firefox into different languages, too.
"It's still early days, so we have a lot of questions to answer," Nightingale said. "We're talking with the Add-on SDK team about the best way to support extensions. We're talking with l10n [localization] about how to ensure we support Firefox users wherever they live around the world."
One possibility, according to some meeting notes on native-UI Firefox, is blunter: "Extensions are gone." The notes raise the possibility of using Mozilla's Add-On Software Developer Kit (SDK), an online tool for creating add-ons, but at present that works only for new-style "Jetpack" add-ons that aren't available on mobile right now.

Sunday, 27 December 2009








Google stopped the its earlier one google buzz today Google concentration is going to the Google plus only Google e try the latest mind blowing feature on the its new Google plus given they try upgrade many feature also it want to overcome the facebook the facebook overcome the google orkut that time google planed to their new product to over come the all of the facebook then their started the google plus Google announced on Friday that it is shutting down a number of properties in the coming months, the most notable of which is likely its failed social network, Google Buzz. Best known as that annoying thing under “Inbox” in Gmail, Google Buzz was a Twitter-like service that never gained traction. Buzz encouraged users to share status updates, photos and more that could then be viewed by friends in real time, however it offered no compelling features compared to already established services such as Facebook and Twitter. Google will also shutter several additional services in the near future, including Jaiku, a social network the company acquired in 2007, and Code search, a tool that helped programmers search for open source code. Google Buzz will shut down in the coming weeks while Jaiku and Code Search will both go offline on January 15th, 2012 along with a few other seldom-used Google services.

Thursday, 24 December 2009

Justice Department,Stop AT&T From Buying T-Mobile

It sounds a bit like overkill, but Sprint said on Tuesday that it has filed a federal lawsuit seeking to stop AT&T’s planned $39 billion deal to buy T-Mobile USA.
Sprint has already voiced its objections to the deal, and last week the Department of Justicefiled its own suit seeking to block the deal. In a statement, Sprint said its suit is being filed as a related suit to the DOJ case.
In announcing the suit, Sprint reiterated its standard arguments against the deal, saying it would both hurt competition and harm consumers.
“Sprint opposes AT&T’s proposed takeover of T-Mobile,” Sprint litigation VP Susan Z. Haller said in a statement. “With today’s legal action, we are continuing that advocacy on behalf of consumers and competition, and expect to contribute our expertise and resources in proving that the proposed transaction is illegal.”
An AT&T representative was not immediately available for comment.
In the wake of last week’s move by the Justice Department, both AT&T and T-Mobile parent Deutsche Telekom vowed to fight on. In addition to needing to prevail in court in the Department of Justice suit, the companies also need approval from the Federal Communications Commission, which said last week that it too has serious concerns about the deal.
 In a statement, AT&T criticized Sprint’s suit and reiterated its case for the merger.

“This simply demonstrates what we’ve said all along – Sprint is more interested in protecting itself than it is in promoting competition that benefits consumers,” AT&T said. “We of course will vigorously contest this matter in court as AT&T’s merger with T-Mobile USA will: help solve our nation’s spectrum exhaust situation and improve wireless service for millions; allow AT&T to expand 4G LTE mobile broadband to another 55 million Americans, or 97% of the population; and result in billions of additional investment and tens of thousands of jobs, at a time when our nation needs them most.”



Monday, 21 December 2009

The deteals about the faster than the light speed neutrinos



The last some days we got the shocking news about the more than light speed neutrons there will come the more deteals about the it Last night, in response to a worldwide surge in interest, the OPERA experiment released a paper that describes the experiments that appear to show neutrinos traveling faster than the speed of light. And today, CERN broadcast a live seminar in which one of the work's authors described the content of the paper. Both of those emphasized the point of our initial coverage: figuring out whether anything is traveling beyond the speed of light requires incredibly accurate measurements of time and distance, and the OPERA team has made an extensive effort to make its work as accurate as possible.
As a spokesperson for the MINOS neutrino experiment told Ars yesterday, there are three potential sources of error in the timing measurements: distance errors, time-of-flight errors, and errors in the timing of neutrino production. The vast majority of both the paper and the lecture were dedicated to discussing how these errors were reduced (the actual detection of the neutrinos was only a small portion of the paper).
Neutrinos are produced using a proton beam from one of the accelerators that feeds them into the LHC. The protons hit a fixed target and produce unstable particles that decay, releasing a neutrino. The protons move close to, but not at the speed of light, as do the unstable pions; both of these effects were accounted for. The timing of the protons and structure of the two bunches of them used in these experiments is not even, either, so the researchers created a profile of the proton bunch. They also compensated for the timing of the kicker magnet that pushes the bunch out of the accelerator and added detectors that registered them passing through the hardware to get a clearer sense of their timing.
Similar work went into the detector side, where the time between an actual neutrino event and the signal propagating through the hardware and to a field programmable gate array (FPGA) where it was processed was estimated at about 50ns (the neutrinos only arrived 60ns early, so that 50ns is a substantial fraction of the total). But the error in their estimate was only ±2.3ns, as measured by shining a picosecond UV laser on the detector.
Distance travelled created its own problems. The positions of the hardware were measured via GPS, which normally doesn't provide the sort of precision needed for this work. But the labs did multiple samples of the GPS signals, threw out bad ones, compensated for the effect of the Earth's iononsphere, and more. Then, just to check their work, they had a commercial company come in and perform an independent analysis. The end result was a measurement sensitive enough to register both the steady change due to continental drift, as well as a 7cm jump triggered by an earthquake.
Then, the timing of all the events had to be synchronized. At each site, the group put a cesium-based atomic clock, and synchronized it with the GPS signal. Then, they sent a portable atomic clock between the facilities to check. They then ran photons through a fiber optic cable between them, just to make sure.
The end result is that the OPERA team doesn't see any obvious problems in its measurements. All of the errors, when added up, shouldn't be able to account for anything close to the 60ns gap between the neutrinos' arrival and the speed of light. The difference between their speed and that of light is very statistically significant, and the neutrino data itself looks excellent. The team has recorded over 16,000 events now, and the profile of events over time very closely matches the structure of the proton bunches that created them.
But that doesn't mean that this presentation is the last word on the topic. There are a lot of potential sources of error they know about—the paper's table lists a dozen of them. Small errors in each of these could add up to something more significant than their total error. Then there are the classic unknown unknowns. The authors have tried to think of everything, but it's not clear that they can.
The audience at the seminar was already thinking of other sources. For example, GPS signals don't actually penetrate down to the where any of the hardware is, meaning that this system has to track the hardware's motion a bit indirectly. This led one audience member to suggest "if this is a true measurement, drill a bloody hole." The speaker pointed out that commercial drilling equipment isn't accurate enough to go straight from the surface to the detectors, which are kept that deep to filter out most cosmic rays —in short, the solution would create another error.
The other reason that many are voicing skepticism are past measurements of neutrino speeds obtained from supernovae. Since these are so incredibly distant, the small signal seen here would be huge—the neutrinos should arrive roughly four years ahead of the photons. Other experiments on Earth also suggested insignificant differences. One possible explanation for this is the energy of the neutrinos, since OPERA uses much higher energy than the other sources. But the paper indicates that's not likely to be the case, since the authors saw the same signal with both 10 and 40GeV neutrinos.
In the meantime, the physics community will be looking through the paper, trying to spot unaccounted for sources of error. There are two other similar neutrino detectors in use—T2K and MINOS—and they'll undoubtedly be looking into working out the timing of their hardware with the same sort of thoroughness OPERA has.
The theorists, however, will undoubtedly be having a field day. It will be a while before anyone has the chance to test these results independently, giving theorists a chance to try to reconcile fast neutrinos with the rest of physics until then.

Thursday, 17 December 2009

tell the difference between the ipad the galexy tab



There was one of the question which one is the good one two best company product cmparison which one is the good prodct the two company is also the fight in the sellling of  the their company products
what an uncomfortable moment for Samsung at its court hearing with Apple on Thursday. Fielding questions from U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh, Samsung attorney Kathleen Sullivan was asked if she could distinguish between Apple’s iPad and Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 10.1, which Koh held up for all the court to see.
Her reply, as first reported by Reuters: “Not at this distance, your honor.”
Not at this distance, your honor.
Not the greatest answer in a case in which the defendant stands accused of “slavishly” copying a rival’s designs. More so, since Sullivan was standing just 10 feet away from the devices she was asked to identify.
Thankfully, one of her colleagues was able to come to her rescue, but only after this plea from Koh:
“Can any of Samsung’s lawyers tell me which one is Samsung and which one is Apple?”
Not a good day in court for Samsung.

Tuesday, 15 December 2009

google got better advertising demand in the sales estimations

The world best search engin google always going to the better in the all over field in the all of the internet part their also got the their website as the best advertisig in the sale of the better
nternet-search company, rose in U.S. trading after demand for online advertising vaulted third-quarter sales past analysts’ estimates.
Excluding revenue passed on to partner sites, sales rose to $7.51 billion, Mountain View, California-based Google said yesterday. That exceeded the $7.23 billion average of analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
Chief Executive Officer Larry Page, who succeeded Eric Schmidt in April, is benefiting from Google’s leadership in search advertising, even as the company pushes into new markets such as mobile, display and social networking. Google, which makes most of its money from search ads, should take 76 percent of the U.S. market this year, up from 74 percent in 2010 and 70 percent in 2009, according to research firm EMarketer Inc.
“The core business is the money pump,” said Colin Gillis, an analyst at BGC Partners LP who rates the stock a “buy.”
Google rose 5.8 percent to $591.68 at 4 p.m. in New York. The shares have declined less than 1 percent this year.
Third-quarter net income climbed 26 percent to $2.73 billion, or $8.33 a share, from $2.17 billion, or $6.72, a year earlier. Profit, excluding some items, was $9.72 a share, beating the $8.76 average estimate.
Shift Online
The number of clicks on ads rose about 28 percent in the third quarter from the year-ago period, while the average cost per click increased approximately 5 percent, the company said.
“It’s the continual secular shift of people spending more online,” said Herman Leung, an analyst at Susquehanna International Group in San Francisco. “They’re benefiting from higher volume and higher click-through. Google’s implementing a lot of advertising improvements.”
Page is trying to fend off competition from Facebook Inc., the biggest social network, with a project called Google+. The service now has more than 40 million users, up from more than 10 million in July.
Google aims to offset increased spending by becoming more efficient, shuttering more than 20 businesses, Page said.
The company said today it plans to shut down the Google Buzz social service to instead focus on Google+. The company also is closing down Code Search, a product to search for open source code on the Internet, and Jaiku, which lets users send updates to friends, the company said on its blog.
Google’s Velocity
“Ever since taking over as CEO, I have focused much of my energy on increasing Google’s velocity and execution, and we’re beginning to see results,” Page said during a call with analysts.
Page held steady on the pace of hiring in the period. Google added 2,585 employees, to finish the quarter at 31,353, a 9 percent increase from the previous quarter. Staffing increased 9.3 percent in the second quarter.
Even with more competition from Microsoft Corp., Google picked up market share in the U.S., according to Sunnyvale, California-based Efficient Frontier Inc., which helps companies promote products online. Google had 82 percent of spending on search advertising in the third quarter, up from 81 percent in the two previous quarters.
Microsoft, which provides search and ad services for Yahoo! Inc.’s U.S. websites under a 10-year agreement, had 18 percent of spending, down from 19 percent in the previous two quarters, according to Efficient Frontier.
Internet Search
Google also has made gains in the number of Internet searches it handles. The company increased its U.S. market share to 65.3 percent in September from 64.8 percent in August, according to ComScore Inc. Yahoo remained No. 2, even as its share fell to 15.5 percent from 16.3 percent. Microsoft was unchanged at 14.7 percent.
Google’s Android software, meanwhile, has emerged as the biggest smartphone operating system, bolstered by HTC Corp., Samsung Electronics Co. and Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. adopting the software. Revenue from mobile advertising is on pace to reach $2.5 billion on an annual basis, Page said.
With the growth, Google and device makers have faced legal challenges from companies such as Oracle Corp. To bolster its patent lineup, Google said in August it planned to purchase Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion, its largest acquisition ever. Motorola Mobility brings more than 17,000 patents.
More than 190 million Android devices have been activated around the globe, Page said. Android continues to grow and expand, even as it comes under legal scrutiny, he said.
“We’re very excited about Android and we see our partners and the whole ecosystem continuing to grow hugely,” Page said. “And while there’s been lots of people trying to attack that and so on, we see absolutely no signs that that’s effective.”

Tuesday, 8 December 2009


The apple company lanuched their latst
It’s not a shocker, but the availability of the iPhone 4S gave Sprint its best sales day ever.
The company, which is investing heavily to at long last get the iPhone on its network, said it broke its record by 1 pm ET on Friday. Sprint is also now selling Apple’s iPhone 4 after years of going without an Apple phone in its lineup. (The iPhone’s existing carriers, AT&T and Verizon, also reported impressively strong sales; see updates below.)
“Sprint today reported its best ever day of sales in retail, web and telesales for a device family in Sprint history with the launch of iPhone 4S and iPhone 4,” Sprint product chief Fared Adib said in a statement. “The response to this device by current and new customers has surpassed our expectations and validates our customers’ desire for a truly unlimited data pricing plan.”
The iPhone went on sale on Friday at Apple’s retail stores as well as other locations including Verizon Wireless, AT&T and Sprint stores. Apple said that it quickly sold 1 million phones during a pre-order period and all three U.S. carriers said they sold through their preorder allotments.
Somewhere, Steve Jobs is smiling.
Apple announced Monday that first-day pre-orders of the iPhone 4S topped 1 million, breaking the record set by last year’s model.
Sprint, which just started selling iPhones, said it has sold out of its cheapest iPhone 4S phones — 16 gigabyte models in white and black.
“We do have the 32GB and 64 GB versions, as well as the 8 GB iPhone 4, available in both colors at this time. It is important to note that Sprint is not taking backorders of our iPhone devices,” a Sprint spokesman said in an email.
Sprint, which offers the cheapest unlimited data plan, could become a popular carrier for the phones.
Apple Inc. and various phone companies in the U.S., Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Japan and Britain started taking orders for the phone last Friday. It hits stores this Friday.
The base model of the iPhone 4S costs $200 with a two-year contract. It has a faster processor and an improved camera compared to last year’s model. However, some customers and investors were disappointed that Apple didn’t launch a more radical new model. It’s been more than a year since Apple since the previous model was released.
Despite the record-breaking pace of iPhone 4S pre-orders, it’s hard to determine whether consumer demand is stronger for the new device than it was for previous versions. Although first-day orders for the iPhone 4 were 600,000 when it launched last year, Australia and Canada weren’t among the launch countries then — they got the phone a month later.
Apple has also expanded the number of carriers in each country that sell the phone. This is particularly significant in the U.S., where AT&T was the only carrier for the iPhone last summer. The iPhone 4S is also sold by Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel Corp.
This means that the potential customer base for the phone has expanded greatly since the last model was launched.
The death of Apple founder Steve Jobs last week could also be affecting sales. Marketing experts say products designed by widely admired figures like Jobs usually see an upsurge in sales after their death.
AT&T said it had taken more than 200,000 pre-orders for the iPhone 4S in the first 12 hours, making it the most successful iPhone launch yet.
Apple shares rose $13.90, or 3.8 percent, to $383.70 in midday trading Monday.

Thursday, 12 November 2009

microsoft gone to the record sell the skype credit



Microsft sell the 8.5 the Skype purchase their the selling of the world most credit selling in the calling in online the Skype created the most profit share of the Microsoft company  Microsoft announced on Friday that it has completed its $8.5 billion purchase of Skype. Skype will exist as a new division within Microsoft and Skype CEO Tony Bates will continue to serve as the head of the Skype team. In addition, Skype’s employees around the globe will remain in their current offices. Microsoft confirmed that it will work to integrate Skype into its existing products, but it did not specifically say which products or when that would begin to happen. “We look forward to working with the Skype team to create new ways for people to stay connected to family, friends, clients and colleagues — anytime, anywhere,” Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said. The acquisition is still pending completion in several other countries. Read on for the full press release.

Wednesday, 4 November 2009

bing start its own deal website





The microsoft always defend the google technology they just over the google then they also start a deal website also
Microsoft announced and launched a new deals website on Friday tied to its growing Bing suite of services. Bing Deals is a shopping site that compiles specials from GroupOn, Target, LivingSocial, Nordstrom and others. “Instead of building another program, we’re harnessing deals from major providers and retailers,” said Bing senior director Lisa Gurry. Microsoft’s Bing Deals offers more than 200,000 specials across the United States and, as a deal aggregator, it should eliminate the need to sign up for email alerts from multiple coupon-based services. Just like competing options, Microsoft will offer daily specials that will be accessible from its desktop website located at http://bing.com/deals and from mobile devices.

Sunday, 1 November 2009

The deteals about the faster than the light speed neutrinos



The last some days we got the shocking news about the more than light speed neutrons there will come the more deteals about the it Last night, in response to a worldwide surge in interest, the OPERA experiment released a paper that describes the experiments that appear to show neutrinos traveling faster than the speed of light. And today, CERN broadcast a live seminar in which one of the work's authors described the content of the paper. Both of those emphasized the point of our initial coverage: figuring out whether anything is traveling beyond the speed of light requires incredibly accurate measurements of time and distance, and the OPERA team has made an extensive effort to make its work as accurate as possible.
As a spokesperson for the MINOS neutrino experiment told Ars yesterday, there are three potential sources of error in the timing measurements: distance errors, time-of-flight errors, and errors in the timing of neutrino production. The vast majority of both the paper and the lecture were dedicated to discussing how these errors were reduced (the actual detection of the neutrinos was only a small portion of the paper).
Neutrinos are produced using a proton beam from one of the accelerators that feeds them into the LHC. The protons hit a fixed target and produce unstable particles that decay, releasing a neutrino. The protons move close to, but not at the speed of light, as do the unstable pions; both of these effects were accounted for. The timing of the protons and structure of the two bunches of them used in these experiments is not even, either, so the researchers created a profile of the proton bunch. They also compensated for the timing of the kicker magnet that pushes the bunch out of the accelerator and added detectors that registered them passing through the hardware to get a clearer sense of their timing.
Similar work went into the detector side, where the time between an actual neutrino event and the signal propagating through the hardware and to a field programmable gate array (FPGA) where it was processed was estimated at about 50ns (the neutrinos only arrived 60ns early, so that 50ns is a substantial fraction of the total). But the error in their estimate was only ±2.3ns, as measured by shining a picosecond UV laser on the detector.
Distance travelled created its own problems. The positions of the hardware were measured via GPS, which normally doesn't provide the sort of precision needed for this work. But the labs did multiple samples of the GPS signals, threw out bad ones, compensated for the effect of the Earth's iononsphere, and more. Then, just to check their work, they had a commercial company come in and perform an independent analysis. The end result was a measurement sensitive enough to register both the steady change due to continental drift, as well as a 7cm jump triggered by an earthquake.
Then, the timing of all the events had to be synchronized. At each site, the group put a cesium-based atomic clock, and synchronized it with the GPS signal. Then, they sent a portable atomic clock between the facilities to check. They then ran photons through a fiber optic cable between them, just to make sure.
The end result is that the OPERA team doesn't see any obvious problems in its measurements. All of the errors, when added up, shouldn't be able to account for anything close to the 60ns gap between the neutrinos' arrival and the speed of light. The difference between their speed and that of light is very statistically significant, and the neutrino data itself looks excellent. The team has recorded over 16,000 events now, and the profile of events over time very closely matches the structure of the proton bunches that created them.
But that doesn't mean that this presentation is the last word on the topic. There are a lot of potential sources of error they know about—the paper's table lists a dozen of them. Small errors in each of these could add up to something more significant than their total error. Then there are the classic unknown unknowns. The authors have tried to think of everything, but it's not clear that they can.
The audience at the seminar was already thinking of other sources. For example, GPS signals don't actually penetrate down to the where any of the hardware is, meaning that this system has to track the hardware's motion a bit indirectly. This led one audience member to suggest "if this is a true measurement, drill a bloody hole." The speaker pointed out that commercial drilling equipment isn't accurate enough to go straight from the surface to the detectors, which are kept that deep to filter out most cosmic rays —in short, the solution would create another error.
The other reason that many are voicing skepticism are past measurements of neutrino speeds obtained from supernovae. Since these are so incredibly distant, the small signal seen here would be huge—the neutrinos should arrive roughly four years ahead of the photons. Other experiments on Earth also suggested insignificant differences. One possible explanation for this is the energy of the neutrinos, since OPERA uses much higher energy than the other sources. But the paper indicates that's not likely to be the case, since the authors saw the same signal with both 10 and 40GeV neutrinos.
In the meantime, the physics community will be looking through the paper, trying to spot unaccounted for sources of error. There are two other similar neutrino detectors in use—T2K and MINOS—and they'll undoubtedly be looking into working out the timing of their hardware with the same sort of thoroughness OPERA has.
The theorists, however, will undoubtedly be having a field day. It will be a while before anyone has the chance to test these results independently, giving theorists a chance to try to reconcile fast neutrinos with the rest of physics until then.

Friday, 30 October 2009

GOOGLE TO START FLIGHT “FILGHTS” SEARCH OPTION


GOOGLE START ANOTHER ROCKING OPTION ALSO
he new Flights feature allows users to receive faster results, a simple list of the most relevant flights, other possible destinations according to their search criteria, and more


Google is the one of the most changing search engin it creat more thing in the technology life
Last year, Google announced that it was offering $700 million to buy searchsoftware firm ITA Software, which provided airline flight information used by Google's search competitors. Later, there were talks of Google buying ITA for $1 billion.

A little over five months ago, Google acquired ITA Software and is now offering a new Flights Search
 feature.

Google launched its Flights Search feature today, which offers additional flight information when searching the topic on Google. Flight schedules have actually been available on Google since May. However, with the Flights Search feature, users can receive faster results, a simple list of the most relevant flights, other possible destinations according to their search criteria, and more.

For instance, if a user searches "flights from Chicago to Denver" on Google, the "Flights" link will be available in the left-hand panel. Clicking on the "Flights" link will quickly set the filters to focus on the user's search criteria and offer airlines, costs, travel times, etc. These filters can also be adjusted to show more flights.

In addition, customers can type in vague flight searches such as where they can go from
 San Franciscohttp://images.intellitxt.com/ast/adTypes/mag-glass_10x10.gif in a three-hour period for less than $300, and Google Flights will lay out a list of options.

Google mentioned that it's looking for new partners in the travel
 industry to broaden this feature, but current paid relationships do not influence flight results.
“The selection of flight results is not influenced by any paid relationships,” said the Official Google Search Blog. “Airlines control how their flights are marketed, so as with other flight search providers, our booking links point to airline websites only. We're working to create additional opportunities for our other partners in the travel industry to participate as well.”
The feature isn't completely finished yet, as it only includes a limited number of U.S. cities as well as show results for round-trip economy-class flights only. But Google plans to continue working on it. For now, the "Flights" link will become available "as is" throughout the course of today.

Sunday, 25 October 2009

In 2013 apple going to earning the big




Apple going to earn another mind blowing profit in their company profit in 2013 the ipad and iphon are the miain profitable thing for the company.Add another chapter to the never-ending Apple growth story.
Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster has modeled Apple’s performance for the 2013 calendar year and come up with some very large numbers indeed: Earnings per share of $40.50 on $164 billion in revenue.
That’s about 10 percent above Street consensus on EPS and 8 percent over consensus on revenue. But Munster has his reasons — specifically soaring demand for the iPhone and iPad. He figures that unit growth rates for both devices will be so strong over the next two years that Apple will end up selling 143 million iPhones and 68 million iPads in 2013. What’s more, it will sell them at sales prices far above the industry average for competing devices.
“We believe the markets for smartphones and tablets are big enough to support this growth, even if Apple’s ASP is significantly higher than its competition,” said Munster. “Consumers have demonstrated their willingness to pay up for the best technology, and we expect this trend to continue.”
And if it does, the iPhone and iPad will account for 49 percent and 21 percent of Apple’s revenue for calendar 2013 by Munster’s calculations.


Tuesday, 20 October 2009

Two-seater Hybrid is Thinly Production Model Sexy Jaguar C-X16





The latest model of hybrid car released from the jauger  it is just from the two seat thinly varial production form the company it is  the new model technolegy and ll of them used for the latest car
Jaguar sure knows how to wow an audience with its concept vehicles. Just under a year ago, the company showed off its C-X75 supercar concept that was powered by four 195hp electric motors generating a total of 778hp and 1,180 lb-ft of torque. 

Today, however, Jaguar is showing off something that is a little more production-ready and will be aiming squarely at the "all-new" 991 Porsche 911. The C-X16 is a thinly-veiled two-seater concept that foreshadows the upcoming production model. With the exception of a few details (like the red-lit side vents, tiny door handles, and side opening rear window/hatch), the car looks amazingly close to production-ready. 
When it comes to the power train, the C-X16 features a supercharged V6 that produces 375hp and 332 lb-ft of torque. In addition to the V6, the C-X16 also features a 95hp, 173lb-ft electric motor that can power the sports car alone at speeds up to 50 mph (for short distances only, of course). The 1.6 kWh battery pack is mounted behind the front seats to help the vehicle achieve perfect 50:50 weight balance.
A Kinetic Energy Recovery System (KERS) continually charges the battery pack through regenerative braking, which can provide an extra boost of power from the electric motor via a button on the steering wheel.
Jaguar says that the C-X16 can hit 60 mph in 4.3 seconds and reach a top speed of 186 mph. That compares favorably to the standard 350hp Porsche 911 (991) with PDK which hit 60 mph in 4.4 seconds and has a top speed of 179 mph.
Now you knew there had to be a “but” thrown in somewhere in all of this yummy goodness. Unfortunately, the concept comes saddled with an 8-speed automatic transmission. We can only hope that Jaguar will offer both manual and automatic transmission options when the vehicle reaches production.
"The C-X16 embodies the established Jaguar strengths of sensual design, animal-like agility and inspirational performance and combines these with attributes that set us on a course to create sustainable sports cars of the future," said Adrian Hallmark, Global Brand Director for Jaguar. 
"Jaguars have always been dramatically different," added Ian Callum, Director of Design at Jaguar. "With the C-X16 we have moved the current award-winning design language on to the next generation, creating a car that is the very essence of future Jaguar performance." 
Seeing as how this is officially a "concept", we'll have to wait another year or so before we see the final production model and pricing. As long as Jaguar doesn't mess with the design too much, it is sure to have a hit on its hands and is a welcome break from the "sameness" of Porsche's 911.

Thursday, 15 October 2009

The Adobe Digital Publishing suit for apple



Adobe announced on Wednesday that its Digital The new digital publishing suit for the  appl system also the publishing suit is foapple ipad ,iphon and the imac system also.Publishing Suite will offer support for Apple’s Newsstand feature in iOS. Newsstand will allow users to purchase popular newspapers and magazines directly from their iOS device. “With more than 600 titles created to date, the industry-leading Adobe Digital Publishing Suite includes full support for Newsstand subscriptions, which can significantly boost sales and advertising revenue by combining greater content discoverability with flexible payment options required by readers,” Adobe said in a statement. The company noted that publishers will be able to use Digital Publishing Suite to build Newsstand applications as soon as Apple releases iOS 5 and launches its Newsstand application. Read on for the full press release from Adobe

New battery designing for upcoming ipad 3 designing


The thinner and lighter battery for designing the upcoming ipad 3 design.
Taipei, Sept. 6, 2011 (CENS)--With the upcoming iPad 3 to feature a thinner, lighter battery module that is widely believed to be priced 20-30% higher than iPad 2’s, Simplo Technology Co. and Dynapack International Technology Corp., both Apple Inc.’s contract suppliers of iPad and Macbook battery packs, will hence secure a surefire profit drive for the near future. 

Institutional investors pointed out that the battery pack for iPad 3, scheduled to be massively produced in the first quarter of next year, has been redesigned to be thinner and lighter with a longer service life than iPad 2 edition’s. 

Furthermore, the new battery pack will also be required to meet CTIA IEEE 1625 standard for better quality and safety reliability, a trend that has been commonly seen nowadays, especially in the U.S. For example, consumer electronic devices with coming ordinary battery packs are banned by AT&T, the country’s largest service provider, from sales on its product shelf as well as from its mobile network services, until with IEEE1625-certificated battery packs. 

Therefore, iPad 3 battery module will call for advanced technologies, selling for a higher price to benefit Simplo and Dynapack for sure, especially when the two companies have had their battery packs pass the IEEE 1625 test as the only two battery makers in Taiwan for the moment. 

Riding on increasing sales of iPad 2, institutional investors noted, both Simplo and Dynapack will see their sales revenues for the third quarter of this year surge 10-15% from a quarter earlier. With iPad 3 battery packs said to be delivered starting in the fourth quarter, the two companies are likely to record new highs in revenues for the quarter. 

In fact, the industry’s prosperity driven by tablet PCs so far this year has been confirmed by Simplo’s chairman Raymond Sung, who said at an investor conference that his company’s annual revenue for the year is estimated to shoot up 20%, with the growth mainly led by shipments of tablet PC battery packs. The boom, he predicted, will linger into next year. 


Saturday, 10 October 2009

The new computer used to kill specific cancer cells




The latest thing one computer to the biolagy fieild to erase the cancer.
Synthetic biological circuitry has been in the news a lot lately. These circuits can be quite complex and sophisticated, but compared to their silicon counterparts, they are quite slow. So why are people working on them? , they have one key advantage: they can integrate with the processes that go on inside of cells. Today's issue of Science contains a dramatic demonstration of just how powerful this can be, as researchers have produced a construct that selectively kills a specific type of cancer cell.
Before the potential hype of that last sentence overwhelms you, let's make a few things clear. The authors were only testing their constructs in different types of cancer cells—they never checked whether it would kill cancer cells but leave normal ones untouched. It is also selective, but not exclusive; some of the targeted cells survived, and a few of the ones that weren't targeted ended up dead. To add to the list of issues, the killing mechanism didn't even work in most of the cells they looked at, and there's no obvious way of safely getting any of the DNA involved in this system into the cells of a human body. So, this isn't the cure for cancer.
Disclaimers out of the way, what is it? A rather clever proof of principle.
The fundamental idea behind the work is that different cell types are different because they express distinct combinations of genes and regulatory RNA. Thus, a cancer cell is different from a normal one, and cancer cells of different origins are all distinct as well. If you look at every RNA inside each of these cells, you can notice consistent patterns that will allow you to distinguish them. You can think of this as each cell having its own RNA fingerprint.
The authors took a collection of six cancer cell lines and looked at a set of regulatory RNAs, which control the levels and expression of other RNAs through processes like RNA interference. Based on the differences between the expression of regulatory RNAs, they identified a half-dozen regulatory RNAs that created a distinct fingerprint in one specific cancer cell line called HeLa. Some of these were present at high levels in HeLa cells, others largely absent.
This creates a bit of a challenge, since regulatory RNAs are generally best at shutting genes off. So, the authors set up a bit of DNA circuitry that handled both positive and negative inputs and fed them into a single on/off output. This is easiest to understand by working backwards from the output.
The authors used a single messenger RNA as the output. For test experiments, the messenger RNA encoded a fluorescent protein to make the output easy to read. In the final experiments, the output was a protein that can induce the cancer cells to commit a sort of orderly suicide called apoptosis. (The protein didn't work in all of the cells they tested, which is one of the reasons that this isn't anywhere close to being a general cancer therapy.) The goal was to keep the output off in most cells, but on in HeLa cells.
Regulatory RNAs act by base pairing to binding sites on messenger RNAs and shutting them off. So, it's easy to take advantage of this to register inputs from the regulatory RNAs that aren't present in HeLa cells—you just stick the binding sites on the messenger RNA. Since they're not present in HeLa cells, the messenger RNA should be made into protein there. Other cells are likely to have one of these RNAs around, which will help to shut the messenger off.
Handling the opposite situation, where the regulatory RNA is present at high levels in HeLa cells, is a bit more complicated. From the perspective of designing circuity, it's pretty easy: just flip the bit with the equivalent of a NOT circuit. Doing that with DNA is a bit harder, but the authors did this with a double negative: any regulatory RNAs that were high in HeLa cells would shut off a repressor. That repressor, in turn, blocks production of the output. The net result of the double negative is that, when these RNAs are high, the output gene gets made into a messenger RNA.
In testing various pieces of the circuitry, the authors found that some of them were a bit leaky, in that they weren't sufficiently sensitive to the differences between cell types. The authors responded by tweaking the system a bit, but they kept its general structure intact. As they started combining individual RNA sensors, however, they found that the discriminatory power went up: "The combined effect of all three HeLa-low sensors is generally stronger than a simple prediction according to individually measured miRNA activities."
With the entire system in place, using a fluorescent output protein showed that the sensor was good at picking out HeLa cells. It wasn't perfect; some of the cancer cell lines expressed the output as well, although much less frequently, and a few of the HeLa cells didn't. The same pattern was repeated when the output gene was swapped from one that would cause the cells to commit suicide—it mostly killed HeLa cells, but didn't kill them all, and took out a few innocent bystanders.

Monday, 21 September 2009

Verizon to launch BlackBerry Torch 9850 on September $199.99


The lanching of the latest blackbery torch and with most of the feature
Verizon Wireless announced on Tuesday that it will offer the BlackBerry Torch 9850 on September 8th for $199.99 with a new two-year contract. The Torch 9850 offers a full 3.7-inch touchscreen display with an 800 x 480-pixel resolution, a 1.2GHz processor, support for global roaming in more than 200 countries, a 5-megapixel camera capable of recording 720p HD video and 16GB of storage. The Torch 9850 was first unveiled during a RIM event in Toronto on August 3rd where we published hands-on impressions of the phone. It is the best full-touchscreen smartphone RIM has sold and its browser is much improved, but the BlackBerry 7 operating still feels stale in comparison to Android, Windows Phone and iOS. Read on for the full press release from Verizon Wireless.

BlackBerry Torch 9850 to be Available on the Nation’s Most Reliable Network
BASKING RIDGE, N.J., Sept. 6, 2011 /PRNewswire/ — Verizon Wireless today announced the new BlackBerry® Torch™ 9850 smartphone will be available online at www.verizonwireless.com on Sept. 8, and in Verizon Wireless Communications Stores on Sept. 15.
Watch videos, play games and stay productive on the largest display and highest resolution on a BlackBerry smartphone to date.  Powered by the new BlackBerry® 7 operating system, customers can enjoy the next generation BlackBerry browser with optimized zooming, panning and HTML 5 performance.  BlackBerry® Balance is now integrated, allowing secure access to business information while preventing it from being copied into, sent from or used by personal applications.  Customers can stay connected to their personal and business lives while in or out of the office.
Key features:
·         3G coverage on the nation’s most reliable network
·         3.7-inch high-resolution touchscreen display (800 x 480) with trackpad navigation
·         1.2 GHz processor
·         Global Ready™ – Quad band with support for UMTS, HSPA, GSM, GPRS and EDGE allowing customers to enjoy wireless voice and data service in more than 200 countries, including more than 95 with 3G speeds
·         5-megapixel camera with flash and 720p HD video recording capabilities
·         Wi-Fi b/g/n, GPS and Bluetooth® 2.1
·         16 GB microSD™ card pre-installed, with support for up to 32 GB microSD card
BlackBerry 7:
·         Liquid Graphics™ technology combines a dedicated high-performance graphics processor with a blazingly fast CPU and stunning high-resolution display to deliver a responsive touch interface with incredibly fast and smooth graphics.
·         Premium version of Documents To Go is now included at no additional cost, offering customers enhanced document editing features, as well as a native PDF document viewer.
·         The newest release of BBM™ (BlackBerry Messenger) now extends the real-time BBM experience together with a range of apps including gaming and social networking.
·         Updated Social Feeds app has been extended to capture updates from media, podcasts and more, all in one consolidated view.
·         Universal search capability now supports voice-activated search, allowing customers to simply say what they want to find on their device or the Web.
·         BlackBerry Balance administrator can remotely wipe business information from the device while leaving personal information intact.
Pricing and availability:
·         BlackBerry Torch 9850 smartphone will be available for $199.99 with a new two-year customer agreement.
·         Customers that purchase a BlackBerry Torch 9850 smartphone will need to subscribe to a Verizon Wireless Nationwide Talk plan beginning at $39.99 for monthly access and a smartphone data package starting at $30 monthly access for 2 GB of data.


Friday, 11 September 2009

SAMSUNG IS COMING WITH 100$ Conquer 4G


Sprint is continuing its unique smartphone run with the Samsung Conquer 4G, a moderately priced new phone at $100 that features access to Sprint's WiMAX 4G network. While we'd like to see more capable smartphones step out at this price point, the Conquer still ends up feeling like a phone full of ill-judged compromises, though its performance is admirable given its price.
The Conquer, unlike most other smartphones today, feels light in hand at 4.2 ounces. This starts off feeling cheap, but I grew to like the weight as I used it longer. The phone's textured plastic back, on the other hand, felt cheap, though its crosshatched pattern made gripping the Conquer easy.
 A volume rocker sits on the right side of the phone and a dedicated camera button is on the bottom left, with a sleep button and headphone jack on top. The standard Android buttons along the bottom of the screen are clickable plastic, rather than the touch versions that have become popular. The Conquer 4G is also on the compact side for a smartphone, with a screen that measures 3.5 inches, and it's thin at 0.46 inches.
The haptic feedback, or tiny vibrations following touchscreen presses, reverberates a little more than on most phones, but in a pleasing way. The buzzes feel more like a tennis volley with the phone than a tiny blip to let you know the button was pressed.



The 3.2-megapixel camera on the back of the Conquer is lacking—pictures with flash seem oversaturated, while pictures without the flash tended to be washed out. The level of detail was decent on still subjects, but color accuracy was a problem.
The Conquer ships with only 430MB of internal storage, as well as a pre-installed 2GB microSD card. If you want to store anything sizable on the Conquer (apps, photos, music, videos), tack on the cost of a real microSD card to the phone—8GB cards are $10-20, and 16GB are about $25-35.
The screen on the Conquer also leaves much to be desired: at 320x480 pixels, all but cartoonishly large text is jagged and difficult to read. The text rendering of most applications and mobile sites is fine because they blow the text up, but sites or apps that aren't optimized are still hard to read when zoomed in, and you have to flip the phone horizontally to get a readable block of text.
This is largely the fault of the way Android renders its text, but Samsung should come at their designs knowing this is a problem and compensate accordingly with a more detailed screen. Above, we compare the text rendering to the iPhone 3GS, which has the same screen resolution and size, and is half the price (though on other carriers, and has hardware that is otherwise much, much older).

When it comes to benchmarks, the Conquer performs admirably at Linpack, clocking 41MFLOPS in single-threaded processes on its 1GHz single-core processor and 512MB of RAM. But in Quadrant, it performs worse than many older phones, including the Nexus One and the one-year-old HTC Evo 4G, which is currently available for the same price on Sprint. According to IntoMobile benchmarks, the nine-month-old Samsung Nexus S clocks a score around 1,600 in Quadrant, and is currently available for $30 on Sprint
Benchmarks aside, the day-to-day performance of the phone, which is running Android 2.3 Gingerbread, is respectable given its price. Games like Angry Birds and 3D Bowling play very smoothly, and moving around in the browser, e-mail, and other native apps isn't choppy or laggy, though apps do occasionally open slowly.
The Conquer comes equipped ready to access Sprint's 4G network, a feature that's hard to find in lower-end phones. While we're not huge fans of Sprint's network, particularly on 3G, the Conquer could provide access to better speeds for customers who are attached to the carrier.
As for the battery, the Conquer is rated at a paltry 6 hours of talk time and 230 hours of standby. Because the screen is not very demanding, the phone gets a little bit of a break, so it still can clock about five to five and a half hours of video playback on a full charge. In a standard use test with infrequent e-mailing, texting, and Web-surfing, the phone didn't get a full day's worth of use; I had to charge it in the early evening.
Overall, the Conquer is a solid entry at its price, particularly if you have access to Sprint's 4G network. Still, we wouldn't peg it as a good phone for non-casual users, particularly those who do a lot of Internet reading or picture-taking. Given that the phone carries a two-year commitment at this price, the Conquer's negatives would start to outweigh the positives in short order. We'd love to see $100 become the new price to beat for a great smartphone purchase, but not if it comes with this many tradeoffs.


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