Monday, 7 February 2011

Spam the Spammer !!!


Every time when we check our mail we will be get annoyed if there is a spam message.We will definitely tried to locate the spammer in some of the crucial situation but we failed to locate him.

Now its our chance to spam the spammer.Thanks to ip-address.com for their new e-mail trace program which helps us to trace the spammer's identity.This gives us a chance to spam the spammer.

Just copy and paste the original message of the spam and locate the spammer.

Visit here for E-mail Tracer

Saturday, 5 February 2011

Lose your TV remote? Use a Samsung app on your Galaxy phone or Tab


Who needs a TV remote when you have a smartphone or tablet
Samsung has released an app to the Android Market that turns your Android-powered Samsung smartphone (OS 2.1 or up) or Galaxy Tab tablet into a digital remote--so long as you use it with a compatible TV.
The Samsung TV Remote uses Wi-Fi to form a connection with the TV. A QWERTY keyboard, numbers, and directional arrows do the rest of the work. 
The free remote app works with Samsung LED C6500 series and higher, the Samsung LCD C650 series and higher, and the Samsung Plasma C6500 series and higher. It will also work with some "smart TVs" from Sammy's 2011 lineup.



Source: reviews.cnet.com

Friday, 4 February 2011

Introducing Blogger Android App


Introducing Blogger Android App

Posted by Vinay Sekhri

Have you ever wanted to write up a quick blog post on the go? Now there is an easy way to do this on your Android phone! We are excited to announce our first version of the Blogger Android App. Using the app you can easily compose a post, attach a photo that you just took with your phone, and either save it as a local draft for later or immediately publish it to your blog. If you are an Android user, you can start using the Blogger app today by downloading it for free from the Android Market.


Feature highlights
  • Multiple accounts and blogs: You can easily switch between different accounts and blogs that you have author rights to. Simply choose your account and blog and you are all set to go.
  • Write and save/publish: You can write a post, assign labels, and then either save it as a draft or immediately publish it. Saving as draft is handy if you need to wait until you have Internet connectivity.
  • Photos from camera and gallery: If you see something interesting, you can take a photo directly from the app and include it in the blog post. You can also browse your gallery to include the ones you like.
  • Sharing to Blogger from gallery or browser: Blogger is one of the available sharing options. If you come across a photo in the gallery, or a website while browsing, you can share the content to the Blogger app directly from the sharing menu.
  • Share location: You can share your location by activating the location bar and selecting the correct location. This information will be included in your post.
  • View saved/published posts: By switching to the List View, you can view all your drafts and published posts that you wrote using the app. By performing a long-press on a published post you can invoke a menu that includes the option to view your post in a browser.
We hope you enjoy the app. As always, we would love to hear what you think so please feel free to share your thoughts with us through our feedback form. (Note: this app is available only on Android devices but we are working toward supporting other smartphone platforms to allow more of our users to easily post to Blogger on the go.)

Thursday, 3 February 2011

Dell Partners With Ubuntu for Linux Cloud Computing Technology


Ubuntu Linux vendor Canonical is expanding its cloud horizons this week, thanks to a new cloud partnership with Dell.
Dell will be making the Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud (UEC) technology available on Dell PowerEdge C2100 and PowerEdge C6100 servers. The UEC deal marks a major milestone for Ubuntu as it moves from Dell (NASDAQ: DELL) desktops to servers.
"It is the first offer that involves Ubuntu Server Edition at Dell," Nicolas Barcet, Ubuntu Server product manager, told InternetNews.com. "So it's a major step extending the strong relationship we have had on Ubuntu Desktop and Netbook editions.
UEC has been part of the Ubuntu Linux distro since the Jaunty Jackalope release in April 2009. Subsequent Ubuntu releases have further improved on the technology that is based on the open source Eucalyptus project. In April 2010, Ubuntu told InternetNews.com that it had 12,000 active deployments of UEC, with 200 more being added each day.
The deal with Dell also involves some money, although it's not clear exactly how much.
"Dell receives a share of the UEC Assist contracts it sells; details are not public," Barcet said. "Dell does the entire sell, which includes the reselling of UEC Assists contracts."
As to why Dell has chosen now to make UEC available, Barcet noted that Dell and Canonical have been working on providing a simple and stable deployment methodology. That methodology is reflected in both reference architecture documents and a set of pre configuration files.
Looking beyond Dell, Barcet said UEC is not yet certified and integrated with hardware from other major system vendors, such as IBM or HP.
UEC offers Ubuntu users the promise of enabling their infrastructure to run as a private or even public cloud deployment. While the price utility of cloud computing economics has made it an attractive approach for some, some challenges that are still left to be overcome.
"Novelty of Infrastructure as a Service is the strongest barrier," Barcet said. "We believe that seeing trusted partners join forces to provide an end-to-end solution will help establish the solution."

Google Debuts a Honey of an OS


By Richard AdhikariGoogle Debuts a Honey of an OS
Google hosted its big Honeycomb show-and-tell Wednesday, elaborating on the new Android version's features and capabilities. This is the first version of Android optimized specifically for tablet devices, and it will arrive in iPad rivals from many different manufacturers in the coming months. Google also released a preview of the Honeycomb SDK so developers can become accustomed to making apps for the platform.


Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) staged an in-depth look at its Android 3.0 operating system, aka "Honeycomb," at a press conference Wednesday. It marks the official arrival of the first version of the Android operating system to be optimized specifically with the tablet form factor in mind.
Features mentioned in the presentation include richer notifications for incoming messages, faster access to home screen settings, optimized 2D and 3D graphics performance and improved streaming video processing.
Google focused heavily on developers, also announcing the Android Market Web store Create an online store today -- 30 day free trial. Click here to learn more. and in-app purchases, among other things.The event ended with the presenters conducting a video chat with musician Cee-Lo Green.Backstage, 18 developers demonstrated functions like in-app billing and other apps created with Honeycomb. Google announced that 50 developers will show off Honeycomb-optimized apps at the Mobile World Congress, to be held in Barcelona later this month.
Android 3.0 Stuff
Google's offering templates in Honeycomb that let app devs create richer, more advanced notifications, such as having the sender's picture pop up when the user receives an instant message on the device.While these Honeycomb notifications are "stronger and more impressive" than those offered by Apple's (Nasdaq: AAPL) iOS for now, the two companies "will begin to leapfrog each other going forward," Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group, pointed out.Google did not respond to requests for comment by press time.Existing Android apps for smartphones work on Honeycomb, and Google demoed the game "Fruit Ninja" as proof.Honeycomb supports video chat with video stabilization technology. This keeps the image smooth and by so doing saves bandwidth because less movement means less bandwidth is required to render the video.

Gunning for the App Devs

Google focused heavily on developers in creating Honeycomb.The new OS includes a user interface framework to create apps for devices with larger screens, such as tablets. Devs can use new UI components, new themes, richer widgets and notifications and other new features.Honeycomb comes with a property-based animation framework that lets devs add visual effects to their apps. It has a built-in GL (graphics library) renderer that lets developers hardware-accelerate common 2D rendering operations in their apps."Performance and responsiveness is important for developers and is certainly key for a new generation of applications that really take advantage of the tablet's larger screen," Al Hilwa, a program director at IDC, told LinuxInsider.
A new 3D graphics engine called "Renderscript" lets devs add rich 3D scenes in Honeycomb.
"The 2D and 3D hardware acceleration is huge and may lead to much richer games and stronger user experiences," Enderle said. Also, the "Monster Madness" demo is "a good indication that gaming will be strong" on Honeycomb, he added.New multimedia features such as HTTP Live streaming support, a pluggable digital rights management framework and easy media file transfer through MTP/PTP help devs create rich content.Honeycomb includes new APIs for Bluetooth A2DP and HSP. These let apps offer audio streaming and headset control.For the enterprise Enterprise Payment Security 2.0 Whitepaper from CyberSource, Honeycomb comes with administrative policies covering encrypted storage, password expiration and other features.Android 3.0 is optimized to run on either single- or dual-core processors.


Getting to the Money
Google Wednesday extended the Android market client from mobile devices to every desktop through Android Market on the Web. This includes merchandising features such as suggestion-guided search, deep linking and social sharing."If you don't need to go to an app market but can download an app from the Web, it makes things a lot easier for everyone and may translate to better sales," Enderle said.

The Honeycomb SDK

Google has released a preview of the Android 3.0 SDK with non-final APIs and system image.
However, applications developed with this can't be published on Android Market. Google will release a final SDK sometime in the next few weeks that can be used to build apps that can be published on the Android Market."The fit and finish of the SDK is not there yet, but for developers, what matters is a familiar language and IDE (integrated development environment)," IDC's Hilwa stated.
"Having Java as the base language is one of the key assets of Android as a whole and one of its key success factors," Hilwa remarked. "This will definitely carry over to Honeycomb."Android 3.0 is "among Google's best work yet," Enderle said. "I'm very impressed."  - LinuxInsider