226th Birthday of John James Audubon

April 26th, 2011

John James Audubon (April 26, 1785 – January 27, 1851) was a French-American ornithologist, naturalist, hunter, and painter. He painted, catalogued, and described the birds of North America in a manner far superior to any before him. In his embrace of America and his outsized personality and achievements, he represented the new American people of the United States……

Source & Story : http://www.google.com & http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_James_Audubon

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iPhone ‘becoming less popular’

February 23rd, 2011

iPhone 'becoming less popular'

Research from the uSwitch.com mobile tracker found that HTC handsets, which are made in Taiwan, were doing particularly well.

The firm compiled a ranking of the most prized smartphones, based on web searches and sales, and HTC were in each of the top three places with its Desire, Desire HD and Wildfire models.

Samsung and BlackBerry also beat the iPhone with their smartphones.

Part of the reason for the non-Apple smartphones gaining ground is that the Android open software which they use has been intensively developed for “apps” which allow specific, often quirky, functions.

Previously Apple had this market almost entirely to itself, and the rivals are often cheaper on contract.

Story and source : http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/mobile-phones/8342176/iPhone-becoming-less-popular.html

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National Treasures: Google Art Project unlocks riches of world’s galleries

February 2nd, 2011

Google is bringing its “street view” technology indoors. With the announcement Tuesday in London of the Google Art Project, the Internet giant jumps into the online art arena with tools that will allow Web surfers to move through 17 of the most prominent art galleries in the world, with the option to look more closely at individual artworks, including some that will be digitized so exhaustively that individual paint strokes and hairline cracks in the surface will be visible. The project will give high-profile exposure to the idea of creating “virtual” galleries that museums have been exploring for years. It may also help build collaborations between institutions that have been working separately on digitization projects. But will it reinvent the museum experience? It’s not clear that even Google can do that. Yet.

Included among the institutions that have teamed up with Google are the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art and the Frick Collection in New York, and the Smithsonian’s Freer Gallery of Art in Washington. Museums in London, Madrid, Moscow, Amsterdam and Florence, among others, are also contributing.

The Freer has allowed a popular work by James McNeill Whistler, “The Princess From the Land of Porcelain,” to be digitized through the “gigapixel” process, which stitches together multiple high-resolution images. Now available online, the Google Art reproduction makes it possible to see the faintest trace of white paint Whistler used to make his subject’s eyes glisten, as well as the nubby, gridlike texture of the canvas underneath.

“On average there are 7 billion pixels” per image, said Amit Sood, leader of the Google Art Project. “This is a thousand times more than the average digital camera.” “The giga-pixel experience brings us very close to the essence of the artist through detail that simply can’t be seen in the gallery itself,” said Julian Raby, director of the Freer, in a statement. “Far from eliminating the necessity of seeing artworks in person, Art Project deepens our desire to go in search of the real thing.”

Other art museum directors who have seen the technology are impressed by it, though not convinced it will substitute for a scholarly eye in direct contact with an actual painting. Brian Kennedy, director of the Toledo Museum of Art in Ohio, said the gigapixel images can bring out details that might not be visible to ordinary museum-goers in a gallery. But scholars will still want a three-dimensional view of the art, which even a very high-resolution two-dimensional image can’t provide.

Many important art museums have already produced extensive databases of their collections, and provide access to some of their collections online. The Google Art Project differs in its combination of a “walk-through” function, letting visitors see how paintings are hung and organized as they move virtually through the collection, with the ability in some cases to see high-resolution images of specific works. It also brings prominent galleries from around the world together through a single interface, with Google’s extraordinary online reach.

A trial of the technology Tuesday proved both enticing and frustrating. Images often appeared grainy and washed-out when using the walk-through function. Navigation arrows take a certain dexterity to use, so as not to see paintings at unnatural angles. And if you hit the wrong navigation arrow, you are sometimes thrown out of the museum altogether to an exterior street view. The rooms of the museums are also free of visitors, which would be a rare luxury if you were there in person, but is strangely haunting when exploring online.

Elizabeth Merritt, founding director of the Center for the Future of Museums, called the walk-through technology an interesting experiment, and the kind of experiment that most museums can’t produce on their limited budgets. But after experimenting with the tool, she also had questions about whom it would appeal to, and what kind of audience it might find. As someone “who sits at a computer eight hours a day,” she wasn’t sold on the walk-through function except for museums that she might not be able to visit personally. But she liked another functionality, which Google calls “Create an Artwork Collection,” allowing visitors to assemble online personal collections that can be exchanged with other users.

“It certainly fits with the research we’ve been doing that people like to create their own experiences and their own mash-ups and share them with other people,” said Merritt.

But if the walk-through still feels gimmicky, the highest resolution images are a delight. The interface includes a bar for zooming in and out and a marker on the image that indicates where the zoom is happening. It’s a useful way of connecting the microscopic and macroscopic landscape of the painting.

Story and source : http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/02/01/AR2011020106442.html

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Facebook beats Google as most visited in 2010

January 3rd, 2011

facebook San Francisco, Dec 31 (DPA) Facebook passed Google as the most visited website in the US in 2010, according to a survey by the web tracking firm Experian Hitwise.

The social networking site also claimed the top search term of the year, with variations on its name filling four of the 10 most popular searches, the survey found. In all, Facebook searches accounted for 3.48 percent of all web searches in the US in 2010, a 207-percent increase over 2009.

The study found that Facebook accounted for 8.93 cent of all US website visits in the year, ahead of Google.com’s 7.19 percent and third-placed Yahoo Mail with 3.85 percent.

However if all Google’s various properties are taken into account, the web search giant did overtake Facebook with 9.85 percent of all website visits. Microsoft’s msn.com and bing.com also made it into the list of top ten websites, as did myspace.com.

Other terms in the top 10 searches included ‘youtube’, ‘craigslist’, ‘myspace’, ‘ebay’ and ‘yahoo’.

Sourceand story : http://in.news.yahoo.com/facebook-beats-google-most-visited-2010-20101230-171523-632.html

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Windows XP users on red alert over Internet Explorer bug

December 24th, 2010

COMPUTER users are under threat from a software flaw similar to one that hit government systems two years ago.

The weakness in Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser would allow hackers to take control of a PC through a booby-trapped web page.

Most vulnerable are Windows XP users.
Rik Ferguson, senior security analyst at Trend Micro, said: “The attacker can run programs directly on the victim’s computer.
“It is highly reminiscent of a bug two years ago which prompted national governments to switch to an alternative browser.”
Microsoft said that there had been no reports of attacks but advised those concerned could use the Enhanced Mitigation Experience Toolkit protection system.

story and source : http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/top-stories/2010/12/24/windows-xp-users-on-red-alert-over-internet-explorer-bug-115875-22803854/

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Top domains of the World & India

December 17th, 2010

There are millions of domains in this world. And it’s increasing everyday in a huge number. Because website is one of the most powerful business wepon. Did you ever want to know which domains have the most backlinks? Worldwide or country by country? It is possible now. The online SEO tool suite SEOprofiler.com publishes a free daily updated list of the domains with the most unique backlinks. Through that we are giving you today’s update of 10 domains from India & Worldwide with the most unique backlinks.

Top 10 domains: World Top domains of the World & India

  1. twitter.com
  2. maps.google.com
  3. facebook.com
  4. google.com
  5. en.wikipedia.org
  6. wordpress.org
  7. validator.w3.org
  8. flickr.com
  9. youtube.com
  10. digg.com

Top 10 INDIA:

  1. indianexpress.com
  2. dnaindia.com
  3. sify.com
  4. timesofindia.indiatimes.com
  5. business-standard.com
  6. zeenews.com
  7. mydonline.in
  8. cinema.thamil.in
  9. financialexpre
  10. erovideo.in

Source & Story: http://staging.seoprofiler.com/monitoring/top-backlinks

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What’s new in Google Earth 6

November 30th, 2010

Google has announced the release of Google Earth 6. The latest version is available for Windows, OS X and Linux. The update that follows Google Earth 5.2 release earlier this year adds three major updates to the virtual geographical tool.

Here’s looking into what the latest update includes:

Integrated Street View

The Google Maps Street View experience is now fully integrated into Google Earth. Pegman (the small guy that represents your Street View position) is now placed alongside the Google Earth navigation controls, where he launches Street View just like he does in Google Maps. Just pick up Pegman and drop him wherever you see a highlighted blue road to fly right down to the ground.

Once there, you can use the navigation controls or your mouse to look around. And unlike Street View layer, you can now move seamlessly from one location to another as if you’re walking down the street by using the scroll-wheel on your mouse or the arrow keys on your keyboard. If you want to visit somewhere farther away, simply click the “exit” button and you’ll immediately return to an aerial view where you can easily fly to your next destination.

3D Trees
3D buildings has been there on Google Earth for some time now. Trees have now been added to liven up the environment. To enjoy these leafy additions to Google Earth, make sure you turn on the 3D buildings layer on the left side panel. As a starting point, try a search for “Palace of Fine Arts San Francisco.” Once you arrive at your destination, click the zoom slider. You’ll then be taken down to the ground where you can use our new ground-level navigation to walk among the trees.

Better Historical Imagery
Historical imagery in Google Earth allows users to look at map views of times like Warsaw in 1935, London in 1945 and Port-au-Prince Haiti before and after the January earthquake. The feature was first added in Google Earth 5, but it wasn’t always clear when and where it was available. With this version, Google has made it easy to discover historical imagery.

When you fly to an area where historical imagery is available, the date of the oldest imagery will appear in the status bar at the bottom of the screen. If you click on this date, you’ll instantly be taken back in time to view imagery from that time period. You can then browse through all the historical imagery available for that location, or simply close the time control and return to the default view.

Story and Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/personal-tech/computing/Whats-new-in-Google-Earth-6/articleshow/7014343.cms

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Naked man spotted in car boot on Google Street View

November 23rd, 2010

Naked man spotted in car boot on Google Street View

A man has been captured on Google Street View apparently climbing into the boot of his car while naked.One Internet user told the CNET website he thought it was just ”an illusion” with the man wearing tight skin-coloured shorts while fixing his brake light.
However Google has removed the image from Street View, which only went live in Germany at the beginning of the month.
It is not the first time a Google Street View image has provoked debate.In August a photo emerged of what appeared to be a dead schoolgirl laying on the side of the road in Worcester.However, it turned out to be ten-year-old Azura Beebeejaun who was lying down playing dead with her friends.

Story And Source : http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/8152990/Naked-man-spotted-in-car-boot-on-Google-Street-View.html

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Hacker compromised Royal Navy security

November 9th, 2010

Hacker compromised Royal Navy security

Computer details of current and former defence staff, including a former Royal Navy head, were posted on the internet after a hacker broke into a military website and shut it down.

The Royal Navy website was taken offline after being “compromised” by the hacker, codenamed TinKode, who has a history of breaching government databases including Nasa, the US Space Agency and the Pentagon.

The Ministry of Defence stressed yesterday that no “malicious damage” had been inflicted on the Royal Navy site, which did not contain any classified information. However, the site has been down for three days and TinKode, who is Romanian, posted so-called “hash values” for Ministry passwords he claimed to have obtained from his illegal entry. With hash values, hackers can crack passwords a lot more easily. One of the named accounts was for former First Sea Lord Admiral Sir Jonathon Band.

In the wake of the disclosure, other hackers piled in with additional material including five passwords for other members of staff. The MoD insisted that the information posted would not allow anyone access to secrets.

The electronic break-in took place on Friday night. Visitors to the website yesterday morning were greeted with the message “Unfortunately the Royal Navy website is currently undergoing essential maintenance. Please visit again shortly.” A message posted by TinKode on the social networking site Twitter read: “Minister (sic) of Defence United Kingdom – HACKED”. According to members of the hacking community, TinKode used to be a member of Hackers Blog, a collective of cyber activists who ran a campaign of breaking into websites to highlight security flaws.

Members of the group were known as “white hats” who did not harm the websites. But TinKode is said to have since become a “grey hat” – someone who deliberately publishes sensitive information online.

TinKode is believed to have used a “SQL injection attack” to target the Navy website, a common method which exploits vulnerabilities in databases used by websites. Once entry has been gained, the hacker can look at and download sensitive data as well as upload malicious software.

Rik Ferguson, a cyber security analyst at the company Trend Micro, said: “It’s always embarrassing when something public is successfully hacked and should serve as a warning to anyone who has a presence online to take all the necessary steps to secure their websites.” The MoD said: “There has been no malicious damage, but as a precaution the website has been temporarily suspended. Security teams are investigating.”

Officials said the site had the level of security needed to prevent “things like silly pictures being put in”. TinKode’s actions, said one official, added nothing to the debate on cyber security.

Story and source : http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/hacker-compromised-royal-navy-security-2128774.html

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On The Top

November 4th, 2010

On 02-10-2010 Google India paid us for our work. It has recognized us as the top “Website Designers” among 30,90,000 listings. For last 1 month we have been moving among 1st three positions. At last we have reached at our desired position. This is the result of hard work by our encoders marketing team. Every work should be paid,financially or mentaly. Otherwise the target will be lost. And on November 2nd we have got it .

Thank you everyone for your support. Without you it cann’t be possible.
Every work has it’s own goal. Achieving the goal is not so easy. The way is too hard to get. In every step you will find competitors or difficulties. The goal seems to be tough for you. But after a hard work when you will reach at the top you will be very happy. Today we are happy.
We have achieved our primary target by taking the 1st position on google India list. So we are celebrating with u through this blog. But this is a promise to everyone that we will do better than now make you guys to feel proud as a part of encoders.

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