Monday, May 31, 2010

Japan plans high-tech World Cup 2022 bid

Japan plans high-tech World Cup 2022 bid

Japan has devised a high-tech bid for the 2022 World Cup.



Japan hopes fans will be able to watch matches without 3D glasses by 2022 Photo: SKY




he country, which co-hosted the football tournament with Korea in 2002, hopes to convince Fifa to award it the tournament for a second time with an elaborate high-tech bid.
Japan plans to make use of 200 high definition cameras to film the matches and then transmit them across the world to be shown on giant 3D screens.
The Japanese are even considering ways to project 3D representations of the players onto empty pitches in other countries so that fans can enjoy a virtual football match. To make the experience even more immersive for viewers at the virtual match, microphones will be installed under the pitch at the World Cup to ensure that all the atmosphere is captured.
Football fans will use digital tickets to get into matches and use GPS to find their way around stadiums.
Kohzo Tashima is in charge of the Japanese bid committee and the $6 billion "Universal Fan Fest" 3D project. He hopes to broadcast the matches to nearly 360 million people around 400 stadiums across the globe.
In accordance with the global green trend, Japan also hopes to make use of the energy made by spectators; cheering, stamping and clapping will all be used to partly power the communications system.


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Windows XP Fans Uneasy as OS Nears Retirement

Windows XP Fans Uneasy as OS Nears Retirement

Half of the enterprise computers running the aged Windows XP operating system are still relying on the soon-to-be-retired Service Pack 2 (SP2), a researcher said today.
According to security risk and compliance management provider Qualys, 50% of the several hundred thousand PCs it monitors for its clients are still running Windows XP SP2.


"The normal thing for IT is not to muck around with something that works," said Wolfgang Kandek, chief technology officer for Qualys, as he tried to explain why corporations have stuck with 2004's SP2 and not updated to SP3, which debuted two years ago .
Microsoft will officially retire Windows XP SP2 on July 13. After that date, although it will continue to provide security updates for XP SP3, it will stop issuing patches for the older SP2.
"I would expect that come August, SP2 will be getting hard and harder to defend," said Kandek, referring to the lack of security updates. "I expect to see reliable exploits of unpatched vulnerabilities three or four months later."
Companies have stepped up their efforts to migrate machines to XP SP3 in the last 11 months -- the rate of adoption of the newest service pack during that period was roughly double that of SP3's first 14 months of availability -- but even now, just weeks before SP2 will slide off support, half of the Windows XP systems still run the older edition, according to Qualys.
"I think this simply flew under the radar of most IT professionals," said Kandek, talking about the July retirement of XP SP2. "Personally, I didn't know about it until two months ago. I don't think many people were looking at the [retirement] messages Microsoft was putting out."
Microsoft started warning customers of XP SP2's looming retirement last February, and has been repeating that warning every month in its Microsoft Security Response Center (MSRC) blog on Patch Tuesday, the regularly-scheduled second-Tuesday-of-the-month security update release day. But not every user reads the MSRC blog.
Windows XP SP3 will exit all support in April 2014; to receive vulnerability fixes, users must update to that service pack by July.
By Qualys' numbers, Windows XP accounts for approximately 80% of all enterprise PCs, a considerably higher share than estimated by Web metrics companies such as NetApplications, which pegged XP's share in April at 63.4% . NetApplications, however, calculates usage share globally -- Qualys' is predominantly U.S. -- and factors in consumers as well as businesses.
Microsoft has made some minor concessions on Windows XP SP2 support. Last month, it said it would take calls from customers running outdated service packs, such as SP2. Previously, it turned those people away.
Instead, Microsoft's support staff will answer questions about old service packs, fill out support tickets and provide what the company's head of support called "limited troubleshooting."
The new support for obsolete service packs isn't free, however. Companies or customers without an in-place Microsoft support plan will be billed on a per-incident rate. A consumer contacting Microsoft support via chat or e-mail, for example, is charged $49, while telephone-based support costs $59.
Windows XP SP3 can be downloaded from the Microsoft site, or obtained from XP SP2 PCs via the Windows Update service.


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YouTube exceeds 2 billion views a day

YouTube exceeds 2 billion views a day
Amazing statistics about YouTube visitors 
In honor of YouTube’s fifth birthday, the site announced it's now attracting more than two billion video views a day.
“That’s nearly double the prime-time audience of all three major U.S. television networks combined,” the YouTube team wrote in a blog post Sunday. “We certainly can’t imagine what the future will look like. But we do know there’s a lot more to be done ... We’re just getting started.”



To celebrate, the Google-owned site launched its YouTube Five Year Channel and a project called “My YouTube Story,” which features users talking about the ways in which the video site has affected their lives.
Among them are such high-profile users as CBS News' Katie Couric, Internet pioneer Vint Cerf and late-night jokester Conan O'Brien.
In Couric’s video, she says “YouTube is kind of like New York City. Millions and millions of people from all walks of life co-existing in one small space. When you turn the corner, you never know who or what you’ll see.”
Adds O'Brien, "If you're like me, America, you spend an inordinate amount of time watching YouTube - and it's probably why our country's economy is in the toilet."


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Sunday, May 30, 2010

SUZUKI TITAN - The New Motorcycles from Suzuki

SUZUKI TITAN is the new motorcycles series and it's from Suzuki Motorcycles. Last night, I watched the launching of new motorcycle from Suzuki, and the motorcycle is named "Suzuki Titan". This is a new motor bike from Suzuki in a long long time after Suzuki never issued a new motorcycle to the market. From the looks of design, the Suzuki Titan is the latest generation of Suzuki Smash 110cc ,

NEC Launches First Biometrics Excellence Center in India

NEC Launches First Biometrics Excellence Center in India

Bangalore, India  NEC India has officially launched its first "NEC Biometrics Excellence Center" (N-BEC) in Bangalore, India. N-BEC will provide world-class engineering competency to cater to the company's global chain engaged in development, deployment and support of identity solutions for the international market. This center is also aimed at accelerating the expansion of NEC's global multimodal identification solutions and integrated security solutions business, including its renowned automated fingerprint identification solutions and face recognition solutions.


Commenting on the occasion, Koji Oda, Managing Director, NEC India said, "The public safety market in India has huge potential and the setting up of this Biometric centre, is indicative of our commitment to the India market. We foresee greater adoption of biometric solutions in India, particularly in civic amenities and various social schemes."

In February 2010, NEC Corporation announced its mid-term growth plan that targets an increase in the company's public safety business to 100 billion yen through capitalizing on group-wide resources. The establishment of N-BEC is regarded as one of the first key steps towards realizing this goal.

"The setup of this NEC Biometrics Excellence Center is to showcase NEC's capabilities in the biometrics field, and by capitalizing on all our resources and engineering, geographic and technological expertise in this area, we will be able to strengthen our core competencies and bring our biometrics technologies to greater heights," commented Takaya Kobayashi, General Manager, Government and Public Global Solutions Division, NEC Corporation.

The centre initially employs around 50 people and will ramp-up its operations to meet the market demands in future. NEC will capitalize on its central competencies in engineering, geographic and technological expertise to drive the development of N-BEC.

"We are well positioned to target this segment because of our long standing leadership in biometrics and our experience in showcasing our capabilities in this field. Karnataka state in India has been using indigenously developed NEC's biometrics enforcement system since 2003, and this is one of the most accurate forensic system in the market till date," said Kris Ranganath, Chief Technical Officer, Government and Public Global Solutions Division, NEC Corporation.

"Hence the setup of this NEC Biometrics Excellence Center enables us to play an important role in reforming identity lifecycle and bringing about reforms at every level from education, land records, hospitals to being a part of social schemes rolled out by the Government," added Ranganath.

As one of the key engineering competency center, N-BEC will support NEC's engineering operations worldwide and enable the company to quickly respond to wide variety of customer requirements  from proposal drafts and specifications, to product development, customization, deployment, and support engineering. The N-BEC that will be managed by NEC India will also develop and deploy solutions for India market and play a leading role in expanding NEC public safety market in India.


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Saturday, May 29, 2010

Toshiba Camileo S20


Toshiba Camileo S20
For sheer bang for the buck, look no further than the fun-filled, 1080p-shooting Toshiba Camileo S20. It's unsurpassed in terms of features, but we've seen better usability and build quality.
It may be thin and light--even for a pocket camcorder--but the ultraslim Toshiba Camileo S20 ($180 as of 5/7/2010) packs more features into its frame than any high-definition pocket camcorder we've tested to date.



Along with 1080p high-definition video, digital stabilization, and a macro/landscape toggle switch--all of which we've seen in models such as the Kodak Zi8--the Camileo S20 has a handful of pocket-camcorder firsts, including an LED light for shooting in the dark, a time-lapse mode that lets you select between three preset intervals, four white-balance presets, and a slow-motion mode that helps you take (very grainy) footage of fast action. It shoots AVI files in 1080p or 720p at 30 frames per second, recording the video footage to a user-supplied SD or SDHC card.
Instead of the candy-bar design employed by the vast majority of pocket camcorders, the Camileo S20 shoots in a pistol-grip style, thanks to a flip-out, swiveling 3-inch LCD screen; it's a Sony Bloggie MHS-CM5 on a no-carb diet. The adjustable screen is great for composing odd-angle shots (filming over a crowd or taking self-portraits, for example), but it's not the sharpest screen we've seen, and it looks a bit dull in direct sunlight. That said, it's big and adjustable enough to get the job done as a viewfinder.
With all the normal settings in 1080p (30 fps) mode, the Toshiba Camileo S20 served up sharp, smooth, but slightly muted video when compared to similar pocket camcorders. Video quality didn't look bad at all, but colors aren't as vivid as they are in footage shot with the Sony Bloggie MHS-CM5 or the top-rated Creative Vado HD. (For the highest-quality footage, select "1080p" from the drop-down menu that will appear in the lower right corner of the embedded video player when it starts.)
In low light (without the LED lamp on), the Camileo S20 brightened up the scene enough to show what was going on, but footage took on a tan, slightly muddy quality. Motion looked smooth, but color accuracy and white balance were lacking compared with our low-light champs, the second-generation Flip MinoHD and the third-generation Creative Vado HD.
The Toshiba Camileo S20 also has two more low-light shooting aids: its front-facing LED lamp, and a ISO-boosting shooting mode. Here's how the camcorder's low-light shooting looks in both of those circumstances: better, but with more visible graininess, especially in the high-ISO mode.
The Camileo S20 also takes 5-megapixel photos (and, according to its on-screen menu, up to 16-megapixel photos at its maximum-resolution setting), but you'll need a steady hand when shooting stills. I got shaky, blurry images when my hand moved slightly while taking a shot; if you use a tripod, image quality is about on a par with that from an above-average phone camera.
Despite all the fun features, the Toshiba Camileo S20 has a few notable drawbacks. For example, it has no flip-out USB connector; instead, Toshiba includes a separate cable in the box for charging your battery and offloading your clips. Also, digital image stabilization is available only in the camcorder's 720p/30 fps mode, meaning you don't get that option for the Camileo's highest-resolution video setting or even in its lower-resolution, Web-friendly video modes.
It's nice to have the macro/landscape toggle, but the macro mode doesn't allow for extreme close-ups; the closest I was able to get to a subject and shoot a clear shot was about a foot away. And the camcorder has an all-plastic build, which definitely makes it feel a bit cheap (but also slim and light, and probably fairly durable).
When shooting with the Camileo, I found the main drawback to be its menu navigation, which is especially frustrating given the amount of goodies at your disposal. Top-level menu navigation is done with the thumb-operated zoom control, which is fairly responsive but feels cheap and plasticky. Pressing the center of the zoom control would be the most intuitive way to make on-screen selections, but instead, you sometimes have to use the two small buttons below it to dive into on-screen menus.
When you're using the same zoom control for operating the 4X digital zoom, it's insanely touchy. At times, I was able to slowly zoom in and out, but at other times, the zoom control jumped between zoom points or rocketed to full telephoto. As with most pocket camcorders, it's best to refrain from using the zoom at all; only the 5X optical zoom on the Sony Bloggie MHS-CM5 stands out here.
The Toshiba Camileo S20 is definitely among the top tier of current HD pocket camcorders, thanks to the useful LED lamp, decent 1080p footage, and unique extras--all for less than $200. But a handful of usability issues, not to mention its cheap-feeling build, prevent it from landing at the top of our pocket-camcorder list.


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Friday, May 28, 2010

Pakistani Islamic site to compete with "facebook"

Pakistani Islamic site to compete with "facebook"
 launched Pakistani Islamist Web sites for social networking to compete with the site "facebook", amid hopes that the participation of about 1.6 billion

Muslims, after the uproar caused by the competition launched by a User of "facebook" Westerners to draw pictures depicting the Prophet Muhammad peace be upon him.
A group of six workers in the field of Information Technology Lahore, Pakistan's cultural capital, has launched a site "
millatfacebook.com" to continue the Muslims across the Internet and to protest against the abuse of Islam.
And this project came after a Pakistani court ordered the site blocked Facebook until May 31, against the backdrop of the competition depicting the Islam.
The new site features:
The site "
millatfacebook.com" is the first Pakistani to social networking, one of the Muslims and Muslims, and also welcomes every person courteous from another religion.
One of the designers of the site: "professionals in the field of information technology are working around the clock to provide benefits in the site are similar to those offered by the original Facebook."
The site includes the new page "Latest News" to put the comments by friends, and provides the ability to send messages and put photos and video, chat, and others.
He says the new site has attracted 4300 members during the past three days, most of them Pakistanis who speak English who are in their twenties.
Osman said Zuhair (24 years), chief operating officer of the company that hosts the site: "We want to say to the owners of Facebook that if Osotm to deal with us then you bear the consequences, and if abused one for the Prophet Mohammad peace be upon him will become rivals and Nqaibdh a lot of the economic losses."

link to the new site http://www.millatfacebook.com/

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Third-grader wins Google doodle contest

new gifts from Google
Thanks to a box of colored pencils and a whole lot of creativity, Makenzie Melton now has a $15,000 college scholarship, a netbook computer and a $25,000 technology grant for a new computer lab at her school.
How did a third-grader from El Dorado Springs, Missouri, score the prizes? By winning Google’s 2010Doodle 4 Google contest.




Melton’s doodle, titled “Rainforest Habitat," will appear on the Google homepage Thursday.
The doodle, which expresses Melton’s “concern that the rainforest is in danger,” was chosen over more than 33,000 submissions by students - ranging from kindergarten to twelfth grade, according to a post on the Official Google Blog.
Melton and the rest of the applicants were asked to develop a doodle for the site’s home page based on the theme, “If I could do anything, I would…” A panel of “well-known illustrators, cartoonists and animators” helped choose the winning doodle, according to the blog.
The regional and state finalists’ doodles can be found on the official Google Blog.

would you need to have such as thees gifts ?
don't forget your comment !!!!



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Thursday, May 27, 2010

Facebook executive responds to users’ privacy concerns



Facebook executive responds to users’ privacy concerns


Elliot Schrage, vice president for public policy at Facebook, has responded to 
a series of questions about the site's privacy settings assuring users that the social network will ‘do

better’.

By Emma Barnett, Technology and Digital Media Correspondent
Published: 1:28PM BST 12 May 2010


The New York
Times asked its readers to submit questions to the former Google executive about Facebook’s approach to privacy, which has become an increasing bugbear for the company, since introducing a series of changes in a bid to make the network more ‘open’.

Schrage said that he found the exercise to be ‘painful but productive’. He explained that a “painful element comes from professional frustration. It’s clear that despite our efforts, we are not doing a good enough job communicating the changes that we’re making. Even worse, our extensive efforts to provide users greater control over what and how they share appear to be too confusing for some of our more than 400 million users. That’s not acceptable or sustainable. But it’s certainly fixable. You’re pointing out things we need to fix”.

When asked by one user why 
Facebook kept making changes to its security settings and whether Facebook customers are really “pounding on your door screaming that they want more categories of their personal data to be available to marketers every few months”, Schrage replied: “Clearly, we need to rethink the tempo of change and how we communicate it. Trust me. We’ll do better.”

Another reader expressed their frustration at how much information strangers on 
Facebook can now see – such as a user’s profile picture and interests. Schrage defended the decision to make more categories de-facto public knowledge, saying: “We’ve found that a few fields of information need to be shared to facilitate the kind of experience people come to Facebook to have. That’s why we require the following fields to be public: name, profile photo (if people choose to have one), gender, connections (again, if people choose to make them), and user ID number

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How new Blu-ray players killed the Nettop

new information about your PC
Caught between fast budget PCs and cheap new Blu-ray players with content streaming support, Nettops have little room to stand out.
We haven't been kind to Nettops since they emerged in the PC market in 2008. Their one intriguing scenario involved connecting a small form factor Nettop to your HDTV as a Windows-based set-top box.
In that kind of setup, you could access every major online video service, from Amazon Video on Demand to YouTube, and play video files stored on your home network or on the Nettop itself. Throw in the DVD player built into the system, a cable box if you must, and we'd challenge you to find a program, a movie, or a Web-based video clip you couldn't queue up in short order.


The concept sounds promising, but if such a system showed up in our lab today, we still couldn't recommend it. The reason? New Blu-ray players from Sony and LG.
One of our chief criticisms of Nettops, which range from $200 to $500, has been that you can get a far more capable slim tower PC for a similar price. Gateway's quad-core SX2000-series, available in configurations ranging from $450 to $600, has almost made this point for us by itself since we first reviewed one in July 2009.
Asus' $475 Eee Box EB1501, for example, is the Nettop that's come closest to satisfying our living room PC scenario, but it chokes on 1080p QuickTime video, and has only a 250GB hard drive. For an extra $100, Gateway's SX2840-01will handle any video format you throw at it, and gives you 1TB of drive space.
If Nettops bump up against more traditional PCs at the high end of their price range, the lower end of the spectrum held some promise until recently. The $199 Acer Aspire Revo R1600 made a reasonable case for itself because of its low price. It won't play HD content, and the lack of a DVD player was annoying, but it can handle the breadth of Web-based standard-definition content, a not-insignificant library.
We argued in our Revo review that the $199 Xbox 360 Arcade was a legitimate home entertainment competitor to that system, but since neither device is 1080p-capable, both felt like a compromise for true home video enthusiasts with large HDTVs. The Sony BDP-S570 and the LG BD570 Blu-ray players solve the 1080p problem, and by integrating support for various streaming services as well as DLNA file support, these $250 devices make life difficult for lower-end Nettops.
Neither the Sony nor the LG player offers as wide an array of content services as you'll find from the Web. But in addition to playing Blu-ray discs, both can stream NetFlix and YouTube content from their built-in Wi-Fi connections. The LG supports CinemaNow, Vudu, Pandora, and DLNA. The Sony player comes with Amazon Video on Demand out of the box, with Pandora, DLNA, and other features coming within the next few months via firmware update.
These Blu-ray players aren't the first to ship with Wi-Fi connections and support for various content services, but at $250 or so they are the most affordable. They also leave low-end Nettops few advantages, especially in light of Nettops' HD difficulties.
With pressure on both ends of the Nettop price range, we see even fewer reasons for the category to exist. Perhaps you can still justify a $199 unit like the Acer Aspire Revo for the extremely budget conscious or as a light duty Web kiosk. Short of adding Blu-ray drives and solid 1080p video support, more-expensive Nettops have little argument.
so take care !!!! and don't forget your comment ....



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