Monday, November 30, 2009

My problem with my wireless adaptor.

I have a USB wireless adaptor connected to my PC and it works well. However, when I wake up from sleep mode, the adaptor no longer connects to the network and is no longer recognised by Windows. As its a USB model, I simply have to unplug and reconnect it, and it comes back to life and connects to the network automatically.

While this problem isn't fatal, it's certainly annoying. How can I get Windows to recognise my adaptor all the time?

Sunday, November 29, 2009

New Windows for Mobile Phones

I have enjoyed using the pleasures of mobile phones especially my Windows Mobile 6.5 home screen. Wherever I go, whatever I do, this keeps me updated about the important information of my emails, text messages, missed calls and calendar appointments. It really does include an update version of Internet Explorer.

Furthermore, the operating system includes Microsoft's new My Phone service which is a mobile data synchronisation service that lets me back up text messages, photos, video and contacts to Microsoft's servers for free. This service is made perfectly for us, customers, to make it easier for us to upgrade our Windows smart phone or retrieve data if our handset is lost or stolen.

Moreover, the company has also launched Windows Marketplace for Mobile, a new online applications store that will provide mobile applications directly to our phone.

With this enjoyment of life's comfort through using the phone with connection of the Internet, everything is made possible!

Friday, November 27, 2009

My Windows forgets how to show folders.

I have a problem with my Windows XP SP2 system. I like to view files in List view, but ever since I reinstalled Windows after a hard disk failure, it doesn't work. I haven't upgrade to service Pack 3 because it crashed my computer when I tried it. To set the view, I opened Explorer and chose the Tools Menu, Folder Options, View, Remember each folder's view settings. I then opened each folder and selected the List view. I applied these changes to the folders on the computer's D: drive, which holds my data files, and on every removable USB drive I own.

Unfortunately, although Windows remembers to use the List View on the D: drive, it doesn't do so with the removable drives.

Hacker cracks web padlock

I felt extremely mad this morning as I opened my Friendster account. I tried to type my username and password again and again but still it didn't activate. I surely know that I was not mistaken of my account because I even wrote them (username and password) on my notebook. Someone probably hacked my account. I really felt extremely, overly mad.

To thoroughly know what's often the "underground" business of these hackers, I read some articles which talks more about them.

One of the article I've read form The Computer Shopper, May 2009 series on page 11 reveals that a hacker has developed a tool that can steal information by tricking victims into believing they are visiting a secure encrypted website.

When a website displays a padlock in the address bar of the web browser, it indicated that the connection is encrypted, which in turn means that is is secure form eavesdropping criminals. The system is called Secure Sockets Layer (SSL), and it's the only way regular Internet users can be sure that their online transactions are safe.

An independent hacker, going by the name of Moxie Marlinspike, has demonstrated a software tool called SSLstrip, which fooled both the website owner and the visitor into believing that a secure connection exists between then. It displays a green address bar in the browser, along with the security padlock and a secure https web address. In fact, the website is using an unencrypted http web address instead.

"Marlinspike's larger message is one that a lot people have been talking about for a few years now. This SSL thing is not working very well," said Dan Kaminsky, director of penetration testing at security firm IOActive.

There is currently no fix for the problem, but users can reduce the risks by avoiding public wireless services and other Internet connections that may be used by other, unknown parties.

Printer ink prices rocket.

A report from Computer Shopper Magazine which was disseminated through the public on its March 2009 release (page 11) stated that the price of ink cartridges for printers has risen to unprecedented heights although this trend has gone unnoticed by many consumers.

Since June 2007, the price of ink has shot up by more than 50%. What may seem to be just an extra 2p or 3p per printout soon adds up. There was a marked increase in the cost of printing between December 2007 and January 2008 which Computer Shopper gathered these figures from printers reviewed over the past 18 months, and they always choose the cheapest possible prices.

It's not clear if this situation is due to global increases in the price of the oil needed to manufacture ink cartridges or printer manufacturers seeking extra profits. However, the hidden cost of the printer is likely to have increases significantly over the past 18 months.

People who print out only a handful of pages in a year are not necessarily immune from the rising price of ink cartridges. They may find they have to replace cartridges that have lain id;e because the ink has solidified and clogged up the print heads.

Thus, when buying a new printer, remember that multifunction peripherals (MFPs) are often more expensive to run than regular printers. In all cases, they advise buying high-yield ink cartridges to save costs. Where available, there are the cartridges they use to calculate the print costs.

Customers should also be aware that cartridges for budget MFPs often cost more than those of their more expensive counterparts. Take note of the price-per-page calculations in their reviews when looking for a printer to buy. This way, customers can find the real bargains and not end up making a buying decision they will regret.

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Universal phone charger to cut waste

Having been read this information about the cause of phone chargers to universally work together, I found it beneficial to share to everyone.
Leading mobile operators and manufacturers have announced that they'll work together to create a universal charger for all mobile phones. The group includes Nokia, T-Mobile, Sony Ericsson, Vodafone and 3.

Many households contain a mess of different proprietary phone chargers. As well as making like simpler for users, the universal charger is an attempt by mobile phone manufacturer to reduce waste.

The companies hope to create an energy-efficient device that will cut standby energy consumption bu half. As the new chargers will work with any handset, is task to supply. Between 50 and 80% of the 1.2 billion handsets sold in 2008 were replacement handsets, shipped with a new charger. Getting rid of the need for these duplicates would cut production of chargers by at least 51,000 tonnes annually, reducing waste significantly.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Compact audio cassettes are but obsolete.

I was born in the year 1982. After 6 years, I was in line in music. I sing songs which are famous of those times. In fact, compact audio cassettes are what I find precious because these are my tools as I practice to sing songs from my favorites artists.

Now, that I am 27 years old, I never find stores selling audio cassettes. They are mostly selling CDs.

Over the past decade, I have seen the DVD format replace VHS tape, but new digital formats are already on the market. HD-DVD and Blu-ray players are available, although the HD-DVD format has already become obsolete, and its highly like that DVD will be replaced by something else in the longer time.

New file formats appear for a number of reasons. Sometimes an exciting new consumer device introduced a new format, or an influential company such as Microsoft makes a decision and most other people follow. For example, its Office 2007 suite of programs uses a new file format called Open XML. It's not compatible with older versions of Office, but Microsoft claims that in the long run will benefit from smaller file sizes, an increased likelihood that data can be recovered when files are damaged and the ability to share data which other systems, such as business databases. The Open XML file format are available for free, so no-one has to pay Microsoft royalties to use it.

Not all such decisions have gone well, though. In 1986, the BBC published a disc containing content generated by more than a million people. It contained writings, photos and videos of their daily lives to give a future society an insight into how we lived. The disc was created using laser disc technology and required a BBC Acorn computer to work. Within 15 years, the BBC realised the disc drives capable of reading the format had become rare. It had to convert the project to the Digital Betacam format to preserve it for the future.

Therefore, when choosing the type of file format for storing your audio and video content, you'll usually have a choice between one that stores a very accurate copy (but takes up lots of disk space) and one that compresses the file into a smaller file (but has a slightly lower quality). Unless you're really stuck for disk space, opt for the higher quality format.

This is the transition of today's generation into a more progressive and instant access of technology's advancement which I, myself enjoyed a lot.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Samsung says new campaign seen to affect long-term sales

Korean consumer electronics manufacturer Samsung expects its two-week facturer marketng camapign directed to youth market to impact on sales in the long term.

"We don't expect it to boost revenue yet of this year, but we expect the campaign to genereate more brand awareness. If that spells into sales, well and good, but not in the short term," Samsung Electronics Philippines Corp. executive Glenn Martin T. Glinoga said.

Glinoga spoke to the Business Mirror at the sideling of the company's Monday press launch of its "Imagine "marketing campaing targeting young people in Metro Manila from 15 to 25 years old. According to Glinoga, the campaign is an original initiative of the company to ramp up brand relationship with the market.

He notes that while the company has maintained a lead market share in the liquid-crystal display (LCD) television category, "we eant to consolidate that lead and give a good showing in other consumer categories."

Aside from LCD TV, the companu also inports and sells in thelocal market mobile phones, LCD camera, printer, video disc players and computer monitors, among others.

The campaign, launched on Ocotober 15, invite young people to send text messages about what they imagine. Messages that get theo most vote from other users, according to Glinoga, would win a cash prize, consumer electronic products and gift certificated from retailer Folded and Hung. "We're encouraging yourn Filipinos to speak uo and voice out their opinions, thoughts, feelings and ideas," he said, adding that the campaign is in no way connected with politics or the electoral exercise next year.

Called "shout-out," the messages are entered through a micro-site of the company's main address in the Internet.

Mobile phones with Internet access can also be used to get into the campaign website.

According to the firm's press material, the shout-outs can be in English or Filipino but must fall under one of three categories: talk, play and love.

Only one slogan can be accepted for each category. Submission will be accepted until November 30, and the winners will be announced after this date.

Glinoga said he's optimistic that even without this campaign, the company willmeet its revenue target for this year. He, however, declined to cite figures.

Likewise, he added that despite the year nearly ending, the company will release new products.

However, he said, "Samsung has yet to see major attractions to justify putting up a manufacturing plant here."

"As of now, our imports and distribution model of business is working so we don't see that plan coming into view."

Saturday, November 21, 2009

New PLDT service offers mobile payment system

The Philippine Long Distance Co. (PLDT) has now made it easy for vendors and clients to carry out payment transactions. By using a single wireless card terminal, merchants can now merchants to seipw all ATM debit and credit card brands.

Called Shops Work Unplugged (SWUP), this new service is a groundbreaking innovation done through strategic partnerships with major acquirer banks. "SWUP operated on a portable payment system that takes advantage of wireless data technology to process sales from practically anywhere," said PLDT customer sales and marketing group head Eric Alberto in a statement.

The PLDT executive said SWUP makes wireless card transactions easy for both vendors and clients, especially in remote areas where there are scant or no banks to withdraw cash from. This is because SWUP runs on the same wireless network that powers Smart Communication Inc.

PLDT corporate business group head Nerissa Ramos said SWUP now accepts major card brands such as Visa, MaterCard, JBC, American Express and Diners Club International as well as Visa Electron, MaterCard Electronic, Megalink and Express Payment System.

SWUP also boasts of security features that make it better than wired credit and debit card point-of-sale terminals which rely solely on the host bank's security system.

PLDT corporate business solutions head Vic Tria said the service to use a private and secure technology called the multiprotocol label switching as its transaction medium rather than the public Internet which is prone to viruses and hackers.

Oracle vows fight as EC objects to acquisition of Sun Microsystems

The European Commission has objected on competitive grounds to the proposed acquisition of Sun Microsystems by US business software giant Oracle, Sun.

Sun, in a filing with US regulators, said that the EC has issued a so-called preliminary "statement of objections" to the proposed $7,4-billion deal.

The EC objections were limited to the combination of Sun's pen source MySQL database product with Oracle's enterprise database products and "potential negative effects on competition in the market for database products," Sun said.

The Santa Clara, California-based Sun noted that a statement of objections "does not prejudge the European Commission's final decision" and is subject to appeal, and Oracle said it planned to "vigorously oppose" the EC move.

The Redwood Shores, California-based Oracle said "the Commission's Statement of Objections reveals a profound misunderstanding of both database competition and open source dynamics.

"The database market is intensely competitive with at least eight strong players, including IBM, Microsoft, Sybase and three distinct open source vendors," Oracle said.

"Oracle and MySQL are very different database products. There is no basis in European law for objecting to a merger of two among eight firms selling differentiated products," it said.

"Mergers like this occur regularly and have not been prohibited by United States or European regulators in decades," Oracle said.

"Given the lack of any credible theory or evidence of competitive harm, we are confident we will ultimately obtain unconditional clearance of the transaction," Oracle said.

The US Justice Department, which gave the deal the green light in August, also reaffirmed its support.

"After conducting a careful investigation of the proposed transaction between Oracle and Sun, the Department's Antitrust Division concluded that the merger is unlikely to be anti competitive," deputy assistant attorney general Molly Boast said in a statement.

"At this point in its process, it appears that the EC holds a different view," she said. "We remain hopeful that the parties and the EC will reach a speedy resolution that benefits consumers in the Commission's jurisdiction.

"The Department and the European Commission have a strong and positive relationship on competition policy matters," Boast added. "The two competition authorities have enjoyed close and cooperative relations.

"The Antitrust Division will continue to work constructively with the EC and competition authorities in other jurisdictions to preserve sound antitrust enforcement policies that benefit consumers around the world," she said.

Sun, a one-time Silicon Valley star, is the developer of the popular Java programming language.

Sun is also the fourth-largest maker of computer servers but has been steadily losing market share to IBM as well as Hewlett-Packard and Dell.

IBM also made a bid to acquire Sun but was edged out by Oracle.

Oracle develops, manufactures and distributes company software and is the market leader in proprietary databases - big beasts fro large-scale management of commercial information by businesses.

Sun, meanwhile, has built up the leading open source databases - which are now able to support similarly large-scale commercial databases running to hundreds of computing gigabytes in size.

Oracle, IBM and Microsoft together control about 85% of the database market in terms of revenue according to the EU.

Nokia recalls millions of dangerous chargers

Nokia, the world's biggest mobile phone maker, a global recall for 14 million faulty chargers made by a subcontractor this year.

The recall concerned "approximately 14 million (chargers) globally," Nokia spokesperson James Etheridge told AFP.

Nokia said the chargers could cause an electrical shock and would be replaced without charge.

The Finnish firm said in a statement it was "not aware of any incidents or injuries related to these chargers."

Etheridge said the recall did not concern China, Britain, Brazil, Argentina and some other countries.

Nokia said the potentially dangerous chargers models AC-3E and AC-3U, manufactured between June 15, 2009 and Aug. 9, 2009; ans the AC-4U model, manufactured between April 13, 2009 and Oct. 25, 2009.

The AC-3E charger was marketed in Europe while the two others were sold to the North and Latin American markets.

All three models were manufactured by subcontractor BYD.

Nokia said customers could check if their charger was potentially hazardous on the company's website.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Netflix movie streaming coming to PlayStation 3

Playstation 3 owners will soon be able to stream movies and TV shows from Netflix to their TVs using the gaming console, just as Xbox 360 owners have been able to do for a year.

Sony Corp. and the DVD rental company announced the service and plan to launch it next month. It will be available for free to PlayStation 3 owners who have a Netflix subscription that starts at $9.

Netflix streaming is already available on a broad range of devices, such as the Roku digital video player, Internet-connected TV sets (including Sony's) and Blu-ray players - and the PlayStation 3's archival, Microsoft Corp.'s Xbox 360. On the Xbox, however, the Netflix streaming is available only to Xbox Live "Gold" members, who pay $50 a year mainly to play games online with friends in other places.

For Netflix Inc., the deal brings millions of potential new customers, to add to the 11.1 million it already has in the United States. About 9 million PlayStation 3 systems have been sold in the US, and more than 25 million worldwide.

Movie streaming is an increasingly important service for Netflix even though it says it expects to keep renting DVDs until 2030. And Netflix CEO Reed Hastings has said he would like the streaming service to be available on all three of the major gaming platform - the Xbox, the Wii and the PlayStation. Until now, however, the company had an exclusive deal with Microsoft.

"The PlayStation 3 is an amazing video platform," Hastings said in an interview.

This leaves the Wii as the last console without Netflix streaming. But even without it, the Wii is the top-selling console.

Netflix has about 17,000 movies and TV shows available for streaming, though few of them are new releases. This will expand the movies Sony already rents and sells through the Play Station 3, and will give the company another feature to tout as it markets the PlayStation as a diverse entertainment device.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Twitter becomes mutual friend of Google, Microsoft

Twitter, Inc. is selling the rights to mine its communications hotbed to both Internet search leader Google, Inc. and Microsoft Corp. in dueling deals that underscore the growing importance of being able to show what's one people's minds at any given moment.

The announcements made within a three-hour span also represent the latest bit of gamesmanship between two of technology's fiercest- and most powerful - rivals.

Microsoft seemed to have seized the upper hand in the information arms race when its top Internet executive, Qu Li, took the stage at a technology conference in San Francisco.

Li used the platform to declare Microsoft's search engine, Bing, would become the best way outside to find out what people are saying in their Twitter messages, or "tweets."

The messages, consisting of no more than 140 characters, can be posted from Internet-connected computers of mobile devices, enabling people to share mundance details about their lives or intriguing news and commentary from all over the world.

It's real-time information that is didn't look like Google's search engine would be able to provide - the kind of competitive advantage that Microsoft has been seeking while investing billions of dollars in what so far has been a fruitless effort to narrow Google's huge lead in Internet search.

Refusing to be upstage, Google revealed on its blog that its search engine has secured the tweeting rights, too.

Neither Microsoft nor Google would disclose how mush it is paying for the rights to index the millions of public updates distributed by Twitter each day. The data is considered to be among Twitter's most valuable assets, raising the possibility that the Google and Microsoft deals will result in the first meaningful revenue for the San Francisco-based startup since its 2006 inception.

"There is a revenue component...but we've yet to see how significant that will be," Twitter chief executive Evan Williams wrote in an e-mail to The Associated Press.

Micosoft has a head start in blending Twitter's feed into Bing's search results. A test version of Bing's Twitter feature debuted shortly after the announcement.

Google still isn't indexing and displaying all the tweets, although that will happen soon, said Marissa Mayer, a Google executive in charge of search products and user experience. She left little doubt that Google's search engine would become less useful without the Twitter access, especially when people are trying to get update about an event that just happened.

"You have to have the answers in order to return them to your users," Mayer said. "That's why a deal like this is so important. It allows us to find answers we couldn't previously have found."

Microsoft will offer another way to probe into the collective mindset by indexing a portion on Facebook - an online hangout with more than 300 million active users around the world. That's about six times the size of Twitter's global audience, but more Facebook users restrict who can see their updates than Twitter users do.

Facebook is only giving Bing access to the updates that its users choose to share with everyone, according to operating officer. It's unclear when the facebook updates will begin showing up in Bing's search results.

Palo Alto-based facebook already has a business relationship with Microsoft, which provides facebook's search results. Microsoft spent $240 million two years ago to acquire a 1.6 percent stake in Facebook.

Google, on the other hand, has a prickly relationship with Facebook, which has lured away many of its employees, including Sandberg.

Meanwhile, Twitter's growing popularity has emerged as a potential problem for Facebook. Their rivalry has intensified since Twitter rejected facebook's attempt to buy the service last year.

While Facebook expects to bring in more than $500 million from selling ads and other service this year, Twitter hasn't been trying to generate revenue until now. Twitter is possibly under more pressure to start making money because a group of investors just poured $100 million into the company and will be looking for returns. The deal valued twitter at about $1 billion.

In internal company documents leaked on the Internet earlier this summer, Twitter projected it would have $140 million in revenue next year.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Stand out from the crowd with Panasonic Lumix'x Face Recognition Technology

The Lumix iA mode has an innovation Face Recognition function that "remembers" registered faces. When the camera detects a registered face in the frame, it optimizes the settings to ensure that the face is sharply focused and brighter. The new Face Recognition feature makes it easier to capture stunning shots of friends and family in a crowd, every time.

AVCHD is a cutting-edge format developed exclusively for high-definition video recording in digital still cameras. Using the MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 standard to compress the captured video signal and Dolby Digital Creator to record high quality audio, it allows longer recordings with breathtaking HD visuals and audio quality.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Report on iPhone in China ahead of official launch

At a Shanghai electronics market, row after of iPhones, real and fake are on display, as vendors cash in ahead of the official launch of Apple's trendy smart phone in China.

"The 'high imitation" iPhones sell much better than the smuggled ones," said one 20-something salesman, sitting behind his small counter piled high with handsets.

His candid words are not good news for mobile operator China Unicom, which officially start selling the iPhone in the world's biggest cell phone market, more than two years after the gadget's US launch.

Unicom and Apple announced a multi-year deal in August to offer the touch-pad iPhone here in a bid to turn around weak performance against riveals China Mobile and China Telecom by attracting customers with high-end tastes.

Unicom says it hopes to sell five million hand-sets in three years, but experts and customers question how realistic that goal is when tech-savvy consumers have been snapping up cheaper fake and smuggled model for months.

Shaun Rein, head of the Shanghai-based China Market Research Group, said two million of China's nearly 720 million mobile phone users are already using authentic iPhones purchased here or abroad, and demand may already be met.

"When the iPhone came out in the United States in 2007, there was a huge demand here, and a lot or people were going to the United States, buying handsets, cracking the code and selling it here," Rein said.

"Almost everyone who wants an iPhone already has one."

On top of that estimate, countless more Chinese are using fake iPhones that are virtually indistinguishable from the real thing, some of which come pre-loaded with the popular QQ instant messaging system as an added bonus.

Hai Bin, a 32-year-old employee at an auction webiste, said he was doubtful the official handset would make much of a mark in China.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Alpha Protocol lets you play a spy.

Role-playing games (RPGs) offered gamers the opportunities to take part in adventures set within the realms of fantasy or science fiction. As a result, Sega and Obsidian Entertainment have joined forces to redifine RPGs with their upcoming title Alpha Protocol.

Alpha Protocol is a stylized RPG that deals with high-tech espionage. It is where you can play with Michael Throton, a skilled agents who gets betrayed bu his superiors and finds himself being hunted by the government. How he survives, where he goes and how his story turns out depends on your choices. Obsidian puts players in situations where thye encounter how the situation should be handled, and which path they want to take. The game allows you to customize and enhance your character the way you want when you gain experience points.

For most part, Alpha Protocol is a third-person adventure game that will remind gamers of Metal Gear as well as some of the recent James Bond games. Other than exchanging gunfire, players can sneak around or even setup booby traps on your enemies.

If you're the type of gamer who enjoys spy games and RPGs, this one is worth a look.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Globe Tatoo unveils new designs

USB skin - Black Dragon, Purple Brushstrokes and White Techie are Globe Broadbrand Tatoo's new designs. Each Tatoo kit also includes a link to download free McAfee anti-virus software installer for a 60-day free trial. Some selected Tatoo kits also contain limited-edition vouchers for free gifts from Adidas and Levi's.

Globe Broadbrand Tatoo is available both in prepaid and post paid plans. You can load credits to the kit like a regular prepaid SIM through Autoload Max, Share-a-Load or prepaid call cards.

Furthermore, Globe is also the first to offer exclusive content inside each Globe Broadbrand Tatoo Kit to enable users to get more value out of it. Each kits comes with free installers for your favorite online games from Online, ZX online and Audition Dance Battle.