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Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Project: Snowblind

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Battlefield: Bad Company 2 [Full]

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Apple's iPhone Event is Near: 5 Predictions


Apple will put an end to the rumors and introduce its next iPhone on October 4--it's already sent out invitations to an iPhone-specific event that will be held at Apple's Cupertino campus. New Apple CEO Tim Cook is expected to take the stage and make the big announcement.

This means we've got just one more week for some good, old-fashioned speculation. Here's what I think we'll see at Apple's upcoming iPhone event:

Prediction #1: The New iPhone Will Look
Different

Depending on which story you're reading, the next iPhone will either have a completely new design or be
exactly the same, aesthetically, as the iPhone 4.

In other words, Apple has managed to keep the tech press guessing. But considering that Apple has gone 16 months without announcing a new iPhone, I would be surprised if the iPhone 5's design offers nothing new.

Prediction #2: Hardware Will be New, but Predictable

The iPhone 4 had a new design, but it didn't surprise us with its specs--it received the same A4 chip as the iPad. Following the same lines, I think the next iPhone will have the same dual-core A5 chip that debuted in the iPad 2.

I think we can probably look forward to a new camera--not only do rumors suggest that the next iPhone will have an 8MP camera, but Apple has a history of improving the iPhone's camera with each generation. To go with the new chip and camera, the next iPhone will also probably have 1GB of RAM--but Apple probably won't say much about this. After all, Apple doesn't usually spend a lot of time discussing specs.

Prediction #3: Hardware Isn't Everything

Rumor has it that the next iPhone will have software improvements, including expanded voice commands. The new voice commands--part of a feature reportedly called Assistant--are based on Siri, the virtual assistant software maker that Apple acquired last year.

This system-wide voice navigation system could be a standout feature that's exclusive to the iPhone 5, and a big focus at next Tuesday's event. Apple did make voice commands exclusive to the iPhone 3GS in 2009, so requiring an iPhone 5 for expanded voice commands isn't without precedent.

Bonus prediction: The event invitation includes a photo of the iPhone's maps application icon, which has me wondering if Apple will finally add turn-by-turn directions.

Prediction #4: A Cheaper iPhone

The use of the singular in the invitation ("Let's talk iPhone") has led pundits such as John Gruber to speculate that Apple will only launch one new iPhone, despite rumors to the contrary.

While Apple may not launch an iPhone 4S, it will still drop the price on its old iPhones--AT&T and Verizon iPhone 4's--as it has in the past. Low-cost, older-generation iPhones have proven to be very successful, and are one of the reasons AT&T far outpaced Verizon in sales in the second quarter, despite Verizon having the iPhone 4. I doubt Apple will give up that market.

Prediction #5: Sprint Gets Love

Between the Wall Street Journal's unnamed sources, Bloomberg's unnamed sources, and Sprint's internal memos telling employees to keep quiet, a Sprint iPhone 5 seems like a good bet.

T-Mobile, on the other hand, probably won't be part of Apple's announcement. When asked if T-Mobile would be getting the next iPhone, T-Mobile CEO Cole Brodman recently said, "To my knowledge, not in October."


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Order of War

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Front Mission Evolved

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Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Mini Ninjas

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Wall St pops on Apple's results, Fed's reassurance

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Techinline Remote Desktop Support Software Review


Gone are the days where those that purchase remote desktop support software are only a little niche in the market today as more and more enterprises discover the necessity of having a remote desktop management team in their IT offices. Now as the name implies, these type of tools allows people miles away to actually control and fix issues locally. This not only decreases any discrepancy between the tech support and the user, but enables to provide quicker solutions as well. On that note, there are many tools out there that provide the same concept, so which one should you choose? Let us help you by highlighting one of these — presenting Techinline’s Remote Access Desktop Support Software.
Most remote desktop tools require the user install one or more software packages that will allow the shared connection between points. There’s the issue of security, connection speed and more among others. Techinline tries to alleviate these hassles by having a browser-based remote desktop support software. You may be thinking, “That’s too easy!”… that’s correct. With this, your company will save a lot in just purchasing and installing a single package instead of multiple ones. What about security then, that’s the main reason why other tools are “bloated.” Techinline reassures that despite having a simpler setup, security isn’t compromised with its SSL and 128-bit Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) — both of which are commonly used in financial transactions.

Now that we’ve laid down the basics, here’s what Techinline’s software has to offer. For starters, you wouldn’t want a generic-looking tool if you wanted to roll it out within your company. Thus, Techinline gives you lots of options in customizing the look of both the local and remote clients from the colors to the logos among others. If that’s not enough take remote copy and pasting — that’s right, your clipboard is also shared between clients. Not only your clipboard, but files themselves are transferable between users. Of course, remote desktop support is useless if both parties aren’t able to talk to each other, so Techinline included a messaging/chat client for easy communication between users. For evaluation and measurement, there are reports and logs available for administrator use that allows administrators to see how their services fare and some needed metrics measurements.


So there you have it. If you want a highly flexible and easy to use remote desktop support solution, then Techinline may actually have the one you’re looking for. Combine that with their round-the-clock global support, they will assure you that their users and your users will be satisfied either way. Now subscription licenses range from a monthly $30 to an annual charge of $300, but for the amount of money you’ll save due to less user problems, then this tool is worth the price. For more information, visit them at techinline.com.

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POOL BREAK PRO Android app

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In Defense of the New Facebook

Not a fan of the revamp? Give Timeline and the other new features a chance -- but keep Facebook clean on privacy controls, too.
By Eric Mack, PCWorld Sep 26, 2011 8:11 pm Shortly after Mark Zuckerberg unveiled a major overhaul to Facebook at the company's f8 conference last week, some informal surveys and Facebook chatter found many users are not fans of the changes. But are Timeline, media integration, and the introduction of Open Graph apps really that bad?

I personally can't wait for Timeline to roll out on my Facebook account. Mark Zuckerberg said at f8 that the redesign to the user profile section will compile past posts, pictures, and activities to help show "the story of your life." Zuckerberg may be overselling the concept a bit, and it remains to be seen how well the underlying algorithm picks and chooses compelling moments from my past activity, but Timeline is a long-overdue upgrade that will finally make profile pages actually provide a user profile.

Right now, profiles are anchored by a user's wall -- a disorganized stream of consciousness from me, people I know, and people I don't really know. Click the "Info" tab to get a more traditional user profile, based on static information gathered at some point in the past from a single questionnaire. A huge social network like Facebook can do better than that and now it is. Timeline could finally deliver a constantly-updating, algorithm-based profile. Hasn't every Tumblr blogger wished sometimes to automatically update their feed without taking all that time to actually synthesize their thoughts and write?

More Media, More Sharing
I suspect that Facebook's efforts at integrating media services like Spotify and Netflix into the network won't go down exactly as intended. I don't expect to spend much time simultaneously watching or listening to something with my Facebook friends. Perhaps that will happen in the youngest demographics, but I'm more excited about the prospect of Facebook as the ultimate discovery engine for music and other media. This is why social is supposed to be so exciting, right? The capability to tap in to your network to recommend new tunes and TV shows is something all media services try to integrate. Few have succeeded because they lack the critical mass of users that Facebook has.

The promise of other Open Graph apps only expands this universe of opportunities to collaborate, discover, and share. Need a jogging partner on short notice, or a recipe recommendation from a friend whose tastes you trust? Soon it could all be within reach in one place.

Creepy Factor?
But isn't all this a little bit scary? What about privacy? Do I really want the world to know how many times I listened to Pit Bull and Nicki Minaj last week?

Yes, Facebook continues to cultivate an ever-increasing creepy factor. I don't like Mark Zuckerberg's apparent disdain for the very concept of privacy. This is why the backlash seen in the past week is good. It helps keep Facebook and Zuckerberg in check by raising important concerns, boosting the public's awareness of possible issues, and pressuring Facebook to include all sorts of opt-out and privacy controls.

As PCWorld's Jared Newman points out, this is just the latest in a string of backlashes against changes to Facebook that shove us into sharing more of ourselves on the social network. There was a freak-out when the feed of friends' status updates and activities first debuted, and now it's the heart of the network. Facebook is going to keep pushing us to be more public, and we should keep pushing back, but so far the benefits have outweighed the costs for most users. These new changes are a particularly strong shove, but I don't think we've neared the point of being pushed off a cliff just yet.


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Analysis: Even in emerging markets, Nokia's star is fading

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Monday, May 14, 2012

Two More Ways To Hack Facebook’s Timeline Cover

Now we have five different tools that create Facebook timeline cover images, all of them appearing to be reformatted banners, screensavers or Twitter backgrounds.
Even if they are all recylcled, it’s still pretty cool considering only one week has elapsed since Facebook made the new timeline profile available to those who have the Developer application installed on their profiles.

We’ve previously covered three such tools: Coverize.me, Facebook Timeline Cover Creator and Facebook Covers. Today we discovered two more of them.

Fresh Facebook Covers has different 211 images, grouped into the following categories: popular, for girls, for boys, celebrities, TV shows, music, quotes, cute and random.
Like the other tools in this space, all of these covers have Fresh Facebook Covers’ web address stamped in the lower right-hand corner — do you want that in your profile?

On Fresh Facebook Covers, the button “download this cover” appearing beneath all of the images makes it look like you’ll automatically capture the image, but clicking on it simply opens up a larger version of the graphic a new tab. You have to save it yourself and then upload it on your own to your timeline.

Meanwhile, FacebookCovers.org contains 50 cover images and lists 16 categories, some of which don’t yet have anything in them.

These groups are labeled: abstract, animals, awareness, awesome, cute, funny, hearts, life, love, movies, music, people, quotes, sports, TV shows and video games.

To the right of each image on FacebookCovers.org there’s a button labeled “add to profile.”

Clicking on the link fires up a permission window asking your permission for access to your profile, but all that does is upload the chosen graphic to your photo albums. You still have to click on “change cover.”

Also, like the others we’ve covered (pun intended if you want), all of the images available on FacebookCovers.org bear the site’s brand name in the lower-right-hand corner.

It’s easy to erase that branding in any graphics editor, although it would be impolite of us to recommend that practice.

So, dear readers, have you tried out any of the applications for tricking out your cover image in Facebook’s timeline?


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CALL BLOCKER Android app

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ONE TOUCH OPTIMIZE 1.4 Android app

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NTLDR is Missing Solution to Fix it

How to fix NTLDR is Missing press any key to restart

This problem some time occurs when Ntldr file is deleted or corrupt some how.NTLDR is the boot loader for all releases of Microsoft’s Windows NT operating system up to and including Windows XP and Windows Server 2003. NTLDR is typically run from the primary hard disk drive, but it can also run from portable storage devices such as a CD-ROM, USB flash drive, or floppy disk. NTLDR can also load a non NT-based operating system given the appropriate boot sector in a file.

Here is a solution if you have NTLDR is Missing problem in your windows XP

Steps

Insert Windows XP installation CD then boot from CD-ROMAt the option screen choose Repair option by pressing R keyChoose the location of the installation of Windows you want to repair by pressing the corresponding number ( mainly 1)Enter the administrator password when prompted ,if you dont have used password press enterThen Enter the following commandhere ‘D’ is the drive name of cd-rom it can be differnet on your system so choose according to itCOPY D:\I386\NTLDR C:\COPY D:\I386\NTDETECT.COM C:\Eject the Windows XP installation CD then type: exit TO restart your windowsDone
Line 7 and 8 are using simple copy command to copy your NTLDR and NTDETECT.COM file to your c: drive.

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ICE CREAM SANDWICH (THEME) Android Home Screen

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Turning Melo 1.0.5 Apk

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Sunday, May 13, 2012

MOBO VIDEO PLAYER PRO Android app

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JVC GC-PX10 hybrid camera

Latest Gadjet jvc-gc-px10
There never was a doubt as to when the digital still camera was going to cross paths with that of the camcorder family, and JVC might have pulled off a masterstroke with their latest model – the JVC GC-PX10. This is a video/still hybrid camera that is touted to deliver professional level performance as well as features, letting you choose between capturing the fleeting moment in 12-megapixel stills, or if you so desire the wonders of Full HD video, then 36Mbps progressive Full HD video and super-slow motion are also options for you.

Apart from that, JVC ensures no matter how much of a beginner you are in photography, you will still be able to capture the perfect moment with 60 shots per second still image shooting, 300 frames-per-second video recording for high-quality super-slow motion as well as the ability to pick out pristine still images from video if the situation calls for something like that – especially when you realized that your photographer has missed out a crucial moment on your Big Day.

Just what makes the JVC GC-PX10 tick? Well, JVC is proud to say that their all new FALCONBRID high speed imaging engine keeps it going, where it was originally spotted over at JVC’s Full HD 3D camcorder, the GS-TD1. For the uninitiated like many of us, FALCONBRID is a single-chip technology that comes with its own processing muscle in order to let the GC-PX10 to record Full HD progressive video at 36Mbps, while capturing 8.3-megapixel during the recording of Full HD video to deliver both high-quality stills from recorded video simultaneously.

There is even an ISO 6400 mode that allows you to capture those precious moments under extremely low light conditions, while rapid-fire still shooting of 8.3-megapixel stills is a possibility as well – just make sure you have the relevant flash memory to be able to support such massive data transfers within a short period of time. Other hardware specifications include optical image stabilization with JVC’s Advanced Image Stabilizer, 10X optical zoom (19x Dynamic Zoom with no image degradation when zoomed), KONICA MINOLTA HD LENS, a mode dial for both automatic and manual settings (white balance, aperture and shutter), microphone output

and headphone input.

The 32GB of internal memory can be further augmented thanks to the inclusion of an SDXC/SDHC memory card slot. The JVC GC-PX10 is not going to come cheap though at $899.95 a pop when it hits the market later this month.


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X-PLORE FILE MANAGER V2.47 [Android app]

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How to Download Torrent Files on Android Devices

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25 Most-Followed Users on Instagram [PICS]

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GO SMS PRO [android app]

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Amazon's streak of Fire ignites shares

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Saturday, May 12, 2012

Brydge Turns Your iPad Into a Laptop [VIDEO]

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Still in the frame, the camera defies smartphone onslaught

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Momac to develop mobile website for O2 loyalty program

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In future, movies may come to theaters by satellite

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V 2.0 of Adfonic SDK for iOS and Android released

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51 Digital Media Resources You May Have Missed

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Deadline looms for Falcone on LightSquared control

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Friday, May 11, 2012

Interest in Pinterest Reaches a Fever Pitch [INFOGRAPHIC]

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Huge boom in UK m-commerce says Worldpay

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Guest Post: Thorsten Heins takes RIM by the Reigns as new CEO

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iPhone app downloads plummet in March, while mobile marketing costs hold steady, reports Fiksu

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Mobile advertising sees tremendous growth says BuzzCity

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O2 Wallet launches

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Researchers Create Glare-Free Self-Cleaning Glass [VIDEO]

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Thursday, May 10, 2012

Pokémon Art Tumblr Reimagines 151 Original Characters [PICS]

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Samsung coyness puts smartphone crown in dispute

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The ultimate babysitter? iPads for infants stir debate

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Leaked Verizon document details Android updates

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Facebook’s filing of $5 billion IPO

Facebook’s filing of $5 billion IPO last Wednesday generated a lot of buzz from investors and public alike. It is estimated that the IPO will value the company north of $75 billion. And as a result of this, hundred of employees from facebook will turn into instant millionaires and even some into billionaires like the company’s founder Mark Zuckerburg.
First of all, what is an IPO? An IPO or Initial Public Offering is a corporation’s first offer to sell stock to the public. An IPO raises cash, and usually a lot of it.

Facebook’s going public got investors excited because it is the largest on record for an Internet company. In fact it is five times the IPO of search engine operator Google. So for those employees who received stock options, it would mean that their personal wealth would turn into millions dollars.

Mark Zuckerburg, 27, would also join the ranks of the richest with a projected fortune of more than $20 billion. Early investor like Accel Partners who invested $12.2 million in 2005 is a big winner with as much as a thousand fold return on some of its investments. Peter Thiel’s investment of $500,000 in 2004 will be more or less worth $2 billion. Elevation Partner which is owned by Bono of U2 is also up for a big payday for investing $120 million in Facebook in 2010.

According to Alex Gould of Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, “Facebook will return insane amounts of money to the early stakeholders”.

Perhaps one of the most celebrated anticipated big winners of Facebook’s IPO is David Choe, the graffiti artist who painted the walls of the company’s first offices in Palo Alto in 2005. Instead of taking cash as payment, he opted on stocks which are now expected to be worth more than $200 million.pa

I wonder how the new Facebook millionaires will be spending their money. Cars, houses, jewelry? I just know Google’s advice: ‘Don’t be evil’.

Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/


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3D Printing Gives Amputees Custom-Designed Legs [VIDEO]

A San Francisco company called Bespoke Innovations is using 3D printing and modeling technology to give prosthetic limbs new life as custom-designed, wearable pieces of art.

[More from Mashable: Stunning 3D-Printed Guitars Will Blow You Away [PICS]]

Here's how it works: First, the company 3D scans both customers' natural and prosthetic legs. A 3D computer model is created, maintaining as body symmetry as possible between the two limbs. Then, the client begins directing the customization process of his or her new fairing. (A fairing is the prosthetic covering for an artificial limb.) Customers can choose from a range of patterns, templates and materials, and Bespoke is preparing to introduce an online tool for more experimentation. Finally, the specially-designed end result is produced using 3D printing technology.

SEE ALSO: You’ll Download Physical Objects Sooner Than You Think, Thanks to Kids Like These

[More from Mashable: Shapeways CEO Will Discuss the Future of 3D Printing at Mashable Connect]

It all adds up, Bespoke says, to prosthetic limbs that actually reflect their users' personalities and tastes. The custom fairings cost between $4,000 and $5,000, according to the company's website.

“We are working on this guy from Israel right now,” co-founder Scott Summit tells Bloomberg Businessweek. “We are designing a Porsche 911 aesthetic for him. It’s a really classic design with clean lines and timeless detailing. We just did three other legs for three guys in Germany, all to reflect their very distinct personalities.”

Do you think this is a cool use of 3D printing technology? Where else do you want to see 3D printing tech applied for innovation? Let us know in the comments.

Thumbnail image courtesy Bespoke Innovations

This story originally published on Mashable here.

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Wednesday, May 9, 2012

AT&T barges into home security and automation

NEW YORK (AP) — AT&T Inc. will start selling home automation and security services nationwide, taking on incumbents led by Tyco International Ltd.'s ADT.

The installations and services will be sold in AT&T stores, starting with a trial this summer in Dallas and Atlanta.

Several of AT&T's competitors, including cable TV company Comcast Corp. and phone company Verizon Communications Inc., have ventured into the home automation and security field. Dallas-based AT&T is showing more ambition with its stated goal of selling nationwide, rather than sticking to its landline service territory, as Verizon does.

Steven Winoker, an analyst at Sanford Bernstein, said about 23 percent of U.S. homes have security systems, so there's plenty of room to grow. Even fewer have automation systems for controlling appliances, lights, heating and cooling.

The biggest player in the field is ADT, but it has only 25 percent of the market. Many smaller companies make up the rest, according to Winoker.

It's a very profitable business, Winoker said, but it's not big enough to significantly affect the earnings of a company of AT&T's size even if it's successful, given that it's a relatively small market.

AT&T's technology comes from Xanboo, a company it bought in late 2010. Its central control panel can connect wirelessly with cameras, thermostats, appliance controls, lights and sensors for doors, windows, smoke and carbon monoxide. Through the panel, home owners can then control their home from their cellphones.

It's highly recommended that the control panel is connected to wired broadband, but it doesn't have to be service through AT&T, said Glenn Lurie, AT&T's president of emerging devices. As a backup, the panel can connect to AT&T's wireless data network.

AT&T didn't say what its services would cost.

AT&T made its announcement on the eve of the U.S. cellphone industry's annual trade show, which starts Tuesday in New Orleans.

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Wrapp up free gift cards for Facebook friends

APPOLICIOUS ADVISOR RATING:

4 of 5 bars PRICE: FreeTASTY: See all of your Facebook friends’ upcoming events, such as birthdays.BUMMER: Your friends will have to authorize Wrapp to use their Facebook accounts to gain access to your gift.COOL: Give free $5 gifts to popular retailers or purchase higher amounts.
Wrapp is a great app that’s likely to be passed over by many users simply for its connection to Facebook. The app for iPhone and iPod Touch integrates with your Facebook account, allowing you to celebrate your friends by sending them gift cards—for free.  Yes, that’s right. Free money.
In the app you’ll be able to see your friends’ upcoming birthdays—including ages, where available—as well as a directory of all of your Facebook friends. Want to do something nice for them? Simply tap their name and then select an item, such as a $5 gift card to Gap, H&M or Sephora, all of which are free for you to choose. If you want, you can pay to increase the value of the gift, too.
Gifts can be sent by text, email or posted to your friend’s Facebook wall. Although the latter makes sense given the Facebook integration, I’d likely opt for the other two methods, lest your gift be lost in spam.
Wrapp’s biggest downside is that it requires your friend to allow the app access to their Facebook account in order to see and redeem your gift. Considering I’d never heard of the service before today—and the wealth of Facebook scams in existence—it’s likely that many of your gifts could go unclaimed. Telling your friends about the service might ruin the surprise, but it’s probably the only way to ensure your gift doesn’t go unnoticed.
Wrapp supports gifts in the United States, UK, Norway and Sweden.
Find great games for iOS here
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Payday loan firm Wonga to lend to small businesses

LONDON (Reuters) - British online payday loans provider Wonga.com launched a credit service for small businesses on Monday, aiming to fill a gap in the market left by banks who have been hamstrung by tight lending conditions imposed since the credit crunch.
Wonga, which has made 4 million short-term loans to consumers since its launch in 2007, will offer small businesses loans of 3,000 to 10,000 pounds ($4,800 to $16,200) for periods of between one and 52 weeks.
Interest rates will be fixed at between 0.3 and 2 percent per week, depending on how risky the loan is judged to be.
Wonga uses automated risk-processing technology to give near-instant answers to online applicants, and turns down about two-thirds of applications.
It now aims to export its more popular features, including the simple application screen featuring sliders that can be dragged to the desired amount to be borrowed and repayment period, to the business world.
"We wanted it to have all the characteristics that people positively associate with Wonga in terms of transparency, simplicity, ease of use, speed ... and we wanted to bring that to small business," said Chief Executive Errol Damelin.
Wonga's business has boomed during the downturn as cash-strapped consumers who found it hard to obtain short-term credit elsewhere turned to it for loans of up to 1,000 pounds to tide them over for up to a month.
The company has been criticized for charging too much interest - it charges simple interest to consumers of just under 1 percent per day - and for targeting the vulnerable.
But Wonga says its transparency, strict acceptance criteria and low default rates, which are in the mid-single digits, show it is a responsible lender.
Because it does not take deposits, Wonga operates under a consumer-credit license, not a banking license, meaning it is not subject to the capital requirements that are currently preventing banks from lending more.
"What became crystal clear to us a year or so ago was that small businesses had maybe even more need than individuals for solving short-term cash-flow problems," Damelin, who is also one of the company's two founders, told Reuters in an interview.
"For owner-operated businesses, capital is their oxygen. That's what they live and breathe and that's what's gives them the opportunity to stay in business and grow their businesses and employ people and help the economy recover."
Unlike the consumer-loan application process, which instantly displays the total cost of borrowing, Wonga for Business will have no instant decisions or predetermined interest rates because of the larger sums at stake and variety of risk factors.
Applicants must provide information about their company and its directors, who personally guarantee the loan. Wonga says the application process can be completed in 12 minutes, and money can be transferred to the business in as little as half an hour.
Wonga is the market leader for short-term, unsecured loans that can only be obtained online. It currently operates in Britain but is considering entering other markets such as Canada and South Africa in time.
Wonga's backers include Accel Partners, Balderton Capital, Greylock Partners, Oak Investment Partners and the Wellcome Trust. The company raised 73 million pounds in fresh capital a year ago.
($1 = 0.6189 British pounds)
(Reporting by Georgina Prodhan; Editing by Hans-Juergen Peters)
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More US government websites hacked by Anonymous

LONDON (AP) — The hacking group known as Anonymous has claimed a new series of hacks against the U.S. Federal Trade Commission and consumer rights websites.
The loosely organized collection of cyber rebels said it attacked the FTC's consumer protection business center and the National Consumer Protection Week websites.
Both sites were replaced with a violent German-language video satirizing the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, or ACTA.
ACTA was recently signed by several countries, but restrictions on online piracy have prompted a growing protest movement.
A call to the Trade Commission rang unanswered before business hours Friday. An email seeking comment was not immediately returned.
The organization's main home page appeared unaffected by the attacks.
Source: http://www.ap.org/

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Nikon Announces D800 Full-Frame DSLR Packs 36 Megapixels Camera.

With a 36-megapixel full-frame sensor, the $3000 Nikon D800 is built for huge prints, aggressive cropping, fashion shoots, and fat wallets.




Nikon today announced its second new full-frame DSLR of the year, the Nikon D800, which offers the same-size sensor as the Nikon D4 announced at CES 2012. The Nikon D800 will sit below the D4 at the high end of Nikon's DSLR line, offering more than twice the pixel density of the top-of-the-line D4. Nikon says that the D800 will eventually replace the Nikon D700 in the company's prosumer DSLR lineup, and that the new camera offers the highest-resolution Nikon sensor yet.
The D800's FX-format full-frame sensor captures 7360-by-4912-resolution images (36.15 megapixels), and its size, in-camera features, and target buyer all differ slightly from those of the 16-megapixel Nikon D4. Whereas the D4 is geared more toward high-speed shooting and low-light performance, the Nikon D800 puts image resolution front and center with its 36.3-megpixel sensor. Nikon says the D800 is built with wedding photography, portraits, and fashion spreads in mind. The combination of pixel density and sensor size should make the D800's output about as crop- and billboard-friendly as it gets outside a medium-format camera.
The D800's image resolution translates into a slower burst-shooting speed at full resolution when compared to the D4 (the D800 snaps 4 frames per second versus the D4's continuous shooting speed of 10 fps) and an ISO range that isn't quite as expandable as the one found in the D4 (the D800 caps out at ISO 25,600, while the D4 is expandable to a whopping ISO 204,800). Both new DSLRs offer a hot shoe for external flashes; but unlike the D4, the Nikon D800 also has a built-in pop-up flash, which can serve as a commander flash to control external Speedlight flashes. The D800 is also significantly smaller than the D4, at 5.7 inches wide, 4.8 inches tall, and 3.2 inches deep, as compared to the D4's 6.3-by-6.2-by-3.6-inch frame.
In addition to the similar sensor sizes, the D800 and the D4 share a few notable similarities, as well: Both are built around Nikon's latest Expeed 3 image processor; both offer 91,000-dot color-matrix metering; both employ a 51-point autofocus system; and both feature a "Dual Live View" mode that retains manual exposure settings while toggling between still- and video-capture modes.
The Nikon D800 looks as though it will be a popular DSLR for videographers ,thanks to manual exposure controls in video mode; 1080p recording at 30, 25, and 24 fps (as well as 720p video at 60 fps); and the ability to feed uncompressed video to a monitor or recording device via HDMI as it's being captured. A 3.5mm stereo mic jack supports recording audio with an external microphone, and the D800 offers the same in-camera audio monitoring and headphone jack as the D4.
In addition to the expected RAW mode, manual exposure controls, aperture-priority, and shutter-priority modes for a camera of its class, the D800 will have an automated HDR (high dynamic range) mode, automatic scene-recognition features, and an Active D-Lighting feature to bring out highlights in shadowy areas.
To speed up transfers of bulky 36-megapixel image files and 1080p videos, the D800 has a high-speed USB 3.0 connector (which will also work with USB 2.0 cables at a slower transfer rate). Storage is handled by two separate card slots--one for SDHC/SDXC cards, and one for CompactFlash cards--and shooters can define target cards for photos and videos separately, set one of the cards as a backup drive, and automatically jump between storage cards without interrupting video recording if one of them fills up.
The Nikon D800 is due in March at $3000 for the body only--about half the price of the higher-end Nikon D4. A second version of the D800, called the Nikon D800E, will also arrive in April. The D800E will eliminate the D800's integrated low-pass filter; Nikon says the filter-less D800E will provide a further boost to detail and image resolution at the expense of a visible moire effect in some images. The Nikon D800E will be priced at $3300 for the body only.
Source : http://www.pcworld.com

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Wednesday, April 25, 2012

CinemaCon: Warner Bros. Unveils New Dark Knight, Hobbit and Great Gatsby Footage


CinemaCon: Warner Bros. Unveils New Dark KnightHobbitand Great Gatsby Footage


There was a lot of anticipation for today's Warner Bros. presentation, because every year, they really seem to bring their A-game, and coming off the enormous hit of last year's Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2, they got to do their presentation earlier in the week as part of the Opening Day Ceremony. Much of the excitement came from the knowledge that director Christopher Nolan would be bringing something for The Dark Knight Rises to the presentation, since he's always had a lot of respect for exhibitors and theater owners. Also, the buzz broke out earlier in the week that Peter Jackson would show ten minutes of his upcoming The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey in 3D at a higher frame rate of 48 frames per second, nearly double what's considered the standard.

But first, everyone had to wait over an hour to listen to speeches from MPAA Chairman and CEO, Senator Chris Dodd, and John Fithian, President and CEO of NATO, who had a lot of interesting things to say about the state of the film industry. Probably the most significant revelation was that 20th Century Fox would stop all non-digital film stock distribution in roughly two years and only be releasing their films digitally. 

Once the Warner Bros. presentation began in earnest, Tim Burton started off by showing an extended trailer for his Dark Shadows after bringing Johnny Depp out, who barely said much of anything.

We'll jump right ahead to the movie everyone was looking forward to, The Dark Knight Rises, although Nolan chose instead of showing the trailer or any sort of long clips with dialogue, to just show a series of hand-picked images that he had cut together with music, with some footage we'd seen before either in previous trailers or stills but also some new bits. It was still quite powerful, even if there wasn't enough dialogue to really have any sort of context.


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A Cheap Terahertz Camera

A Cheap Terahertz Camera

17 April 2012—In the entire electromagnetic spectrum, one of the most conspicuously inaccessible chunks sits smack dab between radio waves and infrared light. Researchers have been trying for decades to come up with better ways to exploit the little-used terahertz band, which could provide ways to find hidden objects and determine an object’s chemical makeup at a distance.
Now a team from IEMN and STMicroelectronics, in France, and the University of Wuppertal, in Germany, has come up with a practical first: a video-rate CMOS camera that’s sensitive to terahertz frequencies.
“I think it’s the hottest thing in terahertz technology at the moment,” says Peter Siegel, who works on terahertz imaging at Caltech and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and is not affiliated with the team. “They’ve done a remarkable job of solving a bunch of very pesky problems in working with silicon at high frequencies.”
Up until now, terahertz detectors have tended to be pricey affairs, composed of devices like Schottky diodes or microbolometers. A Schottky diode–based detector  usually contains just one or a few pixels, which are raster-scanned across a scene to slowly form an image. Microbolometers can be arranged in arrays, but they must be cooled to boost their sensitivity.
With just 1024 pixels, this new transistor-based camera is unlikely to give a high-resolution window into the unseen terahertz realm. But the advance has researchers excited, because it suggests terahertz technologies may soon get a lot cheaper and more accessible. The single-pixel terahertz detectors in use now can easily cost as much as US $10 000, Siegel says, so developing a detector that could be mass-produced by chip manufacturers represents a significant advance. “I think you’re going to find a lot of applications opening up that didn’t exist before,” Siegel says.
Building terahertz detectors out of silicon is difficult, because even the best transistors don’t operate well at frequencies in excess of a few hundred gigahertz, the lower edge of the terahertz band. This limitation stems mainly from how fast electrons can shoot from one side of the transistor to the other, resulting in an intrinsic cutoff frequency above which a transistor can’t amplify signals sent into it. “Traditionally, people would say that beyond the cutoff frequency, the transistor wouldn’t work anymore,” says Hani Sherry, a doctoral candidate working at STMicroelectronics. But in 1996, device physicists Michel Dyakonov (now at the University of Montpellier, in France) and Michael Shur (of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, in Troy, N.Y.) argued in a paper that appeared in IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices that the cutoff frequency can be surpassed. Although they will not be able to amplify signals, some types of field-effect transistors can still respond to frequencies above the cutoff frequency due to electromagnetic oscillations within the transistor’s channel. (The channel is the main body of a transistor through which current flows when the transistor is on. It runs between two electrodes—the source and the drain—and is adjacent to a third, the transistor’s gate.)




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CISPA: Progress, But Flaws Remain


CISPA: Progress, But Flaws Remain

In response to concerns that CDT and others raised, the House Intelligence Committee has agreed to support several important privacy improvements to the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA). Other issues we raised—the flow of Internet data directly to the National Security Agency (NSA) and the use of information for purposes unrelated to cybersecurity—are not addressed by the amendments the Committee is supporting.   We support amendments to address these unresolved concerns.  

Improvements Supported by the Committee

1. On the question of intellectual property and whether CISPA is some kind of backdoor SOPA, the Committee made changes in its April 16, 2012 discussion draft that we think should put that issue to rest.

2. On the definition of the information that ISPs and others can share with the federal government ("cyber threat information"), the Committee has agreed to support a proposed amendment making improvements.  In particular, the proposed amendment deletes language that encompassed "information pertaining to the protection of a system or network."  The new definition is limited to "information directly pertaining to" a vulnerability, a threat, an effort to degrade, disrupt or destroy a system or network, or an effort to gain unauthorized access to a system or network.  This is an important change.  We believe it would preclude interpretation of the bill to permit the sharing of entire communications streams with the government.

3. Another concern we raised with respect to the definition of the information that could be shared was whether the reference to "efforts to gain unauthorized access" in the bill's definition of "cyber threat information" could include conduct such as using a social networking site in violations of its terms of service.  The Committee has agreed to support an amendment to make it clear that cybersecurity threats do not include actions solely involving violations of consumer terms of service or licensing agreements.

4. Another improvement the Committee previously made may bring some valuable oversight to the implementation of the bill - the bill includes a provision requiring the Inspector General for the Intelligence Community to conduct an annual review of, and file an unclassified report on, the use of cyber threat information for non-cybersecurity purposes, on other actions taken on the basis of shared information, and on the privacy and civil liberties impact of the information sharing authorized under the bill.


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iPhone sales help Apple double profit


iPhone sales help Apple double profit

Apple’s quarterly profit almost doubled, blowing past Wall Street estimates after a jump in iPhone sales soothed fears that the device was past its best days for sharp growth.
Shares in the world's most valuable technology company shot 7 per cent higher after the bell, recouping some losses from the past two weeks that had stemmed from concerns that iPhone sales growth rates could not be maintained.
While iPad sales were a little lighter than expected, fiscal second-quarter revenue jumped to $39.2 billion, 59 per cent more than a year earlier and 6.5 per cent higher than analysts' average forecasts.
Lower-than-expected commodity costs also helped lift margins way above estimates.
"That shows they are able to maintain their pricing without compromising on growth," said Morningstar analyst Michael Holt.
Mr Holt added that this had come even though lower priced competition from Google's Android phones - made by the likes of Motorola Mobility and Samsung Electronics were becoming more compelling.
"The concern was that Apple might sell more older models to be more competitive. That would have shown up in the gross margin. But aggregate gross margin and average revenue per device show that this hasn't happened," he said.
Apple sold 35.1 million iPhones - which account for about half its revenue - in the quarter, outpacing the 30 million or so expected by Wall Street analysts, with pent-up demand for the 4S bolstering revenue for China, Taiwan and Hong Kong five-fold to $7.9 billion.
"International iPhone sales were on fire," Apple Chief Financial Officer Peter Oppenheimer told Reuters in an interview.

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iPhone sales defy sceptics


iPhone sales defy sceptics


Apple has trumped sceptics once again by reporting massive iPhone sales.

The world’s most valuable company said it sold 35 million iPhones in the January-to-March quarter, almost twice as many as it sold a year ago and above analyst expectations.

Apple’s stock was down 2% at the close of regular US trading, as investors believed phone companies had reined in iPhone sales. In extended trading, the stock rallied $40.02, or 7.1%, to $600.30.

“They’re delivering the goods much stronger than even the biggest bulls would have thought,” said Brian White, an analyst with Topeka Capital Markets. “It’s Apple fever at its finest.”

Net income in the company’s fiscal second quarter was $11.6bn, or $12.30 per share. That was nearly double the net income of $6bn, or $6.40 per share, a year ago.

Analysts polled by FactSet were expecting earnings of 10.07 dollars per share for the latest quarter, Apple’s fiscal second.

Revenue was $39.2bn, up 59% from a year ago. Analysts were expecting $37bn.

IPad sales came in below analyst expectations, at 11.8 million units. But that was still two and a half times as many as it sold in the same quarter a year ago. Apple launched a new iPad model in the quarter, and supplies are still tight. Mr White believes short supplies of the new high-resolution screen are to blame.

Mac sales were also slightly below expectations, at four million, up 7% from last year. Meanwhile, the overall PC market grew about 2%.

Windows PC makers are now hoping Windows 8 will give them a better chance at competing with Apple, both in PCs and tablets. Intel CEO Paul Otellini said last week he believed PCs and tablets would merge into one light device with a keyboard and a touch-sensitive screen.

But Apple chief executive Tim Cook dismissed that idea on a conference call with analysts yesterday. Tablets and PCs worked best as separate devices, playing to their own strengths, he said.

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Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Barnes & Noble Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight Review

Barnes & Noble Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight Review

The third-generation Nook looks nearly identical to the graphite Nook Simple Touch, except for a light gray sliver rim around the edge. While the dimensions of the two are the same (6.5 x 5.0 x 0.47 inches), the third generation Simple Touch weighs 6.95 ounces, compared to 7.48 ounces on the previous version. While it may not seem like much, the half-ounce difference makes for more comfortable longer reading sessions, as does the soft-coated, rubbery contours of the backside.
The E Ink display, which is slightly inset, features an infrared-controlled touch screen that is generally responsive. The Nook Simple Touch comes with a built-in anti-glare screen protector. We expected it to feel gritty, but we couldn't discern any difference when compared to the E Ink screen on the Kindle Touch.
The Power button still sits on the back at the top, and a stylized N-shaped Menu button sits beneath the front display. Along the right side of the back is a microSD port cover that didn't sit as flush as we'd have liked. Flanking the screen are two rubbery page-turn buttons on each side that were easy to press. Helpfully, in the Settings menu, you can decide if the top or bottom buttons will turn the page forward or back. Whichever button acts as Page Forward will also, when held down, activate Fast Page, miming the act of flipping through the pages of a physical book.


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Poker on your iPhone


Poker on your iPhone

If, just for a chance, you decide not to follow every single game of the World Cup, I think I have just found the perfect place for you…..on your Iphone!

Last night, I spent hours on a new poker application on the Iphone and it is great!

I was always a bit cautious about playing poker in casinos or even with friends because I never really knew if I was good at it. I always wondered where all these people were training to become so good. Well, now I found the perfect tool for that my Iphone…

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Big List of Game Release Dates


Big List of Game Release Dates


We've been busy gathering info on upcoming release dates spanning all the way to 2013 on a selective group of huge games.
This is a living document, so keep this list bookmarked as we update it with more details and more specific time frames.
2012 
April 2012
04/17 – Disgaea 3: Absence of Detention (Vita)
04/17 – The Walking Dead (360, PS3, PC, Mac, iOS)
04/17 – The Witcher 2 (360, PC)
04/24 – Prototype 2 (360, PS3)
04/27 – Risen 2 (PC)
May 2012
05/01 – Mortal Kombat (Vita)
05/01 – Sniper Elite V2 (360, PS3, PC)
05/01 – Tera (PC)
05/02 – Fable Heroes (360)
05/08 – Starhawk (PS3)
05/09 – Minecraft (Xbox 360 Edition) (360)
05/15 – Diablo III (PC)
05/15 – Game of Thrones (360, PS3, PC)
05/15 – Max Payne 3 (360, PS3, PC)


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FrontlineSMS Zombie Apocalypse Simulation at Challenge Accepted 2012


FrontlineSMS Zombie Apocalypse Simulation at Challenge Accepted 2012

Zombies have started to make their way into the DC Metropolitan Area! Yesterday the TechChange team delivered another FrontlineSMS simulation, this time set against the backdrop of a Zombie Apocalypse. The training was part of Challenge Accepted 2012 a weekend conference for undergraduates hosted by Americans for Informed Democracy.
Participants were divided up into teams of the Zombie Control Task Force  (ZCTF) and tasked with responding to the sudden appearance and spread of zombies in the city. They then had to set up the FrontlineSMS platform and determine a strategy for communication between  field workers and HQ, and civilians in need of treatment (all while avoiding a roaming Zombie).
Participants were asked to consider workflow questions such as:
How will you alert civilians when new information becomes available?
Should all civilians receive the same information? How will they be grouped?
What types of information will you need to gather from you field workers? What strategy will you use to ensure adequate communication between HQ and the field?
How will you verify the integrity of information from the field?


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TechChange to Host Digital Organizing Twitter Chat on Friday April 27th


TechChange to Host Digital Organizing Twitter Chat on Friday April 27th


Description:The campaign to #StopKony is approaching a critical transition. On April 20th Invisible Children will launch its Cover the Night campaign on the heels of one of the most successful viral videos of all time.
Moving forward from online ‘awareness-raising’, in which over 85 million people viewed their video Kony 2012, Invisible Children is now asking their supporters for something more – offline action. Regardless of your position on the efficacy and appropriateness of the campaign, the upcoming Cover the Night will be an important event in the short history of digital activism. How will Invisible Children translate a resounding marketing success into tangible action? What does this mean for the greater advocacy community?

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Max Payne 3 Preview: Max Is Back


Max Payne 3 Preview: Max Is Back

Game On correspondent Alex Rubens spent some time wandering the halls of PAX East this year playing everything he could get his hands on. At some point he managed to corner Rockstar employees long enough to play Max Payne 3, which we expect will be released on PC and home consoles in May 2012. Max Payne 3 is being developed by multiple Rockstar studios instead of former Max Payne developer Remedy Entertainment, leading some to wonder whether this is the same Max Payne we know and love. After spending some hands-on time with the game, Alex filed this report.

Max Payne is back and he’s just as much of a badass as we remember. Diving through windows in slow motion, firing rounds into enemies as they slowly struggle to react to what is happening, Max is right at home. Rockstar Studios kept the emphasis on Max and his beautifully executed combat while adapting it to modern game design standards and it works just as expected; perfectly.

Max is older, he’s a drunk, and he can’t stop popping pills; he’s in pretty rough shape. Despite all this, the character animation does a great job of conveying just how broken Max is through subtle tells during combat and cutscenes. His age factors pretty heavily into the gunplay: he’ll collide with walls and it will take him a split-second to recover, and is aim isn’t as tight as it was when he was younger. These touches really sell just how far Max has fallen.




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Skype for Windows Phone Omits Key Features


Skype for Windows Phone Omits Key Features




A year after it bought Skype, Microsoft released a version of the popular Internet calling service for Windows Phone devices that is half baked. Skype for Windows Phone shed its beta label this weekend, but even for enthusiastic users, the app could be a deal-breaker for its lack of background calling ability and its incompatibility with lower-end handsets.


At first glance, Skype for Windows Phone works just like the iOS and Android clients. You can make calls over 4G, 3G, and Wi-Fi; make low-cost calls to landlines and mobiles using Skype credits; or manage your contact list and chat with friends. Using the Metro UI, Skype for Windows Phone looks very slick, too.

However, the app has a few drawbacks. First, you need a Mango (7.5) Windows Phone with 512MB of RAM, which means the VoIP app works only with high-end devices on the platform. Less expensive Tango (7.0) Windows Phones with 256MB of RAM, such as the Nokia Lumia 610, can’t run it. Skype for Windows Phone requires use of a Nokia Lumia 710, 800, or 900; an HTC Titan or Radar; or a Samsung Focus S or Focus Flash.

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30 Things You Didn't Know You Could Do on the Internet


30 Things You Didn't Know You Could Do on the Internet



So you think you have the Web all figured out? Well, think again.
Did you know that you could charter a private jet online, star in your own reality TV show, or download songs as you drive your car? That's just the beginning. You can tell your boss a few unpleasant truths without revealing your identity and sniff out trends before your oh-so-hip friends get wind of them. Using the right sites, you can give Google a face-lift, promote your products or bloviate about your blog, publish a novel, write a business plan, scan your PC for spies, and get free tech help. You can even use the Web to uncover government secrets and to predict your own demise. (Those last two activities will be unrelated, we hope.) Best of all, most of these sites won't charge you a dime.
Here are some of the more surprising things the Web can do for you.

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