Thursday, January 22, 2009

Global Warming

















The global surface temperature increased 0.74 ± 0.18 °C (1.33 ± 0.32 °F) during the 100 years ending in 2005.


The causes of the recent warming are an active field of research. The scientific consensus is that the increase in atmospheric greenhouse gases due to human activity has caused most of the warming observed since the start of the industry era.

Antarctica is heating up than scientists had thought. A large part of West Antarctica, not just the peninsula area, has warmed during the past 50 years, a study shows. The issue of climate change on the frozen continent has been controversial because East Antarctica has been cooling and temperature records are sparse. The evidences shows the continent as a whole is getting warmer.


Warming in West Antarctica exceeded 0.1 degrees a decade during the past 50 years. Significant warming extends well beyond the Antarctic Peninsula to cover most of West Antarctica, an area of warming much larger than previously reported, ice sheets in West Antarctica was at greater risk of melting. Along with the Greenland ice sheet, a complete melt of both sheets would raise sea levels by 14 meters.

Another study, also published in Nature, has found that the seasons are starting about a 1.7 days earlier on average around the globe than during the first half of the century.

Source: smh
Link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_warming

--
Sam

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Windows 7

One week after Microsoft began offering preview downloads of Windows 7 at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, experts are generally optimistic about what they're seeing. The full release of the new operating system isn't planned until 2010. But the software giant seems to be hoping that the preview release will allay the concerns of Windows users who were unwilling to switch from Windows XP to its troubled successor, Vista.

Vista, which was released in late 2006, met with some bad reviews and sluggish adoption in the business world. Forrester Research reports that by June 2008, only about 9 percent of its clients had switched to Vista. Microsoft went on selling XP months longer than it had planned. Now, the company is promoting Windows 7 as a response to user feedback.


Windows 7 features a few changes to Microsoft's familiar user interface. Buttons for open windows no longer appear along the bottom of the screen. In their place are larger icons representing active and frequently used (or user selected) programs. When a user hovers the cursor over the icon for an active program, preview thumbnails of the open windows pop up, and the user selects the one that she wants. Certain cursor movements also trigger common changes to windows. Dragging a window to the top of the screen maximizes it, dragging a window to the side snaps it in place so that it takes up half the screen, and dragging the cursor down to the right-hand corner of the screen makes all the open windows transparent so that the user can see down to the desktop. Microsoft also says that it has made it easier for users to create home networks, and that Windows 7 makes better use of resources than Vista did. The system requirements are similar to those for Vista Home Premium, but early reports say that Windows 7 manages memory better and runs faster.

The first and only release candidate of Windows 7 is expected to be released in April 2009. The OEM of Windows 7 is aiming for an autumn release while the final retail release is expected to be available at the beginning of the Christmas season.

Link: http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windows-7/
Source: TechologyReview

--
Sam


Friday, January 2, 2009

Google India's Free SMS Channel


Stay up to date with the latest information via SMS. Create your own SMS-based communities.


Google Labs in India recently launched SMS Channels, a new free SMS messaging service for India. It may prove to be incredibly useful. The service allows anyone to set up a group of mobile subscribers to message to, or for a group to message each other many-to-many. A user can receive news alerts and blog updates via SMS

There are many commercial group messaging solutions in India where the primary means of mobile communication is SMS. However, unlike GupShup, Zook and MyToday, Google’s SMS channel is two-way, enabling subscribers to publish to the channel.

Link:
https://www.google.com/accounts/Login?continue=http://labs.google.co.in/smschannels/

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Sam

Monday, December 22, 2008

"Faster Yahoo Mail" How to disable advertisements

Most of the time when we check mails in Yahoo, the browser takes a long time to load the advertisements!! There is a small trick to disable them. No need to use any java scripts or any Add-ons. Just follow the instructions below.



[For Windows]

1. Go to the path "C:\WINDOWS\system32\drivers\etc"

[For Linux]
1. Go to the path "\etc"


2. Open hosts file in a text editor


[For Windows]
3. Add 127.0.0.1 ad.yieldmanager.com below #System Administration Related Entries
[For Linux]
3. Add 127.0.0.1 ad.yieldmanager.com below 127.0.0.1 localhost

4. Save the file [Need Administrator/Root Privilege]


Now your "hosts" file will look like this

[For Windows]
#System Administration Related Entries
127.0.0.1 ad.yieldmanager.com


[For Linux]
127.0.0.1 localhost
127.0.0.1 ad.yieldmanager.com



Thats it... you have done it.. No more annoying ads!! Enjoy faster Yahoo Mail!!

If its not working for you let me know...

--
Sam

Friday, December 19, 2008

Sending text messages into space to contact extra terrestrials



According to The Telegraph, believers in aliens are sending text messages into space in a bid to make contact with little green men.

"The messages are sent through a website originally created to send Information's, Messages and expressions of love into the cosmos. They are beamed across the universe on radio waves using a giant satellite dish.

Chris Thomason, one of the founders of website SentForever.com, based in Surrey, said: "Lots of people believe we're not alone. They send messages saying 'I am here, Any one there', or 'Waiting for reply to contact me'."

The website accepts messages that it passes on free of charge, but users who want a certificate of transmission must pay £9.95, which includes postage.


Earlier this year social networking site Bebo arranged to have more than 500 images and text messages transmitted into deep space. The signal was aimed at a planet known as Gliese 581C, which was selected because scientists believe it is capable of supporting life."

Source: Textually

--
Sam

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Serious security flaw found in IE

Users of Microsoft's Internet Explorer are being urged by experts to switch to a rival until a serious security flaw has been fixed.




The flaw in Microsoft's Internet Explorer could allow criminals to take control of people's computers and steal their passwords, internet experts say.

Microsoft urged people to be vigilant while it investigated and prepared an emergency patch to resolve it.

Internet Explorer is used by the vast majority of the world's computer users.

"Microsoft is continuing its investigation of public reports of attacks against a new vulnerability in Internet Explorer," said the firm in a security advisory alert about the flaw.

Microsoft says it has detected attacks against IE 7.0 but said the "underlying vulnerability" was present in all versions of the browser.


Other browsers, such as Firefox, Opera, Chrome, Safari, are not vulnerable to the flaw Microsoft has identified.

"In this case, hackers found the hole before Microsoft did," said Rick Ferguson, senior security advisor at Trend Micro. "This is never a good thing. If users can find an alternative browser, then that's good mitigation against the threat."

Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7784908.stm

--
Sam

The Social Life of Routers

How a 1960s sociology experiment could hold the key to better Internet routing.


Just like an old-fashioned piece of mail, data traveling over the Internet normally follows a predictable path. As the Internet continues to grow, however, experts have begun to worry that current routing protocols will be unable to cope with increased congestion. And so, as researchers search for new solutions, some are taking inspiration from a famous social experiment that called on people to deliver mail using only a network of friends.

For many years, Internet routers have used a standard known as the border gateway protocol (BGP) to map out the path that data takes. BGP requires each router to store a list of network addresses, known as a routing table, which tells it where to forward packets of information (based on a complete picture of that network). But as the number of Internet-connected machines increases, routing tables grow longer and need to receive updates more frequently, potentially slowing some traffic to a crawl. A major sticking point for the BGP protocol is that every time part of the network changes, every router must process an update.



This is where the work of sociologist Stanley Milgram could help out. Milgram carried out experiments in the 1960s that helped make famous the idea of "six degrees of separation." Milgram gave volunteers the task of forwarding a letter to a stranger by sending it to friends or acquaintances that might be one step closer to the target. Milgram measured how many hops there were between the sender and the end recipient, and found it to be, on average, 5.2. (The term six degrees of separation was coined later by playwright John Guare.)


In 2000, inspired by Milgram's work, Jon Kleinberg, a professor of computer science at Cornell University, in New York, created a mathematical model for routing information across any kind of network. Kleinberg says that he drew from the fact that Milgram "demonstrated not just that short paths were present in large social networks, but that people--operating without a global view of the network--could efficiently find them."



Now, research from Marián Boguñá at the University of Barcelona and colleagues, suggests that the approach could indeed by applied to real-world networks, including the Internet's routing system. In work published recently in Nature Physics, Boguñá and his colleagues argue that the work of Kleinberg and others can be applied to real-world networks and, specifically, could be used to design a protocol that allows routers to keep track of less information about a network, thereby reducing congestion.

source: Technology Review

--

Sam

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