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11/05/2014

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1. Google GlassPrice: $1,500 Momentarily limited to the developer crowd, Google’s computing eyewear is slowly progressin...
14/08/2013

1. Google Glass
Price: $1,500

Momentarily limited to the developer crowd, Google’s computing eyewear is slowly progressing into the game-changer we all imagined it would become upon launch. The Android-based smart glasses known as Google Glass pushes the boundaries of wearable technology by allowing owners to perform actions such as answer emails, take pictures, and translate text hands-free—all viewable on a micro-display. The steep price hasn’t stopped many from garnering interest in the hi-tech specs. Plus Google’s commitment to enhancing its mobile OS platform only shows Google Glass’ true potential as we head into the future.

MacBook Air 2013 Edition (13-inch)Price: $1,099 Another year, another upgrade to the MacBook Air line. Only this time ar...
14/08/2013

MacBook Air 2013 Edition (13-inch)

Price: $1,099

Another year, another upgrade to the MacBook Air line. Only this time around, Apple’s ultra-slim laptop is priced $100 less than its predecessor and carries Intel’s new fourth-gen CPUs to help achieve over 15 hours of battery life—making it the longest-lasting portable PC around. Apple also keeps intact its industry-best keyboard and touchpad, also supporting faster flash memory and improved graphics performance. If there was ever a time to cop a MacBook, it’s now.

Microsoft Surface ProWith desktops slowly dying out, the PC convertible market continues to grow vastly and Microsoft’s ...
14/08/2013

Microsoft Surface Pro

With desktops slowly dying out, the PC convertible market continues to grow vastly and Microsoft’s tablet/laptop hybrid is leading the brigade. The Surface Pro expands on the patented elements that made the R/T version a success, while integrating stronger specs and improved multi-touch technology into the mix. An Intel Core i5 Ivy Bridge CPU with HD Graphics 4000 and 128GB SSD make room for ultrabook-like performance, plus the Pro’s innovative Touch Cover promotes accurate touch feedback that you won’t find on most competitors.

Trakdot Luggage TrackerEver had your bags sent to the other side of the world or incompetently misplaced by an airline? ...
14/08/2013

Trakdot Luggage Tracker

Ever had your bags sent to the other side of the world or incompetently misplaced by an airline? Frequent flyers can breathe easy as the Trakdot serves as a LoJack for luggage—monitoring baggage through the use of cellular technology instead of GPS. The palm-sized tracker slips into any back pack or large suitcase and sends alerts via accompanying app, email, SMS, or company website. It even shoots notifications for when your bag hits the claim carousel. Insecure types might want to secretly hide these in the back of their chicks whips. Just sayin’.

Nasscom says hiring in IT sector could come down 17 per cent this yearRising automation and low attrition in IT sector m...
14/08/2013

Nasscom says hiring in IT sector could come down 17 per cent this year
Rising automation and low attrition in IT sector may act as a dampener for job seekers with industry body Nasscom expecting hiring to decline by up to 17 per cent to 1,50,000 in the current financial year.

The $108-billion Indian IT-ITeS sector provides employment to about 3 million professionals.

"I think we will have net additions of 150,000-180,000 this year. Last year it was about 180,000," Nasscom President Som Mittal told PTI when asked about the hiring environment.

Explaining the decline, he added: "It might be less than last year, as it is getting non-linear and lower-end jobs are getting automated. The profile is changing and we need more Domain experts."

Attrition levels have also come down to around 14-15 per cent against the industry average of 20 per cent earlier.

Hiring by India's four largest IT companies dropped by over 60 per cent in the April-June quarter of this year.

The top four IT services exporters made net additions of about 4,100 to their workforce during the quarter this year, against around 10,900 in the year-ago period.

Mittal also said that campus hiring may fall significantly due to change in hiring patterns.

"Campus hiring may be 60 per cent of what it was last year," he said, adding that now employers are focusing more on soft skills and leadership qualities than on technical skills.

According to an analysis, three years back 80 per cent focus was on technical skills but now, Mittal said "only 40 per cent focus is on technical skills and the rest is on soft skills and Domain."

Virtual reality makes a comebackThe computer industry is another sector that continues to see growth, in spite of the gl...
14/08/2013

Virtual reality makes a comeback

The computer industry is another sector that continues to see growth, in spite of the global economic crisis.* Exponential improvements in processing power (doubling every 18 months) are enabling the creation of highly lifelike graphics and 3D environments. At the same time, faster broadband is opening up new frontiers in cyberspace, allowing the development of Web 3.0 – the next generation of Internet. This is being combined with developments in on-person hardware, creating renewed interest in virtual reality.* Having been something of a gimmick in the 1980s, it is now becoming a serious tool for business, leisure, education and training.

Much of the content in these 3D environments is user-generated, with online communities for sharing and exchanging virtual objects, buildings, avatars, etc. Among the most popular hardware configurations now is a circular treadmill-like interface, allowing players to move freely and naturally in all directions.

14/08/2013

More Android malware distributed through mobile ad networks

Security researchers from Palo Alto Networks found Android apps downloading malware from rogue mobile ad networks.

Mobile ad networks can provide a loophole to serve malware to Android devices, according to researchers from security firm Palo Alto Networks who have found new Android threats being distributed in this manner.

Most mobile developers embed advertising frameworks into their applications in order to generate revenue. Unlike ads displayed inside Web browsers, ads displayed within mobile apps are served by code that's actually part of those applications.

[ Security expert Roger A. Grimes offers a guided tour of the latest threats and explains what you can do to stop them in InfoWorld's "Fight Today's Malware" Shop Talk video and Malware Deep Dive Report. | Learn how to secure your systems with InfoWorld's Security Central newsletter. ]

The embedding of code for the advertising network into a mobile application itself ensures that ads get tracked and the developers get paid, but at the same time this third-party code represents a backdoor into the device, said Wade Williamson, senior security analyst at Palo Alto Networks, in a Monday blog post.

"If the mobile ad network turns malicious, then a completely benign application could begin bringing down malicious content to the device," Williamson said. "What you have at that point is a ready-made botnet."

There are precedents for this type of attack. In April, mobile security firm Lookout identified 32 apps hosted on Google Play that were using a rogue ad network later dubbed BadNews. The apps were benign, but the malicious ad network was designed to push toll fraud malware targeting Russian-speaking users through those apps. The malware masqueraded as updates for other popular applications.

According to Williamson, researchers from Palo Alto Networks recently came across a similar attack in Asia that involved using a rogue ad network to push malicious code through other apps without being detected by mobile antivirus vendors.

The malicious payload pushed by the ad network runs quietly in the device memory and waits for users to initiate the installation of any other application, Williamson said. At that point, it prompts users to also install and grant permissions to the malware, appearing as if it's part of the new application's installation process, he said.

"This is a very elegant approach that doesn't really require the end user to do anything 'wrong'," the researcher said.

Once installed, the malware has the ability to intercept and hide received text messages, as well as to send text messages in order to sign up users for premium-rate mobile services, Palo Alto Networks said in a description of the attack sent via email.

Such attacks are probably specific to certain geographic regions, said Bogdan Botezatu, a senior e-threat analyst at antivirus vendor Bitdefender, Tuesday via email.

Botezatu expects the distribution of malware through mobile ad networks to become more common, especially in countries where mobile devices can't access the official Google Play store or where users have difficulties in purchasing applications in a legitimate manner, causing most Android devices to be configured to accept APKs (Android application packages) from unknown sources.

14/08/2013

Oracle trots out virtualization appliance, taking on NetApp and EMC
The Oracle Virtual Compute Appliance ships with network technology bought from Xsigo Systems

Oracle has joined the market for pre-integrated systems intended to ease the process of setting up and managing a virtualized compute environment.

The Oracle Virtual Compute Appliance, released on Tuesday, includes Oracle x86 servers and storage hardware, along with network virtualization technology that Oracle acquired last year when it bought Xsigo Systems.

[ Doing server virtualization right is not so simple. InfoWorld's expert contributors show you how to get it right in this 24-page "Server Virtualization Deep Dive" PDF guide. ]

The promise of such appliances is that most of the setup and wiring is done by the vendor at the factory, leaving customers with a minimum of configuration work to get the box running, reducing the room for error.

Other vendors, such as NetApp and EMC, already offer pre-integrated systems for virtualization. Oracle contends it will have an edge because it owns the virtualization stack it uses, including the OS, hypervisor and applications.

"We're the only vendor that has full-stack capabilities," said Adam Hawley, Oracle's senior director of product management for virtualization.

The Virtual Compute Appliance differs from the high-end "Exa" machines that Oracle already sells. Those systems, like the Exadata Database Machine, are designed for maximum performance, while the virtualization appliance is designed for "extreme ease of use," Hawley said.

It can also run third-party software, which the Exa machines generally can't. Customers can run pretty much "all the viable x86 operating systems," Hawley said, including Oracle Linux, Oracle Solaris, Red Hat Linux, and Windows.

Oracle offers around 120 virtual templates for its applications, to make loading them on the machine easier. It estimates how much CPU, memory and other resources the various workloads need, and the machine configures itself to those specs when the templates are loaded.

The base system, which starts at $265,000 according to an Oracle price list, includes two dual-socket Xeon servers for running the management software, and another two to get started with the compute load. Customers can add more server nodes up to a maximum of 25 in a rack, and they're detected and configured automatically when they're plugged in, according to Oracle.

The base system also includes an Oracle ZFS 7320 storage appliance. It hosts the management environment and can store some of the compute load, but Oracle expects most customers to need an external storage array as well. That can be another ZFS appliance or an iSCSI system from a different vendor.

Two Oracle Fabric Interconnect F1-15s connect to each server, providing a redundant connectivity and about 40 gigabits per second throughput. There are also two Infiniband switches for connecting to other servers in the rack.

The preinstalled software includes Oracle VM, Oracle VM Manager, and the software-defined networking software from Xsigo. Oracle did a webcast Tuesday to launch the product.

INSTANT MOBILE PRINTINGWirelessly print smartphone photos whenever, wherever. Even without PCs or cables, you can print ...
14/08/2013

INSTANT MOBILE PRINTING
Wirelessly print smartphone photos whenever, wherever.
Even without PCs or cables, you can print memorable photos
just by pressing the Send button.
With Bluetooth and NFC support,
Pocket photo can quickly print your photos with no cable necessary wherever you are.

24/02/2012

Western Digital My Book Home Edition 1TB Prices India - buy best Western Digital My Book Home Edition 1TB at low price in India, compare price and features with other Hard Disk Drives, Western Digital My Book Home Edition 1TB, user review with best offer and get best price deals in india.

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