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  • FileScout 4 Launches With Updated Graphics and Dropbox Support

    FileScout is an amazing productivity app for legacy BlackBerry Devices running OS 4 and above. The app delivers a lot of file management features that you’d expect from your desktop OS.

    Bursting with features, FileScout offers a lot of actions typically found in your desktop’s file manager. Here are just a few of the things that you can do with the latest version:

    • Open and edit config files as text files
    • Dropbox support
    • Access hidden files
    • Create, copy and delete folders
    • Opens media files
    • Send and receive files over Bluetooth
    • Save your favorite directories
    • Shows file and directory details
    • Archive emails and SMS messages
    • Create audio playlists
    • Show drive usage info including directory sizes
    • Delete the extra install files like extra wallpaper and ringtones to make more room in OS 4

    There are lots of options for purchasers, there’s a 14-day free trial and a light version if you’re willing to forego a lifetime of email support.

    Click here to try or buy FileScout 4 for $2.99 from BlackBerry World.


  • Ron Howard’s RUSH – 1st Trailer

    RUSH Movie Trailer

    If you’re even a remote fan of Formula 1 racing then you’ve no doubt been waiting for the release of Ron Howard’s new movie, RUSH. Focusing on the rivalry between James Hunt and Niki Lauda during the 1976 F1 season, RUSH has high hopes of giving U.S. fans a shot of adrenaline by showing them just how exciting open wheel racing can be. Check out the first official trailer after the jump.

    Source: Youtube.com

  • Belkin Ultimate Keyboard Case Gives Logitech A Competitor For The Best iPad Keyboard Crown

    IMG_6707

    Keyboard cases for iPad are many and multiplying, but at this point it’s a question of refining the best concepts, not creating dramatically different devices. The Belkin Ultimate Keyboard Case for iPad is a great example, taking a lot of cues from the massively popular Logitech Ultrathin Keyboard Cover for iPad and folio style designs to create a solution that might be as near as perfect as tablet typers can get.

    • Keyboard is 6.4mm thin
    • 160 hours battery life
    • Magnets for secure closure and three viewing angles
    • MSRP: $99.99
    • Product info page

    The Ultimate Keyboard Case is not small, but it isn’t big either. It avoids feeling anywhere near as bulky as a total hardcase like the Brydge, but don’t expect something with the low profile of Apple’s Smart Cover, for instance. But it sill manages to be just about as low-profile as the Logitech Ultrathin, and it has a few extra tricks up its sleeve, including a protective cover for the back of your iPad, three possible viewing angles for your device, and a sound port built into the case that redirects the iPad’s speaker output for better listening.




    The materials feel top-quality, it weighs only 411 grams (slightly more than the Ultrathin’s 355 grams) and its keyboard layout feels natural and won’t impede your touch typing abilities. The design of the keyboard component and faux leather hinge means that you can use it with the keyboard folded back in behind, without keys awkwardly facing outward where you can accidentally hit them with your fingers, as is often the case with folio designs.

    As mentioned, the Belkin Ultimate Keyboard Case is great to type on, with one small quibble: the recessed design of the keys means that it can be awkward to hit the space bar, since your thumb will also brush up against the base of the case itself. It’s not a deal-breaker, but it does annoy when you’re coming from a standard notebook or desktop keyboard. But the dedicated keys, including a microphone key that brings up Siri on later generation iPads or voice dictation on earlier ones, as well as the convenience factor outweigh any downsides.

    The Ultimate Keyboard’s other big feature is its use of magnets to allow for three different viewing angles. It’s a nice trick, and one that works well. The one limitation here is that if you’re trying to type in an unstable setting, say on a very bumpy car or train ride, the magnets can actually become dislodged. As long as you’re using the Belkin on a flat surface and you aren’t on Safari, however, the magnets do their job and offer a bit of flexibility vs. the Logitech Ultrathin.

    I feel like we may be reaching peak keyboard case, especially for the standard-sized iPad. But Belkin’s Ultimate Keyboard Case, though somewhat late to the party, shows that there’s still some depth left to be plumbed in terms of wringing innovation out of the overcrowded space. At $99.99, it’s not cheap, but if you’re looking for a way to make your iPad a much more capable text-entry machine, while still offering full protection for your iPad itself, this is a good option.

  • HP makes a Moonshot

    Before you think that Hewlett Packard is joining the Jeff Bezos-Elon Musk space race, I should clarify that the new HP Moonshot is actually a server that the company unveiled today. HP hopes that this new architecture will be a revelation to the current server market with a number of new features.

    First, HP promises, not the moon, but that Moonshot will use 89 percent less energy, 80 percent less space and cost 77 percent less, compared to traditional servers.

    HP’s Gizmo Gladstone (I didn’t make that name up) claims the hardware will improve the Internet by “hooking up companies on the backend to better handle all the challenges that come with processing cloud, social, mobile and big data”. Meanwhile CEO Meg Whitman says “HP Moonshot marks the beginning of a new style of IT that will change the infrastructure economics and lay the foundation for the next 20 billion devices”.

    This second-generation Moonshot server is more energy efficient and smaller, according to the company, because it is built from chips more commonly found in smartphones and tablets and each chassis shares traditional components including the fabric, HP Integrated Lights-Out management, power supply and cooling fans. HP also claims it can support up to 1,800 servers per rack.

    The first HP ProLiant Moonshot server is available with the Intel Atom S1200 processor and support for web-hosting workloads. The company claims it is already using Moonshot to power HP.com and handle three million visitors daily. Get out your checkbook because the price begins at $61,875.

    Photo Credit: Michal Ninger/Shutterstock

  • Five big ideas from TED@Intel

    TED@Intel-stage

    TED@Intel brought together 18 speakers from within the tech company. Photo: Shawn D. Morgan

    Last week, Intel hosted a unique event — an afternoon of TED Talks delivered by their very own resident innovators, thinkers and dreamers. Through a partnership with TED, they received guidance on event production and curation. The final product — TED@Intel, themed “the future in progress” — was a moment for the organization to celebrate and communicate their best ideas.

    According to Intel staffer Jeremy Schulz, these are the five most intriguing ideas he heard from the event’s 18 speakers:

    1) To create technology that truly enriches people’s lives, you have to ask users what they need and immerse yourself in their challenges. Then think: What can you make that would be most useful for them? Tony Salvador has spent 20 years as an ethnographer at Intel doing exactly that. As he shared in the talk, “The Importance of Listening,” you can’t bring preconceived ideas into the process or you’ll only “hear what [you] want to hear.”

    2) Employees living outside the U.S. negotiate an important but delicate balancing act between Intel’s open — but U.S.-centric — culture and the local cultural norms. Makiko Eda, who leads marketing and branding for Asia Pacific, gave the talk “The Corporation as an Agent of Cultural Fusion,” explaining that the balancing act practiced by people on the ground is vital to connecting the global company to local cultures.

    3) “A little bit of insurrection” is necessary to keep new ideas alive inside corporations. In Peter Biddle’s “straight-shooting” talk, called “Plucky Rebels: Being Agile in an Un-agile Place,” he gave these pithy tips:

        • Make an attractive corpse: Projects get cancelled and plans change, but with an agile approach, your team will have built something and will have tangibles that at worst could go on a resume. “Worked for 2 years on 3-year project that got cancelled” is useless.
        • Keep it secret—until you have something real to show: In a large company, lots of people will want to “help” you, but “don’t be afraid to go dark until you have something to show.” Then show it—don’t rely on PowerPoint.
        • Find some users and make them happy: Anybody can create hockey-stick earnings charts, but “if you have people that are happy with what you’ve done, you’ve got superpower.” (See idea #1 again!)

    4) Parents should act as shepherds to the online world, not gatekeepers. In the talk “Are You ‘Technically’ Fit to be a Parent?” McAfee CTO  and father Michael Fey shared how parents should negotiate the scary world of their children and the internet. He says that if you learn the ins and outs of the online community, “you can learn how to mitigate risk and prevent harm, and you can use technology to better connect with your child.”

    5) If you tap into your community you will find “a fountain of creative and courageous people.” As Schulz wrote on Intel’s internal blog, “I came looking for ideas, but it was the people that left the greatest mark.”

  • Facebook starts charging wannabe stalkers to message celebrities

    Facebook Celebrity Messaging
    You can still send Snoop Dogg links to streams of your demo tape over Facebook (FB), but it’s going to cost you. The Sunday Times reports that Facebook has started rolling out a program in the United Kingdom that allows Facebook users to send celebrities direct messages if they pay a fee. Facebook says that the charges are intended to help people reduce the number of unwanted messages they receive from people don’t know since paid messages are delivered directly to the user’s inbox at the top of the page while unpaid messages from unknown people are dumped into a less prominent folder. Facebook also says that it’s “testing a number of price points in the U.K. and other countries to establish the optimal fee that signals importance.”

  • The Key to Choosing the Right Career

    Choosing a career path (or changing one) is, for most of us, a confusing and anxiety-riddled experience. Many will tell you to “follow your passion” or “do what you love,” but as Cal Newport argues in So Good They Can’t Ignore You, this is not very useful advice. When I graduated from college, I liked lots of things. But love? Passion? That would have been seriously overstating it.

    We all want to choose a career that will make us happy, but how can we know what that will be? Research suggests that human beings are remarkably bad at predicting how they will feel when doing something in the future. It’s not hard to find someone who started out thinking that they would love their chosen profession, only to wind up hating it. In fairness, how are you supposed to know if you will be happy as an investment banker, or an artist, or a professor, if you haven’t actually done any of these things yet? Who has ever, in the history of mankind, taken a job and had it turn out exactly as they imagined it would?

    So if passion and expected happiness can’t be your guides, what can be? Well, you can begin by choosing a career that fits well with your skills and values. Since you actually have some sense of what those are (hopefully), this is a good starting place.

    But a bit less obviously — though just as important — you also want to choose an occupation that provides a good motivational fit for you as well.

    As I describe in my new book with Columbia Business School’s Tory Higgins, Focus and in our recent HBR article, there are two ways you can be motivated to reach your goals.

    Some of us tend to see our goals (at work and in life) as opportunities for advancement, achievement and rewards. We think about what we might gain if we are successful in reaching them. If you are someone who sees your goals this way, you have what’s called a promotion focus.

    The rest of us see our goals as being about security — about not losing everything we’ve worked so hard for. When you are prevention-focused, you want to avoid danger, fulfill your responsibilities, and be someone people can count on. You want to keep things running smoothly.

    Everyone is motivated by both promotion and prevention, but we also tend to have a dominant motivational focus in particular domains of life, like work, love, and parenting. What’s essential to understand is that promotion and prevention-focused people have — because of their different motivations — distinct strengths and weaknesses. To give you a flavor of what I mean:

    Promotion- focused people excel at:

    • Creativity & innovation
    • Seizing opportunities to get ahead
    • Embracing risk
    • Working quickly
    • Generating lots of options and alternatives
    • Abstract thinking

    (Unfortunately, they are also more error-prone, overly-optimistic, and more likely to take risks that land them in hot water)

    Prevention-focused people excel at:

    • Thoroughness and being detail-oriented
    • Analytical thinking and reasoning
    • Planning
    • Accuracy (working flawlessly)
    • Reliability
    • Anticipating problems

    (Unfortunately, they are also wary of change or taking chances, rigid, and work more slowly. Diligence takes time.)

    By now you probably have a sense of your own focus in the workplace, but if you don’t, try our free online assessment.

    Knowing your dominant focus, you can now evaluate how well-suited you are motivationally to different kinds of careers, or different positions in your organization. More than a decade of research shows that when people experience a fit between their own motivation and the way they work, they are not only more effective, but they also find their work more interesting and engaging, and value it more.

    If you are promotion-focused, look for jobs that offer advancement and growth. Consider fast-paced industries where products and services are rapidly changing, and where the ability to identify opportunities will be essential, like the tech sector or social media. To use a sports metaphor, look for a career where you get to play offense — where boldness, speed, and outside-the-box thinking pay off.

    If you are prevention-focused, look for jobs that offer you a sense of stability and security. You are good at keeping things running, at handling complexity and always having a Plan B (and C and D) ready at a moment’s notice. Consider careers where your thoroughness and attention to detail are valued — for instance, as a contract lawyer or data guru. You work best when you are playing defense — you can spot a threat a mile away, and protect your company or client from harm.

    But what about entrepreneurs? you ask. I’m thinking of starting my own business — which motivational focus is best for that? For any successful venture, the truth is that you need both promotion and prevention. An entrepreneur who is all promotion may get her business going, but she probably won’t keep it going for long, since she’ll be unprepared for the obstacles that will inevitably come her way. And the prevention-focused entrepreneur will get so bogged down worrying about obstacles that his business may never get off the ground at all.

    This is one of the reasons that good partnerships can be so invaluable — it often takes a Steve Jobs to see a product’s potential, and a Steve Wozniak to actually build it and make it work. So if you are starting a new venture, make sure that you’ve got a healthy balance of promotion and prevention thinking in the right places.

  • Closer Look: Microsoft’s European Cloud Hub

    Microsoft-Dublin-HotAisle-4

    If there’s a poster child for Ireland’s ideal climate for free cooling, it would be the huge data center in Dublin that powers Microsoft’s online services in Europe. Our photo feature, Inside Microsoft’s European Cloud Hub, examines how Microsoft has optimized its data center design to make efficient use of fresh air, and follows the path of the air through the giant facility.

  • The Apple-Google duopoly so dominates app downloads there is little room for BlackBerry and Windows Phone

    Mobile app store downloads from the four major stores — Apple, BlackBerry, Google and Microsoft — reached 13.4 billion in first quarter, generating $2.2 billion revenue, according to Canalys. Combined, revenue from new sales, in-app purchases and subscriptions grew 9 percent from fourth quarter, while number of downloads climbed by 11 percent.

    There are a half-dozen measures that mark successful platforms, with money being the most important. Developers typically go where they earn more. That’s preface to a fascinating juxtaposition partly explaining developer preference for iOS, even though more Android devices ship and cumulative sales (750 million to 500 million) are larger. Google Play accounted for 51 percent of downloads during Q1. But Apple’s App Store generated 74 percent of the revenue. Ponder those numbers for a moment.

    Winner takes Bronz

    “Apple’s App Store and Google Play remain the heavyweights in the app store world”, Tim Shepherd, Canalys senior analyst, says. “In comparison, BlackBerry World and the Windows Phone Store remain distant challengers today, though they still should not be ignored”.

    BlackBerry and Windows Phone, once dominant smartphone operating systems, struggle for relevance with consumers and developers. “BlackBerry and Microsoft particularly need to continue to proactively work to attract fresh, innovative content and services to their respective catalogs, and fill gaps in their inventories”, Shepard says. Some of those holes are huge, with homegrown apps for services like Facebook and nothing at for others, such as Instagram.

    “They also need to increase device sales around BlackBerry 10 and Windows Phone 8 to increase the addressable market opportunities on offer to developers”, Shepard warns. BlackBerry and Microsoft had respective smartphone OS sales share of 3.5 percent and 3 percent during fourth quarter, according to Gartner.

    BlackBerry and Windows Phone struggle with the age-old chicken-and-egg scenario. Which comes first users or apps? Developers don’t want to invest in platforms if there aren’t users for the apps. Meanwhile people don’t typically adopt platforms without there being apps. Vying against Android and iOS, which are more widely adopted and pack stores with hundreds of thousands more apps, extenuates the dilemmas.

    Platform Winners

    Typically, successful platforms share six common traits:

    • There are good development tools and APIs for easily creating applications
    • There is at least one killer application people really want
    • There is breadth of useful applications
    • Third parties make lots of money
    • The platform is broadly available
    • There is a robust ecosystem

    By most measures, BlackBerry and Windows Phone currently fail to meet the final four.

    “The strength of app ecosystems will increasingly help to determine winners and losers in the smart device industry”, Shepard acknowledges. “BlackBerry 10 now has more than 100,000 apps available through its storefront, showing good growth from the 70,000 it boasted at launch, and the new devices on the platform have given BlackBerry a much greater chance to compete for consumer attention. Its app story is going from strength to strength, but there is no room for complacency”.

    But the majority of newer BlackBerry apps are Android ports, which signals less-than-stellar developer commitment.

    “Microsoft, with the help of partners such as Nokia, is also making good progress attracting some important titles to the Windows Phone platform, but it too needs to do more to make building apps for its platform a priority for developers and also do a better job of marketing and communicating the already established strength of its app story”, Shepard says.

    Android-iOS success leaves room, at best, for one more platform, which puts BlackBerry and Windows Phone in direct competition — groveling share at the bottom rather than raking it off the top.

    That said, “the Apple-Google duopoly creates certain challenges for app publishers, carriers, investors and device vendors, so there is intense interest in the possible emergence of a third ecosystem”, Adam Daum, Canalys chief analyst, says.

    Global Trends

    More broadly, tracking with recent device buying trends, emerging markets — Brazil, Indonesia and South Africa — lifted app downloads. Mature markets also saw healthy growth rates: revenue and downloads grew by 8 percent and 6 percent, respectively, in North America and 8 percent and 10 percent in Western Europe.

    “Apps have had a huge impact on the way consumers use mobile devices, what they value, and what they expect from smart phones and tablets”, Daum emphasizes. “They are now central to how consumers engage with content and connected services, and how they personalize their devices around the app-enabled features that are important to them”.

    Mobile app success feeds the whole “PC is dead” debate. Last week, Gartner offered grim forecast for the personal computer, as shipments decline, as smartphones and tablets make heady gains.

    “This is a multi-billion-dollar growth market, with more and more consumers around the world now comfortable and confident in finding apps, downloading them and making in-app purchases, on a growing addressable base of smartphones and tablets”, Daum asserts.

    Photo Credit: David Andrew Larsen/Shutterstock

  • Google Adds Latin American Spanish Option to Calendar

    Google has just announced that they are making Google Calendar much more friendly to Latin American Spanish speakers.

    Starting today, Google Calendar has a new Español (Latinoamérica) option. Spanish is spoken is much of the world, but the Spanish isn’t the same in every location. Google knows this, and has made a Spanish variant that better suits their Latin American users.

    Of course, it isn’t easy to find a variation of Spanish that works for someone living in say, South America, but also feels natural to a Spanish speaker in the United States or Caribbean for example. The Spanish spoken in these regions differs greatly from one country to the next due to geography, separate cultures, customs, and histories. To give all of our Latin American Spanish speakers an option that looks, feels, and sounds right, Google Localization constructed a Spanish variant that combines the most common elements from the different dialects. So whether you speak Spanish or any one of Calendar’s 42 languages, it’s now even easier to keep up with your busy schedule!” says Google.

    Google has already offered Gmail in Latin American Spanish since last year, and if you’re new to Calendar but have been using this option inside Gmail, you should be ready to go in Español (Latinoamérica) automatically. Otherwise, simply go to your Calendar settings and click the gear icon and change languages.

  • Galaxy Note 3 Will Be First Device With Samsung’s S Orb Photo Feature

    Galaxy Note 3 Will Be First To Feature Samsung's S Orb

    The Galaxy Note 3 is slated to launch in September and according to a new report, will be the first Samsung device to feature S Orb. We originally expected this feature to debut in the Galaxy S 4. S Orb is very similar to Photo Sphere on the Nexus 4 and allows users to take 360-degree panorama photos. There are a couple reasons why the Galaxy Note 3 could get S Orb ahead of the Galaxy S 4. Samsung appears to be waiting on upgrading to Android 5.0 Key Lime Pie which won’t be announced until Google I/O in May. With the Galaxy S 4 launching ahead of the announcement, that means an update is further down the line. However, Samsung could ship the Galaxy Note 3 in September with Android 5.0 installed.

    Source: Android Geeks

    Come comment on this article: Galaxy Note 3 Will Be First Device With Samsung’s S Orb Photo Feature

  • HTC profits continue in wrong direction in record-setting fashion

    htc_logo_400

    Over the past 18 months or so, we have watched HTC’s financial deep dive as it keeps setting record-low quarterly profit numbers. HTC was banking on the HTC One leading a rebound for the company. That could still happen, but after delays, the HTC One was not able to ship in any meaningful numbers during the first quarter of 2013, leading to more disappointing financial results for HTC. According to HTC’s just released report, net income for the first quarter was NT$85 million ($2.84 million USD), a mere pittance compared to the NT$10.9 billion ($363 million USD) for the same period a year earlier.

    In addition to yet another disappointing quarter, HTC also missed analysts’ revenue forecasts. HTC was expected to post net income of NT$467.5 million on first quarter revenue of NT$50-$60 billion. Instead, revenues were only NT$42.8 billion. The delay of the HTC One is expected to reverberate throughout 2013 for HTC. Despite opening against the Samsung Galaxy S 4, analyst Dennis Chan with Yuanta Securities thinks HTC will experience a rebound in the second quarter. However, that will be short-lived as it will “be very difficult to push on the mid- and low-end phones when HTC launches them in Q3-Q4.” Daiwa analyst Birdy Lu is also skeptical that the recently announced partnership with Facebook will be of much help because Facebook Home will only be sought by “Facebook addicts, and the distribution channel for HTC First is very limited.”

    source: Reuters

    Come comment on this article: HTC profits continue in wrong direction in record-setting fashion

  • No, Scott Turow, copyright is not killing American authors

    An array of enemies, from professors to Google to the Supreme Court, are dragging the U.S. towards copyright nihilism that resembles Russia — at least this seems to be the view of Authors Guild President, Scott Turow, whose latest screed entitled “The Slow Death of the American Author” claims the country is betraying its writers.

    Turow’s piece, which appeared in this weekend’s New York Times, could have been a rallying cry to support American literature. Instead, it amounts to a hysterical rant full of slipshod reasoning that shows again the Guild’s propensity for tactical errors and alienating potential allies.

    The central conceit of the piece is the U.S. Constitution’s intellectual property clause, which permits Congress to grant limited monopolies to “promote the Progress of Science and Useful Arts.” Turow, despite being a lawyer, miscasts the clause to suggest it awards a constitutional right to authors and to say that the current copyright system betrays the founders. This is misleading twice over.

    First, the grant of copyright is discretionary — as with many of the other items listed in Article I, Section 8, copyright is a power (like declaring war or borrowing money) that Congress can choose to exercise when it sees fit. The clause does not, as Turow writes, “instruct” Congress to protect authors’ rights.

    The second problem with the constitutional conceit is that Turow and others would likely have been appalled by the Founders’ ideas of about copyright conception. This was an age when Alexander Hamilton opted for piracy as an industrial strategy, and authors’ rights were precarious at best. Indeed, foreign writers received none at all (ask Charles Dickens what he thought of the Founders’ copyright law).

    In lamenting the attenuated state of U.S. copyright law, Turow also fails to mention that protection for authors has been expanded from its original 28-year term to the life of the author plus 70 years. Congress and the courts, in other words, have signed off on a scheme that locks up titles like Presumed Innocent until the year 2200 or beyond — is this not enough copyright for you, Mr. Turow?

    It is these absurd terms — plus harsh penalties of up to $150,000 per infringement — that have helped to make copyright such a mess in the digital age. In an era when the internet grants every writer a printing press and a distribution system, it seems absurd to hand out century-long copyright terms.

    Instead of discussing how copyright can work in digital times, Turow instead lashes out at academics and librarians who are trying to find a way to distribute neglected books and locked-up research to broader audiences through efforts like the Hathi Trust. In my experience, these people respect copyright — they just don’t like the way that some abuse it — and their goal is expanding access to knowledge. Librarians at Duke are among those who are most forcefully challenging the current state of copyright; you can decide for yourself here if they are selling out authors.

    In addition to a potshot at the Supreme Court, Turow also trots out the usual canard that sites like Google and Yahoo are complicit in book piracy with “paid ads decorating the margins of [their] pages.” While book piracy is indeed a problem, Turow’s suggestion that search engines are engaged in deliberate criminal behavior is far-fetched; these are mature companies with big and legitimate customers that have scant need or interest to pander to pirates. (While Google has landed in very hot water in the past over ads for illegal pharmacies, it now says it vies to curtail the bad advertising actors.)

    In short, what Turow has done is to raise an important issue — how to devise an economic means to support modern literary culture — and then alienate nearly every potential ally, not to mention distorting the picture to his own ends. If Turow and the Authors Guild are really on the side of writers, they should toss the specious and acerbic arguments and work instead to build a coalition of advocates for a fair and workable copyright regime.

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  • Trapped Kids Found Dead Under Dirt Wall in North Carolina

    Tragedy struck in Denver, North Carolina this weekend, as two children died in an accident at a construction site.

    According to a report from Charlotte ABC affiliate WBTV, two children were playing in a dirt pit when a dirt wall collapsed on them. James Caldwell, age 7, and Chloe Arwood, age 6, were buried beneath thousands of pounds of dirt in the incident.

    Caldwell’s father, who was working at the construction site, called police, who began efforts to dig the children out of the 24-feet deep pit. The search for the children lasted through the night, with around 75 rescue workers digging non-stop. The children’s bodies were located early Monday morning.

    Neighbors have told WBTV that the children were cousins. The basement for a house was being dug out at the construction site at the time of the event.

  • Was This Facebook Home Ad Altered Because the Original Sounded Way Too Much Like an Eminem Song?

    Mildly funny conspiracy theory alert: This is not confirmed. I haven’t talked to anyone inside Facebook with knowledge on this topic. This is simply something that I observed, and I’m pretty sure I’m on to something.

    OK, so you probably heard about Facebook’s big event last Thursday where they unveiled Facebook Home, their Android takeover “app family” that basically turns any phone that installs it into a Facebook Phone. So, during that event, CEO Mark Zuckerberg introduced an ad for the feature called “Airplane.” In that ad, we noticed that the background music sounded quite similar to an Eminem song. Specifically, “Under the Influence” off of The Marshall Mathers LP.

    Coincidence? Probably.

    But the plot thickens.

    A few days after the event, Facebook finally released the “Airplane” ad on their official YouTube channel. It’s the same ad that we saw during the event – expect for one small detail. The background song has, without a doubt, been altered. The melody is similar, but not the same.

    So…did Facebook have to change up their ad because it reminded people of a decade-old catchy but obscene Eminem song?

    Here are exhibits A,B, and C.

    The original ad starts at about 28:05 in the video below:

    And here’s the Eminem song that the first version of the ad sounds like. NSFW lyrics, obviously:

    And finally, here’s the version of the ad that Facebook released this weekend. The song in the background sounds similar, but has been changed around significantly.

    Remember the lyrics to that Eminem song:

    “You can suck my dick if you don’t like my shit. ‘Cause I was high when I wrote this so suck my dick.”

    Maybe that was Facebook’s subtle way of letting us all know that they welcomed the criticism.

    Joking aside, it’s not impossible that someone made the last-minute song change because the original song sounded exactly like that Eminem song. Whether it was intentionally designed to mimic that song, or it was just an odd coincidence, someone could have pointed out the resemblance and that prompted the change.

    Maybe my brain is just spinning uncontrollably. It’s a Monday afternoon and I didn’t get a lot of sleep over the weekend. But damn if it’s not funny to think about. Especially considering Mark Zuckerberg’s recently unearthed penchant for Eminem jokes.

  • WebSite X5 Free 10.0 adds server and new HTML5 image galleries

    Incomedia has released WebSite X5 Free v10.0, a major new version of its beginner-friendly web building tool for Windows. The app, which is also available in a number of paid-for versions, now boasts an integrated webserver for faster site previews, overhauled template gallery and HTML5 image galleries.

    Changes to the program’s interface include better file management, whereby all files linked to a project are automatically copied so the originals are left untouched. Aside from the new integrated web server, WebSite X5 10 also replaces the default IE engine for browser previews with Chrome’s Chromium engine.

    New visual controls are designed to make the program more intuitive and quicker to use and the app is now loaded dynamically, ensuring its resource demands are cut as well as loading more quickly.

    The Template Gallery has been overhauled to make it easier to browse, and users can now edit default templates as well as more easily insert custom code into pages thanks in part to syntax highlighting in the program editor.

    WebSite X5 also improves its structural map creation tools by allowing the home page to be treated like all other pages on the website, allowing users to search special pages and adding new methods for selecting pages on the map.

    In terms of content creation, Flash-based galleries have also been dropped in favour of native HTML5 galleries, while movement and zoom effects along with image protection are handled by JavaScript rather than Flash to enhance compatibility with touchscreens. HTML5 is also implemented for video insertion and management, allowing WebSite X5 to claim full compatibility with all mobile devices. New objects include Social Network and Map, plus Guestbook, the latter of which isn’t available in the free version. The update is rounded off with improved project export and preview options.

    The top-of-the-line Evolution version of WebSite X5, which costs €69.99 (around $92) also boasts several new business-friendly features: Advertising Message component for inserting ads into websites, Data Management section for the collection and collation of data submitted to user websites, and improved ecommerce optimisation (including Rich Snippets).

    WebSite X5 Free v10.0 is available as a freeware download for PCs running Windows XP SP3 or later. More fully featured versions of the program are also available, with prices starting from €19.99 (around $26) for WebSite X5 Home 10.

    Photo Credit:  YuanDen/Shutterstock

  • Greece revs up in slow lane

    There’s been plenty of bad news for heavily indebted Greece in the past three years – the banking crisis in neighbouring Cyprus being the latest of the country’s woes – but not all the news is gloomy.

    MSCI’s Greece index was one of the developed world’s best performers this year, according to the index compiler’s quarterly survey, giving returns of 14.02 percent.

    Morgan Stanley is one bank to have grown more enthusiastic about the troubled euro zone peripheral economy.

    In a note out today, its analysts say:

    We are more constructive on Greece than consensus expectations. A recovery hasn’t started yet, but soft data are becoming less bad, as the shocks that hit the Greek economy – including euro exit worries – are starting to dissipate, and bank deposit flows now look fully stabilised.

    Morgan Stanley says Greece is likely to show some moderate growth in early 2014, after shrinking 4 percent this year. The country has also beaten its fiscal targets in the first couple of months of 2013, and is likely to maintain a budget surplus, the bank says. Price competitiveness has improved due to large wage cuts and labour market reforms, it adds:

    By the end of this year, the competitiveness loss experienced since 2001 – when Greece joined the euro zone – will have been recouped entirely, judging by current trends. And from that point onwards, competitiveness levels are likely to improve further.

    Greece has held onto its place in the euro zone but that didn’t stop Russell Indexes from downgrading the country’s stock market to emerging market status last month, citing rising risks and falling liquidity, and MSCI could follow suit. Yet this may attract more risk-hungry emerging market investors. 

    Frontier markets broker Exotix has extended its reach to Greece and Cyprus, and was also relatively sanguine today.

    Exotix economist Gabriel Sterne said in a note that the Cyprus bail-out with its hit for bank depositors will have a negative long-term impact on risk aversion towards countries like Greece, but the impact will be “not a marked one”.

     

  • Samsung announces the Galaxy Win smartphone featuring quad-core processor, dual-SIM capabilities and a whole lotta Jelly Bean

    Samsung_GALAXY_Win

     

    No… there’s no need to pinch yourselves because it’s true— Samsung has taken the wraps off of yet another addition to its Galaxy family. This new toy— called the Galaxy Win— is a lower-end mid-range device that comes with a 4.7-inch WVGA LCD TFT display with a 800 x 480 resolution, a 1.2GHz quad-core CPU inside, 1GB of RAM, a 5MP camera, a 2,000mAh battery and Android 4.1. Additionally, there’s no LTE on-board, but at least there’s HSPA+ support and full dual-SIM capabilities.

    No word yet on when the device will hit store shelves or which carriers will feature the device just yet, but expect Sammy to give the Galaxy Win’s cost and availability sooner than later.

    source: Samsung Tomorrow

    Come comment on this article: Samsung announces the Galaxy Win smartphone featuring quad-core processor, dual-SIM capabilities and a whole lotta Jelly Bean

  • Sweden’s Östersund Gets in the Data Center Game

    The global IT infrastructure is evolving beyond centralized data centers and into a distributed system of globally connected points. With more users, more devices, and a lot more data – the data center has become an integral part of any organization. US-based firms are now trying to bring data closer to the user to help deliver better end-user performance.

    As cloud computing and IT consumerization continue to push technology forward, organizations will need to seek out new places to house their data centers. The city of Östersund, Sweden wants to be one of those new data center destinations, and is outlining the merits of its location for medium to web-scale data centers.

    sweden

    The site at Torvalla Industrial Park, located just outside the City Centre, is prepared for construction and is ”shovel ready”. The Östersund site offer includes:

    • Location in the heart of the Power region
    • National electricity price zone 2 – among the lowest price in Europe
    • Reduced energy tax, 34 % lower than South Sweden
    • Extremely stable grid, no interruptions last 30 years
    • Redundant electricity supply connected to the national grid

    Download this white paper on the new Östersund site to learn about an advanced location capable of delivering a powerfully redundant infrastructure. In designing a robust data center, there are many considerations that fall into place. In this white paper, all of those concerns are addressed and expectations are taken to the next level.

    With the perfect climate, optimal cooling capabilities, and the ability to deliver a packet in 16ms or less to St. Petersburg – the Östersund site creates the optimal opportunity for any organization to distribute their infrastructure. The focus around data delivery and cloud components will only continue to evolve. With that evolution, organizations will need to find new places to locate their data centers; to ensure the consistent availability of information for the end-user.

  • HTC One review: The smartphone that changes everything

    HTC One Review AT&T
    With smartphones, as with any category of consumer electronics, we have no choice but to accept compromises. This has been the case throughout the history of cell phones and it continues to hold true even with best handsets on the market today. Apple’s (AAPL) iPhone 5 features a class-leading design with fast, smooth software, but it has a comparatively small display and lacks some of the great new functionality we’ve seen introduced on other platforms in recent years. The Samsung (005930) Galaxy S III is a sleek handset with a stunning screen and a great feature set, but it feels like a cheap toy, as does its successor. Nokia’s (NOK) Lumia 920 packs plenty of punch in a sleek package, but it’s thick and heavy, and it is missing a boatload of top apps. It’s inevitable — some level of compromise is inherent in all smartphones.

    Continue reading…