18 January 2007

Toshiba launched high-definition DVD player

Image of next generation DVDs
Toshiba has launched its new high-definition DVD player in Europe, marking the start of a battle for living room domination.

The electronics firm wants consumers to use their HD-E1 DVD system rather than the rival Blu-Ray format.

Blu-Ray is being backed by electronics firms Sony, Samsung and Panasonic as well as a number of film studios.

The tussle between HD-DVD and Blu-Ray is similar to the 1980s war between VHS and Betamax video, analysts said.

Toshiba has forecast 500,000 worldwide sales of its HD-DVD player by March 2007.

Its system will retail for about £450, roughly half the price of Blu-ray.

A more feature-laden HD DVD player from Toshiba - the HD-XE1 - is planned to launch from late January 2007 for around £649.

Despite differences, both of the new DVD formats offer greater storage capacity than traditional players to cope with the increased size of encoded images needed for high-definition televisions.

And both players have an internet connection, which adds further possibilities of downloadable extras and film teasers.

HD-DVD discs contain up to 30 gigabytes (GB) of data, compared with 50 GB for Blu-ray.

Disney and 20th Century Fox are backing Blu-ray, while Universal is supporting HD-DVD.

Warner Bros and Viacom have said they will support both.

With no agreement between studios, both formats may continue to exist side-by-side for a while, analysts said, adding that many consumers may put off buying a system until a clear winner emerges.

Skype founders move into net TV



The founders of the Skype internet telephony service are launching what they describe as the world's first broadcast quality internet TV service.

Following speculation about a service dubbed The Venice Project, the online television software is now being unveiled under the name Joost.

It is designed to enable broadcasters to get their programmes in front of a global internet audience.

It will allow viewers to access all kinds of television over the internet.

Trial period

The chief executive, Frederik de Wahl, showing off the service in Joost's London offices, claimed that it provided a different experience from other internet television ventures.

"We are trying to replicate the complete television experience," he explained as he flicked through channels using the Joost interface on a widescreen television.

"It's full-screen, broadcast quality, you've got instant channel flipping, and interactivity - a viewer can come to us and get all their TV needs."

The service is still undergoing trials, but thousands of people have taken up an invitation to download the software and try it out.

But the big question is what is there to watch?

So far, it is hard to see a compelling reason to switch on to Joost, which will be a free service supported by advertising.

Competitive market

There is a line-up of sports, documentaries and music programming, but nothing that is going to tempt many away from their existing television diet.

But Mr De Wahl insists this is just trial programming and when the full launch takes place in the next few months there will be much more impressive content on offer.

Joost is backed by Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis, who founded Skype, while Frederik de Wahl previously ran a business whose peer-to-peer software was used in Skype.

He says a version of that software is key to the appeal of Joost, with new peer-to-peer technology, backed up by the firm's own servers, making it possible to stream video on demand.

But rival services are already casting doubt on the claim that Joost represents a new frontier for internet television.

BT Vision, launched in December, offers video-on-demand via broadband, and Channel Four Television says its 4OD service promises DVD-quality programmes to download to your computer.

Meanwhile another company calling itself Babelgum contacted the BBC to insist that its service, launching in March, would also use peer-to-peer technology to stream video at "near-TV resolution".

A spokesman said "the Venice Project hasn't got this to itself."

The battle to broadcast over the internet is hotting up and the Venice Project - or Joost as we now must call it - will have to make plenty of noise to make itself heard.

Film fans get permanent downloads

King Kong
King Kong will be among the first films available on the service
Film fans in the UK will soon be able to legally download and keep blockbuster movies for the first time, according to film studio Universal.

King Kong and Pride and Prejudice will be among the first films available from the new service on the AOL website.

Fans will pay £19.99 for a DVD of their chosen film plus two digital copies to keep indefinitely - one for their home computer and one for a portable device.

Universal said it could "completely revolutionise" how people watch movies.

However users will not be able to burn copies of the films to DVD themselves and the files will be compatible only with PCs and Windows software.


That means they cannot be viewed on Apple iPods or Macs.

Last month, another UK website, Wippit, started offering permanent downloads - but only independent movies are currently available.

Other sites offer Hollywood movies - but only allow customers to keep the digital files for a set time, from one day to a month.

Universal Pictures UK chairman Eddie Cunningham said this would be the first of many such announcements and digital films would become available in many different ways.

"I think what you're seeing here is the beginning of a revolution in terms of how we can distribute digitally and I would expect you'll see a lot more news of this type over the next few months," he said.

He said his company just wanted to get its movies out to the widest possible audience.

Consumers felt "much more comfortable" if a DVD was included in the package as well as the downloads, he said.

"The statistics said people were three times as likely to pick up on this service if the physical copy was included as part of the bundle, and that astonished us."

Apple iPod and coloured tube accessories
The service is not compatible with iPods
Arash Amel, senior analyst at industry journal Screen Digest, told the BBC News website the Universal move was "excellent" for the consumer.

"I think download-to-own is possibly one of the most exciting developments for digital movie downloads over the PC," he said.

The UK movie download market is expected to be worth £200m by 2010, he said - with 40% of that coming from permanent downloads, he said.

The fact that films can be watched on a portable device is also a "major breakthrough", he said. "This is not the norm. This is quite a major step forward."

But studios must allow fans to burn films to DVDs themselves to allow greater flexibility and let prices come down, he added.

'A good move'

"I honestly think that the market won't grow to the same degree if they don't start offering that also.

"It's an exciting time but there are still issues that have to be addressed if this is going to really take off."

Paul Jackson, principal analyst for technology research company Forrester Research, said it was "overall a good move".

"I can see those portable video player consumers taking to this as an easy (and inexpensive, if they were going to buy the DVD anyway) way to get legitimate content onto their devices," he said.

But he added that because the service uses Windows Media Player 10, "it won't work with the video iPod or Sony's PSP, top contenders for portable video playback, or with a Mac PC for that matter".

And Ian Fogg, broadband analyst from Jupiter Research, said the service would only be successful if the price, release date and viewing experience could compete with other ways of watching the same films.

The service will be offered by Universal Pictures UK and DVD rental company Lovefilm via the AOL.co.uk website from 10 April.

Love life & advertisement lines

Love life & Indian advertisement lines

Want to propose a girl
Just do it - Nike

Before going to propose to a girl
Believe in the best - BPL.

If you are hesitating before proposing to a girl
Vicks ki goli lo kich kich door karo - Vicks.

If you are going to propose to a girl
Chances are 50-50 - Britannia.

If a girl slapped you when you proposed to her
Take it easy - Limca.

Girl says NO !
Jor ka jhatka dhire se lage - Mirinda.

Those who succeed in love always say
We dream because we do - Daewoo.

If some one wants to write a love letter to his girlfriend
Likho script apna apna.- Rotomac.

If you love someone
Go get it - Visa power.

Boy riding a bike with neighbor’s girl
Neighbors envy owner’s pride - Onida.

Not satisfied with your date
Yeh dil mangey more - Pepsi.

A guy having a number of girl friends
The Complete Man - Raymonds.

A smart girl having a number of boyfriends
Yeh hai hamara suraksha chakra - Colgate.

For those lost in love
Har shaam ka sathi main aur mera - Bagpiper Whisky.

For a guy ‘r gal who hasn’t yet found one
Dhoondte rehe jayo ge - Surf Exel

Top 10 “Secret” Ways for website promotion

1. Update content.
Create and maintain actual content on your Web site. If you’re trying to sell
something, it helps if you have articles and information about it. If you’re providing information, make sure that you have more than just lists of links for your customers to browse. Having high quality content that is updated regularly will keep
your customers coming back.

2. Write and send a newsletter regularly.

Newsletters remind your customers that your site is still there. E-mail is easy for
your readers to send on to their friends, thus increasing your potential customer base.

3. Post to related newsgroups.

Groups like Yahoo groups, Google groups or the About forums have many topics, there is sure to be one related to your nWeb site.

4. Post to related mailing lists.
Just like the newsgroups, you should find
related lists and get involved with them.
You can find lists at www.topica.com and
www.list-universe.com.

5. Run a contest.
Contests get people interested in your site. Be sure to include an official rules page, and you’ll want to find out if there are any rules in your state our country regarding contests.

6. Invite a guest speaker to your site.
If there is someone in your field who is fairly prestigious, ask them if they might
come and chat with your readers. If you have a chat room, you can hold the event
there. If they don’t want to chat, perhaps they would be willing to write a short note for your site.

7. Advertise online and off.

Banner ads and text links are important, but offline advertising works too. Radio ads, ads in trade journals and so on all helpm to generate interest in your site.

8. Give away free items.
Purchase things like pens or stress balls with your Web site name and URL on them and give them away to your customers.

9. Copy winners.
If there are sites in your topic area that already get lots of hits, visit them to see what they do that is different from your site. If possible, mimic what they do to
add the same value on your site.

10. Watch your page views.

Use your site tracking software to stay informed with what is working and what
isn’t. It doesn’t do any good to purchase a new ad and then never determine if it
actually worked.

How I Work: Bill Gates

Today I was reading about new software updates and found this interesting story by Bill Gates. How The Richest Man of this planet,Bill Gates Works ?

Bill Gates: It's pretty incredible to look back 30 years to when Microsoft (Research) was starting and realize how work has been transformed. We're finally getting close to what I call the digital workstyle.

If you look at this office, there isn't much paper in it. On my desk I have three screens, synchronized to form a single desktop. I can drag items from one screen to the next. Once you have that large display area, you'll never go back, because it has a direct impact on productivity.In the digital age, Microsoft chair Bill Gates uses a lot of electricity, but not as much paper.

The screen on the left has my list of e-mails. On the center screen is usually the specific e-mail I'm reading and responding to. And my browser is on the right-hand screen. This setup gives me the ability to glance and see what new has come in while I'm working on something, and to bring up a link that's related to an e-mail and look at it while the e-mail is still in front of me.

At Microsoft, e-mail is the medium of choice, more than phone calls, documents, blogs, bulletin boards, or even meetings (voicemails and faxes are actually integrated into our e-mail in-boxes).

I get about 100 e-mails a day. We apply filtering to keep it to that level—e-mail comes straight to me from anyone I've ever corresponded with, anyone from Microsoft, Intel, HP, and all the other partner companies, and anyone I know. And I always see a write-up from my assistant of any other e-mail, from companies that aren't on my permission list or individuals I don't know. That way I know what people are praising us for, what they are complaining about, and what they are asking.

We're at the point now where the challenge isn't how to communicate effectively with e-mail, it's ensuring that you spend your time on the e-mail that matters most. I use tools like "in-box rules" and search folders to mark and group messages based on their content and importance.

I'm not big on to-do lists. Instead, I use e-mail and desktop folders and my online calendar. So when I walk up to my desk, I can focus on the e-mails I've flagged and check the folders that are monitoring particular projects and particular blogs.

Outlook also has a little notification box that comes up in the lower right whenever a new e-mail comes in. We call it the toast. I'm very disciplined about ignoring that unless I see that it's a high-priority topic.

Staying focused is one issue; that's the problem of information overload. The other problem is information underload. Being flooded with information doesn't mean we have the right information or that we're in touch with the right people.

I deal with this by using SharePoint, a tool that creates websites for collaboration on specific projects. These sites contain plans, schedules, discussion boards, and other information, and they can be created by just about anyone in the company with a couple of clicks.

Right now, I'm getting ready for Think Week. In May, I'll go off for a week and read 100 or more papers from Microsoft employees that examine issues related to the company and the future of technology. I've been doing this for over 12 years. It used to be an all-paper process in which I was the only one doing the reading and commenting. Today the whole process is digital and open to the entire company.

I'm now far more efficient in picking the right papers to read, and I can add electronic comments that everyone sees in real time.

Microsoft has more than 50,000 people, so when I'm thinking, "Hey, what's the future of the online payment system?" or "What's a great way to keep track of your memories of your kid?" or any neat new thing, I write it down. Then people can see it and say, "No, you're wrong" or "Did you know about this work being done at such-and-such a place?"

SharePoint puts me in touch with lots of people deep in the organization. It's like having a super-website that lets many people edit and discuss—far more than the standard practice of sending e-mails with enclosures. And it notifies you if anything comes up in an area you're interested in.

Another digital tool that has had a big effect on my productivity is desktop search. It has transformed the way I access information on my PC, on servers, and on the Internet. With larger hard drives and increasing bandwidth, I now have gigabytes of information on my PC and servers in the form of e-mails, documents, media files, contact databases, and so on.

Instead of having to navigate through folders to find that one document where I think a piece of information might be, I simply type search terms into a toolbar and all the e-mails and documents that contain that information are at my fingertips. The same goes for phone numbers and email addresses.

Paper is no longer a big part of my day. I get 90% of my news online, and when I go to a meeting and want to jot things down, I bring my Tablet PC. It's fully synchronized with my office machine so I have all the files I need. It also has a note-taking piece of software called OneNote, so all my notes are in digital form.

The one low-tech piece of equipment still in my office is my whiteboard. I always have nice color pens, and it's great for brainstorming when I'm with other people, and even sometimes by myself.

The whiteboards in some Microsoft offices have the ability to capture an image and send it up to the computer, almost like a huge Tablet PC. I don't have that right now, but probably I'll get a digital whiteboard in the next year. Today, if there's something up there that's brilliant, I just get out my pen and my Tablet PC and recreate it.

Days are often filled with meetings. It's a nice luxury to get some time to go write up my thoughts or follow up on meetings during the day. But sometimes that doesn't happen. So then it's great after the kids go to bed to be able to just sit at home and go through whatever e-mail I didn't get to. If the entire week is very busy, it's the weekend when I'll send the long, thoughtful pieces of e-mail. When people come in Monday morning, they'll see that I've been quite busy— they'll have a lot of e-mail.

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type organism - Convert Photograph into a Text Portrait

Ascii-o-Matic is a Flash application that reads your JPG image and creates an interesting plain text portrait filled with just ASCII characters [like you see in the example above, the picture in the inset is the original image]

You also get an HTML version of the image meaning you can copy-paste that code on any webpage. Or just save the generated ASCII image as a standard graphic using any screen-capture tool.

ASCII-o-Matic is faster than most other ASCII conversion tools out there but you are limited to uploaded only JPEG images with a standard 60x50 size.

ASCII-O-Matic.com - probably a good place to convert those MyBlogLog Avatars into text images.
Text Portrait

iPhone Skins for Windows Mobile Phones & PalmOS

iphone skin for windows mobile phone"Creative designers" have created iPhone skins for Palm Treo and other smartphones that anyone can download from the web to make their phone look like the iPhone.

Though these skins don't add iPhone like features to your mobile device, Apple is unhappy because the iPhony themes use the actual iPhone icons made from the screenshots available on the Apple website.

Therefore, Apple lawyers are having a very busy time typing cease-&-desist letters to skin developers and websites that are hosting the iPhone skins.

Apple's lawyers also sent letters to journalists who simply reported on the fact that the skins were available.

We are not jumping into any debate here but this iPhone skin story does prove two things about the web:

1. It is virtually impossible to remove anything from the web. The more you try to police a thing, the more popular it gets and new clones surface video clips on Youtube that . [Remember Daniela Cicarellilater surfaced on Google Videos]

2. Linking to sites that host unauthorized copyrighted content may be considered illegal. We have seen that with Fox and now Apple is also following the same path. Their legal team is after bloggers who are trying to spread the word about iPhone skins.

One of the letters from the law firm hired by Apple says - "While we appreciate your interest in the iPhone, the icons and screenshot displayed on your website are copyrighted by Apple" - would that mean using iPhone screenshots on blogs is illegal ?

Nokia 7373 - L'Amour Collection

  • Innovative swivel design
  • Vibrant QVGA display with up to 262,144 colors
  • Integrated 2 megapixel camera with 8x digital zoom and video recorder
  • Stereo music player and FM Radio
  • Up to 2GB microSD card support
  • Nokia Xpress Audio Messaging function
  • Display
    262K colours QVGA 320 x 240 pixels 2" display
    Adjustable brightness and contrast
  • User Interface
    S40 user interface
    Separate key for camera and for zoom
    Full screen viewfinder
  • Imaging
    Integrated 2 megapixel camera with up to 8x digital zoom
    3GPP Streaming
  • Multimedia
    Visual Radio: Listen to music and interact with your favourite radio stations
    Find out what song is playing, who it's by and other artist information
    Enter contests and answer surveys, vote for your favourite songs
    Download the songs you buy directly into your phone
    Integrated FM radio
    Integrated music player with enhanced user interface and play list for MP3/AAC/M4A/eAAC+/AAC+/WMA formats
    Music library with sort by Artist, Genre and Album
  • Memory Functions
    128 MB built-in memory
    Option to expand memory up to 2GB with microSD card slot
  • Ringing Tones
    Supported file formats: MP3, SpMidim AAC, AAC+, enhanced AAC+
    64-chord/voice polyphonic MIDI ringing tones
    Video ringtones
  • Connectivity
    Pop-Port connector
    Bluetooth
  • Data Transfer
    EDGE*: Class B, multislot class 10
    GPRS: Class B, multislot class 10
    HSCSD (High-Speed Circuit-Switched Data)* / CSD (Circuit-Switched Data)

Size:

  • Weight: 104 g
  • Dimensions: 88 x 43 x 23 mm

Network:

  • Triband GSM 900/1800/1900

Quick Links
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