Stage6 is closing down :-(

February 27, 2008

The most popular site to watch and download DIVx videos is closing down on Feb-28th. Really a sad news for the Stage6 users. The reason being “That the continued operation of Stage6 is a very expensive enterprise that requires an enormous amount of attention and resources that they are not in a position to continue to provide”.

The bad part is that I came to know abt this site only a couple of weeks back :-( !!

I hope, i will find a similar site soon…

Stay Alive..


The Apple iPhone

July 4, 2007

Apple has finally launched itz lattest gadget iPhone on Jun-29th. The iPhone is not just a phone - it is a phone, music player, video player, internet device, and camera all in one. Like its Apple iPod Nano and iPod video cousins, the iPhone is slim and sleek at just 11.6mm thick, 2.4-inches wide, and 4.5-inches tall.

apple-iphone-official-3.jpg

Readmore..

http://www.engadget.com/2007/01/09/the-apple-iphone/

http://www.mobilewhack.com/handset/apple_iphone.html


Yahoo Messenger in web.

June 8, 2007

Now you can start using the yahoo messenger right inside your browser and can chat, download etc., from the yahoo network.

visit: http://webmessenger.yahoo.com/ 


Google Analytics - New Version

May 9, 2007

The new version of Google Analytics is easy enough for a layperson to understand, but also offers the sophistication experienced users need.

readmore..


Hutch is now Vodafone…

May 9, 2007

Vodafone completes Hutch-Essar deal

British telecom giant Vodafone on Wednesday said it has completed the acquisition of controlling stake in Hutchisson-Essar Ltd while paying a less amount at $10.9 billion as against $11.8 billion announced earlier.  readmore….


Alcatel-Lucent is born

December 4, 2006

alcalu.jpg

Alcatel-Lucent is born. The companies officially closed their previously announced merger of France’s Alcatel and the United States’ Lucent Technologies. The union creates one of the largest telecom gear companies in the world.

Readmore…. :

http://www.lightreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=111755

http://www.wirelessweek.com/toc-newsat2direct/12/01/06?starting=4

As Alcatel has bought Nortel’s 3G unit, I believe, I will be working for Alcatel-Lucent for the coming months..

I want to Stay alive…


Mozilla Releases Firefox 2.0

October 26, 2006

Mozilla this week unveiled Firefox 2.0, the next generation of its Web browser that includes security enhancements and quite a few new features that make Web browsing a bit more fun and a lot more intuitive.

I don’t find much difference in appearance apart from features like updated tabbed browsing having close ‘X’ for each tab now and spell checking, itz really very handy and few more features..

readmore..

download: firefox2.0


Google in talks to acquire YouTube

October 10, 2006

The Wall Street Journal reports Google may make a $1.6 billion offer forYouTube Inc. in a effort to bolster its position in the online video market. Google is not commenting on the reports, which include rumors that rival Yahoo! also may be interested in YouTube. 

readmore…


Explore the banned books thro’ Google

September 14, 2006

From: Googleblog

For 25 years, libraries and bookstores nationwide have been celebrating the freedom to read during Banned Books Week, which is sponsored by the American Booksellers Association, the American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression, the Association of American Publishers, the American Society of Journalists and Authors, the National Association of College Stores, and endorsed by the Library of Congress Center for the Book.

Now Google has joined the party. At google.com/bannedbooks, you can use Google Book Search to explore some of the best novels of the 20th century which have been challenged or banned. And while libraries and bookstores around the country celebrate the 25th anniversary of Banned Books Week with special readings, displays, and more, you just might end up with a visit to your local library or bookstore and an old favorite or a new banned book in hand.


Microsoft following Google?

September 13, 2006

The Good Offers both no-frills and info-rich, customized search. Related results are relevant. The Bad Looks a lot like Google; video search still in beta
The Bottom Line It may not score originality points but does make for a solid search experience

tag. –> If you can’t beat them, copy them. At first glance, that seems to be Microsoft’s strategy to capture more of the search market. On Sept. 11, the software giant officially released from testing a trio of search services: Live Search, Live.com, and Live Local Search, which share a striking resemblance to Google’s own offering.– if (!window.OAS_sitepage) { var BW_site; // use for new ad site var BW_page = “/tech”; var OAS_listpos; // use to restrict the number of available page positions document.write(”); } //–>!– OAS_AD(’Middle’); var printPos = “Middle = pos9, in story(300×250), tc_general_9.htm”; var checkAd = (!adcheck)?false:debug(); //–>

 

Unlike MSN.com, Microsoft’s longtime search site, Live.com has the streamlined look of Google’s homepage. The basic site is a bar with several words underneath linking to, among other things, an image search, a Web-only search, and a map program featuring 3-D aerial shots similar to those found in Google maps.RELEVANCY.  It makes sense why Microsoft (MSFT) would release a platform similar to Google’s. Despite having 465 million unique viewers on its MSN site each month, Microsoft has lagged a distant third behind Google (GOOG) and Yahoo! (YHOO) in the search market. Nielsen NetRatings puts MSN’s share of the market at just 9.6% for July, 2006, the last month for which the company has statistics. During that same period, Google controlled 49.2% of the market, with 2.78 billion searches. Yahoo came in second with 1.35 billion searches, representing 23.8% of total queries.

Sid Parakh, an analyst at McAdams, Wright, and Ragen, says computer users were visiting MSN for its content but then leaving when they wanted to find more information. “Microsoft realized that, even though they have a lot of traffic on their Web site, people were going to Google or Yahoo for searches,” Parakh says. A major reason for the search switch was relevancy. Computer users who searched MSN would sometimes receive different, perhaps less targeted, results than when they searched Google and Yahoo, Parakh says.

The new engine, Live.com, has resolved these issues. A recent search for “cars” on Live Search and Google yielded many of the same results in the top 10, including cars.com and a stock analysis of Avis Budget Group (CAR). Similarly, a simple search for a word or two also yields results with relevant ways to refine the search. For example, a search for “home” would bring up suggested queries such as “home loans.”

Stay alive…