Friday 18 January 2013

Give your Windows a 3D Look

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Hii Friends...I hope you all are fine. I hope my previous posts were beneficial for you. Well, today I am back with an Amazing software named as T3Desk. It is a very Interesting software which helps you to give a 3D look to your Operating system. It gives a third dimension look to your Windows. It lets you give a Transparent look to your Windows. Well, it is a lightweight software. It is an unique application.



  
Using this software, your windows can be zoomed , Flipped , moved in almost anyway you want. You can surf more easily using T3Desk. You can also configure your windows Dimension looks, Transparency Effect and much more. This software will work on almost all versions of Windows.

Thank You.

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Thursday 10 January 2013

Flexible Smart Phone : Samsung Youm

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We have been hearing talk about flexible screens for your smart phone and other devices, but they have always seemed to be somewhere in the future.Flexible screens will make your phone smaller as well which is a great benefit. It can then be expanded to a much larger size or larger that we are seeing today. It creates lots of potential. If you thing about the ability to unroll your smart phone for use and then rolling the phone back up to make it compact, you begin to see the potential of flexible screens.




Samsung has given the world a glimpse of a phone with a bendable screen, dubbed the Youm, suggesting that consumers may soon be able to fold up large phone or tablet screens as if they were maps.

The Korean electronics company showed off the device at a keynote speech Wednesday at the International Consumer Electronics Show (CES 2013) in Las Vegas. The annual convention showcases the latest TVs, computers and other consumer electronic devices.


The world’s biggest technology manufacturer said that Youm, the brand it has used for its flexible display technology since June, was a prototype that was not going to launch imminently. Samsung's continued emphasis on the technology will worry its rivals, however, and indicates that the Korean company is continuing both to work on new display Technologies and to reduce its reliance on Google's Android. It pointedly demonstrated the phone running Windows Phone 8.






Analysts say the first uses for flexible displays are most likely to be in devices that are more durable than glass because they can absorb force rather than crack under it. The new technology is also likely to be used, Samsung said, to wrap displays around devices and allow them, for instance, to show information on their edges.
"The concept of the flexible screen has been around for some time, but it finally looks as if Samsung is really going to deliver on that technology," said Stephen Bell, an analyst with Keystone Global.

Here is a Video Demonstration of Flexibility of Samsung Youm. Must watch :-






Source : Cbsnews, Telegraph.co.uk

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Friday 4 January 2013

10 Fast and Free Security Enhancements

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Hi, Now I am Here to tell you about some Maintenance tips that can Protect your Pc and make your Pc as clean as Milk. But, these Methods can slow your pc.  Before you spend a Dime(Money) on security, there are many precautions you can take that will protect you against the most common threats.


1. Check Windows Update and Office Update regularly. Windows Me, 2000, XP, 7, 8 users can configure automatic updates. Click on the Automatic Updates tab in the System control panel and choose the appropriate options.

2. Install a personal firewall. Both SyGate (_www.sygate.com) and ZoneAlarm (_www.zonelabs.com) offer free versions.

3. Block pop-up spam messages in Windows NT, 2000, or XP by disabling the Windows Messenger service (this is unrelated to the instant messaging program). Open Control Panel | Administrative Tools | Services and you'll see Messenger. Right-click and go to Properties. Set Start-up Type to Disabled and press the Stop button. Bye-bye, spam pop-ups! Any good firewall will also stop them.

4. Use strong passwords and change them periodically. Passwords should have at least 9 characters; use letters and numbers and have at least one symbol. A decent example would be Pb@h4ck3rhacker*. This will make it much harder for anyone to gain access to your accounts.

5. If you're using Outlook or Outlook Express, use the current version or one with the Outlook Security Update installed. The update and current versions patch numerous vulnerabilities.

6. Buy antivirus software and keep it up to date. If you're not willing to pay, try Grisoft AVG Free Edition (http://www.freeavg.com). 

7. If you have a wireless network, turn on the security features: Use MAC filtering, turn off SSID broadcast, and even use WEP with the biggest key you can get. For more, check out our wireless section or see the expanded coverage in Your Unwired World in our next issue.

8. Be skeptical of things on the Internet. Don't assume that e-mail "From:" a particular person is actually from that person until you have further reason to believe it's that person. Don't assume that an attachment is what it says it is. Don't give out your password to anyone, even if that person claims to be from "support." 

These are the ways that can maintain your Pc.


Thank You.
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Monday 31 December 2012

Happy New Year 2013

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Hacking Therapy wishes you a very Happy new year 2013.

New Days, New Time, New Moments, New Posts, New Articles, New Tutorials Ahead Are Waiting For You.

Saying Goodbye to 2012 won't be hard. But looking forward with hope for a better year in 2013 is a real challenge.

Thank You.
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Friday 14 December 2012

World-s Biggest Hard Disk/Drive

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This is the Biggest Hard Drive Ever !!!!!!  Seems like a C.P.U ........!!       

                                                           



1956: IBM 305 RAMAC Hard Drive


IBM introduced the 305 RAMAC computer on September 13th, 1956, which was the first computer to include a disk drive named the IBM 350 Disk File. Prior to this magnetic computer storage had consisted of core memory, tape, and drums. The magnetic disk was seen as a replacement for the magnetic drum for the same reason 78 RPM Records eventually replaced Edison cylinders- more storage with less space.
The 350 Disk File consisted of a stack of fifty 24" discs that can be seen to the left of the operator in the above picture. The capacity of the entire disk file was 5 million 7-bit characters, which works out to about 4.4 MB in modern parlance. This is about the same capacity as the first personal computer hard drives that appeared in the early 1980's, but was an enormous capacity for 1956. IBM leased the 350 Disk File for a $35,000 annual fee.
Today the magnetic disc is the platform of choice for the temporary storage of digital video, but it wasn't until the late 1960's that the magnetic disc was used for any sort of video storage. At that time the Instant Replay Deck was introduced, which permitted the storage and playback of brief segments of analog video.

                                                                    

Thank You.
                                                  


                                                             


                                                             

                                                             

                                                             

                                     
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Friday 7 December 2012

50 Facts About Facebook

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  1. 1 in every 13 people on Earth is on Facebook 
  2. 35+ demographic represents more than 30% of the entire user base
  3. 71.2 % of all USA Internet users are on Facebook
  4. In 20 minutes 1,000,000 links are shared on Facebook
  5. In 20 minutes 1,484,000 event invites are posted
  6. In 20 minutes 1,323,000 photos are tagged
  7. In 20 minutes 1,851,000 status updates are entered
  8. In 20 minutes 1.972 million friend requests are accepted
  9. In 20 minutes 2,716,000 photos are uploaded
  10. In 20 minutes 2,716,000 messages are sent
  11. In 20 minutes 10.2 million comments are posted
  12. In 20 minutes 1,587,000 wall posts are written
  13. 750 million photos were uploaded to Facebook over New Year’s weekend
  14. 48% of young Americans said they found out about news through Facebook
  15. 48% of 18 to 34 year olds check Facebook right when they wake up
  16. 50% of active users log on to Facebook in any given day
  17. Average user has 130 friends
  18. People spend over 700 billion minutes per month on Facebook
  19. There are over 900 million objects that people interact with (pages, groups, events and community pages)
  20. Average user is connected to 80 community pages, groups and events

  21. Average user creates 90 pieces of content each month
  22. More than 30 billion pieces of content (web links, news stories, blog posts, notes, photo albums, etc.) shared each month.
  23. More than 70 translations available on the site
  24. About 70% of Facebook users are outside the United States
  25. Over 300,000 users helped translate the site through the translations application
  26. Entrepreneurs and developers from more than 190 countries build with Facebook Platform
  27. People on Facebook install 20 million applications every day
  28. Every month, more than 250 million people engage with Facebook on external websites
  29. Since social plugins launched in April 2010, an average of 10,000 new websites integrate with Facebook every day
  30. More than 2.5 million websites have integrated with Facebook, including over 80 of comScore’s U.S. Top 100 websites and over half of comScore’s Global Top 100 websites
  31. There are more than 250 million active users currently accessing Facebook through their mobile devices
  32. People that use Facebook on their mobile devices are twice as active on Facebook than non-mobile users.
  33. There are more than 200 mobile operators in 60 countries working to deploy and promote Facebook mobile products
  34. Al Pacino’s face was on the original Facebook homepage
  35. One early Facebook function was a file sharing service
  36. The first “Work Networks” as well as the original educational networks included Apple and Microsoft
  37. The meaning of the term poke has never been defined
  38. There is an ‘App’ to see what’s on the Facebook cafe menu
  39. Mark Zuckerburg (CEO of Facebook) calls himself a “Harvard Graduate” when in fact he didn’t graduate (apparently his reply is that “there isn’t a setting for dropout”)
  40. Australian’s spend more time per month on Facebook than any other country at over 7 hours on average
  41. A Facebook employee hoodie sold for $4,000 on eBay
  42. Facebook was initially bank-rolled by Peter Thiel the co-founder of PayPal for $500,000
  43. It is the second biggest website by traffic behind Google (at the moment)
  44. Facebook is now valued at approximately $80 billion
  45. Facebook makes money through advertising and virtual products
  46. Facebook was almost shut down by a lawsuit by ConnectU who claimed that Zuckerburg stole the idea and Technology for Facebook (the issue was settled out of court)
  47. The USA has the largest Facebook user base with 155 million people which represents 23.6% of Facebook’s total users
  48. There is over 16,000,000 Facebook fan pages
  49. Texas Hold’em Poker is the most popular Facebook page with over 60 million fans
  50. More than 800 million active users.


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Wednesday 5 December 2012

Samsung Galaxy Note 2 : Review and Price

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You'll need deep pockets: not just to buy the device, but to carry it as well.
The Galaxy Note is back and this time, it’s packed with more features, such as the ability to preview e-mails, events, videos, and images without even touching your stylus tip to the screen and the ability to rotate the phone’s screen depending on the orientation of your head.In almost every way, the Galaxy Note II is like the Samsung Galaxy S3. It uses the same front face, button and rear styling. So what’s different? How about the addition of a stylus, some software ... and oh yes, the much bigger size.




A handset handful
Having found the 4.8-inch Samsung Galaxy S 3 too big, it is expected to find the 5.5-inch Samsung Galaxy Note II annoyingly huge. 

Having said that it’s more comfortable to carry, however, there’s a glaring exception: when thumb-typing one-handed, We have to position things carefully to ensure there was no risk of dropping the phone. But this is ideal as a hold-in-one-hand-type-with-the-other gadget, and using that setup it’s as safe as can be.

The likelihood that any woman could keep the Note II comfortably in jeans or trouser pockets is slim, but in a man’s trouser pocket, or in a jacket pocket or handbag, it causes zero problem whatsoever even though it’s a hefty 183 grams. That weight, though, also means that the Note II has a heft and thickness that feels robust.

Screen 

One other aspect I is noticed that while carrying the Note II around was that the screen is brighter than the Galaxy S3 in daylight. Given that this is one of the S3’s weak points, It also makes it almost alarmingly bright if you use it at night.

The screen may be bigger, but it’s not any higher resolution: both the S3 and the Note II use 720 x 1280 pixels. On the S3, this gives an overall pixels per inch around 306, which is nice and sharp. The 5.5-inch screen drops the pixels per inch on the Note II to a less impressive 267. It’s still sharp, but noticeably less so when the two handsets are held side-by-side. This really only makes a difference when looking at images, however. For text, to notice the difference in sharpness you have to get close enough to the screen that your eyes start to water. I don’t recommend that.

The screen doesn’t fingerprint readily, but it does attract a few smudges over time. 

Classy Camera
The eight-megapixel camera comes armed with the usual mid range accouterments  such as autofocus and LED flash. But it also has BSI  for improved imaging in low light conditions and it comes with a smorgasbord of extra features, including tilt-to-zoom, Best Photo (eight quick-fire shots from which you can pick the best one), Best Group Pose, burst shot and face detection.

Quality is pretty good overall, though if anything it suffers a little more when there's too much light than too little. It can record video in 1080p HD quality and there's a pretty good two-megapixel camera on the front for video calls too.
Performance
The quad-core 1.6GHz processor backed by a mighty 2GB RAM has a lot of work to do but steps up to the mark admirably. This is a fast device, whipping smartly between apps and browsing web pages with no sign of slow-down. It delivered an AnTuTu benchmark rating of 13,619 -- that's higher than the Samsung Galaxy S3 and even higher than the recent Galaxy Note 10.1, essentially a full-size tablet, making it the highest benchmark of any handset we've yet tried.

It also has 4G capability, which will only be of use to you if you're on Everything Everywhere at the moment, but it's useful future-proofing for the 4G revolution that's underway.

It's running the brand spanking new, up to the minute 4.1 Jelly Bean version of Android -- one of the first devices to do so out of the box. 

The 5.5-inch screen (0.2-inches bigger than Galaxy Note) looks simply stunning. With its 1280x720 pixel resolution, the Super Amoled display is pin-sharp and packed with detail. Arguments that Amoled tends to be vivid but not necessarily accurate with colours fade into insignificance as you feast your eyes on HD video which looks bright and textured, but not overpowering.
Stylus and Software
Big it may be, but in truth, it's not hugely bigger than Samsung's hero handset, the Galaxy S3. But what makes the difference, and distinguishes this phone from virtually all the others, is the S-Pen. This latest version is a marked improvement over the original. Yes, the pressure-sensitive stylus lets you do doodles and drawings with a selection of different pen nibs and colours. You can make notes of course -- usefully, the notes page pops up as soon as you remove the S-Pen from its dock -- but also add captions and annotations to documents, pictures and web pages.

Handwriting recognition is really very impressive overall, and it did a sterling job of translating our handwritten scrawl. Even when it isn't sure, it offers a selection of similar words to choose from, predictive text-style, so you can simply tap on the one you want and keep writing.

There are handy drawing tools too, like Shape Match, which corrects outlines and makes them straight. You can record your sketches or notes and play them back to show how they took shape and automatically search for items you've written.

Samsung's new "Air View" feature allows you hover the S-Pen over items like emails, calendar appointments and gallery pictures, as well as menu icons to give you a quick preview without having to open them.

It also has the Multi Window option that we saw on the Galaxy Note 10.1, which allows you to have two windows open on the screen at once. So you could be checking your emails at the same time as watching a video, or keep a webpage open while you're drawing a picture or making notes. The screen's just about big enough to make it viable, and the processor showed no signs of struggling with multiple screens.
Conclusion
The Samsung Galaxy Note 2 offers a range of improvements over its predecessor with a bigger screen, beefed-up processor, the latest version of Android and a bigger battery. This really is a go-anywhere device that you can use for work or for fun in equal measure, a Swiss Army Knife of a handset that can do virtually everything you might want it to.

Selection and Price in India
The Galaxy Note 2 seems to have checked all the boxes, and if you’re confused whether to buy the iPad and use a compact phone, or choose the well priced 7-inch Samsung Galaxy Tab, your decision-making process just got more complex. The Note 2 is a compelling device that allows you to do almost everything, except type a huge document or work on a complex Excel spreadsheet, but that’s something that takes some effort even on an iPad. In the presence of other large-screen devices, you won’t stand out in a crowd with the new Note 2 even when you have this phablet against your ear. The Galaxy Note 2 is 
priced (on 5th December 2012) at Rs 35,999/- ; you will need deep pockets not just to buy the device but to carry it too.


Source: Pcworld.co.nz, Gqindia.com, Wired.co.uk

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