Saturday, July 7, 2012

How to Know about "DNS Changer Virus" is Attack or Affected your computer.

How to Know about "DNS Changer Virus" is Attack or Affected your computer.
World internet user may be get in trouble in Monday 9 July according to sources internet service will breakdown.DNS changer virus attack near 2.5 lacks computer in world currently.You can remove this virus.

Tips for you if you want to not get trouble with this virus.


1) How to check this virus affected or not your computer system.

Ans: You can known this in a second Just go to www.dns-ok.ca/ open this page. Go to bottom and  click on "I agree". After this new page will be open  if you see  green color banner.It means your computer not affected with this virus your  computer safe, virus not attack on your computer. If you see red color bannar.It means your pc has affected with this virus.Your computer not safe.virus is in your Computer.


2) How to Remove virus from computer
Don't be panic About DNS virus.Scan with the updated antivirus software.you will get this virus in your virus vault and you can delete from their. Before scan remove your internet connection then scan.


3) Second procedure to check virus affected your system or not. (windows)
Ans: You can check this manually. If you using Microsoft window operating system then go to "Start menu" click on "Run" type their "cmd.exe" and enter. you will see the black color dos base window. On that black window type "ipconfig/all" and click. You will see the Your computer IP and DNS server.Please match with following number if your IP and DNS number Match it means your pc is affected with this virus.

4) For Apple user System go to  "System Preferences" select "Network".Click on connection used for internet access (Mostly AirPort or ethernet).Click on "Advanced".then DNS tab.


Virus IP and DNS Number
85.255.112.0     To     85.255.127.25
67.210.0.0         To    67.210.15.255
93.188.160.0     To    93.188.167.255
77.67.83.0         To    77.67.83.255
213.109.64.0     To    213.109.79.255
64.28.176.0       To    64.28.191.255

Friday, June 15, 2012

Facebook vs google display network


Friday, June 1, 2012

Micosoft Windows 8 Release Preview and Functionality

Microsoft has lunched Next generation window software.final test of this version has been tested.Window ads window live department chairmen Steven Sinofsky said we are very happy to lunch of window 8

Window -8 software  you can download from preview.window.com in 14 language . Last week in south korea Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said windows-8 series is less with cloud computing services. this operation system best as compare to previous version.


Windows users are one step closer to getting a major system facelift — and if today’s release of Microsoft’s latest OS build tells us anything, it’s that the company is putting the system’s strongest focus on home-grown software.

We’ve already spent a lot of quality time with Microsoft’s Windows 8 “Consumer Preview”, which was released last February, but today the company made its near-final Windows 8 “Release Preview” available to the public.

The Release Preview comes a bit earlier than originally announced, but there’s no shortage of new and improved features, most of which focus on lean-and-mean Metro apps. Just don’t expect anything astonishingly different in terms of system architecture, as the majority of changes in this latest Windows 8 iteration center around software additions and performance improvements.

While this is the last public preview before Windows 8′s final release (anticipated to arrive in October), that doesn’t mean the new build is completely bug-free. I’ve spent the last day and a half with the Release Preview — more technically termed build 8400 — on a Samsung Series 9 ultrabook provided by Microsoft. The new build works a lot smoother than the Consumer Preview, and there’s much to look forward to. But the Windows 8 team also has quite a bit of work ahead of it.

It’s All About the Apps

In our hands-on of Microsoft’s Consumer Preview, we declared that your familiar Windows desktop is all but dead. In the changes we’ve seen in the Release Preview, this still holds true. Microsoft is focused on improving and deepening the Metro experience, where the desktop is only a portion — or even an afterthought, for some users — of a larger, app-based system.

Right on the Start screen, you’ll see the new build’s most noticeable updates: Three new apps — Sports, Travel and News — are pinned directly on the screen, and come built into the OS. Each of the apps implements great Metro design, but caters to a very specific purpose that might not appeal to every user. Still, they’re all slick and highlight how much Microsoft wants its PC experience to more closely resemble an app-based mobile experience.

The News app aggregates the latest news stories in a way that’s reminiscent of Flipboard or Zite. But according to Jensen Harris, Director of Program Management for the Windows User Experience, it goes much deeper than that. A “Trends” section will show news stories that are trending across the Internet, a feature that’s powered by Microsoft’s Bing engine.

Because Bing has agreements with Twitter and Facebook — the world’s two biggest news-sharing social networks — the News app can pull what people are sharing across search, Facebook and Twitter, and present more accurate results for trending content. There’s also a “My News” section, where you can choose to pull news on very specific topics, such as ultrabooks or The Bachelorette.

“It’s different than a Zite or a Flipboard, where you’re getting a few articles that are being editorially put there, or put there by a small group of users,” Harris told Wired. “You have to look across the entire social graph to build this.”

The new Sports app is a dedicated hub for the latest news, schedules, and team and player stats. The app comes pre-loaded with information silos for a number of sports leagues, including the MLB, NFL, NBA, and even the NHL and Premier League (the top soccer league in the U.K.). The Travel app provides information on travel destinations, and helps users book hotel rooms and flights, view panoramas from various locales, and read articles on travel topics.

The new apps are very easy, and even fun, to use — at least when they work. Harris made clear that News, Sports and Travel are still in beta. “All of them are in the same state that Mail and Calendar were in the previous version,” he said. This was clearly evident during testing: The News and Travel apps crashed on several occasions until they just conked out, and no longer opened for me.

For Microsoft, however, the apps in their current form are less about functionality, and more about, well, proof-of-concept: “This is just an example of a personalized Metro-style app that’s unlike what you have on any other platform,” Harris said.

Beyond the three new apps, other apps we’ve already seen in the Consumer Preview — such as Mail, Calendar, Photos and Internet Explorer — have received noticeable updates. Mail has a new three-pane view that enables easier navigation when using the OS with two thumbs in tablet mode. Calendar has received improved week and month views. And Photos now works a lot faster, and can tap into information from other apps.

For example, when you’re in the Photos app, you can access images from your local drive as well as other apps you have on your Windows 8 PC. This means SkyDrive, Facebook, Flickr and other connected Windows 8 devices are all direct sources of gallery navigation. And while I wasn’t able to install third-party apps onto our test laptop, I did get to see a demo of how Photos can speak to non-native apps, like Photobucket.

“The cool thing about Windows 8 is the way apps work together to complete scenarios,” Harris said. “I liken this to the way that there was originally the web and then there’s Web 2.0. In the original web, every website was a silo. Then Web 2.0 comes and says, ‘Well, actually, websites can start to talk to one another.’ Windows 8 is the glue that binds any two apps together for a whole bunch of scenarios.”

Harris’ vision is all fine and dandy, but one of the new build’s most significant new features actually arrives via a very familiar app: Internet Explorer for Metro now supports Flash directly. Harris says it’s not a plug-in, but rather a native part of the Internet Explorer engine, and shouldn’t be such a resource hog as a result.

The upshot: You’ll be able to get as much Hulu video as you want on a Windows 8 tablet — even on Windows RT, the ARM-based Windows 8 tablet platform.

“We’ve taken Flash and integrated it into the rendering engine of IE. We’ve done the work to basically make Flash touchable, make it have great battery life, and to take out all of the bad parts of having plug-ins,” Harris said.

Multitasking

Trackpad Multitouch Magic


Ever since Microsoft introduced Windows 8, the conversation has focused on the operating system’s role on touch-based devices — tablets, notebooks and all-in-one PC with touchscreens. But most people’s first experiences with Windows 8 won’t be on new devices. They’ll be migrating from an older version of Windows on conventional, non-touch PCs.

With this in mind, Microsoft loaned us a non-touchscreen notebook so that we could test the new system’s multitouch gestures on a conventional touchpad.

So how did it work? Well, to premise, multitouch navigation is totally wonky in its current state. But Microsoft assures us that once we get the hang of the system’s multitouch trackpad gestures, we’ll always want to use them when a touch-sensitive screen isn’t available. “What we’ve tried to do is take the most important part of touch experience and move it into indirect touch,” Harris said.

On a tablet, you swipe from the right to view Metro’s Charms menu. You swipe left to switch through apps. You pinch for semantic zoom, and swipe in whatever direction you want to scroll through a page or screen. All of the same gestures apply to touchpad navigation, albeit on a smaller physical scale.

During real-world use, the first thing I noticed was the strangeness of reverse scrolling — when you move your fingers up on the trackpad, the page you’re viewing onscreen moves down. It’s an issue that was debated furiously by Mac users when OS X Lion was released. You won’t be able to turn off (or flip) reverse-scrolling in the Release Preview build, so get used to it for now.

Technically, you’re supposed to be able to use two-finger scrolling vertically and horizontally. Horizontal scrolling still needs some work, but again, we weren’t using the system’s final build. Thankfully, the other gestures are working pretty well, even in this beta iteration. When you swipe one finger from right to left, the Charms menu quickly appears. Swipe one finger from left to right, and you’ll quickly cycle through open apps. And pinch-to-zoom works just fine.

As someone who’s come to love Mac OS X’s MultiTouch gestures, the Windows 8 multitouch touchpad experience comes as a welcome addition

Where the Desktop Stands

“The way that we think about the desktop is as this wonderful additional app that you have on your PC,” Harris said. “It’s not something that we shy away from at all. We love the desktop. We think it works really well with Metro. We think it’s a huge part of a complete Windows PC.”

In a nutshell, that says it all. The desktop, as we know it, is dead. Now it functions as an app within Windows 8, just as Mail and News is an app. But, of course, the desktop is Windows’ most powerful app, and in that sense, it has a very meaningful place in Windows 8.

While Windows 7 fans are upset they can’t launch directly into the Windows 8 desktop, Metro supporters are confused about why the desktop remains without full-fledged Metro styling. For what it’s worth, Microsoft did recently announce that it’s ditching translucent window borders on the desktop for more a more flat, Metro look.

But Microsoft isn’t worried about criticism on either side.

“There’s a lot of semantic arguments on the web right now, like can people handle two interfaces?” Harris said. “Every app is its own interface, every website is its own interface. There’s not a single person in the world who will come here and click on the desktop app and be like ‘Oh my god, I don’t know what this is, what am I supposed to do?’ Everyone knows how to use this.”

And in this respect, Microsoft is right. People should be able to handle both a Metro and desktop interface in a single PC system. In my time using the Release Preview on a non-touchscreen laptop, I actually enjoyed the dual experience — bugs notwithstanding — especially with the multitasking split-view feature. And I imagine the experience will only get better as Windows 8 is polished further.

In the end, we can all get what we want in Windows 8. Desktop diehards can still opt to spend all of their time in the desktop app (though I don’t recommend it). And those who want Metro through and through can unpin the desktop from their Start Screens to forget the past.

And the rest of us can do both.  

 

Monday, May 21, 2012

Zuckerberg patents aim to simplify Facebook messages

The world's attention may be focused on Facebook's initial public offering and the outsize valuation of the company - but the business of innovation continues in the background for Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg. He's been named as a co-inventor on four Facebook patent applications (the top four) published yesterday by the US patent office.

The filings show Facebook is planning a heap of ways to make more sense of the multitude of different message types that users send and receive on the social network. Why? "It is easy for a user to become overwhelmed with the constant stream of incoming messages," Zuckerberg and colleagues admit in the preamble to patent application US 2012/0124483.

This firehose includes updates from pals, inbox mails, event notifiers, apps, web-chat clients and photosharing sites - like recently-acquired Instagram. The idea seems to be to try to make sending and receiving messages a more coherent, less distracting, process.

In patent application US 2012/0124146, for instance, one idea is that the network can learn how you usually communicate with a recipient. So if you normally send Facebook updates to Joe Soap, and then suddenly you begin texting him, the system will ensure your texts arrive in his Facebook inbox, rather than his phone alone.

Another of the patents, US 2012/0124147, suggests Facebook's servers automatically organise messages into related conversation subject threads. Still another, US 2012/0124148 seeks out contextual information related to messages (such as a link to a profile, or a profile picture) of someone who has provided key information in a thread.

None of this is startlingly innovative - but there's a landgrab going on in the computer-implemented invention field as patent lawsuits proliferate - and firms worry they may be the next target of a patent troll or a floundering rival out to make a buck.

For my money, the best Facebook invention revealed this week was this one: the bizarrely jury-rigged smartphone that allowed Zuckerberg to post to Facebook the moment he hit a button to ring the trading bell at NASDAQ as the IPO kicked off.

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Apple India has launched retina display Ipad


After long time the apple India has launched iPad.important specification is  latest version new retina display , F5 X chip, 5 Mega Pixel eye sight camera and HD video like facilities.

Indian Market the price of the iPad will be between 30000 to 51000 .Basically it all depend on variant model.

WI-FI with 16 GB memory price  will be 30500.but WI-FI and 4G mobile network both service running iPad price will be 38900. by the way the latest IPad will not work in 4G LTI network in India that why customer have to use 3G network for this.

Indian IPAD fan have to choosing option for iPad which have  16, 32 and 64 GB capacity and black and white color model.Customer can  select WI_FI or WI-FI and 4G  both technology model.

APPLE India will continue selling iPad 2,but the price will not drop down.now price of 16 GB WI_FI Model 24500 and 3G Version 32900 in available.

Friday, April 20, 2012

New Google Street View helps you explore hidden treasures of the world

who are struck with wanderlust can now explore the globe from the comfort of their homes, as long as they have access to the internet.

Google's Street View is heading down the Amazon to capture pictures of "some of the most remote and biodiverse areas in the world", according to its official blog.

According to the Sunday Times newspaper, the Street View has so far filmed a 30-mile stretch of from the town of Tumbira along the Rio Negro, the world's second-longest river from northeast Brazil, Moon Bay in the South Shetland Islands of western Antarctica and, reports the Daily Mail.

The cameras can shoot in 360 degrees, motion sensors and lasers to capture 3-D images and distances.

Armchair adventurers will not only be to able to gaze at the Amazon, they'll be able to peek inside buildings as the camera has filmed some villages and paths that lead into the thick jungle.

Named Amazon Street View, the images will be available from November.

But those who have been lucky enough to explore the depths of the Brazilian rainforest say the online pictures simply cannot compare to the real thing.

Speaking to paper, Matt Brandon, a TV producer who filmed with presenter Bruce Parry in the Amazon, said: "I think it's great for everyone to be able to see the Amazon in this way.

"If you're fortunate enough to able to actually go there, then you should grab it with both hands," he added. (ANI)

Coming soon: Sony Ericsson’s Xperia Arc S that can take 3D pictures

London, Sept 5 : Sony Ericsson has announced its new line of smartphones, which can take 3D panoramic images on a standard 2D camera - the first of its kind on the mobile phone market.

Pictures taken on the new, top-of-the-range Xperia Arc S can be viewed on any compatible television set.

The phone, however, will display them only in two dimensions. Nor will it be able to produce 3D video output, reports the Daily Mail.

The camera works by taking several simultaneous images and `stitching' them together.

The phone, which runs Google's Android operating system, has a 4.2" screen and the camera definition is 8.1 megapixels, according to the Sunday Telegraph.

Any 3D images are viewed by connecting the phone to a 3D TV using the HDMI output.

The company said the Arc S will come in five colours - white, blue, silver, black and pink.

The device was unveiled at the IFA technology fair in Berlin. (ANI)

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Micromax new tablet pc in cheap price

Mobile manufacturing company micromax come up with his new product call tablet pc. company launch his tablet in Tuesday.
Price is this 6499 this device is prepare for education sector.Manufacturing is in haridwar of this product.Micromax CEO
Deepak malhotra told company will manufacture 1 lack unit in a month and also they also looking for raise in future.according to company will do four way marketing.

Severn inch funbook is base on android 4.0.3.in which 1.22 GHZ processor,0.3 MB VGA front camera,4GB intermal memory and 32GB expandable memory.For giving educational content of tablett company did partnership with pierson and avron
Mr. Malhotra said for any class educational content user have to spend price 799 which is affordable,
Lounching with tablet pc Micromax is now come in list of major company like HCL Infosys and vhistel those who already made tablet pc for educational sector

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

YouTube working to release blurring tool for videos



YouTube is developing a device for movie creators to simply unknown the encounters of individuals presented in their movie in a quote to deal with comfort issues. This new device should be available within a few months, says Victoria Huge,YouTube administrator of international devices and plan.

As unveiled on Information Week, the clouding technological innovation was described at a segment discussion at the The search engines (NASDAQ: GOOG) Big Outdoor tents occurrence presented the other day.

According to Huge, though clouding the encounters of individuals in movie is not difficult, many customers do not perform any modifying on their video clips previous to posting, or don't succeed to search for the acceptance of everyone presented in the movie. This results in unavoidable problems followed by the treatment of the problem movie if no changes were made to deal with them.YouTube wishes to make things easier by including a clouding device in its movie modifying tool set.This will allow movie designers to modify a movie to cloud out a complainant’s face and deal with the issue, without having to remove it.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Windows 8 and the Perception Game

Windows 8 is likely the most ambitious UI project for Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) since Microsoft Bob, and we all know how that ended up. What was kind of sad about Microsoft Bob was that for what it was intended to do, it was both cutting-edge and very successful. However, because it was positioned as the follow-on to Windows, the bar was set too high and the product failed spectacularly.

We've since seen products like the RIM PlayBook -- which was a brilliant BlackBerry accessory but not designed to be a standalone product like the iPad -- fail for similar reasons.

I could argue that if folks initially saw the iPod as a heavy, expensive device with poor content access (remember it launched without either Windows support or iTunes), or the iPhone as crappy, expensive, fragile phone with slow connectivity (2.5G in a 3G time frame, no screen protection, based on the failed LG Prada), or the iPad as an expensive netbook without a keyboard (which is kind of what it is), they would have failed too.

But Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) got us to see those products for what they could do, and instead of turning into door stops -- which most similar devices became -- they were massive successes.

What people, particularly engineers, don't seem to get is that the success of a product is dependent more on the perceptions that surround it than on reality. That is why the iPad is a magical, successful device, and the PlayBook is a failure. People saw the iPad for what it could do and the PlayBook for what it couldn't.

For Windows 8 to succeed, buyers will have to see it as the best blend of the iPad and the MacBook Air, which is a compelling value. If they see it as an overly complex mess, it will be the next Vista. My peers are split on how this is likely to turn out.

I'll close with my product of the week: an amazing camera that makes focusing obsolete.
Playing to Perceptions

We are all biased. What is amazing is how many of us try to argue that we aren't. We can watch MSNBC or Fox and actually think one is balanced and the other isn't. If we stood back, we should be able to determine that both services play to their own unique audiences and tailor very different positions to appeal to broadly different biases. In short, it is likely both services are intentionally leaving out key information to further their particular biases.

I was reminded of this when I was sent a story by Fox news that referenced a liberal site speaking from Democratic talking points, suggesting that such behavior was objectionable. This came within a few days of "The Daily Show" playing a clip of Fox doing the same thing with Republican talking points. It is doubtful either side thought what it was doing was wrong, even though each criticized the other for doing it.

One of the industry secrets is that current Apple Hardware is very fragile, but Apple will aggressively replace it if it fails. Looking at Apple margins, it apparently is cheaper to accept the breakage than it is to build more robust products and, because they take excellent care of users when they break, the users actually think more of Apple than vendors with more robust products.

Ironically, I first ran into this perception issue in the 1990s with Dell (Nasdaq: DELL). Back then, Dell hardware was very fragile, but Dell took excellent care of users when it broke, and Dell enjoyed Apple-like growth and success back then. It is fascinating to note that Apple has basically learned something from Dell that Dell later forgot -- that maintaining the perception of excellence is actually more important than achieving excellence.

Chances are your -- and my -- entire world is defined by largely false perceptions -- from people we think are evil who aren't, to people we think are good who aren't. Most are someplace in between. You generally see this most pronounced when a marriage fails quickly. Both spouses will often defend their partner to those who think the marriage is a mistake up until the marriage fails, and then they'll instantly become their greatest critic, finding nothing endearing about them. Neither state is accurate -- yet in both instances, they are clearly unaware of their own biases or inconsistencies.

This is a long way of saying our perceptions are our reality, and if you don't get that, stop reading now because you won't get the rest of this any better.
Windows 8 vs. the MacBook Air + iPad

What Microsoft is trying to build is actually rather compelling. Much like the smartphone is a combination of a Palm Pilot, iPod, and phone, the ideal Windows 8 desktop will be a combination of an Ultrabook like the MacBook Air, and a tablet like the iPad.

Now this entire concept works if you mentally grasp that it is better to carry one device that does both than to haul around two distinctly different devices. With the two devices, you have all the objections that surround Windows 8's two interfaces. Apple's iOS and Mac OS X are different, after all. Rather than increasing complexity, removing one of the devices actually reduces the complexity.

But much like you have the iPod interface, the phone interface, and the PDA interface, depending on what app you open on the iPhone, each mode of Windows 8 has a different user experience tied to it. Metro is for when it is a tablet, and the older Windows interface is best when it is in PC mode.

Now let's go back to early last decade, when we had Palm PDAs and the first iPods, and Motorola's flip phone was the most popular phone. If someone would have tossed out a phone that tried to blend all three, it is unlikely the market would have seen it positively. It would have been a thick, heavy phone, without the flip feature people were buying. Remember the first Apple phone: The Roker sucked -- even Steve Jobs hated it.

Both the device and the market had to evolve to something that could be seen as wonderful, and the iPhone was born.

Now what will be interesting -- interesting defined as incredibly difficult to message -- is the fact there will be two (actually you'll discover there are three, but I'll cover that at a later date) distinct versions of Windows 8: one that will emphasize traditional PC performance and capability, and one that will be focused on tablets and emphasize battery life. This is a choice Apple doesn't have, and if people like the choice, it is a winner. If they get confused, Tim Cook and Google will be grinning ear to ear.
Wrapping Up: It Is All About Perceptions

One huge advantage Apple has is the way it approaches the market. It puts a huge effort into ensuring positive coverage of its products and, by containing leaks, preventing any uncontrolled early negative perceptions from seeing the light of day.

Microsoft's partner model limits its ability to control initial impressions -- responses to Windows 8 are now based on a rough Beta -- and requires that its partners execute with a consistent, powerful message. Often, that's were launches fail.

In the end -- and I've been using the Beta for a couple of weeks now -- Windows 8 is potentially wonderful. However, it is also incredibly difficult to message, which will make this rollout, one way or the other, one for the history books.
Product of the Week: Lytro Camera

Product of the Week

Every once in a while, a product comes out that makes everything before it appear on the verge of being obsolete. The Lytro camera is just such a device. It makes current cameras appear woefully inadequate, even though it has clearly not reached its full potential yet.

What the Lytro does is capture a massive amount of visual information when you take a picture, allowing you to focus after the picture is taken. In short, everything is in focus -- you just have to change perspective on the picture itself to change what you are focused on. Have something you like in the background -- shift perspective, foreground same. This is simply not possible with other cameras.

Lytro camera

For now, I recommend this Mac-only product only for true geeks, given its limitations -- it is kind of like an ultra-modern version of the first box Kodak camera, at this point.

There appears to be little doubt that this technology could transform digital photography. We often talk about Innovation, and the truly amazing Lytro camera pushes innovation to the limit, so it is my product of the week

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Orkut App Finally Arrives for iPhone, iPad

Popular Brazilian-based social networking site Orkut has finally gotten its own app for the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch.

[More from Mashable: Facebook Announces Tight Integration of 60 Apps to Timeline, More on the Way]

The free app for Orkut – a site launched by Google in 2004 which now has 66 million active members – allows users to post status updates, pictures and chat with others.

However, the app is slightly overdue. In fact, earlier this week it was revealed that Facebook overtook Orkut as Brazil’s most-popular social network in December. Its popularity in Brazil -- where 60% of Orkut’s users are based -- led to it being hosted and managed by Google Brazil from 2008 onwards.

[More from Mashable: Hey Zuckerberg, Take Facebook Down for a Day]

In addition, Google+ is also picking up steam in Brazil. It alone raked in 4.3 million users last month.

But even still, the app has been much-anticipated for awhile now and Orkut users will certainly be glad to finally gain access to the site on the go. The app is now available for download via the Apple App Store.