Saturday, October 30, 2010

Run multiple IE browsers on your PC

A web designer wants his web-site to be visually same across all the browsers.  Amongst other browsers or even the latter incarnations of Internet Explorer,  IE 6 is a very different animal.
We always want to test  web-sites in various IE versions IE6,  IE7 and IE8 for browser compatibility. But it is always difficult to test on different machines.
There are certain ways to test website on various versions of IE which is mentioned below.
  • What I used to do is to install 3 operating systems on a machine for IE testing, but it consumes a lot of time.
  • We can also make use of IE Tester but in some cases I found this unreliable, so I prefered to avoid it.
But I came across an excellent way to run multiple version of Internet Explorer on standalone computer.
Thanks to spoon browser ,which provides hundreds of desktop applications. It also provides multiple IE version that runs at the same time on standalone PC.
To test all IE browser we can use spoon browser sandbox .

Govt to relieve Rs 3K cr more to PSU oil retailers

"The government has agreed to relieve an additional Rs 3,000 crore to state fuel retailers to makeup for losses they incurred on the sale of fuel during the first half of the current fiscal."


Source
Govt to relieve Rs 3K cr more to PSU oil retailers:

21% Users Eat while Watching Videos on YouTube

The IAB (Interactive Advertising Bureau) has released a new study that provides some very interesting insights on how are people using Facebook and YouTube and why?


For instance, you’ll surprised to known that most people upload videos on these sites not for fun or pleasure but with a desire to impress their friends. Or that 1 in 5 users can be found eating a meal while they are watching videos on YouTube.

YouTube is seen as more of a destination for fun/cheering yourself up, where users are much more likely to visit Facebook to feel connected to people.

You may view the full IAB report online (link for news readers) or download it as a PDF file (~5 MB) from the Google Barometer blog.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

HOW TO: Connect with Other Entrepreneurs Online




This post originally appeared on the American Express OPEN Forum, where Mashable regularly contributes articles about leveraging social media and technology in small business.
There’s no substitute for experience. Many successful entrepreneurs learned how to run a business as they built one, and they had the educational benefit of being able to make mistakes and learn from them as they went along.
But if there’s something close to a substitute for experience, it’s probably somebody else’s experience — which makes other small business owners the perfect people to ask for advice about your own business decisions.
These nine websites will help you track down the appropriate entrepreneurs. If you’ve found success on similar sites, let us know about them in the comments below.

1. OnStartups


OnStartups
Created by the same folks who run the popular programming Q&A site StackOverflow, this site is a perfect place to crowdsource all of your small business questions. After you post a question (let’s say, “How do daily deal or coupon websites handle marketing?”), anyone can post an answer. You and other users can vote the different responses up or down so that the best answer floats to the top — at which point, if you decide to, you can mark one response as the “accepted answer.”
The site is managed almost entirely by the crowd (none of whose members need to register to participate). Anyone in the community can edit posts and frequent users are allowed to vote irrelevant questions off the site.

2. Focus


Focus
Focus differs from other Q&A sites by maintaining a core group of experts who answer many of the questions on the site in exchange for the opportunity to promote themselves. This feature makes it more likely that you’ll receive prompt and useful responses.
Topics are divided into IT, marketing, sales, finance, customer service, operations and human resources sections, which makes it easy to search for the latest discussions on your interest area.

3. MicroMentor


MicroMentor
Q&A has its value, but a deeper one-on-one relationship with a seasoned businessperson can be a greater asset to your business. MicroMentor helps you find a mentor online. Simply fill out a profile about yourself and your goals, and then search the mentor profiles that match your needs. If your selected mentor agrees that they’re a good fit, you can exchange contact information and start learning from each other.
The site is run by Mercy Corps, which intends to help “small businesses grow faster, generate more revenue, and employ more people.” More than 1,000 matches have been made to date.

4. Entrepreneur Connect


Entrepreneur_Connect
Entrepreneur Media, the parent company of Entrepreneur Magazine, hosts this online network of entrepreneurs. The site’s broadly defined “groups” where you can post questions, makes it useful for asking for advice. The replies are less frequent than on some of the other sites, but they tend to be of high quality. You also have the option to create your own private group.
The directory of other entrepreneurs, browsable by industry and name, is also helpful for locating someone who might be helpful regarding a specific issue.

5. PartnerUp


PartnerUp
If you have a question that can be expressed in fewer than 140 characters, the PartnerUp community will likely have an answer. You can also search for contacts with different skills in different industries or “PartnerUp” with people who have made comments you appreciated so that you can stay in touch. Like OnStartups, questions and answers can be voted up or down so that the best ones — at least theoretically — remain on top.
Thankfully responses aren’t restricted with a character limit.

6. EFactor


Efactor
The authors of business networking book The N Factor venture up the alphabet a little bit to bring you the EFactor. This social network for entrepreneurs can help you answer your questions in a handful of different ways.
First there’s a Q&A feature that shares your questions with other entrepreneurs on the site. There’s also a traditional forum where you’re likely to find a thread that answers your question and where you’re welcome to start a new one if you don’t. And finally, there’s an option to search for a mentor by their expertise and the assistance you’re seeking.

7. MeetTheBoss TV


MeetTheBoss
This site gives you the opportunity for personal access to the world’s most innovative and influential business leaders. Although the rest of us probably won’t be able to get our questions for business leaders answered directly, there’s likely a video on MeetTheBoss TV that is relevant to your issue. They’re all targeted specifically for entrepreneurs and intended to expand a skill set. You’ll need to use the search bar to find a video that answers your specific question, but the quality of the advice more than compensates for this slight effort.

8. SCORE.org


SCORE.org
A resource partner with the U.S. Small Business Administration, SCORE gives free advice to entrepreneurs. The organization has 370 office locations offline and about 1,200 “counselors” offline. By typing in a couple of keywords about what business issue you’d like to discuss, you can browse a list of these counselors — mostly other small business owners — and e-mail them directly for advice.
If you prefer a face-to-face conversation, there’s also an option to search for a mentor by your zip code.

9. LinkedIn Answers


LinkedIn_Answers
What sets LinkedIn Answers apart from the others on this list is that people have a couple of strong motives to help you. First, people are always looking for ways to stay in touch with members of their professional networks. Answering your question is a perfect opportunity to refresh a connection. Second, people who give the best answers to questions are featured as “experts” on the Answers homepage and in each category of questions.
LinkedIn’s giant network of professionals is another advantage. You can allow this entire network to search and answer your questions, or if you prefer, select individuals from your network who you want to answer your question. There are also advanced search options that allow you to browse the database of previously asked questions.

More Business Resources from Mashable:


Social Media Marketing 101: In-House Team, Agency or Consultant?
6 Tips on Starting a Digital Business from the Founder of Pandora
5 Tips for Startup Success From a Co-Founder of HootSuite
Growing Your Business: 5 Tips From the Founder of Foursquare
5 Popular Startups and How They Got Funding
Image courtesy of FlickrTravelin’ Librarian
For more Business coverage:

New Gmail Labs Feature Saves You Precious Seconds




Gmail has just added a new “Labs” feature that should save you some time if you’re the type of person that tends to plow through your e-mail inbox in bunches.
As the name implies, the new “Auto-advance” option (that can be enabled under “Settings” > “Labs”) lets you automatically move to the previous or next conversation after Archiving, Deleting or Muting an individual e-mail message.
While that might sound like expected behavior, up until today, Gmail simply took you back to your inbox after taking any of those actions, meaning you essentially needed to scroll back down to wherever you were in your attempt at e-mail triage.
Thus, you can see how “Auto-advance” might save you some time – and probably not an insignificant amount of time if you get a lot of e-mail and aim to keep your inbox clean through the use of archiving, deleting and muting.
Have your own Gmail productivity tips? Let us know in the comments.

For more Tech coverage:

War between web browsers

Which browser will win the browser war? Every month we see the browser share of Chrome, Firefox and Internet Explorer go up and down to give us some sign of who will emerge the winner.
I started a discussion on our Devils’ Workshop Facebook page about which browser was the favorite and why it was a favorite?
Chrome win browser wars Why Google Chrome will win the browser wars?
Credit: Mozillazine

Some interesting observations

  • Well the sample size is a little small to be called a poll but about 13 responses were in favor of Firefox, 6 for Chrome and only 3 for Internet Explorer. There were other opinions which even found favor with Opera and other browsers.
  • At first glance it looks like Firefox wins hands down but 4 opinions which were favorable to Firefox also said they really liked using Chrome.
  • Majority of the people who voted for Firefox seems to like the browser for its amazing add-ons.
  • Almost no one had anything negative to say about their experience using Chrome.
Going by the response, one can assume that Firefox is leading the pack by a big margin. But I feel differently about which one will end up winning the browser wars.

Why Chrome will end up winner?

Everything about using the Chrome browser comes down to one word and that word is ‘Simplicity‘. Lets be honest the world is not full of techies and majority of the people who use browsers are not geeks.

Installation

Installing newer versions of Internet Explorer or Firefox seems like rocket science when compared to installing Chrome. Most people use Gmail, Orkut and other Google related services which actively prompts people to download Chrome. This actually works great because Chrome installation is awesomely easy.

Speed

Chrome browser came to the market as the fastest browser around. It even boasted about it’s speed with its strange experiments. Jokes apart people felt Chrome won’t stay fast once they supported extensions. That has not happened and even now Chrome is known for being lightning fast as a browser.

User-Interface

Chrome has a spartan User Interface. The search bar is the same as the address bar. The tabs are nicely up right at the top, the settings and options are hidden and access through just a couple of not so interfering icons. Chrome keeps the user’s focus on the web-page rather than other features it might or might not have.

Add-on and extensions

When Firefox updates its Add-ons or when you update even its version it needs you to restart the browser. Get and extension on Chrome and start using it without any interruption. Such interruption free features make Chrome a browser to beat.
I know a lot of you might not agree with me and might argue that Firefox simply has more options. The problem with Firefox is not the options which makes it a browser of choice even for me. The problem is it has not been able to make it simple.
So do you think Chrome will win the browser war? Do drop in your comments and views.

How to read Wikipedia articles in simple English?

I often read Wikipedia for finding some interesting facts. Most times it is to get some basic background about certain things. Most articles will include a lot of information like the correct way to pronounce certain words.

It also has links to a particular query’s ambiguous meanings. This can be a little too much for children or for people who do not know English as their first language.

Wikipedia simple english How to read Wikipedia articles in simple English?

Getting Wikipedia articles in simple English

  • Let’s say I am reading an article about India on Wikipedia. The URL will be http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India .
  • To get the same article in simple English just replace “en” with “simple”.
  • So the URL will be http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/India.

This gives the same content in simplified English which does remove a lot of information which people might not really be interested in. Special thanks to Mani Karthik for this tip.

I do not think most people will find Wikipedia articles are too difficult to understand. But this is really useful if you are learning English or for students who might find the language of a particular article too difficult.

Do you think Wikipedia needs more such filters? Do drop in your comments?

Links: Wikipedia | Simple English

-- This Post How to read Wikipedia articles in simple English? is Published on Devils Workshop .

Monday, October 25, 2010

Google's cars grabbed emails and passwords

Kindle Wireless Reading Device, Wi-Fi, 6" Display, Graphite - Latest GenerationGoogle Inc admitted for the first time its 'Street View' cars around the world accidentally collected more personal data than previously disclosed -- including complete emails and passwords."

'Inflation to moderate to 6% by Dec end'

'Inflation to moderate to 6% by Dec end': "The Planning Commission today exuded confidence that inflation would moderate to 6 per cent by December end from over 8 per cent currently, mainly on account of good farm output."

Because of this Dec month future is going to raise today

Gold may gain further; but all-time peak distant

Gold may gain further; but all-time peak distant: "Gold futures are likely to extend gains for third straight quarter in December, as investors seek a safe hedge against global uncertainty."

SEBI hikes limit for retail investors to Rs 2L for public issues

SEBI hikes limit for retail investors to Rs 2L for public issues: "SEBI hikes limit for retail investors to Rs 2L for public issuesThis will cut the numerous applications investors sometimes make in the name of relatives to get more shares."

I might have earned more if this rule was bought before an year

Robust inflows lift Sensex 137 points

Robust inflows lift Sensex 137 points: "Continued robust foreign portfolio investments and firm world equities helped BSE Sensex notch a 0.7% gain on Monday, led by financials and metal makers."

Exports jump 23% in Sept, fastest in 2 yrs

Exports jump 23% in Sept, fastest in 2 yrs: "India's merchandise shipments in September rose at its fastest pace in two years, clocking a rise of 23%, or some $18 billion."

Tech World Welcomes Digg Refugees With Open Arms

Tech World Welcomes Digg Refugees With Open Arms: "


This morning most of us woke up to the disappointing news that social news site Digg, once a promising destination for Silicon Valley talent, was losing 37% of its staff as well experiencing key executive departures.


While the usual armchair Twitter quarterbacks responded to the what the layoffs mean for the ailing site, another more positive trend was also evidenced; People making it clear that the kind of top tier engineering talent that worked for Digg was welcome at a spectrum of high profile startups and full fledged techcompanies.


As I’m hearing that the talent pool of experienced engineers in the Bay Area is currently in short supply, this layoff might be a boon for local startups looking to add skilled staff. Some of the companies that have already expressed interest in hiring include Twitter (above), Groupon, GDGT, O’Reilly Alpha Tech Ventures, IGN, Styleseat, various First Round Capital portfolio companies and AT&T Interactive.


It looks like SimpleGeo founder and former Digg Lead Architect Joe Stump is curating the tweets and offering support and introductions help to the 25 people laid off. If you hear of anyone else who is tweeting about hiring, please link to them in the comments.











5 Most Engaged Brands in Social Media

5 Most Engaged Brands in Social Media: "

The Social Media for Business Leaders Series is supported by The Awareness Social Marketing Hub, an enterprise-grade application for marketers who manage multiple social channels. Learn more here.

If you are a major brand and you aren’t using social media, well you probably aren’t a major brand. The truth is, to stay competitive brand need to be investing in social media as a way to really extend themselves to their customers. This is 2010 and consumers have options … lots of options. Social media is one way to create unique opportunities to show your customers who you really are and what you and your products stand for. Advertising and cultivating an image is still important, but it’s interacting with your customer base that creates loyal customers. Show them that you care, and you are involved in what they say, think and feel about your products, and they’ll be grateful. The results will be in your profit margins. Like most things, some brands do it better than others. Engaging in social media is about being extremely open, creative, and extending yourself across a wide range of platforms — with depth.

We’ve comprised a list of five brands who are most engaged in social media, and the impressive lengths they’ve gone to when connecting with consumers.


1. Starbucks



Starbucks is on just about every corner in the real world, and that’s the same strategy they’ve taken online as well. When it comes to a web presence Starbucks has made their mark on Twitter, Facebook, YouTubeFoursquare, mobile apps and with their own social network My Starbucks Ideas. They have dominated the social media landscape, creating active and engaging profiles on a variety of platforms. And according to various reports they are the most engaged brand using social media, and for a few years running.

Take a quick look at the coffee giant’s Twitter page, and you’ll see the company has just over 1 million followers. The next thing you’ll notice is there is a lot of conversation going on. Starbucks is keeping busy responding to mentions, apologizing for bad experiences, and just carrying on some interesting conversations with their followers.

Meanwhile on Facebook, more than 15 million people will admit to Liking the brand. And Starbucks is trying to make buying product as integrated and seamless as possible. Take for example the Starbucks Card Facebook application they introduced this past April, and just recently announced that customers could now “Give a Gift” and credit their friends’ cards too.

And that feature is an idea born out of their community site, My Starbucks Idea. The Seattle-based caffeine king wants to know what you want from Starbucks, and they are listening. Here consumers are asked to share their ideas, and let them know what you think of other ideas as well. Discussions are encouraged, and the community votes to see ideas become reality. The “Give a Gift” idea was suggested way back in 2008, and drew more than 42,0000 votes. It may have taken some time for the idea to become a reality, but it shows that Starbucks is listening to their customers.


2. Coca-Cola



Always Coca-Cola. As one of the most universally recognized brands, it’s not surprising that Coca-Cola is the second most engaged brand according to Famecount. Just like Starbucks, Coke is active on Twitter engaging in conversation with its 142,000 followers. Given that it has a world wide following it’s appropriate that many of the tweet are written in many different languages. In addition to it’s overarching brand, each drink it produces also has it’s own Twitter page.

On Facebook its kind of astounding that 14.6 million people Like the soft drink empire, but the company has done a good job of keeping things interesting and interactive. The Page is a hub of all sort of activity, from social good initiatives like Live Positively where fans voted for America’s favorite park to receive a $100,000 grant, posting fan photos, videos, and something called Expedition 206 — 365 days, 206 countries, one mission. “Happiness Ambassadors” traveled the globe looking for happiness. They blogged and posted photos and videos of their travels and fans could vote in polls on things like where they are the most happiest.

And on Coca-Cola’s YouTube channel, the soda company launched “Unlock The Secret,” a viral video campaign featuring Coke’s inventor and Doc Pemberton. By clicking on bottle links in the videos, viewers are taken to the @docpemberton Twitter page, their Ahh Giver app on Facebook that allows users to send a message to a friend delivered in video format by the Coke polar bear, and to Coke’s Smilezier a novel feature that allows you to record the sound of your own laughter and listen to other people as well. All of this ties together Coca-Cola’s brand of happiness, and they’ve done an interesting and original job engaging with consumers online.


3. Oreo


Oh-Oh-Oreo, is the third most engaged brand according to Famecount, and for a brand that’s been around since 1912, racking up 11.7 million Likes on Facebook is a great way to prove that good products have real staying power. For Kraft, makers of the delicious black and white cookie, Facebook outreach has been their main strategy. While other brands are engaged across the board, Oreo hasn’t leveraged Twitter at all yet. So the Oreo Facebook Page is a place to find recipes, photos of fans enjoying the cookie, videos, and games like Twist To Win for a chance to win the Double Stuff Racing League (Shaquille O’Neal, Apolo Ohno, Eli Manning and Venus Williams). The DSRL’s videos are the main focus on Oreo’s YouTube channel, with videos of interview with the athletes, commercials, and behind the scenes footage.

Kraft Foods: How Oreo Learned to Fish Where the Fish Are, presented by Beth Reilly from GasPedal on Vimeo.


4. Skittles


Skittles may also sound a little weird to be making this list, but they have an amazing online presence, starting with their website — a vibrant landing page that invites you to “Experience The Rainbow” and scroll down the page. First you are met with a really strange four minute commercial featuring a intellectually-challenged fellow rambling about the little candy piece of the rainbow, and the option vote if liked it or hated it. Moving further down the page, fans are asked to upload photos and videos if they think they’re funnier than the rainbow. Keep scrolling and you’ll find fan photos and picture posted, and you’ll be asking yourself why you kept scrolling, but you probably aren’t part of the “rainbro” demographic Skittles is trying to reach with their site. On another site, Share Skittles, YouTube videos of fans eating skittles are posted.

While Skittles hasn’t quite figured out how to leverage Twitter, logging just over 6,000 followers, and producing some really weird tweets, over 11 million likes show they managed to figured out how to make use of Facebook. Features like Mob The Rainbow, another strange but really innovative effort that strives to bring fans together to create something big. The first mob was a massive outpouring of Valentine’s Day greeting to a person who doesn’t get much love — a parking enforcement officer. Fans were asked to either make a card on the site or get the address and send one on their own — 43,037 sent cards. Since the launch of Mob The Rainbow last year, fans have completed three mobs, with a fourth one to “crash” an 85-year-old grandmother’s birthday party currently underway. It’s an brilliant way to engage their audience with social good and keep their quirky image alive.


5. Red Bull


Red Bull is a brand that is associated with a lot of things — late night last minute studying, late night partying, way too early morning meetings or classes, and the ability to keep you awake during the day. With 9.9 million Likes on Facebook, it probably not just because the Austrian company is your sweet savior from the long hours of the day, but rather because it offers a really cool and interactive Facebook Page that appeals to it’s core audience. The Procrastination Station, featured on their Games page, offers high quality, engaging and interactive procrastination, like a soapbox car racing game, rock, paper, scissors, and fans can listen to “Drunkish Dials” — drunk recordings of Red Bull drinkers who called the company’s toll free number. Yep, that’s what happens if you leave them a ridiculous drunken message, they’ll put it online.

Plus, they’ve run creative contests like 2009’s Red Bull Stash, where the company hid Energy Shots all over the country, and posted clues on their Facebook wall. It was the company’s way of saying thank you to fans when they hit the 1 million mark. Currently the company has teamed up with an San Francisco Giants player Tim Lincecum, to create an ongoing scavenger hunt for 11 autographed baseballs hidden in the street of San Fran. A picture of each baseball has been uploaded at a specific location and the first fan to arrive and check in with Facebook Places and the password “San Francisco’s Got Wings” wins the coveted ball.

And as the sponsor of a ton of sporting events and athletes Red Bull’s website is the place for fans to see exactly what they are sponsoring. With videos, interviews, photos, games and a feature called “Holy Shit” featuring short, extremely high quality videos of amazing moments in extreme sports.

The company has also done an impressive job on the mobile front with motor-sports game Red Bull X-Fighters, access to their web TV channel with behind-the-scenes footage of daring stunts, with the Red Bull TV app, and Red Bull BPM an app that turns your iPhone into a complete DJ set-up. All these apps are great extensions of the brands core product, creating apps that compliment the consumer’s lifestyle goes a long way.

The Social Media for Business Leaders Series is supported by The Awareness Social Marketing Hub, which builds social marketing software for marketers leveraging multiple social channels to engage with customers, build their brand, and increase revenues. Built upon Awareness’ expertise deploying more than 200 communities and social media projects for the world’s biggest brands including Sony, JetBlue, Kodak, ASOS.com and AIRMiles, The Awareness Social Marketing Hub is a leading enterprise-grade application for marketers struggling with the social media chaos of managing multiple social channels. With the Awareness Social Marketing Hub, marketers are now able to publish, manage and measure across all their social channels from one central location using advanced built-in permissioning, workflow and audit controls.

eBay Now Highlights Groupon Daily Deals

eBay Now Highlights Groupon Daily Deals: "

Group-buying service Groupon and online auction house eBay just agreed to a business relationship that will place Groupon’s regional daily deals on the pages that eBay users visit. The site will determine each user’s location and show the deals available in his or her area.

Furthermore, members of eBay’s rewards program will earn 5% of each Groupon purchase amount in eBay Bucks, which members can use to buy other things on eBay.

The deal makes sense for both companies. Groupon will gain additional exposure, and in exchange eBay will get opportunities to give its users more incentives to buy things in eBay auctions. It’s a win-win for consumers too, as long as they don’t mind having Groupon deals pitched to them when they visit eBay.

Rumor has it that Groupon is working on similar deals with Yahoo and Citysearch, but those rumors are unconfirmed and the specifics are fuzzy. We’ll keep you posted.

Google Finally Upgrades Feedburner

Google Finally Upgrades Feedburner: "
rss image

Believe it or not, Google hasn’t forgotten about Feedburner. The RSS feed service has received an experimental new interface that better matches Google Analytics and looks like it might actually integrate into other Google AdSense and Webmaster tools.

The interface doesn’t work for every component of Feedburner — if you need to access feed management or change certain settings, you can continue to use the old interface. The new interface — which is accessible via feedburner.google.com/gfb/ — shows real-time stats for clicks, views and podcast downloads from across your feeds.

This is really powerful, especially if you use the Feedburner Socialize service to auto-ping Twitter when you publish a post. This can let you track how users are referred and what RSS clients are being used to access feeds.

The stats take a lot of the information that used to be spread across multiple panels and put it into one interface. You can also view the last two hours of activity for a feed to see different waves of traffic and click-throughs.

The new Feedburner dashboard also has a new message center that displays notices if there are any problems with a feed or other things that you need to know.

We hope these new real-time tools and the improved interface are the start of some real momentum behind the Feedburner product. RSS might be going out of favor in a world of Facebook, Twitter and mobile apps, but publishers still need a central place to control and manage their content streams. Feedburner no longer does everything publishers need it to do, but there just aren’t a lot of alternatives.

What do you think of the new Feedburner interface? Let us know.

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, angelhell

Watch Videos on your PC without any Interruption

Watch Videos on your PC without any Interruption: "

Video on Computer


When watching web videos or DVD movies on your computer, your video playback may be interrupted in many different ways.


For instance, the screen saver can activate itself or the computer screen may enter sleep mode if you don’t touch the mouse or the keyboard for a long period (because you are busy watching the video). Sometimes, pop-up notifications from IMs and other programs, that are running in the background, can also interrupt playback.


You can easily turn-off these distractions through Windows Settings but the problem with this approach is that the changes will stay even when you are done watching the video. To give you an example, if you disable the screensaver before hitting play, it will stay in the disabled state forever unless you re-enable it manually.


Therefore, instead of fiddling with your existing configuration, you may consider using utilities that will also disable all these distracting elements, but only temporarily.


Some media players are start enough and will automatically turn off the screen saver during video playback. If you are using VLC, go to Video settings and check the option that says “Disable screensaver.” In Windows Media Player, go to Player options and uncheck the box that says “Allow screen saver during playback.”


If your media player doesn’t have such a feature, you can use this excellent utility called Mouse Jiggler to prevent the screensaver from becoming active. It moves the mouse pointer back and forth periodically so Windows will never go into an idle state and therefore the screensaver won’t show up.


The next task is keep your monitor awake during the video playback. Mouse Jiggler should care of this part as well or you may try Caffeine – it’s like Jiggler but simulates keystrokes instead of mouse movements.


There’s nothing to install or configure – just download and run Caffeine and your system will stay awake as long as you like. Double-click the Caffeine icon in the task bar and it will disable itself – all this without making any changes to your system register or power plan.


Related tip: How to Skip Trailers on DVDs


If you have too many apps running on your system, they are consuming system resources and some of them, especially the chat clients, may surprise you during playback with notifications. You can either right click-click in the task bar to selectively close these apps or get a utility like CloseAll that will automatically close all running applications with a click.


CloseAll closes all running apps by default (including itself) but you can also configure it to ignore certain applications by adding a simple exclusion list to the CloseAll.exe command line. Here’s an example:


CloseAll.exe -x='explorer.exe|firefox.exe|outlook.exe|dropbox.exe'

An excellent alternative to CloseAll is SmartClose – it will not only close all the running programs with a click but can also restore all these the programs once you are done watching the video.


It does this by capturing a snapshot of all the running process and services. If there’s a particular program or Windows Service that you would not like the utility to close, just add it to the protected list. The default settings are good enough though you can always choose the location where these system snapshots should be stored.


Finally, if you like watching videos while simultaneously working on other windows /tasks, check out Always on Top – this is again a free utility that will help you stick your media player window on top of other program windows. Launch the program, select the media player window and press Alt+Space bar to put it on top.

Convert and open multiple links with a single click: Linkrr

Convert and open multiple links with a single click: Linkrr: "


If you are using file-hosting websites like Rapidshare or Megaupload to download files you might come across many files which are split or sometimes the links to download these files are multiple.

Linkrr is useful for converting text into links and opening them with a single click.

Linkrr open multiple links Convert and open multiple links with a single click: Linkrr

How Linkrr works?

  • Simply copy the text into the box. I could also copy and past multiple lines of text which needed to be converted into HTML links.
  • Once done, click on “Make clickable!” and a list of links that will be opened are displayed.

Linkrr link list Convert and open multiple links with a single click: Linkrr

  • All the links converted from text will being can be opened using at the same time. It does need you to disable pop-up blocker in some cases. This applies to Internet Explorer users.

Even though I tried creating links of our blogs in our network, I think Linkrr is more useful when downloading a big file that is split in parts and the link is posted or shared as text rather than a link which we can click on.

Do try out Linkrr and drop in your comments if you know of similar tools which makes managing multiple links easy.

Link: Linkrr

-- This Post Convert and open multiple links with a single click: Linkrr is Published on Devils Workshop .

Corp India against rate hikes, conveys to RBI

Corp India against rate hikes, conveys to RBI: "Corporate India today urged the Reserve Bank not to further tighten its key rates during its monetary policy review next month, on the ground that interest rates are already very high."

Wal-Mart CEO sees progress in opening up of retail in India

Wal-Mart CEO sees progress in opening up of retail in India: "Wal-Mart CEO sees progress in opening up of retail in IndiaWal-Mart, in an equal partnership with Bharti group, operates four cash-and-carry outlets in India and supplies to retail stores run by Bharti."

How to write a professional Resume in 2 minutes?

How to write a professional Resume in 2 minutes?: "

Almost 3 months ago when I had just given my engineering exams and was waiting for the results to be out, I thought of searching for a job. To get a job you need to have a resume, and that’s where I got stuck. With all sort of different views around me, and different people it all just added to confusion. Some suggested resume building services but they were charging money for it. So, I was kind of searching for something like a resume builder but free and I found one. :)

It asks you to login using your email account and password. Once given your email id and password you have to confirm it.

screenshot 065 How to write a professional Resume in 2 minutes?

There are mainly three sections:

screenshot 067 How to write a professional Resume in 2 minutes?

  • Compose: Here you can add the sections or remove them from your résumé.
  • Design: You can decide on the format or design of the résumé.
  • Preview: You can see how your résumé looks.

Why should you use this service?

  • You can add or remove any field any time.
  • Once the résumé is made, you can save it.
  • You can download it under Publish as a PDF or as a Docx file.

How to use it?

  • Go here.
  • Start writing your résumé.

The only thing that can be wrong here is that Jobspice can spam you with job mails that you do not want, in that case I will suggest you to make an email id for login purpose that is gone in only 60 minutes.

    The usage is very simple and good. Do you know any other such free resume service? Feel free to share it with me through the comments below.

    -- This Post How to write a professional Resume in 2 minutes? is Published on Devils Workshop .

    How To Protect Your Login Information From Firesheep

    How To Protect Your Login Information From Firesheep: "

    TechCrunch reader Steve Manuel claims to have found a workaround to Firesheep, the controversial Firefox extension that allows anyone on an insecure open Wifi network to access user login info for almost every single social network in existence.


    Firesheep banks on the fact that most social sites default to the HTTP protocol because it’s quicker. The already existing Firefox extension Force-TLS attempts to circumvent this by forcing those sites to use the HTTPS protocol, therefore making user cookies invisible to Firesheep.


    Like the alternative option HTTP Everywhere, the Force-TLS Firefox extension allows your browser to change HTTP to HTTPS on sites that you indicate in the Firefox Add On “Preferences” menu, protecting your login information and ensuring a secure connection when you access social sites.


    HTTPS encrypts user data, so if a script like Firesheep’s like tries to pull it, it can’t be read. Force-TLS forces a number of sites to make all of their requests over an SSL secured channel and while some sites, like Amazon, don’t currently have the secure option, the majors like Facebook, Twitter, Google, etc all allow a HTTPS connection.


    How to configure:


    1. Download the plugin here and install into Firefox.



    2. Open “Preferences” and add the domains you want to force the HTTPS connection with.



    3. Restart Firefox.

    Note: Unlike HTTPS Everywhere, Force-TLS relies on the user defining the sites they want to access through a secure HTTPS connection.

    And while everyone should have learned by now that there’s always some privacy risk when interacting online, hopefully the installation of Force-TLS will at least put less of a damper on today’s stint at your local “free Wifi!” boasting cafe.

    Thanks: Steve Manuel

    Skype Demands Mobile App Nimbuzz Remove Support, Effective October 31st

    Skype Demands Mobile App Nimbuzz Remove Support, Effective October 31st: "


    Exclusive: Nimbuzz, a popular mobile communication service provider, has been asked by Skype to remove support for all Skype services as from October 31st.


    The startup will be announcing the news to its 30 million or so registered users later today.


    Nimbuzz sees the decision to ask for the removal of support for Skype services in line with the communication software giant’s “mandate to disconnect with all third-party VoIP services ahead of its impending IPO“.


    Skype, in turn, calls bullshit and claims Nimbuzz simply stopped communicating with them quite recently, following several months of discussions about Nimbuzz’ compliance with its API Terms of Use and End User Licence Agreement.


    You may remember that the exact same thing happened between Skype and Nimbuzz rival fring back in July. Skype at the time also stated that it tried to resolve a dispute with fring amicably for a considerable amount of time, only to arrive at a point where they saw themselves forced to threaten legal action over “misuse of Skype software”.


    From October 31st onwards, Skype users will also find themselves unable to chat, send messages or call their contacts on Nimbuzz, and vice versa. Nimbuzz points out users will remain free to communicate with their contacts using other VoIP/SIP, instant messaging services and social networks, including Facebook, Yahoo, Windows Live Messenger, AIM, Google Talk, Twitter, MySpace, ICQ and others.


    In both the Nimbuzz and fring case, of course, it’s their millions of users who also use Skype that are the ones getting screwed over here. It’s also telling that Skype has started requesting the bigger third-party service providers to remove support for Skype services very recently, while both fring and Nimbuzz have offered Skype support for many years …


    Said Evert Jaap Lugt, CEO of Nimbuzz:


    Skype’s decision is unfair to its own and our users. People want to choose how they communicate and to be able to make calls and send messages, regardless of service, social network, device or operator network. Nimbuzz gives them the freedom to do so, Skype does not.


    For what it’s worth, Skype responded with this canned statement:


    “Skype has been in discussions with Nimbuzz regarding our concern and belief they were using Skype’s software in ways which it was not designed for, in a breach of our API Terms of Use and End User Licence Agreement.


    Skype offered to meet Nimbuzz and discuss the issue however we have not heard back from them since our last correspondence to them in early August. As we have said before, Skype encourages openness and supports developers to build products that work with the Skype platform.”


    Coincidentally, both Nimbuzz and fring recently started offering their own paid VoIP services to users (NimbuzzOut and fringOut, respectively), so my educated guess is that that’s the real reason why Skype is singling out these companies in particular (for now).


    For all its popularity, competitor eBuddy does not offer support for Skype services and, as far as I know, never has.


    Nimbuzz is not a small player in the mobile messenger / VoIP space either, any way you look at it. The startup recently announced that it has surpassed 150 million downloads and has 30 million registered users across all major mobile operating systems. Moreover, Nimbuzz claims 3.65 billion mobile voice minutes have been logged over the past year.


    The company has raised $25 million to date, and one of its shareholders is Naspers / MIH Group, the multinational media group which boasts investments in Tencent, Mail.ru, Facebook investor DST and other notable industry players.


    Time will tell if both fring and Nimbuzz have strong enough offerings, and loyal enough users, to stand their ground against the many alternatives, no longer bearing in-app Skype support. It will also be interesting to see if Skype will move to demand more third-party clients to remove support for its services in the future.


    Sunday, October 24, 2010

    Spice Mobile gives India it's first 3D phone at Rs 4,299

    Spice Mobile gives India it's first 3D phone at Rs 4,299: "Spice Mobile gives India it's first 3D phone at Rs 4,299View D will allow users to experience images and videos in 3D without the 3D glasses, making it convenient for a common user."

    Internet TV and The Death of Cable TV, really

    Internet TV and The Death of Cable TV, really: "

    Yes, you heard this before. The Death of Cable TV. Yet, it hasn’t happened. But now, so many disruptions are happening in the video space, cable tv is really stepping towards the cliff. Don’t expect the cable industry to just give up.


    We’ll get some new insights next week when the largest U.S. cable operator (23 million cable customers), Comcast, reports its Q3 earnings and subscriber count. Comcast cable customers dropped nearly 3% in Q2 compared to last year. In Q2 for the industry overall, a record 711,000 subscribers abandoned cable tv, and six of eight operators suffered their worst quarterly subscriber losses ever.


    Just this month, a lot has happened:



    • Google unveiled its Google TV platform less than 3 weeks ago. You can’t ignore Google. Hey, they just built a car that drives itself. But Thursday, in a battle that will likely become more frequent between old media and new, ABC, CBS and NBC blocked their programs from Google TV. MTV, Fox and HBO are still available, but that could change. Still, one TechCrunch post declared “I’ve seen the future and it begins on my sofa with Google TV.”

    • Steve Jobs bragged this week that Apple has already sold 250,000 new Apple TVs. The first Apple TV shipped in 2007. It had its fans but didn’t take off like the iPod or iPhone. The second generation of Apple TV’s launched just last month. MG Siegler really likes the device, but admitted it’s not yet the killer device in the living room. To get there, he said, would require tv network subscription packages.

    • “Watch Instantly” is booming at Netflix. A shocking statistic came out this week. 20% of Internet traffic during peak times in the U.S. is coming from Netflix.

      For more on Netflix’s plans, see Sarah Lacy’s interview with CEO Reed Hastings.

    • Hulu Plus will be coming to the Roku box in the fall.

      For some, the Roku box may be the first step towards eliminating cable.

    • Boxee announced the new Boxee Box will ship next month, both if you pre-ordered from Amazon or want to buy one in stores.

    • Flurry reported Apple’s iOS Apps are responsible for the recent downward trend in TV ratings. The actual cause may be a bit broader.

    • A TechCrunch post Friday suggested the future of TV is HTML5.


    With all these alternatives, a J.D. Power and Associates survey released this month said consumers are less satisfied with the monthly pay-TV bills and cable subscribers are more likely to feel ripped off than telcom or satellite TV customers.


    Why Does Cable TV Exist?


    When cable tv first started in the 1940s, it was a disruptive technology. Community Antenna Television (CATV) solved a problem. Some homes, in mountainous regions, cities, and locations far away from the over-the-air broadcast transmitters couldn’t get a good signal. By setting up a large community antenna and retransmitting the signal on coaxial cables to those homes, the reception problem was solved. Some claim the first system was set-up in Mahanoy City, Pennsylvania and cost subscribers $100 per hookup plus $2 a month.


    As the industry grew, cable operators began to pick up distant signals, providing new programming choices for consumers. Even homes that could receive the over-the-air signals signed up for cable. And cable started producing its own exclusive, original channels. In 1975, HBO became the first cable network delivering its signal across the country, via satellite to cable systems, which then re-transmitted it to consumers. Ted Turner (“I was cable before cable was cool“), launched the first basic cable network distributed by satellite, WTBS, in 1976. Cable also offered local community programming, not available on the broadcast networks. I remember watching a news show at home produced at my junior high school. At the time, this blew my mind.

    (Disclosure: I owe the cable industry for the first 14 years of my career, working at a place with a name starting with ‘Cable.’ But then I switched to the internet.)


    What’s Changed


    But all these once ‘cable-only’ benefits have changed. DSL, cable (yes, cable – more on that shortly) modems, and perhaps future fiber to the house mean video has many other routes to the home.


    The once exclusive cable-only content is now becoming available elsewhere. At first, cable shows started appearing on DVDs after their first run on cable. But now, there are many more options. Cancelcable.com lists some non-cable ways to find your favorite shows. And local and user generated content now has a global reach and can be shared in a community of viewers with common broad or narrow interest.


    There is one key stumbling block for getting more tv shows on the Internet though. Money. And it’s the reason for the network / Google TV dispute mentioned above. An AdAge article wisely pointed out


    “The networks aren’t blocking Google TV because it’s Google. They are blocking Google TV because it is putting a web TV show, with web TV show economics, on a TV, which would be incredibly disruptive to their business.”


    Revenue per viewer-minute is much less online vs. broadcast. This could change as more ads appear on the web distribution and they become more targeted and interactive. Also, show or channel subscriptions could solve this problem.


    The one thing that cable does have going for it is: its relatively easy to use. Make a call, someone comes over to your house and hooks it up, and then you control it with your remote. (Well, you may have waited for hours on hold for someone to answer your call and then waited all day for the installer to arrive.) Up to now, you had to be a tech savvy person to cancel cable and hook up your own system. No one from Google, Apple, or Netflix is going to come to your house and help you hook the new devices up. As Danny Sullivan found out, hooking up your Google TV is not quite ready for prime time or the masses. But, expect it to improve. And other offerings, such as Apple TV, are making it easier. The cable alternatives are moving from technologies only early adopters use to ones the broader market can figure out.


    Cable Has Faced Competitors Before

    The cable tv industry is no stranger to competition. Cable survived competition from the DVD rental store. (Blockbuster filed for bankruptcy. Apple just killed the optical drive in its new laptops.) Satellite TV providers DirectTV (18.7 million customers in the U.S.) and Dish Networks (14.3 million customers) have some loyal customers, but haven’t been able to stop cable. But, the internet will be a tougher challenge.


    The Cost of Cable

    One of the biggest problems for the cable industry is its high cost. Growing cost was the biggest reason one study reported one in eight consumers said they would eliminate or scale back their cable, satellite or other pay-TV service in 2010. The cable industry tries to explain that the cost of cable is going down. Check out this graph on Price Per Viewing Hour, on the National Cable & Telecommuncations Association website



    Yeah, right. That’s not going to convince any cable subscriber looking at their monthly bill.


    The cable industry has resisted “a la carte” pricing, allowing customers to pick and choose which channels they watch and pay for. Cable networks make part of their money from subscription fees paid by customers to the cable operators and then to the networks. So smaller networks could go out of business under such a pricing plan. There’s also a debate over whether “a la carte” pricing would save or cost consumers money. Internet TV already offers pick and pay pricing options. New media can handle this much better than old media. For my money, I think I’d come out with a big savings under an “a la carte” system.


    Cable Fights Back

    While the cable industry is losing basic cable subscribers, they are still doing fine financially. Comcast stock is up 15% so far this year, vs. 9% for NASDAQ. Comcast’s internet business (cable modem users) is growing. Comcast, teaming up with Time Warner cable, is also pushing TV Everywhere, which puts TV channels online and behind a paywall only cable subscribers can view. And of course, Comcast is planning to merge with broadcaster and cable network giant NBC Universal in a complex transaction. But the new joint venture won’t include Comcast’s cable systems. The deal still needs regulators approval, and the FCC has asked the companies how the merging of the biggest broadband provider and major content firm will impact the distribution of online videos.


    There’s also speculation that cable boxes could come with ‘Google TV’ built-in for an additional fee. But, would consumers really choose to pay the higher fee and keep their cable box, when other options will be cheaper?


    The Immediate Future

    The Death of Cable remains a hot topic. Next month, a panel at Streaming Media West will discuss “Cutting the Cord on TV: Will Online Video Really Lead to Cable’s Demise?”


    I actually still have cable. I’m inches away from dropping it, but there are still a few shows not available elsewhere that my wife enjoys. But, it’s hard to imagine those shows won’t be available elsewhere in the near future. I know a lot of folks who keep cable for live sports, but cable surviving as a sports-only service is hard to fathom.


    More than a year ago, writer and entrepreneur Paul Kedrosky wrote “Many people are coming to the correct conclusion that in the age of Hulu, Boxess, Bittorrent, etc., that cable TV is an over-priced relic of another entertainment age.” Now that the likes of Apple, Google, Netflix and others are aggressively joining the game, the days of that over-priced relic seem even more numbered.


    Information provided by CrunchBase

    Now You Can Follow Stocks On Twitter. Stocks, Not People.

    Now You Can Follow Stocks On Twitter. Stocks, Not People.: "


    I’ve got to admit it: When it comes to financial advice, I just don’t trust my friends. And I certainly don’t trust random people on Twitter or other social networks. I don’t think I am alone. Most social finance sites have yet to gain mainstream acceptance. Just look at the pivot kaChing just did by renaming itself Wealthfront (and focusing on professional money managers instead of amateurs who outperform. It’s not that I think amateur investors are untrustworthy, it’s just that I don’t know who to trust.


    For that reason, among others (I don’t trade stocks), I haven’t really spent much time on StockTwits either. But StockTwits just turned on a new feature a few days ago that finally made it click for me. It lets you follow stocks on Twitter, not just the people talking about them. All of a sudden, it is not about trying to figure out who you trust, it is about getting all the buzz on the stocks and companies you care about in realtime. This ability to follow stocks instead of people is a perfect example of how to take Twitter’s interest graph and put it on steroids.


    People on StockTwits use a convention similar to hashtags whenever they Tweet about a stock. They put a “$” in front of the ticker. So you can find what people are saying about $GOOG or $AAPL. Now you can follow each of those tickers as well, and any mention of those stocks is placed into your StockTwits stream, along with the Tweets from the people you follow on the service as well. You can even follow mentions of private companies such as $TWIT and $FBOOK (hey, those aren’t publicly traded stocks—not yet, anyway). As people start following stocks, you can see their watchlists. Here’s StockTwits founder Howard Lindzon’s followed stocks, for instance, and here’s mine.


    Before now, StockTwits was about random and not-so-random people talking about stocks on Twitter. But unless you knew these people already, were you really going to take stock-picking cues from someone named BullzzEye or RaginCajun? No offense. Those guys could be the most amazing traders on StockTwits, I have no idea. I really don’t have the time or inclination to find out either—which could be more my loss than theirs. But again, I don’t think I am alone here in being wary about taking stock advice from random strangers on social networks.


    Following stocks instead of people changes the whole equation in my mind. It is no longer about trusting people, it is about collecting data. If I am trading $AAPL or $GOOG, I may very well learn about a market-moving announcement first on Twitter than anywhere else. By following these “stocks” on StockTwits, it is really more of a realtime warning system for traders. In the stock markets, timely information is money. And by following these filtered streams, I get both financial information and product/technology news. So as a news junkie, it is a very interesting filter for me. Also by following Tweets about a specific topic (anyone Tweeting about $GOOG or $NFLX), over time I should be able to figure out who to trust based on the quality of their Tweets on the subject, and then I can start following them if I want.


    StockTwits has been evolving for some time beyond being a simple front-end for Twitter, and this makes the service even more compelling. But I would rather consume these stock-specific streams on Twitter itself. How cool would it be if you could follow $GOOG on Twitter or any other interest stream for that matter? StockTwits would need to create accounts for each ticker symbol (if that’s possible), or perhaps some sort of set of Twitter lists that people could follow. But this really points to the next step for Twitter itself. It needs to make it easier to follow your interests, not just people.



    Sony Retires the Cassette Walkman After 30 Years

    Sony Retires the Cassette Walkman After 30 Years: "
    walkman

    After retiring the floppy disk in March, Sony has halted the manufacture and distribution of another now-obsolete technology: the cassette Walkman, the first low-cost, portable music player.

    The final batch was shipped to Japanese retailers in April, according to IT Media. Once these units are sold, new cassette Walkmans will no longer be available through the manufacturer.

    The first generation Walkman (which was called the Soundabout in the U.S., and the Stowaway in the UK) was released on July 1, 1979 in Japan. Although it later became a huge success, it only sold 3,000 units in its first month. Sony managed to sell some 200 million iterations of the cassette Walkman over the product line’s 30-year career.

    Somewhat ironically, the announcement was delivered just one day ahead of the iPod’s ninth anniversary on October 23, although the decline of the cassette Walkman is attributed primarily to the explosive popularity of CD players in the ’90s, not the iPod.

    Image courtesy of Flickr, FaceMePLS

    [via Gizmodo]