Thursday, August 25, 2011

Airtel Ad:Har Ek Friend Zaroori Hota Hai [ Lyrics and Download Link]

Har Ek friend Zaruri hota hai : Lyrics

Chai ke Liye jaise toast hota hai--Vaise har ek friend zaroori hota hai
Aise har ek friend zaroori hota hai
Koi subah paanch baje neend se jagaye
Koi raat ko teen baje jaan bachaye
Ek teri kadki mein sharing kare
Aur Ek tere budget mein sneak in kare
Koi nature se guest koi host hota hai
Par har ek friend zaroori hota hai
""Ek ghadi ghadi kaam aaye par kabhi kabhi call kare
Ek kabhi kabhi kaam aaye aur ghadi ghadi call kare""
Gossip ka koi ghoomta phirta satellite
Koi sath rahe toh kar de sab alright
Koi effortless koi forced hota hai
Lekin har ek friend zaroori hota hai
Chat Room friend koi classroom friend
Koi bike pe race wala vroom vroom friend
Shopping mall wala shopping friend
Koi Exam hall wala copying friend
Movie buddy groovy buddy
Hi buddy--Bye buddy ----Joke buddy Poke buddy
Gaana Buddy Shaana buddy ---Chaddi Buddy Yaar Buddy
Kutte --kamine---
Everybody---Sab buddy
A to Z
Gin din ke naam bheja Roast hota hai
Par har ek friend zaroori hota hai
Lekin har ek friend zaroori hota hai"




DOWNLOAD LINK MP3

http://www.mediafire.com/?0o4e8720858ly7b

Slide, the social apps Shut down as Max Levchin to Leave Google

This Week have the great news of all time, Jobs reigns from apple to Facebook new Privacy setting, Now it's time for the Google .
 Slide the apps which was Purchased by Google a year ago seems to be dissolved as the Leader Max Levchin leaves Google,as Liz Gannes of AllThingsD first reported .

All the apps owned new and old seem to be dissolved. New apps like Dance, Party pool, video inbox and yes just launched Photovine. They all are dead. The apps, none of which were extremely popular, will be sunsetted over the next few months.

After the Purchase of the App, Slide was working as an Independent unit for the Google. Slide teams were more focus on the great Google plus project.

Google's Spokesperson
Max has decided to leave Slide and Google to pursue other opportunities, and we wish him the best. Most of the team from Slide will remain at Google to work on other opportunities.
UPDATE: Slide has just put up the following blog post to let customers know about the product terminations:
We wanted to give you all advance notice that in the coming months, a number of Slide’s products and applications will be retired. This includes Slide’s products such as Slideshow and SuperPoke! Pets, as well as more recent products such as Photovine, Video Inbox and Pool Party. We created products with the goal of providing a fun way for people to connect, communicate and share. While we are incredibly grateful to our users and for all of the wonderful feedback over the years, many of these products are no longer as active or haven’t caught on as we originally hoped.
Most importantly, we wanted to take this opportunity to reassure you that we’re committed to helping our users preserve their data as easily as possible. We recognize that many of you have stored valuable content with us and want to assure you that, wherever possible, you will have ample time to download that information or transfer it to another service.
For example, on Slide.com, we will enable users to either download their photos or export them to a Picasa account. We are working to release this export feature over the coming weeks and, once added, users will have several months to take advantage of transferring their photos.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Steve Jobs Resigns As CEO Of Apple: Stock Price DIPS


Apple CEO and co-founder Steve Jobs resigned today as chief executive officer from Apple. His place at the top of the company will be taken by Tim Cook, previously Apple's chief operating officer.

In January 2009, Jobs said that he was suffering from a hormone imbalance that was impeding his body's ability to absorb certain proteins. In April of that year, Jobs underwent liver transplant surgery and returned to work by early July. In August 2004, Jobs underwent successful surgery to treat a rare form of pancreatic cancer, which sidelined him until September of that year

While Jobs has announced that he is stepping down as CEO of Apple, he is taking on a new role as chairman of the board. Replacing Jobs as the chief will be Tim Cook. Cook has been at Apple for some time now and has an impressive background in the tech industry. Insiders have said that if there is one person who could continue Apple on its path of innovation like Jobs, it is Cook

Apple shares are down about 5% in after-hours trading following the news that Steve Jobs was stepping down as CEO.


This is to be expected: 5% is not actually a large drop, considering the importance of Jobs to the company he founded. Apple’s share price is astronomical, it’s true. But that isn’t just because of Steve Jobs. It’s because Apple has been producing – increasing its share in the PC market, continuing its performance in smartphones and MP3 players, and just trouncing everyone when it comes to tablets. If Jobs weren’t ill, one could imagine that the stock price would be a good deal higher.

The news comes just as the market had made up some positive ground after several rough weeks for stock prices. In a related note, Gold prices were down in something of a sell off today, closing down over $100 per ounce with a closing price of $1,757.30.

Analysts Not Giving Up On Apple Despite Jobs Leaving 

Investors and analysts say they aren't giving up on the company's stock, even after Jobs regins. Still, investors and analysts say they don't question the prospects for a company that has shown repeatedly it can redefine not only technology but itself. They point to products with commanding presences, a marketing well-oiled marketing strategy and $76 billion in cash that can be used for acquisitions, dividends or buybacks.

"Apple not only survives Steve, but it continues to prosper," says Tim Ghriskey, chief investment officer for Solaris Asset Management in New York, which holds Apple shares in a $2 billion fund. "Apple has done a lot to attract very high level creative talent which will perpetuate the creativeness Steve has established."

Ghriskey says Apple might consider buying the 5.5 million shares, or 0.6% of the company's shares outstanding, that Jobs owns. Those shares are worth roughly $2 billion at Apple's current stock price.

Some analysts and investors say any pullback is an opportunity to snap up shares of a company that is driven by enviously strong fundamentals. Apple's stock is up roughly 60% from its year low amid expectations earnings growth will top 80% and revenue will jump by two thirds in the fiscal year ending in September.

They also say Apple will continue delivering hit products because of the culture Jobs has created at the company.

"Tim is molded after Steve," said Colin Gillis, an analyst at brokerage BGC Partners, who recommends buying Apple stock on the dips. "If they got an outside CEO, there might be concern."

Facebook Tweaks Privacy Settings, Give Users More Control



Facebook plans to roll out new settings allowing users more control over how they share personal information, giving the reigning social network a facelift, so to speak.
Facebook users will soon be able to choose specific audiences for every photo, text post, tag and video using something the social network calls an "inline." Until now, those controls existed on a separate section of users' profiles, a fact many people found cumbersome.
Now, reportedly every piece of content on users' profiles will have a drop-down menu listing its visibility level. In other words, users can choose to share something only with their "friends" list, with "friends of friends," with "everyone" on or off Facebook, or with a "custom" hand-picked list of people.
"Your profile should feel like your home on the web -- you should never feel like stuff appears there that you don't want, and you should never wonder who sees what's there," Facebook stated in a post.
Facebook and other social media have received criticism for controls that may cause users to accidentally share information with a wider audience than intended. Consequently, users requested the ability to more easily target smaller groups with certain information.
Google's social network, Google+, did just that with its "Circles" feature this past June, gathering more than 20 million world-wide unique visitors in its first full month.
Facebook's vice president for product, Chris Cox said the social network has been working on the update for six months. He dismissed the notion Facebook's planned changes respond to emerging competitor Google+, stating, "We are launching this now because it is ready."
"It is all about making it easier to share with exactly who you want and never be surprised about who sees something," Cox said, adding the new controls are "absolutely critical" to Facebook's future success.
In addition to better positioning Facebook as rivals begin to encroach on its territory, the changes may be an early salvo in the social network's campaign allowing users under the age of 13 access to the site.
This past May, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, speaking at a conference on private investment, said younger children should be allowed on Facebook for educational purposes. He added Facebook can play a role in new software and technology that will enable young people to learn from sharing with their fellow students in the future.
"That will be a fight we take on at some point," Zuckerberg said about the issue of allowing younger kids on the site. "My philosophy is that for education, you need to start at a really, really young age."
As it stands today, the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act, or COPPA, keeps websites from collecting the information of those under 13. The agency works to restrict children from joining sites like Facebook, which has no measures like parental notifications and therefore does not comply with COPPA's law.
While Facebook's new plan to increase users' control and enhance privacy isn't yet enough to ensure younger kids' safety, it may be a step in that direction.
The new privacy options will debut on August 25. They are not expected to change users' current privacy or default settings.

This post originally Published in Mobiledia

Linux :Two Decades




The history of Linux is an interesting thing in its own right, and even more interesting when taken in context of the history of computing in general. The Linux Foundation has a number of events lined up to celebrate Linux’s 20th birthday, including a new 20th Anniversary Website and a video contest to be judged by Linux creator Linus Torvalds!
The Key to Linux's Sucess is that it came at the right time, right Place, and the right kind of environment.If for instance ,Richard Srallman hadn't set the base for creating a free operating system way back in1983,by creating the Free Software Foundation and all the components Required for an OS other than the Kernel. Linux would never have been created. Linux Torvalds completed the Last Piece of the Puzzle by creating the Kernel, and Later switched it to the GNU General Public License. Together GNU software ans the Linux Kernel formed a complete operating system that was free for everybody to use, modify, and distibute.
In fact, today Linux is the largest collaborative development project in the history of computing, which means that the 20th Anniversary of Linux is an opportunity for the community to come together in celebration of this great success story and in collaboration on how it will define the next 20 years of Linux.

We’re kicking things off with an exclusive video produced by The Linux Foundation that is one way to tell the Story of Linux:


We hope this video will inspire submissions for the annual Linux Foundation Video Contest,  for which Linux creator Linus Torvalds will choose the best. 


Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Google Salutes Jorge Luis Borges with Doodle


Today 24 August 2011, birthday of Jorge Francisco Isidoro Luis Borges Acevedo aka Jorge Luis Borges. Google Celebrates his Birthday by Displaying the Doodle on the Homepage.





Jorge Luis Borges was an Argentine writer, essayist, poet and translator born in Buenos Aires in August 24 1899. His work Embraces the "character of unReality in every Literature" His famous books Ficciones published in 1944 and The Alpeh published in 1949 are compilations of short stories interconnected by common themes such as dreams, labyrinths, libraries, animals, fictional writers, religion and God. He died in Geneva, Switzerland in June 14 1986.






In Google Doodle Jorge Luis Borges Represent the "L" of the Google.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Google plus vs Twitter


Editor’s Note: This post originally appeared on Mike’s personal blog and was republished here with his permission.

Here’s a mid-Summer prediction for you… The Google Plus v. Facebook debate is a sideshow. The real battle will be between G+ and Twitter… and while Google+ will become a franchise for The Goog, Twitter will win.
Here’s my thinking.


Before Google Plus, Facebook was mostly for personal, LinkedIn was mostly for professional, and Twitter was in the middle:
I think G+ will make people focus Facebook all the more on their personal lives, and LinkedIn all the more on their professional ones. I’m already considering de-friending all of my professional contacts on Facebook, so I can post family and political stuff there without having to master the Byzantine administrivia of Facebook’s “privacy controls.”
I’ve already started to interact more with my professional contacts over on G+, which has become the default among the digerati crowd with remarkable speed. But while the Circles feature is brilliant, simple, and useful in clustering groups, I’m not going to get my Aunt Lala to dump Facebook and master G+  at this point, so home base for family etc. will stay in Facebook.
G+ is actually more about Twitter’s franchise, in the great middle of indiscriminate social networking. But while the feature set in G+ is much more robust than that of Twitter, in the end Twitter works because it’s simple, and it will win the shootout for the center because of two other important factors in this dialogue: Apple and Microsoft.
Apple has already embraced Twitter in it’s new OS, and I predict Microsoft will make a few more lame attempts at a consumer social net before realizing it’s franchise is in Office and setting it’s sights on LinkedIn by acquiring Slideshare. With that said, the OS wars will keep Google at bay, and ensure Twitter’s franchise as the mass market social medium of choice.
The result will be this:

That’s my take, anyway. What’s yours?


Monday, August 15, 2011

Google's big buys

Google's big buys


A list of some of Google's biggest and/or most important acquisitions to date.
Applied Semantics, April 2003 ($102 million)
Built AdSense, the paid search ad platform that still drives most of Google revenue and profits.
Picasa, June 2004 (terms not disclosed)
Image-organizing tool remains one of Google's most popular services
Android, August 2005 (terms not disclosed)
The platform started by ex-Danger head Andy Rubin is now the second-most popular mobile OS in the world.
YouTube, October 2006 ($1.65 billion)
Video-sharing site that was initially a copyright risk now earns more than $1 billion a year.
DoubleClick, April 2007 ($3.1 billion)
Helped launch Google's display advertising business.
FeedBurner, June 2007 ($100 million)
Helped users and advertisers manage RSS feeds.
Postini, June 2007 ($625 million)
The company's e-mail security services have become key features of Google's enterprise apps business.
GrandCentral July 2007 ($45 million)
The technology behind Google Voice.
AdMob, November 2009 ($750 million)
Gave Google a major technology inroad into the mobile advertising business.
On2 video compression, February 2010 ($133.9 million)
With this acquisition came codex that Google later renamed WebM and is pushing as a new Web video standard.
ITA, June 2010 ($700 million)
Purchase of travel search company was opposed by competitors who felt it would give Google unfair power.
Like.com, August 2010 ($100 million)
Visual search and e-commerce engine boosted Google's product and image search sites.
Slide, August 2010 (terms not disclosed)
Social media company founded by PayPal veteran Max Levchin was purchased as part of effort to make Google products more "social."
AdMeld, $400 million (June 2011)
Aimed at helping Google optimize online display ads.
Motorola Mobility, August 2011, pending ($12.5 billion)
Would give Google valuable intellectual property and get it directly into the handset business.

Google's patent play: $12.5B for Motorola Mobility [Full Report]


Motorola has a history of over 80 years of innovation in communications technology and products, and in the development of intellectual property, which have helped drive the remarkable revolution in mobile computing we are all enjoying today. Its many industry milestones include the introduction of the world's first portable cell phone nearly 30 years ago, and the StarTAC--the smallest and lightest phone on earth at time of launch. In 2007, Motorola was a founding member of the Open Handset Alliance that worked to make Android the first truly open and comprehensive platform for mobile devices. I have loved my Motorola phones from the StarTAC era up to the current DROIDs.
It may be the boldest move yet by a company known for being audacious: Google is spending $12.5 billion to buy Motorola Mobility. But the big prize isn't Motorola's lineup of cellphones, computer tablets and cable set-top boxes.
Google wants to pony up $12.5 billion to acquire Android handset maker Motorola Mobility. Buying Motorola would give Google thousands of patents that could provide it with a great deal of protection; it would also give it the ability to produce its own mobile hardware. Other Android phone makers have expressed support for the deal, though privately they may be very nervous.
The patents would help Google defend Android, its operating system for mobile devices, against a litany of lawsuits alleging that Google and its partners pilfered the innovations of other companies.
In addition to the existing trove of patents that attracted Google's interest, Motorola, which introduced its first cellphone nearly 30 years ago, has 7,500 others awaiting approval.
Phone makers and software companies are engaged in all-out combat over patents for mobile devices. The tussle has been egged on by the U.S. patent system, which makes it possible to patent any number of phone features.
The deal is by far the largest Google has pursued in its 13-year history. Motorola Mobility's price tag exceeds the combined $9.1 billion that the company has paid for 136 previous acquisitions since going public in 2004, according to filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Buying Motorola also would push Google into phone and computer tablet manufacturing, competing with other device makers who rely on Android. The largest makers of Android devices are all supporting a deal that Google CEO Larry Page said was too tempting to resist.
"With mobility increasingly taking center stage in the computing revolution, the combination with Motorola is an extremely important step in Google's continuing evolution," Page told analysts in a conference call Monday.

What is Google getting with its planned $12.5 billion acquisition of Motorola Mobility?

After coming back from the brink of bankruptcy and splitting from Motorola Solutions at the beginning of the year, the company has faced a myriad of problems. Beyond the loss of market share, Motorola has suffered from high-profile product delays, including its first 4G LTE phone from Verizon. Pricing miscalculations led to the lackluster debut of its Xoom tablet, as well as the Atrix 4G smartphone, which came with a pricey laptop dock accessory.
Certainly, Google's acquisition of Motorola is largely about its portfolio of 17,000 patents (with 7,500 more pending). But even if Google plans to run Motorola as a separate unit, there are bound to be issues that Google will need to deal with.
For instance, Motorola's share of the smartphone market in the second quarter fell to 4.1 percent from 4.9 percent, according to a recent study by Gartner. At the same time, Samsung Electronics' share nearly quadrupled to 15.8 percent, while LG Electronics' share similarly quadrupled to 4.6 percent. HTC saw its share slightly increase to 10.2 percent.

Still bullish 
Google and Motorola put on their best faces today with the announcement.
"We're really excited about this whole business and working with Motorola and their team," Google Chief Executive Larry Page said today on a conference call. "There's tremendous opportunity here."
Jha said on the call that the company will continue to use its strong relationships with its carriers to drive sales. During the last quarterly conference call, Jha added that despite a weak forecast for the third quarter, the fourth-quarter results should pop as a result of a number of new product launches.
Motorola is expected to benefit from working even more closely with Google. Analysts say the company will likely get access to the latest features from Android, giving it a leg up on the competition. Such an advantage, however, may alienate some of Google's other allies in the Android world.
In the end, Motorola's issues may not be a huge priority for Google.
"It's about the patents," said Avian Securities analyst Matthew Thornton. "Operations are house money."

Friday, August 12, 2011

Games for Google +: Finally Google Announced !



Google has announced a big move toward mainstream adoption today, integrating Web-based games within the brand new social network. "We want to make playing games online just as fun, and just as meaningful, as playing in real life," the announcement says. Titles include Angry Birds, Bejeweled Blitz, Zynga Poker and Sudoku. Google has launched a new Google Plus Platform Blog to help
 encourage more.

According to Google Plus Blog

Today we’re adding games to Google+. With the Google+ project, we want to bring the nuance and richness of real-life sharing to the web. But sharing is about more than just conversations. The experiences we have together are just as important to our relationships. We want to make playing games online just as fun, and just as meaningful, as playing in real life.

That means giving you control over when you see games, how you play them and with whom you share your experiences. Games in Google+ are there when you want them and gone when you don’t.

Game On Between Google Plus and Facebook

Games are an important feature for a social network that wants to compete with Facebook for users' attention, not to mention its gaming business. "There is terrific potential for games on Google Plus," Billy Pidgeon, a game analyst at M2 Research, told VentureBeat games specialist Dean Takahashi in a report on developer anticipation of games on Google Plus two weeks ago.

"Opening up gaming on other social networks gives other publishers more opportunity to compete outside the Zynga-Facebook matrix, and can also help Zynga escape dependence on Facebook."

Takahashi wrote that he spoke to a number of game developers who were confident that Games on Plus would launch soon and that it "would change the game industry" when it does.

Read More Here