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Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts

Microsoft Introducing Outlook.com | Good Bye Hot Mail Hello Outlook !

Recently, we talked about how we've reimagined cloud services for Windows 8 and Windows Phone. And we described new apps for Windows 8, updates to SkyDrive, and how cloud services power the new Office Preview, We've also been hard at work on a mission to reimagine personal email - from the datacenter all the way to the user experience. Today, we're starting to deliver on that goal with a preview of the new Outlook.com - modern email designed for the next billion mailboxes.
Webmail was first introduced with HoTMaiL in 1996. Back then, it was novel to have a personal email address you could keep for life - one that was totally independent from your business or internet service provider. Eight years later, Google introduced Gmail, which included 1 GB of storage and inbox search. And while Gmail and other webmail services like Hotmail have added some features since then, not much has fundamentally changed in webmail over the last 8 years - though yesterday's frustrations about the small size of inboxes are now things of the past. At the same time, email is becoming less and less useful as inboxes become cluttered with newsletters and social updates, and people increasingly keep up their personal connections in social networks instead of their email address books. All of this has led many to hope for a better solution so you don't have to settle for today's webmail.

It's Time for a Change


We think the time is right to reimagine email. So today, we're introducing a preview of Outlook.com. We realized that we needed to take a bold step, break from the past and build you a brand new service from the ground up. You already know Outlook via the Outlook desktop application-for PCs and Macs-as the world's most popular application for reading email, managing a calendar, and connecting to people. And you may have used the Outlook Web App connected to Exchange Server in your organization. Now, in addition to a desktop application and a service for businesses, we're offering Outlook as a personal email service - Outlook.com.
Modern experience for modern browsers and devices. Email isn't just about the browser anymore. In fact, email represents 20% of the time we spend on smartphones, and is used extensively on tablets as well as PCs. Outlook is designed cloud first, so all of your mail is always available wherever you are. Its fresh, clean user interface gets the clutter out of your way-the header has 60% fewer pixels and there are 30% more messages visible in your inbox that the webmail most people are used to. And there are no display ads or large search boxes that take up extra space. Outlook.com also uses Exchange ActiveSync, so it powers your mail, calendar and people experience on your smartphone, tablet, and the new Outlook 2013 Preview.

 

Connected to friends and co-workers, wherever they are. Over the last several years, social networks have become an incredibly popular place to share and communicate with friends and co-workers. At the same time, email use among people who use social networks actively has continued to increase. We saw an opportunity to make email better by using your connections on social networks to enrich your email experience. And so with the Outlook.com preview, we are giving you the first email service that is connected to Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google, and soon, Skype, to bring relevant context and communications to your email.
In the Outlook.com inbox, your personal email comes alive with photos of your friends, recent status updates and Tweets that your friend has shared with you, the ability to chat and video call - all powered by an always up-to-date contact list that is connected to your social networks. And, of course, you are in control of your experience - what you share, the networks you connect to, and your personal information.





Smart and powerful. Today's inbox is about more than just exchanging mail with the people you know -50% of the email in a typical inbox is newsletters and another 20% is social network updates. This is part of the reason our inboxes are overloaded and we often feel it's a chore to "do email." Outlook.com automatically sorts your messages from contacts, newsletters, shipping updates, and social updates, and with our Sweep features you can move, delete and set up powerful rules in a few, simple clicks so you can more quickly get to the email you really want.
People also use email to share photos and work together on documents. So we included free Office Web Apps -- Word, PowerPoint, Excel and OneNote - which let you view and edit attachments without leaving your inbox. And Outlook.com comes with SkyDrive, so if you're sending photos, documents, or just about any other file, you can now put them on SkyDrive and stop worrying about attachment limits.



Putting you in control. Email is private and confidential, and most folks we've talked to want to keep it that way. So we keep your personal email personal. We don't scan your email content or attachments and sell this information to advertisers or any other company, and we don't show ads in personal conversations. We let you decide whether to connect your account to social networks, and which ones you want to use - and you're in control of who you friend or follow. And, if you're a power user who wants to really fine tune your inbox, we let you create your own categories, folders, and rules to tailor Outlook.com to your preferences.
And of course Outlook.com comes with the features you'd expect from any email service. Building on our past work with Exchange and Hotmail, we provide an inbox with virtually unlimited storage, industry leading spam protection, and rock solid account protection powered by your Microsoft account. Outlook.com also works great with the Outlook desktop application, and as you'd expect from a personal email service, it's free.

Get Started Today at Outlook.com

While today's preview is just the start, Outlook.com is ready now to become your primary email service. We're expecting millions of people to try it out. Starting today, you can get an @Outlook.com email address, and we've also made it easy to get started with your current email address if you want to.
  • If you're a Hotmail customer and want to upgrade to the Outlook.com preview, just click "Upgrade" in the options menu of Hotmail. Your email address, password, contacts, old email, and rules will remain unchanged, and you can send/receive email from your @hotmail.com or @msn.com or @live.com address. You'll experience it all in the new Outlook.com preview user interface. You can also add an @Outlook.com email address to your account if you want.
  • Using Gmail, Yahoo, or another email service? No problem - it's easy to try the preview by going to http://www.outlook.com/. If you have a Microsoft account, just log in and get started. If you don't, it's easy to create a new account with an @Outlook.com email address. Then you can set up Gmail or your other email service to forward your mail to Outlook.com and import your contacts and messages by following these instructions . This will let you use both services for now, but we think that over time, most people will prefer Outlook.com.
  • Don't have an email address? Go to Outlook.com and create a new one and you'll be up and running.
Once you're using Outlook.com, you can also set it up on your phone (Windows Phone, iPhone, Android, Blackberry, or other phone), tablet (Windows 8, iPad, and Android), in the new Outlook 2013 Preview, or in other mail apps you might use. And because Outlook.com supports Exchange ActiveSync, you can set it up just like you would your Exchange or Hotmail account.  Have more questions? See our step-by- step guide to setting up Outlook.com on your phone.

Join the Preview and Join the Conversation

Today is the start of our preview, which represents an opportunity to learn together as we roll out and scale this new service. We know your email is important and you need a service that puts you in control, and we're looking forward to your feedback. Once you're using the service, just click Feedback in the Outlook.com Options menu and let us know what you think. If you have questions about this post, feel free to leave a comment here on our blog, or join us on Reddit later today where we're hosting an "Ask me anything" at 11am PST. We have a lot more we'll be sharing on this blog, and we look forward to continuing this conversation with you.
A lot has changed in the last eight years, and we think it' time for a fresh look at email - modern, connected, smart, powerful, and in control. So try out the preview at Outlook.com. We think you'll like what you see.

How to place pictures in Facebook chat

Over the weekend, a Facebook chat feature was revealed--one that allows you to use a profile picture to represent someone instead of simply typing their name.

To place a picture into your chat, all you need to know is the Facebook user ID for either the friend or the page you want to use. You can find either one by visiting the user's profile and looking at the URL.

The user ID can be a string of characters, as shown above. 
Using the URL above, you would only need to know
"songsfeed."
 User ID's can also be a string of numbers. Using the URL above, 
you would need to know all numbers following "id=."

Once you have the user ID, to place the profile picture of that user into a chat, surround the user ID with double brackets. So, as an example, to place the SONGSFEED profile picture in a chat, you would enter [[songsfeed]] Or [[306301309406814]]. Once you send the message, Facebook will automatically place the profile picture into the chat, instead of the text.

Here's an example of what it looks like:

Going one step further, a "GENERATOR" was made, which allows you to type in what you want to say and get the corresponding picture codes for each letter. Simply copy and paste the code into your chat to see the fruits of your labor. See below for an example.

 Tags: Facebook Chat Image Generator, FB Chat Image Generator, Faceboook Trick, Facebook Chat Image, Your Profile Picture In Chat, Pic Into FB Chat, Facebook Chat Generator Image, Chat Image Code Generator, FB Chat Code Generator, Picture.

Googgle Plus Gets New Look

In its attempt to be on top of the social media with its so much in news product; Google Plus; Google rolled out a new look to it last week. The move was slow to start and in a 2 day span virtually everybody was rolled over to the new look. Towards a simpler, more beautiful Google is how guys at Google put it, who now claims that the new look has been rolled over to around 170 million users. Seems the platform is being used by quite a few out there. Here is the introduction to the new improved platform.
New Look 
Here is how the new look is:

You will notice a new ribbon floating on the left of the screen and a lot of white space (just below You Might Like) on your right. We will discuss about them both in detail. But for now this is how the new Google Plus stream looks like.


The Ribbon
You now see a ribbon on the left side of your screen, with all the options that previously sat on the top bar of the page.
Google Plus RibbonAs you see on the image on the left here the options are now nicely aligned in a vertical way for you to use. Jumping from one to the other just makes you feel like a no refresh kind of a thing and that you just jumped layers. The best part of this ribbon is that Google now allows you to reorder the options in that ribbon to your choice. Just drag your important or most used ones on the top of the ribbon; the rest go down the order automatically.
The ribbon as a whole stays intact with only the center part of the page rolling as you scroll down the page, looking a steady look. There is an option of adding more like the pages that you have from the More option available at the end of the ribbon. The new thing to notice on this ribbon is that the Hangouts now have a new home. Separate from the others, something you will love if you are a regular user of the feature.
Similarly the Explore feature now provides you the options like the Trending on Google Plus and What's Hot feature plus suggestions on whom to follow. You may also do a video chat with a maximum of 9 users at once. Watch out for the slider available at the enter of this page that lets you choose how much of What's Hot news to show on your stream (or Home Page).


Cover Photo To New Profile Look
We saw cover photos being a hit with the FB timeline and now on same lines it seems Google Plus has the same feature, although with some subtle changes as we discuss next, but here is the look for you...




The one that you see on our profile is the default cover provided by Google plus. A little smaller than the one you are accustomed to on FB timeline. You may choose the photo for a size of 940 by 180px. The other option is to have the look like you had previously with your multiple photos chosen as the display. This is how you choose either of the options:


The option at the top Choose a template is where you toggle both the looks!

Your Circles
This is how your Circles page look like now.
Don't forget to see the Actions menu in the pic above. You may increase or decrease your circles size. Although we find it a bit useless and think it rather should have been a size already chosen by the app.

Mini Profiles
We now also have a mini profile look for the users to look in to. Here is how it looks like:
 
Ripple View
Now see the how the news/share/post is floating down the stream with what Google now calls is the Ripple View:

Google Plus Ripple View
From a post, just drop the arrow on the top right to see the last option on the drop menu that comes up. Click on the option to go to a Ripples page where the system tells you who all has shared/re shared the post and some more statistics as you go down the page. Enjoy the new stats page:)

Tags: Google New Look, Google Plus New Look, Google+ New look, PlusGoogle New Look, +Google New Look.

Exploring Google Drive | Easy Shareing | Uploading

Drive Google, Exploring Of Google Drive, Easy To Share, Upload, How To Upload On Google Drive, New Launch In India Google Drive, Document Files And Now Other Apllications Too On Google Drive






Your document list is now part of Google Drive. Watch this short video to learn about syncing your stuff with the desktop application, creating and sharing files, new views and simplified navigation, and more. Find out more at https://drive.google.com/start/

Google Drive - Google New Launch

Google Drive, Google Launch Drive.google.com, Store 5gb Data On Google Server, Google Latest Google Drive





Go To drive.google.com/start to start Google Drive. You Can Store 5Gb Data To Goggle Server.

Facebook Messenger desktop app gets official, keeps you constantly tuned in

Facebook Messenger desktop app gets official, keeps you constantly tuned in

to keep up to date while participating in other activities on your computer:

Chat while you do other stuff

See and respond to chats right from your desktop. You don’t have to click away to stay connected.

Get notified instantly

Find out about new comments, photo tags and more as soon as they come in.

See what’s going on anytime

Stay up to date with an active stream of posts and activity from your friends. Just click to leave a comment or see more.

Personally, we’ve kept the window snapped to the right side of our screen, which pushes other opened windows to make room for Facebook Messenger, and we’re still connected to the happenings in Facebook. Some of you who stay logged in all day may find yourself bombarded by messages from friends. In that case, you can choose to go offline, like in the browser version, but keep up-to-date through the real-time Ticker feed. Any notifications that appear on your wall, will notify you with a temporary floating pop-up at the bottom right-hand corner of your screen.

In the coming weeks, the application will be rolling out for other users globally, while Facebook works on building a Messenger for Mac. Whether Facebook will build an application for other versions of Windows other than Windows 7 and in the future, Windows 8, remains to be seen, but we’ll update you if they get back to us.

Facebook Messenger For Windows Desktop Chat Client Launches After Leaking

Facebook Messenger For Windows Desktop Chat Client Launches After Leaking

 Microsoft’s Messenger Live site that lets users Facebook Chat, read updates from friends, and share is technically Facebook’s most popular app according to AppData, with 22.4 million monthly active users and a staggering 19.1 million daily active users for an incredible stickiness percentage of 85.5%. Messenger for Windows could bring some of this usage to where there’s no Hotmail, SkyDrive, or other Microsoft features to distract users.

Facebook loves to test its products on small percentages of its user base to check for usage patterns and adoption rates before rolling them out globally. It even has a specially designed piece of infrastructure called Gatekeeper to manage who can see what. When testing browser-based products Facebook has full control, showing and hiding features to different users at will, with guinea pigs typically unable to opt in or out of tests.

In testing one of it’s first downloadable desktop products, Facebook suddenly found it was the guinea pigs who were running the experiment. When a blogger for Israel’s TechIT was admitted to the Messenger for Windows test group after the product was announced in November, he was given an unprotected download link. He promptly published it. We picked up on the news and suggested Facebook face facts and publicly release the link for those desperate to download. That’s just what it did, making the client available in the Help Center, but making no formal announcement.


Hacker group targets internet today: Interpol Chief

Hacker group targets internet today: Interpol Chief

 

New Delhi: Interpol Chief Ronald Noble on Friday warned that a group of hackers might try to shut down internet service today.

"Operation Global Blackout 2012 looks to shut down the internet for a whole day on Saturday by disabling its core DNS servers, making websites inaccessible," Noble said here.

He said the hacker group 'Anonymous' is protesting against Wall Street and irresponsible leaders.

The Interpol Chief was delivering 13th DP Kohli memorial lecture on 'Multi-jurisdictional Investigation: Operation Unmask'.

The event was organised by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) here.

"Investigations have already been launched by Colombia, Chile and Spain as their private and public websites have been attacked by the group," Noble said.

Yahoo! Sues Facebook for Patent Infringement

 Yahoo has decided that it would be a good idea to sue Facebook because – get this – Yahoo actually came up with and patented the "entire social network model".
Yahoo's lawsuit, which it first threatened Facebook with earlier this year, covers the Facebook news feed, advertising methods, messaging tools and even its sometime controversial privacy settings.
"Facebook's entire social network model, which allows users to create profiles for and connect with, among other things, persons and businesses, is based on Yahoo's patented social networking technology," Yahoo's lawsuit reads.
The search engine goes as far as to say that Facebook has been "free riding" on Yahoo's patents for years, hinting that Yahoo wants a little more than just royalty payments – in fact, it wants triple damages as well as to stop Facebook using the patents altogether.

Maybe they'll rename it Facebook!

It seems that Yahoo's aggressive court-based tactics aren't sitting too well with its employees, with All Things D reporting that many "top techies" at Yahoo not in favour of the move.
But newly minted CEO Scott Thompson appears to be driving the push, presumably for the cash and the handy side benefit of damaging Facebook's IPO action.
Facebook, meanwhile, is feeling sad, disappointed and betrayed: "We're disappointed that Yahoo, a longtime business partner of Facebook and a company that has substantially benefited from its association with Facebook, has decided to resort to litigation," the social network said in the statement.
"Once again, we learned of Yahoo's decision simultaneously with the media. We will defend ourselves vigorously against these puzzling actions."
First it was the Winklevoss twins' idea, then it was Mark Zuckerberg's, then it was some random New Yorker's and now it turns out that Facebook was actually Yahoo's idea all along.
Hey, someone should make a film about this…

‘Oh no! Where’s Facebook?’



Facebook users in India faced trouble logging onto the site on Tuesday, as the site kept crashing in the morning. For now full access has been restored. According to Us some users had access while others faced trouble signing in.
Access via desktops was the most affected, with users finding that they were unable to post or share links on the site which kept crashing. For some lucky users, mobile apps and the mobile site, m.facebook.com, was accessible. As expected, Facebook’s distraught users, turned to twitter to vent their rage on not having access to Facebook. DNS (Domain Name System) and #Facebook are still trending on Twitter India.
DNS translates queries for domain names (which are meaningful to humans) into IP addresses for the purpose of locating computer services and devices worldwide. The social networking site faced a DNS issue last week as well when European users faced an outage.
Oh no where'd Facebook go? AFP
Twitter was soon abuzz with users offering help to each on how to correct the DNS issue. According to @Prasad Parmaj, users could have used the following tip
Change IP addresses 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 as your #DNS servers to solve Facebook india access problem.
You can change DNS settings by going to network settings inside your browser.
Of course Twitter also has people commenting that since Facebook was gone, people might finally get down to work.
For now the site is back and India is back to normal again. The company has not issued an official statement on why services were down in India.

Facebook draws flak over blocking users with Chutia surname

 Controversies have continued to chase Facebook. The social networking site, already facing civil lawsuit over objectionable content issue, has come under heavy criticism for blocking “thousands” of accounts in India for using the word “chutia". The word “chutia” is a commonly-used derogatory term in Hindi, but it is also a surname (pronounced as sutiya) used by a community in the Indian state of Assam. The All Assam Chutia Students' Union (AACSU) has raised serious concerns over the issue and has sought public apology from the social networking giant.
Facebook believes that accounts with that word are fake and fabricated. The AACSU, however, argues it is a big misunderstanding, as Chutia is an ethnic tribe of Assam, with a long rich historical background in the state history. While talking to the media, AACSU general secretary Jyotiprasad Chutia said that they were unhappy with the authority concerned as they didn't verify accounts before blocking. He went on to say that the move to block their accounts could be a well-thought conspiracy against their community. “They even failed to verify the truth when they blocked the accounts of some prominent personalities and popular artists like Krishnamoni Chutia, who belongs to our community,” adds Jyotiprasad.
It's notable that social networking sites such as Twitter, Facebok and Google+ insist on users using their real names on their profiles. However, Google recently modified its names policy, allowing users to post their nicknames on their profiles. It also allowed maiden names and names in non-Latin script.
Facebook and other social networking sites are flooded with fake accounts. However, these sites allow users to block/report such fabricated accounts. Facebook's move to block “Chutia” word may be seen as a step towards monitoring the “offensive content”. But in a country like India where there are many languages and dialects spoken, taking any similar move in haste could be counterproductive.
Do you also believe Facebook didn't research enough before blocking the term? Or, you will like to give Facebook benefit of doubt, considering the large diversity in the country.

Valentine’s Day Special Google Doodle







Google known for its timely seasonal Doodles, and amazing Easter Eggs has come up with an interesting doodle to commemorate Valentine's Day — the day celebrated around the world as the day of love.


Very nice Google doodle on Valentine's Day. Unfortunately the music is not for free, so I can only document the video without sound. Hope, you get the Google message: Don't use Google to win someones's heart. Be real - because love is live!

Best wisehs to all of you, happy Valentine's day :-)

Thumbs UP if you like :-)

Google privacy policy: Who will be affected and how you can choose what information gets shared

 

Two days after Google announced sweeping changes to its privacy policy, analysts are weighing on who might be most affected by it. Cecilia Kang reports:
Google this week announced a shift in its privacy policies that will allow it to follow the activities of users as they move across the firm’s Web sites, including its highly popular YouTube, Gmail and main search engine. The company emphasized in interviews that the change would apply only to users who are signed on to their Google accounts.
The initiative could be of particular significance for consumers of Android devices, who are almost always signed on to their phones and tablets, experts said. Without signing up for an account, an Android smartphone owner would be limited in what he or she could do on the device, they said.
“I guess it’s theoretically possible to use an Android device without being logged on, but that wouldn’t be much of a smartphone,” said Kurt Opsahl, a senior staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a group that advocates for free speech and privacy online.
The company said users who activate Android phones without signing into a Google account can make phone calls, browse the Web and use pre-installed applications. But they couldn’t use their Gmail, chat functions or download Angry Birds, Pandora or other applications from the Android Marketplace.
But Opsahl said that because Google account holders cannot opt out of the new policy, he fears that the company’s efforts to compile information about users won’t accommodate those who want to separate their personal and professional digital lives. The policy change also alarmed some lawmakers and consumer advocates.
In the light of the policy change, Hayley Tsukayama explains how to choose what you share with Google:
The search giant offers a couple of options on what information is associated with any given Google account. You can get an overview of all the data Google associates with your account by looking at the “Dashboard” option on your main Google account page. There’s a lot of information on this page, such as Android devices associated with the account, calendar information, contact information, Gmail history and records of activity on Google Music, Google Talk, Google Reader, Google Voice and social connections through Google contacts and chat.
You can edit some account preferences through this page, though other information, such as what Android devicesare associated with your account, can’t be edited.
Apart from the Dashboard, users can turn off the setting that allows Google to record their search history . This record logs all your search history and the results that you’ve clicked on from those queries. To get to this menu, head to the “privacy” menu from the top navigation bar you see when signed in to your Google account. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click on the button that says “Go to Privacy Center.”
From there, you can see Google’s current policy — the company has also put a notice at the top of the page with a link to its new policy — and you can head to the “Privacy tools” menu by clicking on that link and scrolling down to “Web History Controls.” From here, you can pause, edit or remove all Web History.
Columnist Joshua Topolsky says this change and other recent company decisions should have the firm rethinking its ‘Don’t be evil’ motto:
I don’t think anyone in our industry would knock Google for continuing to build its business and make money. And yes, we could all benefit from acknowledging that our concepts of “good” and “evil” aren’t always clear. But explaining away Google’s changes as simply a matter of differing perspectives wouldn’t address the real problem.
The real problem is that Google’s search policy shift and the change in its privacy policies suggest a shift in core values at the company — values you didn’t need a road map to figure out a few years ago. Those were values that placed the user first and stood in stark contrast to monopolistic practices of companies like Microsoft in the 1990s.
They were Google Values, and they felt right. They felt good.
If Google can’t see how perverse some of its decisions look today by comparison, maybe it’s time to rethink the company motto.