Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts

Download glass Notepad for your windows

Saturday, December 24, 2011 // by Hacking Beast Editor // Labels: , , , // 0 comments








"Glass Notepad" is a standalone application for Windows Vista and 7 which provides full Glass interface. So if your graphics card supports Aero theme, you will definitely enjoy this nice application.

 It supports all basic Notepad functions and the Menus are almost same as Windows default Notepad. It should also work in earlier Windows versions like Windows XP.





Download :- Here




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Blackberry Playbook vs Xoom Tablet Comparison

Friday, December 23, 2011 // by Anonymous // Labels: , , // 0 comments

Blackberry Playbook vs Xoom Tablet Comparison. Blackberry Playbook is elegant, that’s the first impression that you are going to get no doubt. Its sleek and stylish design and excellent finish will certainly be getting your attention first up, before you get into the details of other specifications

With the tablet market in India going crazy with the addition of new tablets every day, the latest addition to the tech selves from a renowned manufacturer is Playbook from Blackberry makers RIMand Xoom from Motorola. The main competitor for all the tablet manufacturers is undoubtedly the Apple iPad2, seemingly the competition is getting tougher and tougher for iPad but somehow it has managed to keep its market share on the high so far. Will Blackberry Playbook and Xoom be able to get any closer to beat the iPad in the tablet race or will this prove to be just yet another good try. Let us compare the important features of both these tablets to find out which one has a better chance.

  • The First Impression (Looks and Size)
Blackberry Playbook is elegant, that’s the first impression that you are going to get no doubt. Its sleek and stylish design and excellent finish will certainly be getting your attention first up, before you get into the details of other specifications. With this sleek and stylish design, playbook weighs only 14 ounce and is much lighter than 1.6 pound Motorola Xoom. Now comes the size, with the weighs compared you can expect Playbook to be extremely compact and that’s exactly what the case is, even with so many tablets around it would be hard to beat its 7-inch pocket fit size, again Motorola Xoom has a screen size of 10.1 inch. Both the tablets feature TFT capacitive touch screens with 16M color with Xoom having a higher resolution 800*1280 compared to 600*1024 pixels of Playbook.


  • Camera
Blackberry Playbook comes in with a 5mp camera at the back plus a 3MP front camera. To have a 5MP camera in your pocket size tablet is indeed a big delight. It has the ability to capture high resolution images in all environments and record HD 1080p video. Xoom is not behind on this front featuring a 5Mp front camera and a 2MP rear facing camera. It is capable of recording HD 720p video. So Playbook has a slight edge on thecamera battle front.


  • OS
Blackberry Playbook runs a new OS called QNX while Xoom has quickly gained reputation as being the first tablet running on the latest Android 3.0.Both the tablets feature impressive 1ghz dual core processor. Both the devices are available in 16,32 and 64GB versions.


  • Applications
The availability of apps is something that has always kept Apple ahead of the other tablet manufactures. The only other competitor at the moment as far as apps goes is Google Android. Playbook will definitely not be able to match Motorola Xoom on the apps front with its 3000+ available apps compared to well establish Android apps in Motorola Xoom.


  • Email Client And Web Browsing
Blackberry Playbook lacks the email clients for yahoo, hotmail and gmail but provides a better browsing experience being equipped with Adobe flash player that is missing in Motorola Xoom.

Even though Blackberry has tried hard to produce a business oriented tablet with decent entertainment features the more iPad like Xoom is ahead with its Android 3.0 OS.

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Close Look To Features Of Android Ice Cream Sandwich

Thursday, November 10, 2011 // by Anonymous // Labels: , , // 0 comments

Close Look To Features Of Android Ice Cream Sandwich Ice Cream Sandwich

From its navigation methods to fonts, Android is redesigned and refreshed in its Ice Cream Sandwich edition to meet thetastes of its users. Google introduced the update to Honeycomb and Gingerbread Tuesday night alongside Samsung's debut of the Galaxy Nexus. Here are thehighlights.
The Lock and Homescreens
The Android 4.0 lockscreen closely resembles the one found on Android Honeycomb tablets: a lock icon, surrounded by a circle, which you flick outward to unlock the phone. Home screens behave the same way as they currently do on Android (swipe left or right to navigate, open an app drawer, retrieve widgets, and so on) except you now get a customizable “favorites tray” that resembles the dock in iOS. Because the Galaxy Nexus lacks physical navigation buttons, the Back, Home, and Recent Apps icons are located at the bottom of the screen and lit up when touched. Google gave no word on how ICS will work on older phones with physical nav buttons, but future phones running Android 4.0 may lack them as well.

Close Look To Features Of Android Ice Cream Sandwich
The app drawer is updated to look more like the one in Honeycomb and you now scroll through apps by swiping left or right. Widgets have their own tab in the app drawer to make them easier to find. They look and work like the ones we have seen on Honeycomb, and are resizeable so you can fit them wherever you feel like.
Taking another leaf out of Apple’s book, Android 4.0 lets you create folders by dragging one app onto another. Apps can be rearranged in folders by dragging them around and folders can be renamed to your liking.
Recent Apps and Gestures
If you tap the Recent Apps icon at the bottom right of the screen, a scrollable list of running apps pops up -- each with a thumbnail image of that application. You can close a particular app by flicking it away. The flicking gesture command is accepted throughout Android Ice Cream Sandwich, and is also used to dismiss specific notifications in the Notification Tray.
Besides accepting gestures, the Notification Tray displays photos and supports music controls, so you don’t have to go into a specific app in order to skip a song or pause your music. The Notification Tray is now accessible without having to unlock your phone. Just drag down the tray from the lockscreen and you can quickly jump to new text messages or e-mail messages by tapping on a notification. I like the fact that you can quickly get into apps without having to unlock the phone first, but I hope Google puts a security measure in place so that not just anyone can access your private communications.
Speaking of security, in Android 4.0 your face can be used to unlock your phone. Ice Cream Sandwich and the Galaxy Nexus support facial recognition, so the phone can be set to unlock only if it recognizes your face. When demoed on stage, the phone failed to recognize its owner and defaulted back to the traditional pattern unlock screen. Let's hope the Android team gets the kinks worked out before launch, and that other phone manufacturers support this feature in future handsets.


Core Apps Updated
All the core Android apps are getting a facelift and new features, though only the Browser, Calender, and Gmail were explicitly detailed at the introduction event.
Close Look To Features Of Android Ice Cream Sandwich The Browser now supports incognito mode and your bookmarks from the Chrome browser on desktop are now synced to the Browser in ICS. Google adds support for tabbed browsing, and you can quickly view which tabs are open, each with a live preview of that page. As with the notifications and Recent Apps list, you can quickly close tabs by flicking them away.
The biggest update to the Browser has to be the capability to save pages for offline reading. You can save web pages exactly as they are, and access them even when you don’t have a data connection. This is great for people who find an interesting article they want to read, but are going to be in an area with little to no data coverage.
Gmail also received a substantial update and is now much faster to use, thanks to the new Action Bar at the bottom of the screen. The bar is context-sensitive and changes depending on where you are in Gmail. For example, when viewing your inbox you the Action Bar has options for composing a new message, searching for a specific message, and so on. However, once you select one or more e-mail messages, the Action Bar buttons change and offer options to Delete, Archive, or Move those selected messages.
A new preview pane allows you to preview messages without having to open them, and you can now search through the last 30 days of your e-mail offline. It's unclear whether these updates are exclusive to the ICS Gmail app, or if the Gmail app on older Android devices will be updated to support these features as well. Close Look To Features Of Android Ice Cream Sandwich
The Calendar was mentioned only briefly, but you can now pinch to zoom in on your calendar events to see more details about specific events or you can zoom out to see all your events for that day. It's pretty cool, and beats tapping each event individually to find out more about it.
Maps, Music, and other core apps were updated as well but weren’t demonstrated.
Talk To Me
Yes, the Android keyboard is updated for better text predictions, but the show-stealer was definitely the improvements that were made to the speech-to-text software.
Previously, in order to dictate a text message or other text field, you had to manually presSiri, this is huge for people who use their phones while driving, since it no longer requires them to fuss with their phones to activate the dictation software.
Cut and Paste is improved upon even further as well. Now you can drag selected text to the position you want, and the controls for cutting and pasting text are more consistent throughout the operating system.
Camera and Gallery
Close Look To Features Of Android Ice Cream Sandwich The camera on the Galaxy Nexus has zero shutter lag -- and demonstrators proved it by rapidly taking a series of photos just seconds apart. We still aren’t sure if that is a feature of Android 4.0 or if it’s exclusive to the Galaxy Nexus, but it was impressive nonetheless.
Once you snap a photo, you can quickly share it by tapping on it. A list of applications you could use to share the photo will pop up, and you can quickly select where you’d like to send the photo. If the photo could use a touch-up, ICS provides an impressive array of photo editing tools. These include various filters (which were lovingly described as “hipster”), the capability to adjust the image angle, red eye removal, cropping capabilities, and a few others that were not discussed. Any edits you make to a photo will create a copy, in case you ever want togo back to the original.
ICS also comes with a simple-to-use panorama mode. You just set the mode to panoramic, then take the first picture. A slider at the bottom of the screen guides you so you know when to move the phone, and you can preview the image as the device stitches the pictures together. I would expect to see way more panoramic pictures on Facebook and Twitter once Android 4.0 launches.
Video recording gains continuous focus as well as support for time-lapse and video snapshots.
Like with the Notification Tray, you can quickly access the phone camera from the phonelockscreen by flicking the lock icon to the left. A small camera icon pops up and you can launch straight into the Camera app.
People App and the Dialer
The Contacts app is revamped as the new People app. The People app functions in the same way as the Contacts app found in Android 2.x, but it changes contact cards to show much more information at a glance. Nice big photos replace the tiny thumbnails, and you can quickly see a contact's recent photos or status updates. If that person is your friend on a social network, that data is automatically pulled so you can easily see their latest Tweet without having to open the Twitter app. Though described as an evolution of the current Contacts app, this felt more like a fine-tuning than a sensational leap forward.Close Look To Features Of Android Ice Cream Sandwich
The Dialer also has a few tweaks here and there. You can now retrieve voice mails from inside the call log, and can speed up or slow down their playback. Those nice big photos in the People app take up the entire screen whenever someone calls you, and you can send a Quick Response to anyone whose call you decline. Quick Responses are customizable canned text message responses that you can send to a caller to explain why you declined their call. It's pretty neat, and I can see myself using them on people I want to avoid.
Android Beam
Google is really pushing Near Field Communications with its Google Wallet app, and Android Beam in Ice Cream Sandwich is just another reason to own an NFC-equipped phone.
With Android Beam, you can share any contacts or content between two Android devices just by tapping them together. You can share webpages, maps, and even apps. It's handy if you want to give your friends directions or want to share an article you found while browsing the web.
Odds and Ends
Google mentioned tighter Google+ integration in Ice Cream Sandwich, but didn’t really demo anything. Representatives did, however, bring up the subject of data caps, and described a way for to better manage data usage.
Close Look To Features Of Android Ice Cream Sandwich By going to Settings>Data Usage, you can see a chart of how much data you have used that month as well as an estimate of your expected usage. You can also set limits and alerts so that you know exactly when you exceed your data limit, so you don’t get hit with overages. You can also select specific sections of the chart to see which apps used the most data that day. The phone will show you a breakdown of how much data that app uses, and allow you to restrict the app so that it uses data only when you want it to.
This is a huge step in giving users more control over their phones, and should help save people the headache of accidentally exceeding data limits.
Android 4.0 adds a handful of new live wallpapers as well as a new font aptly titled "Roboto." The live wallpapers were kind of neat, but Roboto was interesting because it is designed to be used on high-density displays. Since Ice Cream Sandwich natively supports 1280-by-720-pixel displays, let’s hope it gets used a whole lot more often. Barometer support is also added, although its use is unclear.
The first Ice Cream Sandwich equipped phone will be the Nexus Galaxy, which launches in November, but the SDK is available for developers now on the Android.com website. Now we wait to find out which phones are getting a tasty Ice Cream Sandwich update.

Monitor Folders for Changes in Windows

Sunday, November 6, 2011 // by Hacking Beast Editor // Labels: , , // 0 comments














Folder Monitor is a free Windows app that can track changes to folders you select. The types of changes include a file being created, changed, renamed, or deleted. When one of those events occur you can have a visual notification appear, a sound played, and a command line action taken.
Monitoring folders for changes is something that can be pretty useful, and is something I use regularly. Here is an example of how I use a program like this:
  1. I upload a text file to my Dropbox account remotely that contains the URL of a file I want to download.
  2. Folder Monitor notices that a file was added to the folder, and executes a custom script I have to download the file locally on my PC.
  3. The text file is automatically deleted from my Dropbox so that I know the script ran successfully.
  4. When I get home the file is on my computer and ready to go.
Using tools like Folder Monitor combined with Dropbox you can come up with some pretty clever things you can do remotely, and there are other reasons you may want to monitor a directory for changes. We’d love to hear about any ideas you come up with!
Folder Monitor Homepage (Windows only; Freeware)

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HCL launches Android-based tablet PC

Thursday, October 13, 2011 // by Hacking Beast Editor // Labels: , , , , // 2 comments



HCL Infosystems today launched MEX1 tablet in New Delhi.
Priced Rs. 10,490 the new tablet is based on Android 2.3 OS and has Adobe Flash
 capabilities.
It features 2MP camera and 512 MB storage capacity with an internal memory of 4GB which is expandable to 32GB. With 7 inch screen the new device offers full HD 1080 pixel video support.

The content on Hacking Beast like Hacking Articles, Cyber News etc are provided by many sources ( email,messages,internet etc) , we do not take any responsibility of your activities. The news provided by us on this site is gathered from various sources. if any person have some FAQ's in their mind they can Contact Us. and you can also read our Disclamier for more info. Thank You !
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Qubes OS operating system for security !

Wednesday, August 31, 2011 // by Hacking Beast Editor // Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , // 0 comments




Qubes is a very effective operating system designed for desktop security .Qubes is based on Xen , Qubes can also run many lunix applications on it !!

Download : here 

The content on Hacking Beast like Hacking Articles, Cyber News etc are provided by many sources ( email,messages,internet etc) , we do not take any responsibility of your activities. The news provided by us on this site is gathered from various sources. if any person have some FAQ's in their mind they can Contact Us. and you can also read our Disclamier for more info. Thank You !
If you enjoyed Hacking Beast Articles , Make sure you subscribe to our RSS feed. Stay Updated about latest Hacking News, Tips and Tricks,and Cyber News.! and recieve all our emails and latest posts directly in your inbox to enjoy fast and easy reading . Thank You!

UNIX Special 4: Linux vs. UNIX

Tuesday, August 30, 2011 // by Hacking Beast Editor // Labels: , , , , , // 0 comments



INDIA: Although many still consider UNIX the best option for high-demand applications, the technical differences between Linux and UNIX are "going to be pretty minimal" going forward, argued Gartner analyst George Weiss in a recent report.
Things going in favour of Linux were - better hardware features, internal multitasking and multiprocessing, less expensive resource requirements, stronger application independence and other such bullets.
Gabriel Consulting Group takes the same vein.
What it labels as a blinding glimpse of the obvious, GCG puts it forth in these words:
“The Linux operating system has had a huge impact on enterprise computing. It’s being used in closet-sized data centers and massive government research facilities alike – and most all of the IT shops in-between. Linux growth has come from new workloads, Microsoft Server replacements, and – of course – from the commercial UNIX installed base as well.”
No doubt, pressure from Linux-fueled systems has driven the major UNIX solutions toward the high end of the data center.  We no longer see racks of Sun, HP, or IBM RISC systems driving file, print, or application servers. In fact, Linux (and to a lesser extent Microsoft) operating systems have completely taken over those functions, along with many others. Systems based on commercial UNIX have moved to a much more mainframe-like role, hosting large applications.
But then has Linux matured to the point where it’s a substitute for commercial UNIX? Does Linux offer the mission critical characteristics that data center customers need for their most important workloads?
GCG tried to attack just these very questions in its survey. Dan Olds, principal analyst tells that it’s important to point out that there’s a place for both commercial UNIX and Linux in the modern data center and that these are both moving targets – so we’re taking a snapshot in time on these issues.
And with that as the silhouette, the survey find out that almost 60 per cent of respondents believe that commercial UNIX is a better choice than Linux for some workloads. It’s a majority, but not overwhelming. Why?
Well, it’s interesting to note that the ‘Not Sure’ responses outweigh both the ‘Disagree’ and ‘Strongly Disagree’ voters. This is a pattern; Dan says they saw on many of the UNIX vs. Linux questions.
A hardcore minority of 20-30 per cent who see Linux as superior to UNIX in every way, and then a reasonably large number of undecided respondents.
For instance, a question asks, from a Linux perspective, if Linux is technically better than UNIX these days. A solid majority of customers (60 per cent) say Linux isn’t quite at the same technical level as commercial UNIX.
Of course, it can be argued that Linux can provide very high application availability when it’s used in a cluster or with applications that scale horizontally rather than vertically, Dan adds.
But that’s not the same thing as the single-system availability that has been the design point for modern commercial UNIX operating systems. Almost half (56 per cent) believed that commercial UNIX-based systems provide higher levels of availability and reliability than the typical Linux distribution.
“I think that the major operating systems will continue to survive, but the bulk of the growth will go towards Windows and Linux – which is natural, given that they are lower cost alternatives. I believe that commercial UNIX systems will continue to grow in terms of usage (bigger and more capable systems being shipped), albeit at a much slower rate.”
From how Dan Olds interprets this quite fairly, anyone who knows Linux would feel fairly comfortable with commercial UNIX these days. This is something that the UNIX vendors need to explore and discuss with prospective customers.
UNIX needs to continue to show how it’s a better platform for mission critical workloads – how it’s more highly available, provides more predictable performance, and is easier to manage vs. Linux.
So the ‘whether’ part in the question of UNIX or LINUX still is in a much larger font size, be it a survey, or a crucial decision looming over an enterprise CIO.
The ink continues to be in grey, rather than in Black or White.
Because, in the survey, there’s still that quarter of respondents who aren’t quite sure which is better, perhaps signifying the ‘moving target’ nature of the two operating environments. 

The content on Hacking Beast like Hacking Articles, Cyber News etc are provided by many sources ( email,messages,internet etc) , we do not take any responsibility of your activities. The news provided by us on this site is gathered from various sources. if any person have some FAQ's in their mind they can Contact Us. and you can also read our Disclamier for more info. Thank You !
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