Thursday, 6 November 2014

Get Google's Inbox invitation by a quick mail.

Google's new Inbox is the hot new email app currently in invite-only stage. Although you can get it with a friend's help, here's a surefire way for the rest of us to get Inbox: Send an email between 3 and 4pm PT.




Here's the tweet from Google explaining the situation:

Want an invite TODAY? #InboxHappyHour 3-4pm PT. Send us an email at inbox@google.com between 3 and 4pm PT and you'll get your invite by 5pm.




— Inbox by Gmail (@inboxbygmail) November 5, 2014





Email inbox@google.com within that timeframe and you'll get your invite by 5pm, the company promises. (Thanks Avi!)
Want an invite TODAY? | Inbox by Gmail on Twitter via TechCrunch

Viruses & Malwares are now a threat to IOS.

IPhones, which were consider malware proof aren't anymore, A report from Palu Alto Networks suggets. The've discovers a bug named wireluker which already for infected hundreds of Iphone oweners. The Bug is spreading through Maiyadi app store, a third party source for OS X apps in China. Researchers estimated the infected app is already downloaded more than 350000 times. Once the computer is infected, Wireluker spreads to IOS devices that connect over USB rewriting programs on the device through the binary file replacement.

Friday, 27 September 2013

Google Introduce a new change in it's Algorithm "Hummingbird"

This recent change in google's algorithm will answer your basic queries in the form of question directly.

Other things announced in the surprising event(at Garage) include a tweak to Google’s Knowledge Graph to allow it to handle comparison questions (“Which is better for me — olive oil or butter?”)


The main focus, and something that went repeated many a time, was that the new algorithm allows Google to more quickly parse full questions (as opposed to parsing searches word-by-word), and to identify and rank answers to those questions from the content they’ve indexed.


Microsoft to unify Windows Phone and Windows Stores

One of the major downsides within the Microsoft ecosystem is the inability to share applications between Windows Phone devices and Windows 8/RT tablets. Rumors had emerged in the past that the company might be looking for a way to merge the two stores and create a one-stop solution for users; today, those rumors have been confirmed.
According to The Verge, Microsoft is planning to combine its current Windows Phone Store and Windows 8 Store into one single entity. Sources have stated that head of Microsoft’s Operating Systems Group, Terry Myerson, confirmed the decision to merge the stores “in an internal company meeting today”, which was “attended by thousands of Microsoft employees”.
Myerson has been quoted as being committed to the “next releases” of both Microsoft’s Windows PC and Windows Phone Operating systems; an exact update roadmap has not been specified, we might see the special update for Windows 8.1 and Windows Phone in the spring of 2014.
It has not yet been revealed how the application store will work or how Microsoft plans to pull off the merge. We may see a store similar to Apple, in which some applications will be restricted to tablets, while others can be scaled up. It would be even better to see Microsoft combine both distributions of a single purchase, so if multiple versions of the app are available for both tablets and phones – users will only have to worry about picking up the app once.
As of now, the Windows Store and Windows Phone Marketplace are the Achilles Heel of Microsoft’s entrance into the industry and combining the two marketplaces can only be helpful. In addition, if users find out that all of the Windows 8 applications they bought can easily be accessed from their phone – it might draw more appeal to Windows phone handsets.

Wednesday, 20 March 2013

Nokia Lumia 1000 EOS PureView could debut P2i waterproofing


Nokia is working with P2i, meaning the Lumia EOS may be waterproof

P2i’s self-named technology is a nano-coating which works at a molecular level to effectively ‘bounce’ liquids off the surface of phone components, in particular the delicate internals.
The technology is significant because, unlike the current tech found on the likes of the Sony Xperia Z, it doesn’t require the phone’s various ports (headphone jack, microUSB etc.) to be sealed with fiddly grommets and covers.
Not only are such covers frequently annoying to use every time you wish to access a port, but they’re also often held in place by a flimsy plastic band which, if it snaps, compromises the waterproofing of the entire device.
Reports indicate Nokia is planning to debut this P2i technology on products within 2013 and rumours suggest the company’s next flagship, the PureView equipped Lumia 1000 EOS, could be among the first.
The Lumia EOS is said to pack the Nokia 808 PureView 41-megapixel camera with optical image stabilisation and will feature an aluminium unibody to keep the weight down.
With P2i technology in place the potential is there for users to take spectacular underwater shots and footage from their phone.
The 41-megapixel setup is capable of capturing some truly stunning images and video, but was left a little redundant in the 808 PureView as it ran the now defunct Symbian operating system.


Previous reports suggest the Lumia EOS will have an angular design language but will focus on a ‘new look’. Nokia is said to have another aluminium-bodied revamp of the Lumia 920 in the works, dubbed the Catwalk, which may or may not have the same chassis as the Lumia EOS and also sports a ‘Phase 2’ PureView camera.
Select attendees at MWC 2013 caught a glimpse of the Catwalk with Eldar Murtazin pouring praise on the new design for its slim and lightweight build. He also alleged that it could be the most popular phone of the year for its superb design and camera tech, but that it is let down by the Windows Phone 8 operating system.

Just in news, Nokia Lumia 1000

Riding high on the "success" of it's latest Windows Phone-8 powered Lumia range of smartphones, Nokia might be gearing up to launch it's new flagship smartphone being dubbed as Lumia 1000. The Nokia Lumia 1000 has been spotted on China Mobile's database, which is Chinese mobile operator. As of now, nothing else is known about the device except the name but if naming is he criteria to go by, one can safely assume the Lumia 1000 to be the next flagship Windows Phone device from the Finnish smartphone-maker.







Rumors are also doing the rounds that the Lumia 1000 could be the same phone, which was being dubbed as the EOS till now and it's expected that the EOS a.k.a. Lumia 1000 will be the first ever Windows Phone device from Nokia to feature a true PureView camera, sporting a 41 megapixel sensor which we saw on the Nokia PureView 808.