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Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Man buys 14,962 domains in 24 hours, makes millions in a month


Cybersquatters are quick to register domains that could fetch thousands of dollars and Mike Mann is one of those individuals. He has been on a domain registering spree for the past few days. CNET reports that he’s registered close to 15,000 domains in the process, in a day, between Tuesday and Wednesday last week. Mann says he wants to own the world and by the looks of things, he plans to do that by registering all the major, popular domains on the net. Mike Mann from Delaware, USA, who is 45 years of age now, used to run an ISP in the 90s but he made his first big fortune when he was offered $25,000 and then $50,000 for the Menus.com domain. Mann had bought the domain for a mere $70. He took the domain sale business seriously and started a business doing that.
Freedom on the World Wide Web
No domain is safe


Mann, like some others made a business out of it and even sold it to other companies. NameMedia as it is known today, once belonged to Mike Mann under the name BuyDomains. For a while, Mann was busy with other ventures that he started up - nothing to do with buying and selling domains. Some two years back, he got back to registering domains and he has been registering some 300 domains a day. The sale of the domains gets him some $400,000 a month - that’s close to 20 lac.

Things haven’t always been great for those in the domain buying and selling business. With more top-level domains coming up, companies have more options and there are those who are opting for it. This means, they don’t have to pay the price that some of the domain selling businesses ask for. Companies are even willing to use modified names with a few characters missing as an option. These alternatives cost a fraction of the price of the main domains itself.  While many would claim the actions of Mike Mann to be illegal and against the law, there are those who believe that it’s no different than any other business. Some countries even have laws that requires the individual registering a domain to provide proof that a particular domain is being registered for a genuine purpose.

Gideon Sundback: 'Doodle’ honours zipper man

Gideon Sundback: `Doodle’ honours zipper man Zeenews Bureau

California, US: World’s most popular search engine, Google, has once again created ripples with its latest ‘doodle’, a giant zipper running down the centre of its homepage.

The zipper doodle is Google’s tribute to Gideon Sundback, who perfected the zipper. April 24 is Sundback’s birthday.

Gideon Sundback: `Doodle’ honours zipper man
Born in Sweden in the year 1880, Sundback was trained as an electrical engineer and immigrated to the US in 1905.

After a stint at electric company in Pennsylvania, Sundback joined the Universal Fastener Company in New Jersey, and became its head designer in 1909.

Engineers have been working to develop a fastener with interlocking teeth for over 20 years before Sundback perfected the zipper.

His innovation revolutionised the clothing industry - gone were the days of cumbersome buttons and hook-and-eye fasteners.

Sundback’s smart design - a dimple on the underside of each tooth and a nib on the top – ensured that no single tooth has enough room to come apart, hence making the zip strong.

Importantly, he also designed a machine for manufacturing the new zipper. 

News from - http://zeenews.india.com/news/net-news/gideon-sundback-doodle-honours-zipper-man_771409.html

Monday, April 23, 2012

Google Android Applications List


Google has announced the winners of its $10 million contest to develop innovative apps for its open source mobile platform.

Late last year, Google announced that it would give $10 million worth in prizes to Web 2.0 Development Companies to develop innovative and useful applications for their open source mobile Android platform.

Roughly nine months later, Google has announced the winners, and the applications it has selected help users do everything from calling their nearest taxi cabs to comparing sale prices at different stores to calculating their carbon footprint.


Cab4me
Utilizing Android's Google Maps application, cab4me lets users call a cab to their location with a single click. By using GPS capabilities to locate not only the user's current location, but also the location of the nearest cab company, the application can initiate a call to the cab company with a mere click on the map. The application was developed by Konrad Huebner and Henning Boerger.

Locale
Ever get embarrassed at a company meeting when your cell phone unexpectedly goes off? With Locale, you can make sure your device knows to switch to vibrate mode the minute you step into your office. With Android's GPS capabilities, Locale adjusts your phone's settings to wherever you're located. Thus, your phone will forward calls to different numbers based on whether you're at work or home, or will send out a status message on Twitter letting people know where you're located. This application was developed by Carter Jernigan, Clare Bayley, Jasper Lin and Christina Wright, with additional contributions from Jennifer Shu.

PicSay
Essentially a drop-and-drag picture editor for your mobile phone, PicSay lets users spruce up their pictures with color correction, highlighting, word bubbles and distortion effects. It also can be used to create event invitations or holiday greeting cards that can be sent out to friends, family and associates. This application was developed by Eric Wijngaard.

Softrace
This application actually lets you set up real, live races with your friends and track their progress in real time while the race is going on. Whether on foot, bicycle or skis, Softrace uses Google Maps' location API to track each user's progress, and can store statistics of the race onto Android's SQLite database. This application was developed by Staffan Kjellberg and Thomas Kjellberg.

TuneWiki
An open source music-based social network, TuneWiki lets users share what they're listening to with each other, or to use Google Maps to find what users around the world are listening to. TuneWiki also plays audio and video for songs while scrolling synchronized lyrics as they play. The application creates a virtual library of songs that hooks up to the Internet and suggests similar-sounding songs or artists. This application was developed by TuneWiki, with additional help from Rani Cohen, Chad Kouse, Zach Jobbs, Jared Fleener and Amnon Sarig.

Wertago
Billing itself as "the mobile application nightlifers have been waiting for," Wertago is a social networking application that lets users coordinate social events with their friends, rate current hotspots and create personalized social networking profiles for users to share their favorite locations. Like many other Android applications, Wertago uses Google Maps API to map out different clubs, restaurants and theaters. This application was developed by Kelvin Cheung, Teresa Ko, Peter Ree, Robert Sarvis and Douglas Yeung.

Life360
This is a neighborhood-centric social networking application that keeps users up-to-date with their local communities and families. Life360 users can receive emergency alerts in their neighborhoods and can send notices to everyone in the area. Whether you're holding a backyard neighborhood barbecue or looking for help to find a lost pet, Life360 gives you quick access to your neighbors and your family. This application was developed by Chris Hulls Dilpreet Singh, Luis Carvalho, Phuong Nguyen and Steve Potell.

GoCart
The goal of GoCart is to help shoppers gather as much information as they need to make smart, informed decisions. Using GPS and Android's built-in camera to scan bar codes, the application will search both the Web and local stores to compare prices of any product. The application also lets you read user reviews of products and can set up price alerts whenever prices go down either in stores or online. This application was designed by Rylan Barnes, with contributions from Noah Labhart and ZXing Developers.

Ecorio
An application destined to warm Al Gore's heart, Ecorio uses Android's GPS capabilities to track a user's carbon footprint while driving in your car. It also gives suggestions for carpooling and public transportation.

Web 3.0 Technology


With the Internet dominating the business world, the need to have an effective web 3.0 sites has increased among companies. In today's always-on world, a company's web site is critical to its ability to compete and succeed. Our top priority is to provide high-quality updates on web 2.0 and 3.0 solution around the world. Web 3.0 is defined as the creation of high-quality content and services produced by individuals using Web 2.0 technology as an enabling platform.

Web 3.0 Technologies (Semantic Web) Includes

1. Artificial intelligence
2. Automated reasoning
3. Cognitive architecture
4. Composite applications
5. Distributed computing
6. Knowledge representation
7. Ontology (computer science)
8. Recombinant text
9. Scalable vector graphics
10. Semantic Web
11. Semantic Wiki
12. Software agents

The Semantic Web 3.0 will bring structure to the meaningful content of Web pages, creating an environment where software agents roaming from page to page can readily carry out sophisticated tasks for users.

Web 3.0 is a place where machines can read Web pages much as we humans read them, a place where search engines and software agents can better troll the Net and find what we're looking for. A prime example of a Web 3.0 technology is 'natural-language search', which refers to the ability of search engines to answer full questions such as 'Which is the third leading software MNC in india'.

Web 3.0 developments will be driven by a new hybrid of innovation strategies that support a new business model. In the new models businesses will make quantum leaps because they will finally discover that fostering new ideas and empowering their employees by ethically compensating them for their intellectual property, makes more sense than the current business-as-usual rewards for hard work, It will finally dawn on companies to spend more money supporting the flow of ideas than pouring down the drain with outrageous severance packages and counter productive levels of disparity in income. My new business Innovation Black Soft Group is trying to cultivate a new approach and a new awareness.

Instead of using HTML as the basic coding language, it will rely on some new -- and unnamed -- language. Experts suggest it might be easier to start from scratch rather than try to change the current Web. However, this version ofWeb 3.0 is so theoretical that it's practically impossible to say how it will work.

The man responsible for the World Wide Web has his own theory of what the future of the Web will be. He calls it the Semantic Web, and many Internet experts borrow heavily from his work when talking about Web 3.0. What exactly is the Semantic Web?

Keep reading to find out………..

Best Collection Of 2-In-1 Image Optical Illusions




Optical Illusions always fascinate people simply because they either reveal hidden power of our brain or show us how limited our brains are. These are some rather unique optical illusions that show us how one image can be two completely different pictures.