Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Friday, August 6, 2010

New Indian browser with latest technology




Epic browser.

Mozilla has launched new Epic Browser with many features.

It included social network support like Orkut, Twitter, Facebook, Likedin etc.

It included YouTube facility and video download.

The best feature i found in this is Language Converter. It support many Indian languages like Sanskrit, Hindi, Malayalam, Tamil, Marathi, Gujarati and many more. It is very simple converter as same as we type our mother tongue language in English.

It has built in antivirus scanner.

It has My computer access to explore our files.

Epic has high security and privacy.

You can download it free from its webpage www.epicbrowser.com

Thank you.

For more details, visit www.epicbrowser.com

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Owner of East India Company is now an Indian

The East India Company which ruled India for over 200 years is now owned by an Indian Sanjiv Mehta.The article is a tribute to India and this great son.




The East India Company which ruled us for over 200 years is now owned by an Indian. When i heard this news my heart was filled with patriotism and love for our country. The news gave me a feeling of proud and the glory of India seems to be regained. Mr. Sanjiv Mehta, a Mumbai based entrepreneur, bought the company with an investment of nearly $ 15 million.

My mind was taken back to the pages of history and i refreshed my knowledge about our country. The East India Company was established way back in ending decades of 15th century by the queen Elizabeth 1. The queen allowed a group of merchants to trade across the India ocean with the Indies countries. Later the company was given the Royal Charter by Elizabeth in 1600. The company grew in size shape and expanded over a large number of countries. The companies was having its own army, shipping, currency and control over major trading posts in India. The East India Company became a powerful arm of British imperial and in India it was known as Company Bahadur. The company brought control over India and many countries under the command of British Crown.


Sanjiv Mehta bought the company from its owners in 2005. In addition he traveled around the world to gather more knowledge about the company. He himself was filled with a joy when he finally got all the rights of the company. He has opened a store in London with the name of East India Company London store. The store offers a large variety of world wide products and tea is still the specialty of East India Company. They offer you a large variety of brands of tea to choose from. The store sells products that are made in London but with the taste and culture influenced from all of the world.

The feeling itself is great and i would love to share this news with all of you. But one thought hurt me that this news was nowhere in our newspapers or news channels. The most important part of Indian history was left uncovered by the so called active media. Still its a great news for me and i hope for you too. 



 

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Sunday, February 7, 2010

8 must have mobile applications and services



Think your cellphone can work a trifle more harder than you do? Think it can keep you that much more connected to work, friends and family? Here’s a list of applications that you should have on your cellphone to keep you happy.



FoxyTag is a collaborative application which warns you 15 seconds before a speed camera. Now before you go all crazy and get a Bugatti Veyron from somewhere and go berserk on the roads after you get FoxyTag, read this from their website.
“FoxyTag motivates neither speeding nor any other risky behavior, but allows the driver to concentrate on the road instead of having their eyes fixed on the speedometer.” Right said.




With ZYB, you can be sure that you’ll never lose your contacts and calendar ever again. It safely stores all your calender/contacts online and you can synchronize it with a single click. Can be a boon when you are migrating cell phones or have just plain lost it; mind and/or mobile.


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Fring is to the mobile what Digsby is to the PC. It can keep you connected to Skype, Google Talk, MSN Messenger, ICQ, AIM, Yahoo and Twitter. You’ve also got push mail and video streaming for screaming out loud! Agreed most of you don’t use most of things mentioned here, but a long options list is never a bad thing. Over and above that you can make VoIP calls as well, but in India, you’re going to get royally screwed with the exorbitant data transfer rates when making calls via VoIP. So, if you’re an Indian and have escaped recession, make VoIP calls only when you are in Wi-Fi hotspots.
(If you are having connectivity issues with Fring, you can also give eBuddy a shot. Head to m.ebuddy.com for a quick WAP fix or download the application from their site.)




Shozu is basically a photo and video upload application with quite a comprehensive list of destinations to where you can upload them. Flickr, Picasa and PhotoBucket are just the tip of the iceberg. It also brings Facebook right in your hands and you can do a fair bit with it. Upload images, update descriptions, check out friends’ photo feeds and keep track of events. Shozu can also double up as a mobile blogger’s paradise with support for Wordpress, Blogger, Windows Live Spaces, Live Journal and what have you. And if you happen to have been bitten by the reporter bug, you can also report to BBC, CNN and Reuters with your pictures and videos. This thing also allows you to upload via FTP. Just falls short of taking your dog for a walk.



Like using Google Maps to find directions from your PC and laptop? You’re going to love Google Maps on Mobile then. It offers you the complete functionality of Google Maps right in the palm of your hands. You can switch from maps to terrain view to satellite view with a click and also find the best routes. And your phone need not have GPS inbuilt for using this. It uses approximation to well, approximate your location within 500 mts. Also, it’d have been great if Google compressed the data before sending it to us hapless Indian users. One simple map loading, zoom-in and zoom-out sequence takes up a good 0.25MB of data. What? Don’t look at me like that.



If you ask me, Opera Mini can easily be called the best innovation after the cellphone phone itself. A mid-server sitting somewhere in the Obama-land compresses all your web pages and sends it to you at just 1/10th of the size of the original web page. Also you can store all your bookmarks on Opera’s server and synchronize them between your PC and mobile; very useful when upgrading or such like. Supports uploading files, saving web pages, has a RSS reader and has a few themes in the latest version to suit your whims and fancies
If you are a Windows Mobile or Symbian S60 user, you could also try Skyfire.




GMail for Mobile is a simple Java application to access your Gmail account. It’s definitely faster and more efficient than trying to access it from your browser. Only problem is, you can’t attach anything.





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Wouldn’t the world be a better place if you could read your voice mail rather than hear it? This text could then be organized in so many ways and you could build a humongous archive of all your voice mails for future reference. Alright, this thing is still in the making but looks promising. Do signup and get yourself on the waiting list.
And oh yeah, if you’re a developer, they have a big buck challenge happening.