Archive for October, 2010

iPhone Costume?

Posted: October 31, 2010 in iPhone
Tags: ,

John Savio and his gang including Reko Rivera and Bobby hartman have built iPhone costumes for the past two years. They as you can probably guess built the 3G and 3GS. This each played an endless loop of normal usage of the iPhone. This year John wanted to take things even further. He worked for 40 hours over a three day period and built a fully functional iPhone 4. This one uses a 40inch LCD panel strapped to a sandwich board. A Jailbroken iPhone 4 powers the device. Although the battery life is not as good. It is powered by  a mini 12 volt battery lasting only 2 hours. It weighs at 75 pounds. But all you can see is the fun and excitement, this boy may not be as happy as he seems. I mean the costume gets warm and uncomfortable after a while. Hopefully next year he’ll come up with an iPhone costume without the iPhone.

 

If anyone else sees people dressed up as iPhones this Halloween send in pictures to us and we will post these crazy peoples pictures on the site.

 

Happy Halloween

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

40 iPad Apps That Librarians Love

Posted: October 27, 2010 in Apple, free stuff, iPad
Tags: ,

Librarians wear many hats at one time. Besides managing their space, they also organize events, reach out to the community and enhance the feel of the library, making it a timeless treasure that is making a major comeback. Libraries now stock DVDs new and old, the latest bestsellers and magazine and newspapers that we can’t always find at our local stands.

Oh and if that wasn’t enough for you, did we also mention it’s free?

Fun and Organizational iPad Apps for Librarians

Whether you’re looking to get creative or organize your life, nearly every librarian will find these iPad apps fun and useful.

  1. iBooks This e-reader allows you to sample a page of many books before you decide to put in an order.
  2. Kindle Like iBooks, this is an e-reader app that’s powered by Amazon. It’s different because it offers a far wider variety of books than iBooks.
  3. Stanza This app is a standout because it works across the board with your iPhone or Touch, allowing you to catch up with your reading or selections no matter what toy you’re working with.
  4. Howcast Learn how to do anything and everything from this clever video app that brings how-tos right to your screen.
  5. Tweeterena 2 If you’re only tweeting on the iPad, this is one of the best apps since it’s scaled to fit the larger screen.
  6. Box Net Box Net can be used for work or play and allows you to back up your work so it’s accessible online.
  7. Outliner Outliner helps you organize and get things together at the library and otherwise.
  8. Barnes & Noble Here’s another e-reader and believe or not it has titles you can’t find with the Mac or Amazon e-reader apps.
  9. Touch Karma For the librarian that deals with small children, this app helps point out at-risk children and those who are star pupils and may need more of a challenge.
  10. Docs Anywhere This app allows you to check out your docs anywhere. Whether it’s Excel, MS Word or a PowerPoint presentation, you can get it on your iPad with this app.
  11. gFlashPro Most librarians are always learning. This fun flashcard app allows you to explore subjects you already know and find out trivia for things you don’t.
  12. World Book – This Day in History Improve your history knowledge with history tidbits for the respective day. This is great for posting on a library’s website or bulletin board daily.
  13. Pages This is the Mac word document app that allows for easy and creative documents. Use it for library newsletters or handouts.
  14. Lanschool Teacher’s Assistant If your library is considering allowing iPad apps for loan, be sure to install this app that will block certain content from the device and allow you to monitor the sites patrons are visiting with the library’s property.
  15. History – Maps of the World Maps of the World isn’t just for history buffs. It’s useful for getting geographically familiar with the material you’re reading and sharing fascinating geography tidbits with students and patrons.
  16. Keynote This fantastic app is made for librarians who have to create presentations. There are pre-m ade templates and graphics, allowing you to fill in the blanks.
  17. Free Books This app is completely free and gives you instant access to many books including classics like Great Expectations and The Great Gatsby.
  18. eClicker If you’re a librarian at a public library or work with older students, this app is useful for getting immediate feedback on various messages you send out.
  19. Sundry Notes Get organized in one convenient place with Sundry Notes. This app also gives you the ability to search Google and Wikipedia.
  20. Netflix Get cozy with the iPad and check out the movies available through the Netflix app. This is a great resource for librarians since many libraries are now making DVDs available for the public to check out.
  21. Pandora Crank up the tunes with Pandora. If you’re already a Pandora user, you can log in with this app and you’ll automatically have your favorite stations at your fingertips.
  22. Scrabble Librarians are usually word smiths, making Scrabble a favorite pastime for those who’ve sought a career among words.
  23. OmniGraffle For the librarian who loves to get creative, OmniGraffle provides a great app for creating layouts and getting artsy. A favorite of designers and developers, this app will get your creative juices flowing.
  24. Bento If you love to organize everything in your life, Bento is for you. The iPad version even has a section for surfing the web while organizing.
  25. Tweetdeck Keep up with your students or community by getting on Twitter and chatting about what’s going on at your library.

Work iPad Apps for Librarians

When it comes to making the grade in the work place, librarians will benefit from these nifty apps that make life easier.

  1. Pages It’s the same program you know and love for your Mac computer, updated so it’s fit for the iPad. Use it to create memos, newsletters and any other word document.
  2. iNapkin Like scribbling your random notes on a napkin, only far more sanitary and easier to keep up with. Librarians will appreciate this app because it keeps all of your notes in one place and allows you to categorize.
  3. Evernote This is the ultimate note-taking app. Organize your thoughts on”paper” or use the audio function to talk aloud and have your iPad do the work for you.
  4. Moodboard Pro Love to whip up an inspiration board? Use Moodboard Pro to create and organize nearly anything going on in your life or your library.
  5. Dropbox For the librarian that loves having technology on his or her side, consider Dropbox for allowing your smart phone, computer and iPad join forces.
  6. Osfoora HD For those who tweet exclusively for work, check out this app which supports multiple Twitter accounts allowing librarians to share and interact.
  7. Dictionary Need a definition…right now? Dictionary takes care of it for you with just a few taps.
  8. Wikipanion Wikipedia fit for the iPad. This allows you to look up authors, time periods and more to help your patrons out if they have a question.
  9. GoodReader Check out this app for saving web pages and then checking them out when you don’t have wifi access.
  10. Quick Office With this app, you’re basically taking your entire office on the road. It allows you to create and edit MS Word and Excel documents.
  11. The Guardian Witness This is the iPad version of The Guardian newspaper, which can give you a perspective of world news from the other side of the pond.
  12. Newsrack For news from around the world, check out this app that displays all of your news in a layout fit for the iPad.
  13. Offline Pages Save entire web pages and pick up reading right where you left off when you were near a wifi hotspot.
  14. Audiobooks Because even librarians don’t have all the time in the world to sit down and read every book they’re interested in. Now you can download literature and listen on your commute or while in the office.
  15. ICDL This is an amazing app and a great resource to share with parents who also own an iPad. There are thousands of free children’s books available in many languages.
  16. iAnnotate Check out this nifty app for reading PDF files and editing your own PDF files, even after they’ve been saved.

Librarians are using technology to run their library with ease and stay in-the-loop with the iPad. This tool makes it easy to keep up with schedules, deadlines and the latest in reading.

 

Article was first posted on onlinecolleges.org

 

In the days of cold, hard newsprint, only people who could draw were successful comic strip authors. In some cases, this resulted in comic strips that had very nice pictures, but weren’t all that funny. Thankfully, the Internet has taught us not to accept an inferior form of comic artistry, but a more flexible one.

Comic strip enthusiasts who want funny but don’t care about pretty drawing can have their strips, those who want artistry have theirs, and even those with very specific tastes can find something just right.

The best part about these developments is that they allow you, regardless of any talent as an artist or comedian, to create your very own comic strip. Depending on what you’re going for, you can use one of these six sites to help you do it.

1. MakeBeliefsComix.com

MakeBeliefsComix.com is easy enough for children to use, but there are enough options for adults to get a message across, too. Users can choose from 25 characters to fill a two-, three-, or four-paneled comic strip. Currently, the site supports typing in seven different languages. There are plans to add Chinese, Japanese, and Korean characters in the future.

One limiting factor is color. Though you can choose a background color, the characters remain black and white. If you’re planning on printing your comic strip, this could be a good opportunity to pull out the old-fashioned box of crayons. But if you’re planning on sharing it online, it’s a bit restricting.

The pre-set options that make the site so easy to use can also be slightly limiting. Your comic strips will look pretty generic. There are only about four different expressions for each character. The upside of this is that you can finish a perfectly respectable online comic in about ten minutes.

The creator, Bill Zimmerman, is the author of 18 books — including Make Beliefs: A Gift For Your Imagination. “My hope is that by giving you a choice of characters with different moods and the chance to write words and thoughts for them,” he writes on the site, “you will tap into your creativity and explore new possibilities.”

2. MarvelKids.com’s Create Your Own Comic

If there’s any company that knows what it takes to build great comics, Marvel Characters does. So it’s no surprise that its DIY comic site is pretty awesome, considering its simplicity.

Features that make it awesome include choices for different styles of panels (not into boxes? try zig zags), the set-up for creating up to a 22-page comic book, and the Photoshop-esque tool dock that moves around the page. Your character choices include the stars of the Super Hero Squad Show, including The Hulk, Falcon, and Wolverine.

The site does have some rough patches. If you’re hoping to create an original-looking comic strip, you’re out of luck, because you are limited to Marvel characters. There are a measly five options for objects, and you can’t change the background. With no option to save your work on the site, it’s also unlikely you’ll be completing a full 22-page comic book in one sitting.

3. ToonDoo

ToonDoo hits the fine balance between creative versatility and user friendliness, ensuring that the final results look sharp. While there’s still an extensive library of characters and objects to use in your comic strip, there are also tools to create your own touches. The TraitR tool allows you to create custom characters and DoodlR lets you paint freely. If you want to use your own photos or another image in your comic strip, you can manipulate it through the ImagineR photo tool.

Unlike other sites, there’s an option to save your project mid-creation so that you can come back to it later. When you finish a handful of ToonDoos, you can compile a book. It’s easy to embed individual cartoons in a website or share them over networks, and you can buy print-quality images of your favorites.

4. Strip Generator

The stoic characters of Strip Generators lend themselves to sarcastic commentary. There’s not a whole lot of opportunity to create a personal style — you need to work with what the site gives you — but that doesn’t mean you can’t be creative. The community topic-themed galleries are testimony to this (check out the current theme, “Autumn”).

One unique capability is adjustable frames. If you need a specific cell to be a bit wider or longer, you can just drag the wall. Another stand-out trait is the personal library. When you tweak an image to get it just right, you can save it to use again later.

5. Pikistrips

Pikistrips takes your photos (er…”Pikis?”) and turns them into comic strips. Once you upload your favorites into a customizable comic cell format, you’re free to add text bubbles, speech bubbles, and objects. The object gallery is pretty extensive, and its contents aren’t random. Many of the categories — like hairstyles, hats, mustaches, scars, and tattoos — wouldn’t be much fun without using your own photos as a canvas. If you miss the cartoon look, you can apply the “comic” effect to your photo or choose from seven others.

All in all, this site is fun for tweaking your photos (also see the related Pikipimp.com), but is intended to boost the company’s custom printing business (you guessed it, “pikiprint”).

Final word:

This is your opportunity to have your own comic strip featured on Caintech.co.uk send you comics into help@caintech.co.uk and I will feature the best ones on my site.

Zynga Faces Federal Lawsuit

Posted: October 21, 2010 in Facebook, gaming
Tags: ,

Zynga, the social gaming company responsible for five of Facebook’s Top 10 games, is being sued in Federal Court for allegedly transmitting users “sensitive personally identifiable information in violation of Zynga’s agreement with Faceboook , industry standards, and state and federal law.

Zynga provides free social games to Facebook users including Famrville, Texas HoldEm, FrontierVille, Caf? World, Mafia Wars, and Treasure Isle. Zynga requires users to registers with them and provide information including their name, address and sex.

The class action suit, filed in California, alleges that Zynga profited substantially from sharing users real names and other sensitive information to third party advertisers and internet marketing companies without user consent.

Facebook policy restricts third-party application developers, like Zynga, from engaging in this kind of activity stating that developers cannot “directly or indirectly transfer any data you receive from us to (or use such data in connection with) any ad network, ad exchange, data broker, or other advertising related toolset, even if a user consents to such transfer or use.”

In addition to violating Facebook policy, the suit alleges that Zynga violated numerous federal and state laws including The Electronic Communications Privacy Act, The Stored Communications Act, California’s Unfair Competition Law, Computer Crime Law, Consumer Legal Remedies Act, and committed a breach of contract.

In a statement, Zynga it believes the “complaint is without merit and we intend to defend against it vigorously.”

The lawsuit follows a Wall Street Journal investigation into the way Facebook handles data. The WSJ found that Facebook applications had sent Facebook User IDs to advertisers and other unauthorized third parties. Zynga’s applications were among those named in the article.

The suit seeks to prevent Zynga from engaging in such practices in the future and also to “disgorge Zynga of all revenue earned from its social gaming applications.”

Zynga’s games have over 59 million Facebook users and the suit was filed on behalf of all registered users of Facebook.com in the United States who, at any time after October 18, 2006, registered with Zynga.

 

The top 10 most downloaded movies on BitTorrent, ‘Jonah Hex’ tops the chart this week, followed by ‘Machete’. ‘Resident Evil: Afterlife’ completes the top three.

For information and the latest news on all things torrent orientated take a look at torrentfreak.com

 

Ranking (last week) Movie Rating / Trailer
 
1 (6) Jonah Hex 4.4 / trailer
2 (2) Machete (R5) 7.5 / trailer
3 (…) Resident Evil: Afterlife (R5) 6.4 / trailer
4 (1) Get Him To The Greek 6.9 / trailer
5 (5) Robin Hood 7.0 / trailer
6 (4) Knight and Day (R5) 6.6 / trailer
7 (back) The Expendables (DVDscr) 7.4 / trailer
8 (…) Reign of Assassins (R5) 6.4 / trailer
9 (7) Iron Man 2 7.4 / trailer
10 (…) Toy Story 3 (R5) 8.9 / trailer

Audio Streaming can be fun, you can host your own show on internet with very little effort of installing softwares and equipments like a simple mic arrangement.

 

Live streaming, more specifically, means taking the audio and broadcasting it live over the Internet. The process involves an encoder to digitize the content, a audio publisher where the streams are made available to potential end-users and a content delivery network to distribute and deliver the content. The media can then be viewed by end-users live.

With documentation and help files its easy to host and make perfect use of your internet plus computer, with just sitting back in your office or bedroom.



Icecast

Icecast is a streaming media project released as free software maintained by the Xiph.org Foundation. It also refers specifically to the server program which is part of the project. Icecast was created in December 1998/January 1999 by Jack Moffitt and Barath Raghavan to provide an open source audio streaming server that anyone could modify, use, and tinker with. Version 2 was started in 2001, a ground-up rewrite aimed at multi-format support (initially targeting Ogg Vorbis) and scalability.

PeerCast

PeerCast is a simple, free way to listen to radio and watch video on the Internet. It uses P2P technology to let anyone become a broadcaster without the costs of traditional streaming. This means you get to hear and watch stations not normally found on commercially funded sites. PeerCast offers considerable savings for broadcasters because they do not have to provide bandwidth for all of their listeners. A single 56K modem can be used to broadcast a radio station to the entire network.

Firefly Media Server

Firefly Media Server is an open-source project to build the best server software to serve digital music to the Roku Soundbridge and iTunes; to be able to serve the widest variety of digital music content over the widest range of devices. Current stable releases have been reported to run on Linux, all the BSDs, Solaris, AIX, and a variety of embedded devices such as the Linksys NSLU2, the Maxtor MSS, and the Buffalo Linkstation, to name but a few.

VideoLAN

VLC is a portable multimedia player, encoder, and streamer supporting many audio and video codecs and file formats as well as DVDs, VCDs, and various streaming protocols. It is able to stream over networks and to transcode multimedia files and save them into various formats. It is one of the most platform-independent players available, with versions for Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, BeOS, Syllable, BSD, MorphOS, Solaris and Sharp Zaurus, and is widely used.

 

The System File Checker (sfc.exe) is a command-line tool built into Windows that helps you repair corrupted system files. If you can’t boot your PC, the Winhelponline blog explains how to use it from the install disc.

Normally you’d just open up an administrator mode command prompt, and then type in sfc /scannow to scan your system files, and either repair or replace anything that’s broken—but when you’re booting off an install DVD it’s not quite as simple. Instead, you’ll need to boot off the install disc, choose the “Repair your computer” option, choose your installation drive, open up a command prompt, and then type in this command:

sfc /scannow /offbootdir=d:\ /offwindir=d:\windows

 
You’ll need to adjust the drive letter depending on where your system is installed—you’ll probably notice that the drive letter is different during the repair process than normal, so make sure to pay attention on the screen where you choose the installation to repair.

Everyone loves something for free and most of us love to learn new things. So here are 7 free e-books to help you learn Microsoft’s .NET. If you know any more that I have missed please add them in the comments section below.

Foundations Of Programming

The Foundation Of Programming Series is simple, short and sweet. Especially for ‘casual’ programmers, this will give a better thought process – that’ll definitely enable them to code better and think better. This book covers the ALT.NET Philosophy, Domain Driven Development concepts, DI, TDD etc in a nice way. This book is close to my heart.

Microsoft Application Architecture Guide, 2nd Edition

Published by Microsoft, this is an essential read for any Microsoft.NET developer or Architect to understand the underlying architecture and design principles and patterns for developing successful solutions on the Microsoft platform and the .NET Framework. This guide neatly covers popular architecture patterns, best practices and common challenges you need to understand for developing .NET applications. Get a good grip on developing enterprise applications in .NET.

Rob Miles C# Yellow Book 2010

A nice action packed book that takes you through C# and .NET concepts. This book explains C# language and .NET library in general – with a clear focus on implementation thought process and best practices.

Threading in C#

A short, neatly written book from Joe Albahari about Threading in C#. This is a must read for any .NET programmer to understand more about threading in general, thread pooling, synchronization, Non blocking synchronization, etc. In this book, Joe even covers the Parallel Framework Extensions and Parallel programming in .NET

Improving .NET Application Performance and Scalability

This guide is again from Microsoft, and focuses on designing your applications with Performance and scalability in mind. It has sections relevant to architects, developers, testers, and administrators. Following the checklists and guidance in this book will ensure that there won’t be any unpleasant surprises in the end. Read this guide if you develop Enterprise applications in .NET

Applying Design Patterns

This is a quick introduction towards the thought process of applying design patterns. The objective of the book is to introduce design patterns in a simple way, so that developers can understand some common patterns and how to apply them. I wrote that some time back ;)

RefCardz from DZone

DZone has a number of awesome Ref Cardz (Quick reference sheets) on multiple technologies. You can go to DZone –> RefCardz to browse and download them (after getting a free DZone Id). Here are some of my recent favorites

New Virus Hits Android

Posted: October 10, 2010 in Android
Tags: ,

The Android operating system might need an antivirus, as a new type of malware was detected byKaspersky, who confirmed the file is named “Trojan-SMS.AndroidOS.FakePlayer.a” and is downloaded as a typical .APK Android app. The company stated this is the first known Android-specific trojan.

The malware works by posing as a media player app. Once the app is installed on the mobile device, the trojan begins to send SMS messages to premium rate numbers without the device owner’s knowledge. Since the trojan’s creators are usually the ones on the other end of those premium numbers, they end up profiting from the scam.

This SMS-based type of malware is currently one of the most common forms of mobile viruses. SMS trojans have been around for years on mobile phones, even predating the smartphones we all know and love. The first mobile SMS virus appeared in 2004, and the first-ever Android malware (isolated incidents of spyware) popped up in 2009.

Kaspersky Lab is currently working on Android-specific antivirus technologies; the company plans to release Kaspersky Mobile Security for Android early next year. Other antivirus apps are available in the Android Market; in the past, such applications were thought unnecessary.

However, as this platform continues to experience meteoric growth, even outselling iPhones in the first half of this year, more criminals will be attracted to the money-making capabilities of Android viruses. We hope that Google and device carriers and manufacturers will think about security and antivirus options when planning on-board apps for future OS updates.

As always, be aware of what you download. Kapersky recommends you pay particular attention to the “permission slip” list of hardware or software an application accesses. These lists are available for every Market and non-Market Android app. If the app needs to make premium-rate SMS or phone calls, you might want to think twice before downloading and installing it.

There are lot of features in windows 7 many of them are accessible via GUI and many of them are hidden features which can be used by knowing the tricks so here is another great feature of windows 7 which was discovered by folks at CNET and the name was given by bloggers.Actually GodMode is a folder having all the setting and control options in windows, this can be created by just entering special set of characters to the folder name by just renaming the folder.GodMode also works in windows Vista but may cause some problems, this feature was discovered by trial and error method.

Steps to enable GodMode in Windows 7:

  1. Create a new folder in your computer and name it as ‘GodMode’.
  2. Now select the folder ->  right click on it ->  and then select rename in context menu.
  3. Now add these characters “.{ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C} “  to the folder ‘GodMode’.
  4. The name must be like this “ GodMode.{ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C} “.
  5. Now save it with the above name and you will get a folder named as ‘GodMode’ with a special icon, which will look like the image below.

List of other sets of special characters which your could try out:

.{00C6D95F-329C-409a-81D7-C46C66EA7F33}
.{025A5937-A6BE-4686-A844-36FE4BEC8B6D}
.{1D2680C9-0E2A-469d-B787-065558BC7D43}
.{1FA9085F-25A2-489B-85D4-86326EEDCD87}
.{208D2C60-3AEA-1069-A2D7-08002B30309D}
.{20D04FE0-3AEA-1069-A2D8-08002B30309D}
.{2227A280-3AEA-1069-A2DE-08002B30309D}
.{62D8ED13-C9D0-4CE8-A914-47DD628FB1B0}
.{241D7C96-F8BF-4F85-B01F-E2B043341A4B}
.{1206F5F1-0569-412C-8FEC-3204630DFB70}
.{0142e4d0-fb7a-11dc-ba4a-000ffe7ab428}
.{05d7b0f4-2121-4eff-bf6b-ed3f69b894d9}
.{15eae92e-f17a-4431-9f28-805e482dafd4}
.{17cd9488-1228-4b2f-88ce-4298e93e0966}
.{4026492F-2F69-46B8-B9BF-5654FC07E423}
.{78F3955E-3B90-4184-BD14-5397C15F1EFC}

Use the above sets of special characters in your folders and become the God of window 7