By Dora Tutor, on June 29th, 2011%
Steve Ballmer, CEO, Microsoft said, “What happens when Microsoft Office meets the cloud?”
You get Office 365. CEO Steve Ballmer endorsed latest cloud product of Microsoft at an occasion in New York City.
It places applications including Outlook, Excel and Sharepoint into an online format, which means users could access the software from any device that links to the Web.
The service is a big move to defend Microsoft Office, the most profitable product of the company.
Samara . . . → Read More: Cloud Computing with Office 365, Introduced by Microsoft
By Jane Gracielo, on June 29th, 2011%
Google modernized its Transparency Report with H2 2010 information highlighting user information with data elimination demands round the world.
It processed around 14,000 demands in the second half of the previous year, the company said. The most amazing data place might be China, as Google said there has been no particular demand for restriction or handing over user data throughout the period. On the other hand, we must as well note down that Google.cn currently shows the homepage of Google.com.hk, which allowed the company to hide the restriction argument with China and not go after Chinese restriction demands any . . . → Read More: Google Denies Content Data Requests from China
By Jharma Mulchandani, on June 29th, 2011%
The latest myTouch 4G Slide of T-Mobile has been announced, claiming that the HTC-built handset sports the most higher camera accessible in any smartphone.
The myTouch 4G Slide camera marks a broad opening lens (f/2.2), a dual-LED flash, and zero shutter lag so users could be secure they are getting the exact time when they snap a picture. The camera as well features a SweepShot panorama mode for capturing a panorama in a single motion, ClearShot HDR for high-contrast lighting shots, and a burst mode for capturing action. The camera could as well shoot 1080p high-definition video and . . . → Read More: T-Mobile Launches myTouch 4G Slide
By Jan Paul Ronaldo Manching, on June 28th, 2011%
Google says the US government inquires Google for user data more than twice as frequently as any other and is more probable to obtain its own means.
The US completed 4,601 requests, next by Brazil with 1,804 and India with 1,699 over the second half of previous year. The figures relate to the entire Google services, counting YouTube videos, Gmail, Blogger blog posts and search results.
Google says in its transparency statement that it fulfilled with US demands in 94% of cases, compared with 90% of Japan, 88% of Singapore and 81% of Australia.
Matt Braithwaite of the company says, “Our . . . → Read More: User Data, Released to the US Government by Google
By Jane Gracielo, on June 28th, 2011%
The young programming whiz and hacker, George Hotz or Geohot, was hired by Facebook, according to the reports.
Hotz is the computer expert who came up with a means of cracking Sony Playstations. He was also indirectly the reason of hacker attacks on Sony that purchased its online gaming network to its knees, because of the serious handed legal bullying of Sony. He has a lot more sedate occupation working at Facebook.
It was corroborated from the company that the young hacker is already working there in Facebook. On the other hand, Facebook ended short of saying what he is up to.
Hotz . . . → Read More: George Hotz Gets to Work for Facebook
By Jan Paul Ronaldo Manching, on June 28th, 2011%
Per Research Center’s Internet and American Life Project has conducted a study which revealed that most of the adults in the US have E-readers as compared to tablets.
The proportion of the US grown-ups possessing an E-reader has become twice from 6% to 12% between November 2010 and May 2011.
The owners are mostly adults younger than 65 years old and those living in households with incomes of not below $75,000.
Kristen Purcell, Associate Director of Research at the Pew Research Center said, “These findings come from a survey conducted from April . . . → Read More: More Adults in US Own E-readers Than Tablets
By Jan Paul Ronaldo Manching, on June 27th, 2011%
Scientists turned into a surprising conclusion when a 43-foot gray whale was spotted off the Israeli town of Herzliya previous year. The conclusion: It should have wandered across the usually icebound route beyond Canada, where warm weather had temporarily opened a clear channel three years before.
Scientists have as well discovered planktons in the North Atlantic where it had not existed for at least 800,000 years.
The whale’s odyssey, whose species lives in the Pacific, and the amazing look of the plankton points out a migration of species through the Northwest Passage, a perturbing indication of how global warming is . . . → Read More: Climate Change and Global Warming Cause Oceanic Migrations
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