Saturday, July 17, 2010

Apple vs Android

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Apple still leads the market with greate iphone not only in Design of component, but also a speedy processor,New features ,attractive display.With a revamped design, a sparkling new display,speedy processor it enters to give its new operating system IOS 4 (WHICH works in ipad, ipod, itouch) iphone4.

Android is one of the leading Mobile platform OS with open source apps and greate features.
Google is trying to enter into mobile phone compitation by introducing lot of features for android phone users like MSpot,Google voice.
Even android is open source with greate graphic user interface it lags with some flaws (like high unauthorized download rate) and speed is not upto the mark.But there is no dought that google will get back and run into the market great.

With introduction of new android 2.2(froyo) with increased kernel speed(JIT) and inbuild Flash , HOTspot.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Orkut flooded with FREE MOBILE RECHARGE RS 500 X_x spam

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This days Most of Indian Communities and atleast one Indian profile from 50 profiles in Popular Social networking site Orkut.com has been Infected with Phishing attack of a SCRIPT which promises to Make free recharge of 500 Rs. . Most of the Innocent and new user clicks on the Link.


As soon as link gets clicked, Script redirects them to a "FAKE LOGIN PAGE OF ORKUT" , where they have to login with their orkut username and password. Once details are given. Their profile gets hacked and Immediately About me section, Update and all joined orkut communities of that user gets flooded with the same Recharge spam through which they got infected!!

Sunday, July 4, 2010

How To Trace Mobile Numbers in India

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With rapid growth in mobile phone subscribers in India and low call rates, most calls we receive on our mobile are form other mobiles. At the same time, to cater increasing user-base most operators come up with new series everyday which makes remembering a cell number increasingly hard. Also sometime we just want to trace a mobile number for reasons like unknown number in miss call list, to get hint of callers permanent location (sounds unlikely, I know…), etc.

But if you have a look at this wiki page, you can certainly trace any mobile number up-to the level of its mobile operator and state (or zone) that’s too using first 4-digit only. It (wiki page) lists all mobile number series in nice tabular manner categorizing them according to mobile operator and state (or zone).

Like other wiki pages, this wiki is also updated regularly and provides you with latest information. I have never been disappointed by it and I am using it for over a year.

If you prefer simpler interface where you can just enter your cell number and get the desired information, you can try this website.

Link: Mobile telephone numbering in India

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Opera submits Mini browser for iPhone approval

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Opera Mini 5 running on an iPhone looks and behaves almost identically to Opera Mini 5 on other mobile browsers, like Java and BlackBerry. The one major exception is the addition of session restore for iPhone, which will reload browsers from the previous session if you need to close and restart iPhone. This is an important feature for a platform that only runs one third-party application at a time. Page caching was also notable on the demo version of Opera Mini for iPhone. Pressing the back arrow quickly surfaced the page before without reloading it from scratch.

As interesting as these details might be, the real elephant of the question in the room--the one perhaps being asked by those who follow Apple's submissions and rejections--is why Opera would go to lengths to submit a browser that has a high chance of being cut short. Apple isn't known for approving browsers that aren't based on Webkit, and Opera Mini absolutely falls into the latter category. Like many other iPhone apps, it's written in the Objective C programming language on the backend, Opera's founder and former CEO Jon von Tetzchner told CNET, and on the front end is written "in our own little language."

But Opera's von Tetzchner has high hopes that Apple will accept Opera Mini, starting off by citing Opera's merits of speedy browsing, high compression rates that lead to rapid loading, and bookmark-syncing, and ending with the opinion that users should have plenty of choice, specially if Opera Mini is in high demand. Opera's conviction would hardly seem like a compelling enough reason were we in charge, and we can't imagine it would sway Apple.

More on the mark, perhaps, is the argument that Apple shouldn't nix Opera Mini because it may not directly violate rules laid out in Apple's software development kit (SDK). Unlike other Web browsers (including Opera Mobile,) Opera Mini is a proxy browser that delivers Web pages through Opera's servers. It isn't a standalone HTML browser that interprets and executes code on its own. This loophole alone is the more realistic justification that von Tetzchner and the rest of the Opera team should hope would get Opera Mini through the golden doors.

"The way we read things, we don't violate anything with [Apple's] SDK license," von Tetzchner told CNET. "From our perspective, there's no reason why Apple would not allow Opera...It brings something really different to iPhone users."

Again, we're not convinced that will be reason enough for Apple's application approval team, but if it is, it could signal a sea change that would make Opera Mini the most notable browsing alternative to Safari on iPhone