Monday, December 31, 2012

An African Congolese invent first African Smartphone

Verone Mankou displays the tablet he invented in the offices of his company, VMK, in Brazzaville on January 31, 2012
The inventor of what has been billed as Africa's first tablet computer, Verone Mankou, displays the device on January 31, 2012 in the offices of his company, VMK, in Brazzaville. Congolese inventor Mankou has unveiled what he says is the first African-designed smartphone.


A Congolese inventor has unveiled what he says is the first African-designed smartphone.
Verone Mankou, 27, told AFP that the so-called Elikia, which means "hope" in the local language, went on sale the day before in the Republic of Congo.
Mankou, head of the company VMK, said the Android-powered device was on sale in only in Congo for now, but he planned to launch it in other countries.
The phone was initially due to go on sale in October but its launch was delayed "because of an explosion in demand," he said.
Though the phone is Congolese by design, it is manufactured in China. It costs about 130 euros ($170) -- a considerable sum in this central African nation.
The phone has a 3.5-inch touchscreen, 512 megabytes of RAM and a 650-Mhz processor. Its camera is five megapixels, and it also comes with GPS and Bluetooth.
Mankou last year designed what was billed as Africa's first tablet computer. 

© 2012 AFP
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China launches rival GPS satellite system


China has launched commercial and public services across the Asia-Pacific region on its domestic satellite navigation network built to rival the US global positioning system.
The Beidou system started providing services to civilians in the region on Thursday and is expected to provide global coverage by 2020, state media reported.
Ran Chengqi, spokesman for the China Satellite Navigation Office said the system's performance was "comparable" to GPS, the China Daily said.
"Signals from Beidou can be received in countries such as Australia," he said.
It is the latest accomplishment in space technology for China, which aims to build a space station by the end of the decade and eventually send a manned mission to the moon.
China sees the multi-billion-dollar programme as a symbol of its rising global stature, growing technical expertise, and the Communist Party's success in turning around the fortunes of the once poverty-stricken nation.
The Beidou system comprises 16 navigation satellites and four experimental satellites, the paper said. Ran added that the system would ultimately provide global navigation, positioning and timing services.
This NASA file image shows the Great Wall of China and Inner Mongolia, photographed from the ISS, on April 22, 2009
This NASA file image shows the Great Wall of China and Inner Mongolia, photographed by Expedition 10 Commander Leroy Chiao on the ISS, on April 22, 2009. China has launched commercial and public services across the Asia-Pacific region on its own domestic satellite navigation network, built to rival the US global positioning system.
The start of commercial services comes a year after Beidou began a limited positioning service for China and adjacent areas.
China began building the network in 2000 to avoid relying on GPS.
"Having a satellite navigation system is of great strategic significance," the Global Times, which has links to the Communist Party, said in an editorial.
"China has a large market, where the Beidou system can benefit both the military and civilians," the paper said.
"With increases in profit, the Beidou system will be able to eventually develop into a global navigation satellite system which can compete with GPS."
In a separate report, the paper said satellite navigation was seen as one of China's "strategic emerging industries".
Sun Jiadong, the system's chief engineer, told the 21st century Business Herald newspaper that as Beidou matures it will erode GPs's current 95 percent market share in China, the Global Times said. 
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Japan: a drone that catches thieves


A Japanese security company plans to rent out a private drone that takes off when intruder alarms are tripped and records footage of break-ins as they happen, a spokeswoman said on Thursday.
The helicopter-like device is equipped with a small surveillance camera that can transmit live pictures of a crime taking place.The machine with four sets of rotors is based on a model provided by Germany's Ascending Technologies and equipped with Secom-developed software, camera and other devices, Saito said. The company says the world's first autonomous private drone for security use measures 60 centimetres (24 inches) wide and weighs 1.6 kilogrammes (3.5 pounds) and will allow factory managers to monitor areas left uncovered by static cameras.
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Apple to go into wind energy storage technology

There’s no plan to put a wind turbine on the iPhone or iPad, so far as we know – but Apple nevertheless is apparently dabbling in wind power technology.

AppleInsider recently discovered the company’s June 2011 application with the U.S. Patent and Trademark office for system intended to store the energy produced by wind turbines.



Here’s how it would work, according to the application:

“During operation, the system uses a set of rotating blades to convert rotational energy from a wind turbine into heat in a low-heat-capacity fluid. Next, the system selectively transfers the heat from the low-heat-capacity fluid to a working fluid. Finally, the system uses the transferred heat in the working fluid to generate electricity.”

In a standard wind turbine, wind moves across blades that are shaped such that the air pressure is uneven on each side of the blades. This causes the blades to spin around a rotor. A rotor shaft turns a series of gears that increase the speed of the rotation, in the process spinning a generator to maximize electricity production.

This has turned out to be one of the more effective ways to produce emissions-free electricity; wind power has grown 40-fold since the late 1990s.

But an issue of concern with wind is that it produces power intermittently, which means that sometimes there’s energy when it’s not needed and sometimes there’s no energy when it is needed. This is mostly a theoretical issue at this point, since wind, despite its growth, remains a relatively small contributor to most grids. Still, many experts – although not all – believe that at high levels of integration some kind of energy storage will be necessary.

The Apple concept is actually pretty simple. The wind turbine turns a shaft that then turns a device (with “one or more paddles, a propeller, a drum, and/or another component ) immersed in a fluid chamber. This action would “agitate, circulate, and/or heat low-heat-capacity fluid.”

That heated fluid could then be held until electricity is needed. Here’s how the application describes the electricity-generating part of the process:

Once sufficient heat is transferred to working fluid, the heat may be used to generate electricity. In particular, the heat may boil working fluid (e.g., due to the low boiling point of working fluid), generating vapor that is used to rotate a turbine. Turbine may then be used to drive an electric generator that supplies electricity to a load, such as a motor vehicle, home, business, building, and/or electrical grid. Transfer of heat from low-heat-capacity fluid to working fluid, as well as the resulting generation of electricity from the transferred heat, may be ceased once the energy stored in low-heat-capacity fluid is no longer needed to meet electrical demand.

As Apple Insider noted – and we’ve reported on extensively – Apple has been looking for ways to power its data centers with alternative energy, but the conceptual nature of this storage technology would seemingly make it an unlikely (at best) candidate for use anytime soon.

Obviously there would be losses incurred in converting the rotational energy to heat and then using that heat to generate electricity, so a big question that would have to be answered in development and testing would be how the system compares in efficiency and cost to battery storage.

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Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Free Nook Hdd for you


Nook HD













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Storage

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Cellular

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WiFi

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Battery

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How to Move From Windows Live Mesh to SkyDrive

image
Windows Live Mesh is set to shut down on February 13, 2013. If you still depend on Windows Live Mesh, you’ll need to find some alternatives soon. Remember to download your files before the deadline, too!
While SkyDrive is the successor to Windows Live Mesh, it has a different design philosophy and offers less features. Many Live Mesh users may be surprised at the missing features when they transition to SkyDrive.

Sync Files Across PCs and Share Folders, Fetch Any File

If you only use Windows Live Mesh to synchronize a folder of files between your computers and store them online, Microsoft’s SkyDrive is the perfect replacement. It gives you a single, Dropbox-style folder that automatically synchronizes whatever you put into it. The contents of this folder are also available on the SkyDrive website.
SkyDrive also offers the ability to share folders with others — you’ll find the sharing options on the SkyDrive website, not within Windows Explorer on your desktop.

 


Sync Any Folder

Unlike Windows Live Mesh, SkyDrive does not offer the ability to synchronize any folder on your computer. If you still want to do this, you can create a symbolic link (also known as a “symlink” or “soft link”) with the mklink command.
You’ll have to run the same command on each computer you use. While this is not the ideal solution and isn’t as user-friendly, it will allow you to sync any folder on your computer with SkyDrive.


Peer-to-Peer Syncing

SkyDrive no longer offers the PC-to-PC syncing feature found in Windows Live Mesh. Microsoft wants to encourage you to use the cloud and store your files there, not on your local computers. You can still synchronize your files between your computers — but you’ll have to go through the cloud.
LogMeIn’s Cubby offers a DirectSync feature that can synchronize files and folders directly between your computers, skipping the cloud entirely. Many former Live Mesh users seem pleased with this service.






Remote Desktop Access

SkyDrive doesn’t have an integrated remote desktop feature. If you only want remote access to your files, you can use the Remote Fetch feature in SkyDrive. With Remote Fetch, you can remotely “fetch” any file from a powered-on computer. This is ideal if you only need remote access to your files.



If you need full remote desktop access, you’ll have to use another solution. Windows includes a built-in Remote Desktop feature, but it’s more difficult to use over the Internet and the remote desktop server isn’t available in Home versions of Windows.
To use Windows’ Remote Desktop feature securely over the Internet, you may want to try a VPN solution like LogMeIn Hamachi. Once you’ve set up a VPN and connected to it, you can use the Remote Desktop feature in Windows and remote desktop into other computers connected to the VPN.
You may also want to try another solution, such as TeamViewer, VNC, or the remote desktop feature integrated into Google Chrome.

Internet Explorer Favorites Sync

SkyDrive does not offer synchronization of the favorite websites you have saved in your Internet Explorer browser. However, if you’re using Windows 8, favorites synchronization for Internet Explorer 10 is now built-in.
If you’re using a previous version of Windows, you’ll need a different favorites synchronization solution. We’ve covered a few other options, including placing your Favorites folder in the SkyDrive folder or using the third-party Xmarks browser add-on.

Microsoft Office Settings Sync

SkyDrive does not offer the ability to synchronize your Microsoft Office settings between your computers. If you like this feature, you’ll be happy to know  it’s now integrated into Office 2013. Users that depend on Live Mesh to synchronize their Office settings between computers should upgrade to Office 2013 for a more seamless experience.




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Newsweek to end print and go fully Digital

 A woman perusing the final print edition of Newsweek in Washington, DC on December 24, 2012
Almost 80 years after first going to print, the final Newsweek magazine hit newsstands Monday featuring an ironic hashtag as a symbol of its Twitter-era transition to an all-digital format.
The second-largest news weekly magazine in the United States has been grappling with a steep drop in print advertising revenue, steadily declining circulation and the migration of readers to free news online.
During a fierce decades-long rivalry with fellow American coffee-table staple Time magazine, Newsweek pushed the envelope with bold and often controversial covers.
Its first issue, on February 17, 1933, featured seven photos from that week's news printed on the front, including Adolf Hitler snapped in Berlin as he declared: "the German nation must be built up from the ground anew."
For its final cover, dated December 31, editor Tina Brown used an aerial archive shot of the magazine's New York headquarters as the backdrop for her message, #LASTPRINTISSUE -- the word print emblazoned in red ink.
"Bitter sweet! Wish us luck!" Brown tweeted.
The Washington Post sold Newsweek to California billionaire Sidney Harman for one dollar in 2010, ahead of a deal with Internet conglomerate IAC to merge the magazine with the news and opinion website The Daily Beast.
Memorable Newsweek covers in recent years have included a December 2003 edition with a bedraggled, long-bearded Saddam Hussein pictured below the headline: "We got him."
In 2011, a computer-generated image of the late Princess Diana alongside Kate Middleton, the photogenic young lady who was about to marry her son Prince William, caused quite a stir.
In May, after Barack Obama came out in favor of same-sex marriage, he was adorned with a rainbow halo and the accompanying headline: "The First Gay President."
The "#MuslimRage" cover in September, which sought to spark a conversation about anti-American violence sweeping the Muslim world, saw thousands take to Twitter to mock the premise with both real and imagined gripes.
Announcing the demise of Newsweek's print magazine in October, Brown, also editor-in-chief of The Daily Beast, said the all-digital version would be targeted at today's "highly mobile, opinion-leading audience."
She cited research showing that 39 percent of Americans get their news online and said Newsweek had reached "a tipping point at which we can most efficiently and effectively reach our readers in all-digital format."

© 2012 AFP
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Monday, December 24, 2012

Another Microsoft Guru Steps Down

Microsoft executive Craig Mundie attends the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Honolulu on November 12, 2011
Microsoft announced on Monday that company veteran Craig Mundie has stepped down from his post as chief of research and will retire in the year 2014.
Mundie, who was one of two executives who assumed responsibilities left behind by Bill Gates when the Microsoft co-founder retired in 2008, will now serve as an advisor to chief executive Steve Ballmer.
"In this role, he works on key strategic projects within the company, as well as with government and business leaders around the world on technology policy, regulation and standards," Microsoft said on its website.
Mundie began his career in 1970 and joined Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft in 1992, according to his biography on the corporate website.
When Gates retired, Mundie was entrusted to oversee Microsoft research and "long-term technology strategy," according to his online bio.

© 2012 AFP
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Sunday, December 23, 2012

Growing fast: Google Play

Chris Yerga, engineering director at Google, introduces some features of Google Play in San Francisco on June 27, 2012
Google's online Play shop of applications for Android-powered smartphones or tablets is growing fast, a report released Thursday by market tracker Distimo said.
The aggregate daily revenue at Google Play shops across the 20 largest countries where they are available climbed 43 percent during the past four months, while sales at Apple's online App Store increased 21 percent.
"Google Play is just starting to rival the Apple App Store in a few countries on a worldwide scale, even though it is still losing in terms of daily revenues," Distimo said in the report.
Apple's App Store catering to its iPhones, iPads, and iPod touch devices took in more than $15 million dollars a day in November, while daily revenue at Google Play was just shy of $3.5 million, according to Distimo.
"There were many success stories in 2012 about applications that became very successful in a matter of a few days and gathered millions of downloads and revenues," the analytics firm said in the report.
"Looking at the worldwide daily download and revenue volumes, the opportunity is really huge."
Smartphone game application "Draw Something" reached a million users in just nine days, while Asian publisher Naver launched five games in November that quickly became hits.
Naver game application Line Pop was downloaded 1.75 million times within three days of its release, according to Distimo.
A report released this month by research firm IDC projected that Android operating system will power more than two-thirds of smartphones sold worldwide in 2012, and will remain the dominant platform for at least the next four years.
IDC also boosted its forecast for global tablet sales for 2012 to 122.3 million, from 117.1 million, in large part due to demand for Android tablets and the new iPad mini.

© 2012 AFP
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Saturday, December 22, 2012

Brazil firm to sell its own phones with iPhone brand legally

An Apple iPhone 5 is pictured at a company store in Saint-Herblain, France, on November 15, 2012
A Brazilian company this week began selling its own Android-powered smartphones using the iPhone brand name and did so legally.
Gradiente S.A. told AFP Thursday it could do so because in 2000, it secured the exclusive right to use the iPhone brand name through 2018, before Apple did.
Gradiente said it had obtained the right from Brazil's National Industrial Property Institute, having anticipated a "technological revolution in the cellular world".
"In Brazil, Gradiente has the exclusive right to the iPhone brand in telephones and related accessories. It will adopt all the measures used by companies around the world to preserve its intellectual property rights," a company statement said.
Apple's Brazil spokesperson Maria Parra Rodriguez told AFP the company had no comment.
Gradiente said its first iPhone family model, the Neo One, went on sale Tuesday with a price tag of around $300.
The Neo One features a single core 700MHz processor, a 3.7-inch 480 x 320 display and comes running Android 2.3 Gingerbread.
Other features include dual-SIM support and a 5-megapixel camera on the rear and a 0.3-megapixel front-facing snapper for video calling. Retweet this story

Thursday, December 20, 2012

UK mililtary puts a satellite into Space


ArianeA powerful new telecommunications satellite for the UK military has blasted into orbit.
The five-tonne Skynet-5D platform was sent up on an Ariane rocket from the Kourou spaceport in French Guiana.
It complements three others already in operation, enabling British forces to stay connected over most of the globe.
The Skynet system, which includes the radio equipment deployed on ships, on vehicles and in the hands of troops, is the UK's single biggest space project.
It is valued at up to £3.6bn over 20 years and is run by a commercial company, Astrium, in a Private Finance Initiative (PFI) with the Ministry of Defence (MoD).
UK forces pay an annual service charge for which they get guaranteed bandwidth, with spare capacity then sold to "friendly forces". These third party customers include the Nato allies such as the US.
The Ariane left the ground at precisely 18:49 local time (21:49 GMT) and dropped off Skynet-5D 27 minutes later over the east coast of Africa. 5D will now use its own propulsion system to move into a geostationary position at an altitude of 36,000km. The eventual operating position early next year will be at 53 degrees East.
The first three spacecraft in the Skynet series were launched in 2007-2008. They all match the sophistication of the very latest civilian platforms used to pass TV, phone and internet traffic, but have been "hardened" for military use.
Classified technologies on board will resist, for example, attempts to disable the spacecraft with lasers or to "jam" their operation with rogue signals.
Putting a fourth spacecraft in the fleet gives some assurance to the MoD that a basic service can be maintained through this decade even if there is a failure in orbit of one or two satellites.
5D is largely a clone of 5A, 5B and 5C, and even includes a number of spare parts held in reserve.
South Pole Antarctic science bases are using Skynet
"From a distance you would not be able to tell the difference between them all," said Van Odedra, the Skynet programme manager at Astrium, Europe's biggest space company.
"It is inside though that there have been some subtle changes in terms of the configuration - particularly the UHF payload. We were able to introduce some design changes to be able to provide more than double the number of channels compared with 5A, 5B and 5C."
UHF (Ultra High Frequency) is much in demand. The frequency supports "comms on the move" - soldiers in forward deployments with backpack radios, and the like.
The MoD wants more of it and Astrium is keen to be able to sell additional capacity to its third-party customers.
A lot of key encrypted data will go through the satellite's X-band (SHF, Super High Frequency) payload.
Astrium intends to purchase further X-band capacity on a Canadian satellite launching next year. This will be positioned over the Americas and when combined with Skynet's own X-band offering will give UK forces coverage from 178 West to 135 East - near global coverage.
Antarctic support Although principally a military system, Skynet is finding use also in civilian sectors.
"Using Skynet, we also support something called the High Integrity Telecommunication System (HITS) for the UK Cabinet Office," explained Simon Kershaw, executive director of government communications at Astrium Services.
"HITS is a civil-response, national-disaster-response capability. It was deployed during the Olympics. It provides emergency comms support. The network runs from police strategic command centres across the UK into the crisis management centres, and into government as well," he told BBC News.
British troops on patrol Skynet is one of the MoD's biggest PFIs
"And we still fly three of the old Skynet-4 satellites, one of which is now 22 years old - not bad for a design life of eight years.
"Skynet-4C is now in such an inclined orbit that we offer several hours of coverage over the South Pole each day. It's a niche and unique capability for what is a geostationary satellite." The British and American Antarctic operations make use of this service.
5D represents probably the completion of the current generation Skynet system. Already, Astrium is in discussion with the MoD about the shape of a possible follow-on.
It is not clear just yet what the military's requirements will be in the 2020s but it is almost certain to include some satellite capability.
Whatever happens, those spacecraft still working at the end of the Astrium contract will pass to the ownership of the MoD for the sum of £1.
Ariane's second "passenger" for Wednesday's flight was the three-tonne Mexican telecommunications platform Mexsat Bicentenario. It was released by the rocket's upper-stage 36 minutes after launch. Retweet this story

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Photos of memory of moon landing




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Thursday, December 13, 2012

Google Maps returns to iPhone after Apple fiasco

Google on Thursday released a new Google Maps app for iPhone users to replace a glitch-ridden Apple program panned for omitting key landmarks and cities and failing correctly to identify locations.
The company has promised an "entirely new" experience with its Google Maps app, which includes local search functions, voice-guided directions and "Street View" images of places and even the inside of some 100,000 businesses.
Apple was forced to make a highly embarrassing apology in September for its own maps application in the new iOS 6 operating system used by the iPhone 5, and urged customers to use rival programs while improvements are made.
Apple had booted off Google Maps -- which had been the default program for Apple devices -- when it developed its own mapping application.
But the new Apple program immediately drew scorn, leading some users to refuse to upgrade their operating systems.

© 2012 AFP
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Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Yahoo Mail gets a revamp and new apps


Yahoo on Tuesday rolled out an entire suite of email apps for every major relevant platform: all-new Apple iOS and Windows 8 apps, plus redesigned clients for Android and the Web


Yes, Yahoo Mail still exists. The update is one of the first major product overhauls released by new CEO Marissa Mayer, who pledged to revamp Yahoo's languishing collection of Web sites and apps.
Yahoo once dominated search and email, and it was one of the earliest players in instant messaging and online news aggregation. Then, of course, it all went south. By the time Yahoo lured Mayer away from Google, it was barely even a shell of its former self.
With her hiring came promises to restructure the sprawling company, remake the products, and transform Yahoo into an innovator that can compete with the Googles, Facebooks, Microsofts, Apples and Twitters of the world.
Yahoo Mail general manager Vivek Sharma says Mayer was actively involved in the email revamp.
"She's played an unbelievably pivotal role in product direction and design," Sharma said. "She has an unbelievably intuitive understanding of what users want and need."
The new suite of email apps aren't life changing, but they at least offer a good experience for dedicated Yahoo users and show that the company is aware of what it needs to do to not only hang around, but actually make people care.
Following in the footsteps of Google and Microsoft's recent redesigns of Gmail and Hotmail/Outlook, Yahoo's apps now have a cleaner look, though Yahoo's overall use of color and texture in its user-interface design feels a few years behind what its competitors are doing. A big part of the company's goal was to make its products simpler (there are fewer visible elements and a more intuitive layout) and more consistent across platforms. All of the mobile apps and the Web client now have the same general features and layout.
Among Yahoo's new apps, the iOS app for Apple devices is probably the most modern in look and feel, though much of that comes from the baked-in iOS tools that Google, Twitter and Facebook already use in their apps (including the "pull" gesture to refresh and "swipe" for options). Most importantly: It's fast, renders emails properly, and works offline. One drawback is that it only allows one account at a time to be logged in.
The Web client is also an improvement, with less visual noise and an easier path to firing off emails, but it still looks a generation behind as far as design trends go. Yahoo's Windows 8 app can't help but feel modern since it follows the Windows 8 design language, but -- much like the default Metro email app -- the tragic flaw is that it lacks an expanded view for individual emails. That forces you to view messages in a single corner of the screen.
Merely being good might not cut it. Email is no longer a novel thing, and it's not hard to find better alternatives. Unlike Google and Microsoft , Yahoo lacks a widely used instant messaging service, offers no cloud services, and doesn't have little perks like a "priority inbox" setting.
Sharma says that he hasn't dismissed the value of those features. In addition to looking into developing new clients for other iOS products (read: iPad), the company has its eye on ways to improve the utility of Yahoo Mail, he said.
These apps won't attract an army of converts, but if Yahoo follows through on its promise to treat this as a first step, there may be hope yet for the embattled company. Retweet this story

X-37B - American military secret spaceplane is sent back to space

A notoriously mysterious military space plane operated by the US Air Force has launched from Florida, the third flight in a secretive test programme.
The reusable, unmanned craft is designed to operate in Earth orbit for extended periods. Its prior missions in 2010 and 2011 lasted 224 and 469 days.
The US government kept the timing of Tuesday's launch secret and has not said how long the mission will last.
That has prompted fevered speculation as to the craft's ultimate purpose.


X-37B (AP/USAF)
  • Mission: Described as a re-usable testbed for new sensors and other space technologies
  • Length: 9m Wingspan: 4.5m Height: 3m Mass: 5,000kg
  • Origins: Started as a Nasa project in 1999 before being handed to the military in 2006
  • Operating altitude: 180 - 800 km
  • Cost: The budget line for the X-37B programme continues to be classified information
Tuesday's launch had been pushed back from October, delayed by two satellite launches. Patrick Air Force Base in Florida gave notice of a hazard from a launch in a window between 15:45 and 22:15 GMT (10:45 to 17:15 local time).
The X-37B craft, designed by aerospace giant Boeing, shares more than just a passing similarity to the now-retired space shuttle.
It is just a quarter the size of the shuttle, but is launched on a rocket - the Atlas V. It is coated in thermal tiles to withstand the heat of re-entry, after which it lands on its own gear autonomously.
The stated mission of the craft, according to the US Air Force, is an "experimental test program to demonstrate technologies for a reliable, reusable, unmanned space test platform".
But the latest mission in particular sparked speculation that the craft was spying on the Chinese space lab Tiangong-1 - an idea that has since been largely discredited.
When it returned from its second mission in June, programme manager Lt Col Tom McIntyre said: "We knew from post-flight assessments from the first mission that OTV-1 could have stayed in orbit longer. So one of the goals of this mission was to see how much farther we could push the on-orbit duration."
But any official mission objectives seems set once again to remain secret. Retweet this story

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

NASA to Crash 2 Probes into Moon by Next Week

NASA's twin Grail spacecraft will crash into the lunar surface intentionally next week, bringing their gravity-mapping mission to a spectacular end.
The probes, known as Ebb and Flow, will be commanded to slam into the moon on Dec. 17, NASA officials said Monday (Dec. 10). The agency will host a press conference Thursday (Dec. 13) at 1:30 p.m. EST (1830 GMT) to discuss the impact and the events leading up to it.
The $496 million Grail mission — short for Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory — launched in September 2011 to map the moon's gravity field in unprecedented detail. Ebb and Flow arrived in orbit around the moon about one year ago — on New Year's Eve and New Year's Day, respectively.

The washing-machine-size spacecraft were originally tasked with 90-day science missions, which ran from March to May. But NASA extended Grail, allowing the two probes to gather a trove of additional data.
Ebb and Flow have been flying in formation around the moon, detecting the tiny changes in the distance between them caused by lunar mountains, craters and subsurface mass concentrations. Scientists used these ultra-precise measurements to construct an incredibly accurate map of the lunar gravity field.
This map, unveiled last week at the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco, reveals that the moon's crust is almost completely pulverized. The surprising find suggests that the moon and other rocky bodies in the inner solar system were pounded by long-ago impacts far more violently than previously believed, researchers said.
The new map was based on data gathered during Grail's original science mission; scientists expect to upgrade it based on measurements the spacecraft made during their extended mission, which brought them even closer to the lunar surface — an average altitude of 14 miles (23 km) as opposed to 34 miles (55 km).
Ebb and Flow are now running low on fuel as expected, NASA officials said, so the end is near for the probes. Mission managers will ensure that they go out in style on Dec. 17.
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Monday, December 10, 2012

Enable Siri on an iPad:How

You've heard of Siri, the hands-free virtual assistant built into iOS. It used to be exclusively available on the iPhone, but with the release of iOS 6, Siri is now available on certain iPad models as well. As of December 2012, it works on the third and fourth generation iPad, as well as the iPad mini.

Here's how to enable Siri on your iPad:
  1. From the iPad's home screen, tap Settings.
  2. Tap General on the sidebar. The general settings appear, as shown below.

  3. Tap Siri. The settings for Siri appear, as shown below.

  4. Move the Siri slider to the On position.
Congratulations! Siri has been enabled for use on your iPad. To use Siri, make sure your iPad is connected to the Internet, and then press and hold the home button. When you hear the alert and see Siri's icon, ask Siri a question. Retweet this story

Booting Problem:How to Factory Reset Your Android Phone or Tablet

android-recovery-mode
Safe mode can help you troubleshoot your Android, but sometimes you’ll need to wipe everything and restore your device to its factory state. You can even perform a factory reset when your Android phone or tablet won’t boot normally.
Ensure you have any important data backed up before doing a reset. This includes your Google Authenticator credentials, which will be lost during the reset. Disable two-factor authentication on your accounts first or you’ll experience some trouble afterwards.

If You Can’t Boot

If safe mode doesn’t help fix your device, you can perform a hard reset by booting into a special recovery mode. First, ensure your device is fully shut down.
Press and hold the correct keys to boot the device into recovery mode. This will vary from device to device. Here are some examples:
  • Nexus 7: Volume Up + Volume Down + Power
  • Samsung Galaxy S3: Volume Up + Home + Power
  • Motorola Droid X: Home + Power
  • Devices With Camera Buttons: Volume Up + Camera
Similar devices will likely use similar key combinations. For example, the Nexus 4 also uses Volume Up + Volume Down + Power.
If your device isn’t on this list and none of the above methods work, do a Google search for the name of your device and “recovery mode” – or look in the device’s manual or support pages.
Release the buttons when the device powered on. You’ll see an image of an Android lying on its back with its chest open and its internals revealed.

Press the Volume Up and Volume Down keys to scroll through the options until you see Recovery mode on the screen.

Press the Power button to restart into recovery mode. You’ll soon see an Android with a red triangle.

Hold down the Power button and tap Volume Up. You’ll see the Android system recovery menu appear at the top of your screen.

Select wipe data / factory reset with the volume keys and tap the Power button to activate it.
Select Yes – erase all user data with the volume buttons and tap Power. Your device will be reset to its factory state and all your data will be erased.

If your device freezes at any point, hold down the Power button until it restarts.

If You Can Boot

You can reset your Android phone or tablet normally from its Settings screen. Tap the Backup & reset option on the latest versions of Android or tap Privacy if you’re using Android 2.3.

Tap the Factory data reset option and to through the reset of the steps to confirm the factory reset.

If the factory reset process doesn’t fix your problems – or doesn’t work at all – it’s likely that there’s a problem with your device’s hardware. If it’s still under warranty, you should have it fixed or replaced.
(There’s one exception to this: If you’ve been flashing custom ROMs and messing with your device’s low-level software, it’s possible that you could have overwritten the stock recovery software. In this case, it’s possible that you have a software problem and not a hardware problem.)




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About Wi-Fi Signal Strenght


Whether it’s the structural layout of your home or just ghosts in the machine, we’re all familiar with inexplicable Wi-Fi dead spots. One extra puzzling situation, unseen in the comic here, is when the addition of another wireless node actually causes issues with your Wi-Fi connectivity. There’s nothing more frustrating than having twice the Wi-Fi node power and half the actual signal at your laptop. If you’re looking to extend your Wi-Fi network coverage headache free Retweet this story

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Russian Proton Rocket another Lunch failure


The Breeze-M upper stage of Russia’s Proton heavy-lift rocket on Dec. 9 failed for the third time in 16 months, placing Gazprom Space Systems’ Yamal 402 telecommunications satellite into a too-low orbit, launch-service provider International Launch Services (ILS) and Russia’s Roscosmos space agency said.
The launch is all but certain to raise fresh issues over whether Proton Breeze-M manufacturing team has workmanship quality issues that were not addressed by the inquiries into the failures of August 2011 and August 2012.
The Dec. 9 failure poses serious problems for Mexican satellite operator Satmex, whose Satmex 8 satellite arrived at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, where Proton is launched, on Nov. 29 to prepare for a Dec. 28 launch.
The December launch date now looks out of reach. Satmex badly needs Satmex 8, which is intended to replace the Satmex 5 satellite. Satmex 5 is expected to run out of fuel in May. If Satmex is unable to provide immediate replacement capacity for its Satmex 5 customers, they are likely to go elsewhere and compromise Satmex’s already fragile financial condition.
The 4,600-kilogram Yamal 402, like many satellites launched solo on the Proton rocket, was fueled to capacity and is likely to provide several years of commercial service despite now having to climb further than planned to reach its operating orbit. How many years of life will be available to it remained unknown in the hours after the launch failure.
Roscosmos said Yamal 402, a Spacebus 4000 satellite built by Thales Alenia Space of France and Italy and carrying 46 Ku-band transponders, or 66 when measured in 36-megahertz equivalents, appeared to be in good health in orbit.
Moscow-based Gazprom intended to place Yamal 402 into an orbital slot at 55 degrees east.
Reston, Va.-based ILS said a Russian government inquiry board would be established, along with an independent ILS board, to investigate what happened.
ILS and Roscosmos said initial indications are that the Breeze-M upper stage shut down four minutes early during the last of a planned four burns to carry Yamal 402 into geostationary transfer orbit. The fourth burn was scheduled to last nearly nine minutes.
The rocket was intended to place Yamal 402 into an orbit with an apogee of 35,696 kilometers and a perigee of 7,470 kilometers, with the orbit at a nine-degree inclination relative to the equator.
The Breeze-M failure released the satellite into a perigee of around 3,100 kilometers, with an inclination of 26 degrees, according to early indications.
The failure is the third for Breeze-M since August 2011. All of them have resulted in the destruction or in reduced operating lives for Russian government and Russian commercial telecommunications satellites despite the fact that ILS has launched several non-Russian commercial telecommunications spacecraft during the same period.
Industry officials remarked after the August 2012 failure – when two Russian satellites, one for commercial fleet operator Russia Satellite Communications Co. (RSCC), one a commercial telecommunications satellite for Indonesia’s Telkom – that Proton’s recent launch history is disastrous for Russian operators, but not so bad for non-Russian ILS commercial customers.
The August 2011 failure caused the loss of a large RSCC-owned satellite.
Since its August 2012 failure, ILS and the Proton Breeze-M rocket have launched two Western commercial satellites, for Intelsat of Luxembourg and Washington, and for EchoStar of Englewood, Colo. Both were successful.
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Saturday, December 8, 2012

How To Restart Windows Program When it Crashes

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We’ve all had programs crash on us in Windows at one time or another. You can take the time to manually start the program again, or you can have a simple program like ReStartMe restart it automatically for you.
ReStartMe is a free program that has one purpose in life, to restart processes. You tell it to watch specific processes and if any of those processes exit, whether they crashed or you accidentally closed them, ReStartMe will automatically restart them.
To install the program, double-click on the restartmeinstaller.exe file you downloaded (see the link at the end of the article). Follow the easy installation process, accepting the default settings.

NOTE: ReStartMe installs into the Program Files directory. If you’re installing it in Windows 7 or Vista, you have to take ownership of the ReStartMe program directory because the program settings are written into a file in the same directory. If you don’t take ownership, you’ll encounter the following error. If you click Continue, the program will still work, but the settings won’t be saved.

To take ownership of the ReStartMe program directory (C:\Program Files\ReStartMe),. Then, you can easily use the right-click menu to take ownership of the program directory.

Because we were already in the Program Files directory, we chose to start ReStartMe by double-clicking the ReStartMe.exe file. You can also start the program from the Start menu.

To add a process to be watched by ReStartMe, click Add a process.

You can either add a currently running process, or select a program to watch that is not yet running. To select a currently running process, select the process from the drop-down list. To add a program that is not currently running, click Browse for a program, navigate to the program’s directory and select the .exe file for the program.

Once you have selected the process to watch, click Add.

NOTE: You can add multiple processes, both currently running and new programs. This allows you to ensure that critical programs and ones you use often are always running.
To remove a process you don’t want ReStartMe to watch anymore, select the process in the list and click Remove Selected.

There are some options you can set in ReStartMe. You can choose to have the program remember the processes you have chosen to watch the next time you start the program by selecting the Remember processes for the next time check box. For processes that are not already started when ReStartMe starts, the program can either ignore them (Do nothing), Watch for them, or Start them.
If you want ReStartMe to automatically start when you log into Windows, select the Start with Windows check box. This setting is only applicable for the current user.
When ReStartMe starts, the main program window displays by default. Once you set up the program with the desired processes and options, you may not need to change anything. If that’s the case, you can choose to have ReStartMe and automatically minimize to the system tray when it starts. To do this, select the Start in system tray check box.

ReStartMe allows you to lock the program to prevent other users of the computer from changing options, adding and removing processes, or closing the program. To do this, enter a password in the edit box above ReStartMe Options and click the lock button, which currently shows an open lock.

Everything on the ReStartMe window becomes grayed out and unavailable except the password edit box, lock button, and Minimize to Tray button. The lock button changes to show a closed lock. To unlock the program, enter the password again in the edit box and click the lock button.

To minimize ReStartMe to the system tray, click Minimize To Tray. The processes you chose to watch are still monitored by ReStartMe in the background, and when one crashes, or exits for any reason, it will be restarted.

To close ReStartMe, and stop monitoring processes, click Close ReStartMe.

Download ReStartMe from http://bkprograms.weebly.com/restartme.html. The program runs on all 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Windows.
NOTE: ReStartMe is not being actively developed anymore, so errors you may encounter most likely won’t get fixed. However, we didn’t experience any bugs while testing the program. The simple, single-purpose nature of the program makes it a useful tool as is.
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