Tag Archives: Virtual Technology

If you are a Blogger, You have to Tweet – Says Technorati Analysis

Yes if you are a blogger, you blog, then you have to Tweet. Why? Lets see.

Bloggers use Twitter much more than does the general population. Yes it is true. Bloggers say they use Twitter to promote their blogs, bring interesting links to light, and to get a feel for what people are talking about.

In year 2009, the trends set by Twitter, the most eminent microblogging service today have made a huge impact on bloggers & have came as the leading blogosphere trends for this year. This is what State of the Blogosphere 2009 report from the blog search engine, Technorati analysed while leading blogosphere trends for 2009.

About 73 percent of bloggers use Twitter, compared to about 14 percent of the general population. About 52 percent of Twittering bloggers are syndicating their blog posts to Twitter.

Technorati found that blogs with more than 100 page views a day received just 0.83 percent of their page views from Twitter referrals.

In fact, some bloggers (26 percent) spend so much time on Twitter that it has eaten into the time that they spend updating their blogs.

Now look at the bloggers are not using Twitter. Among the bloggers who don’t use it, 35 percent say they simply don’t understand the point of it. Another 54 percent say they feel no need to blog the details of their personal lives, in spite of the popularity of personal musings.

Technorati’s report also focused on the growing political influence of bloggers. The blogosphere’s impact on elections, from local politics to national elections, is growing. (Image Credits: Technorati)

Do you agree with the report from Technorati? Is Twitter is impacting the global nature & future of blogging? If yes, How?

Comment & Share your views with us. Follow Inforids on Twitter.

Google Sidewiki – New Google Toolbar Feature allows to Read, Publish & Share your Insights + Video

Now Google Toolbar is equipped with a new feature, Google Sidewiki which is meant to allow users to Read, Publish & Share Insights & related information in the sidebar, next to any webpage. Its really very useful to track how many people visit the same pages and look for the same information & get the information that is added by many others have done while searching the same.

Google Sidewiki, with the major aim to contribute helpful information to webpage visitors, appears as a browser sidebar, where you can also read and write entries along the side of the page & share them.

Google has implemented an algorithm that promotes the most useful, ordered & high-quality entries allows you to see the most relevant entries first.

Google Sidewiki as a feature of Google Toolbar, is now only for Firefox and Internet Explorer but it will be available soon  in Google Chrome and elsewhere too.

Also, you can to start exploring the web with Google Sidewiki, visit google.com/sidewiki to download Google Toolbar with Sidewiki and contribute your own entries alongside pages on the web.

How Java is Empowering Most of the Technologies Today

Java, its power & its applications are empowering      most of the technologies today.

How? Lets see that.

Yes, Java is Everwhere! This Quick Video nicely depicts the contributions of Java to most of the technologies today. So, Included in the Weekly Video Garbber Section of Inforids.com

Microsoft Vision 2019 – Envisioning what’s Possible[Video]

Microsoft, after winows 7 decides to imagine the future & envisioning what’s possible. Some of the new technologies demoed including a “transparent wall” between two classrooms around the world, animated drawings, realtime conversation translations, surface displays, electronic boarding cards, transparent displays, mini projectors, electronic newspaper etc. Here is the future vision montage  depicting & showing Microsoft’s dream envisioning exciting future ahead.

Explore more via istartedsomething. This next-tech video is the part of Video-Grabber(this week) section of Inforids.com

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Feel the taste of your Favorite Guest Operating System(OS) on Linux with VirtualBox 3.0.0

Running multiple OS on the system is the choice of various curious programmers who indulge themselves in working on different OS on the same PC  which is very helpful to get knowledge, understanding the technology behind them &  how they works. Although there a different methods like  installing dual Os on the same system etc. using Virtual machines has become quite popular one commonly known as VirtualBox.

VirtualBox is a family of powerful x86 virtualization products for enterprise as well as home use the popular, amazing, open-source, virtualization software from Sun Microsystems. Not only is VirtualBox an extremely feature rich, high performance product for enterprise customers, it is also the only professional solution that is freely available as Open Source Software under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).


Presently, VirtualBox runs on Windows, Linux, Macintosh and OpenSolaris hosts and supports a large number of guest operating systems including but not limited to Windows (NT 4.0, 2000, XP, Server 2003, Vista), DOS/Windows 3.x, Linux (2.4 and 2.6), Solaris and OpenSolaris, and OpenBSD.

Sun xVM VirtualBox allows users to create “virtual machines” in their host operating system so that they can install any guest OS, facilitating the development, cross-platform running and testing of multi-tier applications on a single computer. Being very space efficient, Sun xVM VirtualBox has around 40 megabytes and is ready for use after just a five-minute install.

Recently VirtualBox from Sun Microsystems, reached version 3.0.0 a day ago. So, a more powerful one thatis VirtualBox 3.0.0 ia available now with  lots of new features.

The big and breathtaking  implements in VirtualBox 3.0.0 are:

  • Users can now use Direct3D 8 and 9 games or applications.
  • The new SMP (Symmetrical Multiprocessing) guest support with no more than 32 virtual processors.

Other major improvements & additions in VirtualBox 3.0.0 for Linux are:

  • Support for Linux kernel 2.6.31
  • Support for Guest Additions in Novell SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 11
  • Fixed CentOS 64-bit support
  • Better performance for PAE guests on Linux kernel 2.6.29 or higher
  • Better network I/O
  • Revamped settings dialog
  • Lots of fixes for 3D support
  • Windows 7 Remote Desktop Protocol client support
  • Fixed TX checksum offloading for Linux kernel 2.16.8 or higher
  • Time synchronization handler provided by the new vboxadd-service module
  • Added guest properties, which offers information about logged in users, operating system or network;
  • Added USB high-speed isochronous endpoints support, with read-ahead buffering for input endpoints & many more.

Download Sun xVM VirtualBox 3.0.0

Virtual Touch Layer Keyboards and Projection Technologies | A Voyage of the Virtual World

A Voyage of the Virtual World, A section devoted to the hats-off innovative techniques & devices which are not only providing best solutions to present day e-scenarios but also opening new realms in innovations, exploring new future-tech possibilities & prophetic visions. As the result of Virtual touch layer and Projection technologies, the Virtual Keyboard is the live example of the human imaginations realizing to truth.
Virtual Keyboards(also known as onscreen keyboard, soft keyboard, virtual laser keyboard (The VKB), projection keyboard) software and/or hardware component combination, with the primary purpose to provide full QWERTY keyboard functionalities virtually to the user like entering characters & keystrokes. They can be projected and touched on any surface. The keyboard watches your fingers move and translates that action into keystrokes in the device. Most systems can also function as a virtual mouse. Each time touching the image on the surface of a key generates a unique electronic signal corresponding to a key’s image. Virtual keyboards are also used as features of emulation software for systems that have fewer buttons than a computer keyboard would have.
Virtual keyboards are also compatible with many Smartphones and PDAs & are replacing the millions of foldout keyboards sold for Palm and other handhelds in the smart cellular phone market.

With a large number of applications including projection notepads that track any pen, pencil or pen-like object; gestural interfaces for devices with inconvenient or ultra-small form-factors or locations (ie-wearable computers); and user identification and authentication through facial recognition, sight-enabled applications in consumer games, premise security, automobiles, military-aerospace, and medical applications. Using these virtual facilities the chance of breakage and infection transfer is reduced. Additionally virtual keyboards require no cleaning and they have no wires, buttons, or switches. All mechanical input units can be replaced by such virtual devices, optimized for the current application and for the user’s physiology maintaining speed, simplicity and unambiguity of manual data input.

Senseboard Technologies (http://www.senseboard.com) further extending the capabilities by providing the technology. The user can type on a hard surface like a desk or table, or into the air. The hand-mounts measure finger two hand-mounted devices that connect to the target computing device with the help of Bluetooth wireless networkingovements and tell the handheld what keys the user intends to press, based on the ubiquitous QWERTY keyboard layout. There’s also a pause function to capture the motion of the fingers and hands, enabling keyboard functionality.

Kitty (http://www.kittytech.com), a finger mounted keyboard for data entry into PDA’s, Pocket PC’s and Wearable Computers. KITTY, an acronym for Keyboard-Independent Touch-TYping, is a fingermounted keyboard that uses touch-typing as the method of data entry. The device targets the portable computing market and in particular wearable computing systems, which are in the need of a silent, “invisible” data entry system based on touch-typing. The new device combines the idea of a finger-mounted chording device (such as the “Twiddler” by the HandKey Corp.), with the advantages of a system that uses touch-typing (such as the Virtual Keyboard by Senseboard or the Scurry by Samsung) References: Canesta(http://www.canesta.com) Developer VKB Inc (http://www.vkb.co.il/) Virtual Devices(http://www.virtualdevices.net/)

Live in The Virtual 3D World with Second-Life | A Voyage of the Virtual World

Getting bored with your life? Now on internet you can start a new one, sounds strange but its true. Now Internet is itself a complete package of the things we people do in our life & the things we like. Are you ready to live the Second Life but in the virtual world of internet, so design your new appearance, home, friends & enter in to the virtual utopia that can be as detailed as you like, and you are the sovereign – down to details of currency, economy and government. This is all possible in games such as Second Life, by San Francisco-based Linden Lab.

Recommended Reading:
Virtual Touch Layer Keyboards and Projection Technologies | A Voyage of the Virtual World

Second Life (Second Life is an online game that gives you a new life in a virtual world) “world” resides in a large array of Linden Lab servers. Subscribers (“residents”) run the Second Life client program which allows them, via the internet, to view and modify the Second Life world and participate in its economy. Most of the content is resident-created; indeed, residents retain the intellectual property rights. Second Life residents are represented by an avatar which may be customized in a variety of ways.

The basic avatar is a humanoid in shape and, through a series of graphical user interface (GUI) controls, can be modified by adjusting parameters such as size, build, colours and hair style. Residents can also create or buy clothing, and fit out their avatars with accessories. Second Life has its own economy, and a currency called Linden dollars (LUSD). Residents receive an initial amount of LUSD when they open an account, and a weekly stipend thereafter, the amount depending on the type of account. Additional currency can be acquired by selling objects or services within the environment. Residents can purchase LUSD directly, or convert between Linden currency and US currency through Linden Lab’s currency brokerage, the LindX Currency Exchange, with a rate that fluctuates daily. Interest groups can be created for a fee of LUSD 100. After three days an additional two members must have been recruited, otherwise the investment is lost and the group is deleted.

Second Life has become very popular. Many real-world celebrities have confessed to “living” their second lives in the virtual world. Problems also exist in this utopia. Some residents are malevolent; thus, groups of residents are actively trying to damage the world, by creating self-replicating objects that may eventually paralyse the server. Second Life speculators buy land at low costs in hopes of earning quick profits when it appreciates in value. There have even been real-life lawsuits against Linden Labs for loss of virtual property.

A virtual second life may not be such a utopia after all. It is entertaining & becoming eminent on the Internet.

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