TECH GURU, TECH-SCIENCE NEWS

"I celebrate myself, and sing myself,
and what I assume you shall assume,
for every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you."

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Lipstick story

Lipstick, Lip-Lock and Liping ..all these things are emotional. Red lips are an essential component to a woman’s makeup repertoire.

GEORGE JONES: Heartbeat on Pain, a Country Song.

Music may give life and express pain of heart. GEORGE JONES | 1931-2013 His Life Was a Country Song“When you’re onstage or recording, you put yourself in those stories,” His Life Was a Country Song. George Jones, Country Singer, Dies at 81

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Chris Gayle's eating mystery!

Chris Gayle's eating mystery reveled. He had eaten Just 2 piece of cake and 1 Egg omlete before his Record breaking Innings. So, build up this habit to be more powerful. Gayle remains unbeaten on 175 just for 66 balls. He scored Highest Individual Score and Highest sixes in an innings.

Phone Sex Enables 'Fundawear'

Feel that tingle down there? It might be a long-distance call. Condom-maker Durex has introduced app-controlled underwear that vibrates, the company announced in a YouTube video viewed more than 500,000 times since Wednesday. The promo (watch above) features a slightly naughty demonstration by an Australian couple remotely "touching" each other. The premise is that if you and the main squeeze want to get busy while you're apart, you can put on the Fundawear and buzz each other via iPhones. You simply drag your fingers across an app diagram of the body parts you want to stimulate remotely. Wires and sensors convey what actual touch cannot. And we used to think that "Skype me" sounded suggestive! Fundawear is still in the experimental stage, so no word on a release date. Visit its Facebook page for more on how to score a free prototype. Outlets have had some fun with Fundawear. Cult of Mac imagined preoccupied users zapping themselves in public. The Sun called the undies "his'n'hers buzzing briefs" Durex isn't first to the virtual-sex party. LovePalz developed a pair of intercourse simulation gadgets that women and men can connect to their erogenous zones for long-distance loving.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Take your Pillow as Boy friend and Girl friend


If a girlfriend body pillow doesn't ring your bell, don't worry, there's now a male alternative that includes all of its limbs and body parts—or at least most of them.

Abhishek feels jealous of wife Aishwarya

Yes, Abhishek reveals how he has been shut out of the bedroom quite a few times in the last few months because of the baby's sleep routine. "Aaradhya wakes up in the night for her feed and a nappy change. Ash, who's completely clued in, is up in a jiffy. However, I must confess, it took time for me to get used to the new routine. When the baby cried, I woke up too, but couldn't go back to sleep immediately. So Ash suggested that I sleep in another room till such time as Aaradhya was slightly older."

Friday, April 19, 2013

Worst Women Underwear :D


Read a womens views about mens underware: As a girl, I don't think I could take a guy seriously if I noticed he were wearing these....guess about women worst!! :D

Celebs Die short but Politicians survives Longer (Be a Cockroach, Not a Dinosaur)


Fame may 'lead to a shorter life'. Having a glittering career in the public eye may come at the cost of a shorter life, an analysis of obituaries in a US newspaper suggests.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Lumia Pureview 41 model no: Lumia 1001


Nokia, the mobile giant struggling to catch up with rivals, may have an ace up its sleeve. The company set the benchmark for smartphone cameras with its 808 PureViewsmartphone last year, which came with a 41MP camera and ran on Symbian operating system. However, the company soon began focussing itsenergies on Windows Phone-powered Lumiaseries and Symbian was retired. Now, word on the street is that the company is working on aLumia phone that will have a 41MP camera sensor. Previously, there had been some speculation about an upcoming Lumia phone with 41MPcamera, codenamed EOS, but the rumour mill went silent after Mobile World Congress in February. Now, MyNokiaBlog has said that a source with access to the company's plans has said Nokia is currently testing EOS on quad-core as well as dual-core chipsets. The model was said to be tested on Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 quad-core chip, but poor battery performance made it an unviable option. Therefore, the company is going with a dual-core processor for this phone, according to the report. Talking about the camera, the report says that the company is using a 41MP sensor similar to the one seen in 808 PureView, but will have optical image stabilisation and variable aperture lens. The company will tweak the interface of the camera app in this phone and include Xenon as well as LED flash units. Nokia is also testing 2K and 4K recording for the device, though the report says this feature is not supported currently. Nokia EOS is said to have an AMOLED display panel with 1280x768p resolution, though the size of the screen is not clear yet. Other features confirmed by the source include FM radio, microSDsupport and microHDMI port. The report also says that the phone will initially be launched only for AT&T in US, and the global launch will follow 1-3 months afterwards. Lumia 920 is the only Windows Phone 8 smartphone to have PureView imaging technology, but features a smaller 8.7MP sensor. Nokia is also said to be working on a Windows RT tablet, which will rival the likes of Apple iPad, Google Nexus 10, Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 and Microsoft Surface.

iPhone is boring, Android is hot

Android phones have become cooler, buzzier, more fun and more useful compared to the iPhone. Who would have imagined this? But that is exactly what has happened in the last six months. In India, where we value our money and demand something that is truly useful, we always knew that a high-end Android phone is a better deal compared to the iPhone. But now the rest of the world has discovered Android. And how. There are a lot of writers and bloggers who swear by the iPhone (or for that matter, anything made by Apple). In the last six months, many of these people have finally realized that the iPhone is not all that exciting anymore. It’s not as useful as it was earlier. It no longer even runs the most beautiful software. Many of these people have ditched their iPhones and started using Android. It’s a big change, considering how faithful the Apple users usually are. So, who are these people? Some big names in the world of technology. Let me list a few: -- Guy Kawasaki, an Apple evangelist and a long-time fan of the company, ditched the iPhone and switched to Android. But why? “I fell in love with Android on the smartphone, and then I got a Nexus 7 and started using Android on the tablet as well. To me the great irony is that Apple’s slogan was ‘Think Different,’ but today if you think different you’re looking at Android,” he told Dan Lyons at ReadWrite. -- Andy Ihnatko, a big-time Apple fan who often wrote “florid” reviews of Apple products, has switched to an Android phone. Why? “I’ve switched from the iPhone to the Samsung Galaxy S III because it’s the best there is at the kind of things I need my phone to do. And as soon as something comes along that’s better, I’ll switch again,” he wrote. -- Robert Scoble, an influential technologist, is “no longer an Apple fanboy”. He wrote on his Google+ page, “Apple lately HAS slipped in my eyes and there are lots of examples how (Google Now, Waze maps, and tons of apps that are here already and coming on the Android platform, like SwiftKey keyboards) are examples of why I’m getting ready to leave the Apple platform and switch to Android.” -- MG Siegler, arguably one of the most diehard Apple fanboys, once wrote a piece titled ‘Why I hate android’. Now, he is praising Nexus 4, an Android phone even though he has not exactly ditched the iPhone. “Nice hardware aside, the true reason to go with Android — if you’re going to go with Android — has to be the software. Aside from the core Android layer getting more polish, the Google services keep getting better. Specifically, Google Now is great. You may not realize it at first, but over time, it keeps getting better,” he recently wrote. -- Then there are technology bloggers like Jamie Dihiansan, Brian Osborne and Mathew Ingram whose faith in the iPhone seems to be wavering. Why the sudden exodus? Personally, I have always found Android to be a much better operating system. The iPhone and iOS have their merits but for me Android works best for several reasons. From the posts written by people switching from the iPhone to Android, I believe these are the same reasons Apple loyalists are now discovering. Let me put them in a list. -- Android is much more flexible compared to iOS. This means you can customize your phone according to your needs and do a lot more with it. This is a huge advantage once you realize the possibilities it opens up. -- Compared to iOS, Android is now much better looking. The design language adopted by Google in Ice Cream Sandwich aka Android 4 is modern, clean and sensible. This is in stark contrast to now boring and bloated user interface in iOS. -- Android does a lot of things better compared to iOS. For example, it has better notification system, apps can talk directly to each other, if a user wants, he or she can access the file system, the lockscreen can be customized, and Google services tend to work better on Android. -- Most high-end android phones have a large and gorgeous screen with very high-resolution. Believe me, once you have used a high-resolution large screen, you will not like to go back to the ‘tiny’ iPhone. -- Android allows people to do their stuff in the way they want. But Apple forces the user’s hand. For example, on Android you can choose your default web browser. On the iPhone, you are forced to use Safari by default. On Android, you can change your keyboard and choose from different styles of typing. On the iPhone, you are limited to just one way of typing and one keyboard. So, is Android the perfect mobile operating system? No. nothing is perfect and Android has its own issues. But despite the issues, overall it is the most functional, flexible and a reasonably good-looking operating system at the moment. In a high-end phone, it is tough to beat it. And long-time Apple loyalists are realizing it.

Monday, April 15, 2013

Surface branded Smart Watch?

Microsoft may bring Smart phone, Smart watch and Phablet. All the device will be `Surface' branded. Microsoft is working on designs for a touch-enabled smart watch, joining a number of other large competitors like Samsung Electronics and Apple who are said to be working on similar devices, a newspaper reported. Executives at suppliers to Microsoft told The Wall Street Journal that the company was sourcing components for the prototype of what could potentially be a "watch-style device." Microsoft has, for example, requested 1.5-inch displays from component makers for the prototype, an executive at a component supplier told the newspaper. It is unclear whether the company will decide to go ahead with the watch, the newspaper added.

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Do Women Need Bras? French Study Says Brassieres Are A 'False Necessity'

Women who go braless may actually have the right idea, new research suggests. According to the results of a 15-year study in France published Wednesday, bras provide no benefits to women and may actually be harmful to breasts over time. "Medically, physiologically, anatomically, the breast does not benefit from being deprived of gravity," Jean-Denis Rouillon, a professor at the University of Franche-Comté in Besançon, told France Info. Conducting the study at the university's hospital, Rouillon measured and examined the breasts of more than 300 women, aged 18 and 35, taking note of how the additional support provided by bras affects the body over time. (It should be noted the study does not mention breast size.) Overall, he found that women who did not use bras benefited in the long term, developing more muscle tissue to provide natural support. As France's The Local notes, Rouillon also noticed that nipples gained a higher lift, in relation to the shoulders, on women who went braless. When bras are worn, the restrictive material prevents such tissue from growing, which may actually accelerate sagging, the study concluded. Capucine Vercellotti, a 28-year-old woman who participated in the research, found that she breathes easier without the constraints of a bra. "At first, I was a little reluctant to the idea of running without a bra, but I got started and after five minutes, I had no trouble at all," Vercellotti said, according to the Agence France-Presse. But don't throw away your bras just yet, ladies. Despite the findings, Rouillon said it would be dangerous to advise all women to take off their bras based on the study's sample, which may not be representative of the population. Speaking to France Info, Rouillon cautioned women who have worn bras for a long time -- several decades -- from following the recommendation since they would not benefit from taking off their bras now.

Worst. Men's Underwear. Ever.

This piece of delectable underwear is available from the French men's clothing website Inderwear - and while they call it the 'String Latéral Flash Bleu Alter', we rather like the name Laughing Squid came up with: 'one-sided grape smugglers'. Described as an "original and ultra sexy string which encloses one side of the waist", the String Latéral Flash Bleu Alter can be yours for a mere €22. What are you waiting?!

The second coming of Facebook

Back in 2010 Mark Zuckerberg made a very bad decision. Instead of building separate apps for iPhones, Androids, BlackBerrys, Nokia devices, and, yes, even Microsoft phones, he put his engineers to work designing a version of Facebook that could operate on any smartphone. In effect, he was betting that as different operating systems jostled for control of mobile devices, standalone apps would go away and soon we would surf websites on our phones, just as we do on PCs. Zuckerberg was wrong. Google's Android and Apple's iOS quickly became the dominant mobile operating systems, and Facebook's applications, which were built with its CEO's web-centric worldview in mind, didn't work well on either platform. They were buggy and slow, crashing often. A 2011 update garnered 19,000 one-star reviews in the Apple App Store within the first month. "It's probably one of the biggest mistakes we've ever made," Zuckerberg tells me during an interview at Facebook's Menlo Park, Calif., headquarters in late March. Just six years after it had been founded, Facebook(FB) -- the company that had ushered in the social-networking era -- was missing the next big shift in technology. Around the world consumers were abandoning laptops for mobile devices, busying themselves with a dizzying array of downloaded apps designed specifically for small touchscreens and people on the go. (Have you ever seen anyone play Angry Birds on a desktop?) Facebook, meanwhile, had only one engineer dedicated to the iPhone; most of its mobile team was coding for mobile web browsers. Hidden among all the Silicon Valley success stories there are hundreds more companies that fail to catch the next wave and die. Zuckerberg was determined not to be among them. But to address his mobile problem, the wunderkind who had tasted enormous success so early in his career had to come to terms with failure, and he had to make sweeping structural and cultural changes at the young company -- moves that often went against his instincts. Instead of going faster (virtually a religion at Facebook), mobile developers had to take a pause on new releases. Instead of doubling down on the mobile web, they had to embrace apps. And instead of trying to reach the broadest possible audience with a killer product, Facebook ultimately would have to pick one operating system to show off what it could really do in mobile. "I can't overstate how much we had to retool the whole company's development processes," he says.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Nokia 105: colourful, durable and affordable

‘Connecting the next billion and beyond’ just got more colourful with the super-dependable Nokia 105, available in cyan and with a colour screen. Around 2.7 billion people around the world are yet to buy their first mobile, mostly due to financial restraints. The Nokia 105 is set to retail at just €15, making it the most affordable mobile phone in Nokia’s current range. Others are ready to buy a second phone, perhaps for emergencies, or for sports. That phone will need to be durable and long-lasting, and the Nokia 105 definitely fits the bill. Fundamental value The phone was created to offer the essentials – phone calls and SMS – but also some desirable extras. It has an FM radio*, a much-prized addition for people with limited personal entertainment options. Similarly, the phone features a flashlight, useful where reliable electricity is in short supply. The Nokia 105’s sturdy one-piece keymat is dust-proof and splash-proof. Tech specs System: Dual band, EGSM 900/1800 Size/weight: 107 x 44.8 x 14.3 mm; 70 g (including battery) Display: 1.45” 65k Colour TFT Display Memory: 8MB ROM Connectivity: 2.0 mm Charger Connector, 3.5 mm AV Connector Battery: standby time: up to 35 days; talk time: up to 12.5 hours *headset required. The battery life – up to 12.5 hours talk-time and 35 days standby – once again means you’ll be able to keep talking and texting for ages. The Nokia 105 carries the same design aesthetic found on our top-end devices, which makes the phone stand out from the crowd. Lead designer Sungwoo Cho said: “The very human curves and the clean, fresh design make it very distinct from our competitors’ devices in this price range, and utterly modern despite a traditional form factor. We’re also extremely happy to be able to offer the Nokia 105 in cyan, as well as black. This is pretty unique at this price point.” Product manager Tracy Chen told Conversations that “Nokia’s experience in optimising phone quality, combined with its global footprint and economies of scale, is a major contributor to being able to work to such a low price.” Working with thoroughly-tested hardware and software means there’s no drop in quality. Extra special powers While the major focus of creating the Nokia 105 was on covering the basics and achieving such an affordable price point, the product team also decided to include a speaking clock: “We wanted to be able to offer a bit of fun, an extra surprise that provides a talking point for the owners.” The Nokia 105 also comes with pre-loaded games, and the Nokia Life service will also be available in supported countries. The Nokia 105 marks the end of an era. With colour screens available at such a low price, Nokia officially says farewell to black-and-white screens. We don’t imagine many people will be sad about that! The Nokia 105 will start selling in the second quarter of 2013. read more at : http://www.techandteen.com/

I've been alone with you inside my mind

I've been alone with you inside my mind And in my dreams I've kissed your lips a thousand times I sometimes see you pass outside my door Hello, is it me you're looking for? I can see it in your eyes I can see it in your smile You're all I've ever wanted, (and) my arms are open wide 'Cause you know just what to say And you know just what to do And I want to tell you so much, I love you I long to see the sunlight in your hair And tell you time and time again how much I care Sometimes I feel my heart will overflow Hello, I've just got to let you know 'Cause I wonder where you are And I wonder what you do Are you somewhere feeling lonely, or is someone loving you? Tell me how to win your heart For I haven't got a clue But let me start by saying, I love you Hello, is it me you're looking for? 'Cause I wonder where you are And I wonder what you do Are you somewhere feeling lonely or is someone loving you? Tell me how to win your heart For I haven't got a clue But let me start by saying I love you ......................................Lionel Richie

Monday, April 8, 2013

HTC's ship is sinking

Oh, how the mighty have fallen. HTC, an early champion among Android manufacturers, is in dire straits. And those straits are about as dire as they could be – with disastrous quarterly results to prove it. How did this happen? Will the HTC One be enough to pull its head above water? Read on. Today HTC announced its results for Q1 2013. They ain’t pretty. The company’s revenues are down 37 percent from the same quarter last year. Compared to Q1 of 2011, they’re down 59 percent. But the revenue numbers don’t begin to paint the picture of HTC’s troubles. Profits are down year-over-year by 98 percent. Yes, you read that correctly: a 98 percent drop in profits. Ouch. This ship is sinking. And fast.

Modern life making us lonely

Studies have consistently shown that one in 10 of us is lonely, but a report by the Mental Health Foundation suggests loneliness among young people is increasing. At the same time, social changes such as the rise of the solo dweller and the surge in social networks, combined with an ageing population, are changing the way people interact with each other. So is modern life making us lonely? "It can be poor health, illness, money, children moving away, feeling cut off from family and friends and the community, friends dying, a lack of access to transport, redundancy or career problems or divorce. Often it's when people lose a sense of purpose and contribution.'' "We have data that suggests people's social networks have got smaller and families are not providing the same level of social context they may have done 50 years ago. "It's not because they are bad or uncaring families, but it's to do with geographical distance, marriage breakdown, multiple caring responsibilities and longer working hours" Social networking websites have also come under fire for reducing face-to-face contact and making people more isolated, although Mitchell says they can also some people stay in touch. But if modern society is making us more lonely, what can be done to counter it? "I think we'll look back and think 'how did we allow that to happen?' It's like looking back at the issue of children going to work at 12 - there's something so fundamentally wrong with what's happening,

Online translation

Google translates 65 languages and can be used on websites with speech recognition and as an app on mobile phones. You might use Google Translate to read a hard-to-find Manga comic book or to decipher an obscure recipe for authentic Polish blintzes. Or, like Phillip and Niki Smith in rural Mississippi, you could use it to rescue a Chinese orphan and fall in love at the same time. Google is now doing a record billion translations on any given day, as much text as you'd find in 1 million books for everything from understanding school lunch menus to gathering national security intelligence. It translates in 65 languages, from Afrikaans to Yiddish, and can be used on websites, with speech recognition and as an app on mobile phones even if there is no connection. While the technology is exponentially evolving, Google's translation guru Franz Och's face lit up when he heard that the Smiths and their new daughter, 14-year-old Guan Ya, are settling into their new lives together this month communicating almost exclusively through Google Translate. "All day long I look at algorithms, algorithms and algorithms,'' he said. "It is so rewarding to hear that it is touching lives.'' In the Smiths' case, it changed theirs forever. The Smiths, who already have three children, first spotted Guan Ya less than a year ago when Niki Smith was looking at photos of hard to place orphans online, offering simple prayers for them one by one. With three children of her own, including a 3-year-old daughter adopted from China, she had no intention of adding to her family. Then she saw Guan Ya. "She was just our daughter,'' said Smith of that chance internet encounter nearly a year ago. "There was no doubt about it, from the first time we saw her on the internet.'' There were seemingly impossible obstacles to adopting the girl. Firstly, Guan Ya was months away from turning 14, the age at which Chinese law would make her ineligible for adoption. Not only could Guan Ya not speak English, she didn't speak at all. Guan Ya is deaf. Undeterred, the Smiths scrambled through the paperwork and home studies that are inherent to international adoptions. With support from both Chinese and US authorities, they expedited the bureaucracy by running a flurry of emails and forms through online translators. And one day Niki Smith received an email from her daughter-to-be, an unintelligible jumble of Chinese characters. "Well, I couldn't begin to read this letter,'' said Smith. That is where Google Translate came into play. Smith cut and pasted the letter into the empty rectangle for the programme in her internet browser and Guan Ya's thoughts magically appeared. Thus began their heartwarming virtual conversation of love, family and life. "The computers and software are tools, but I have no doubt that these tools made our bonding so much easier,'' said Niki Smith. Machine translation dates back to the end of World War II, when coders realised that cryptography and deciphering were, in part, math problems. In 1949, influential scientist Warren Weaver laid out a pivotal proposition that paved the way for today's computational linguistics: a theorem could be developed to solve the logical structure of languages. Yet almost 65 years since Weaver wrote that "it seems likely that the problem of translation can be attacked successfully, machine translation is far from perfect" A team of South African researchers at the Matieland Language Centre recently published a study comparing documents translated between Afrikaans and English by professional translators and then by Google Translate. The results weren't even close. For the machine-translated writings, "the quality was still below average, and the texts would require extensive post-editing for their function to be met,'' they found. "The general public thinks you can stick anything into machine translation and it's going to give you everything you need, but of course that's not the case,'' says Jamie Lucero, who heads the translation and interpretation program at Bellevue College in Bellevue, Wash. He said for high quality translations, literature, marketing materials or complex syntax, a human translator is still essential. But machines are helpful, he said, "for people who just want to get a basic message across.'' And he said some machine translators are better than others. While translate.google.com leads the market, Microsoft's www.bing.com/translator offers a similar, free service with 41 languages that users say outperforms Google's when it comes to language used in high tech and software. WorldLingo is emerging as a leading pay-for-use translator with machine and professional translations in more than 140 languages, for people who require accuracy. But any translation is a huge leap for communication, said Jennifer Uman , who co-authored a children's picture book, "Jemmy Button,'' with Italian collaborator Valerio Vidali, published this week. They met and then communicated for almost five years on the project almost exclusively through Google Translate. Initially, she said, the translations were strange. Uman would write, "It looks great,'' and Vidali would read "I hoist much illusion.'' "But over the years Google Translate got better and we got better,'' she said. "We kind of got the hang of how to use it, and it made it possible for us to collaborate.'' Angolan blogger Rosie Alves, who launched a poetic and often racy blog 'Sweet Cliche' a year ago, was confused when she saw that one in four readers were in the US. She blogs from her hometown Luanda in her native Portuguese, and counts 18,959 visits to date. In an email exchange with The Associated Press, she used Google Translate to answer questions: "I think it's very good although the translation is not 100 percent safe," she wrote. "The best part is knowing that there are people interested in what I write, and use the Google translator to understand my texts." Nine thousand miles away at Google's Mountain View headquarters, Och said he's hoping to launch translation services for several Indian languages next, including Malayalam, an official language of Kerala state spoken by millions of people. His team consists of computer scientists and programmers, not linguists. And there's not a single Yiddish-speaking babushka, Basque sheepherder or Vatican-trained Latinist onsite to help. Instead, the ever-improving algorithms detect patterns in texts already translated by humans, so the more "data" that exists in the form of books and documents, the more accurate the translation. When the system gets precise enough, they roll it out to the public. There have been a few early releases, said Och. When Iran sank rapidly into an election crisis in 2009, Google released a Persian translator, noting the programme was "a work in progress." And just days after a catastrophic earthquake hit Haiti in 2010, they launched a buggy Haitian Creole translator that, despite glitches, was widely used by rescuers and relief workers. Last week in a supermarket in Rienzi, Mississippi, a mother and daughter hovered over an iPhone, passing it back and forth as they strolled the aisles, chatting about what they wanted to cook for dinner. It was just a few short weeks since they'd met in person, since Guan Ya had emailed her family-to-be: "No, I have never been shopping. You do not need to bring me anything. I do not know the things I like. I guess I like chocolate. Have you come to China yet? I will not be afraid. I am very happy." When they met, she told her parents that more than anything, she wants to hear. And already doctors in Mississippi are suggesting that hearing aids and possibly a surgically implanted cochlear implant may help. "So many things had to fall in place on both sides that it is amazing to see how God worked to get her home!" said her mom. In those early emails, and on this day, the two typed back and forth the three English words, eight simple letters, and the three Chinese characters, a series of strokes and slashes, that mattered the most: "I love you!"

Friday, April 5, 2013

Facebook home

Facebook has unveiled a new product, Facebook Home, at an event everyone knew would have something to do with phones and apps and operating systems. "We're not building a phone and we're not building an operating system," CEO Mark Zuckerberg said Thursday. "But we're also building something that's a whole lot deeper than just another app."

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Artificial Intelligence in Big Data, Commercial Apps, Mobility and Search

My new Research Published by Mindcommerce. Please look at the report. Artificial Intelligence (AI) facilitates the efficient and effective supply of information to enterprises for optimized business decision-making. Major IT and software vendor companies are investing billions to generate revenue from AI based commercial solutions in various areas including robotics, machine translators, chat bots, voice recognizers, business intelligence systems, mobility control systems, intelligent search, and more. The AI based solution market is valued at US$ 900 million globally by year end 2013 and is expected to grow exponentially over the next five years. Some of the biggest opportunity areas are commercial applications, search in the Big Data environment, and mobility control for generation of actionable business intelligence. The entire mobile/wireless ecosystem is well-positioned for AI via the growing adoption and expanded usage of consumer and enterprise electronics devices including smartphone, tablet, portable devices and wearable technologies. This research evaluates the market for AI solutions within commercial applications, business intelligence, search analytics in mobility environment, and more. This report analyzes the potential for enterprises to improve performance through AI, development of AI solution in cloud environment, and AI for Big Data control. The report also includes vendor analysis and market predictions. Target Audience: • AI companies • Big Data companies • Mobile network operators • Wireless device manufacturers • Wireless application developers • Analytics and data reporting companies • Cloud infrastructure and service providers Companies in Report: APPLE, GOOGLE, MICROSOFT, IBM, HP, INTEL, SAP, FACEBOOK, ORACLE, I2 TECHNOLOGIES, SAS SYSTEM, DELL, AMAZON, HTC, LG, SONY, NOKIA, LENOVO, SAMSUNG, OPTIMIZELY, NETFLEX, MOTOROLLA, TOSHIBA, DATLOGIC, HONEYWELL, TERADATA, TABLEU, QLIKTECH, TETAPP, FUZITSU, CLOUDERA, 10GEN, SPLUNK, ACTIAN, CISCO, ACCENTURE, HITACHI, VMWARE Table of Contents: Table of Contents: 1.0 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 5 2.0 INTRODUCTION 7 3.0 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE 9 3.1.1 DEFINITIONS 9 3.1.2 PHILOSOPHY 10 3.1.3 THE BIRTH OF AI 11 3.1.4 AI TIMELINE 13 3.1.5 AI RESEARCH 14 3.1.6 RECENT AI RESEARCH AND IMPLEMENTATION 15 3.1.7 LOOKING FOR AI 15 3.1.8 FUNDAMENTAL CONCERN OF AI 16 3.1.9 AI TOOLS 18 4.0 BASIC ELEMENTS OF AI 20 4.1 STRONG ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE 20 4.2 WEAK ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE 20 4.3 AI AND NATURE 20 4.4 KNOWLEDGE REPRESENTATION 21 4.5 AI LANGUAGES AND TOOLS 22 4.6 PRINCIPAL AI APPLICATION AREAS 22 4.7 COMPARISON BETWEEN AI AND GENERAL PROGRAMMER 23 4.8 THREE LAWS OF ROBOTICS 23 4.9 TURING TEST 24 5.0 AI FUTURE PREDICTION 26 5.1 AI DOMINANT GLOBAL MARKET AND DOMINANT GLOBAL PLAYERS 27 5.2 WHERE IS AI? 27 5.3 AI BASED APPLICATIONS 28 5.4 AI ULTIMATE FUTURE AND PREDICTION 29 5.5 AI MARKET 30 5.6 THE BUSINESS CASE FOR ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE 30 6.0 BIG DATA CASE FOR ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE 31 6.1 WHAT IS BIG DATA? 31 6.2 BIG DATA MEANS FIVE `V’ 31 6.3 THE APPLICATION OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE 32 6.4 BIG DATA FORECASTS AND MARKET ESTIMATES 35 6.5 BIG DATA MARKET HIGHLIGHTS AND TRENDS 38 7.0 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN MOBILE DEVICES 44 7.1 AI ON YOUR SMARTPHONE IS HELPFUL 44 7.2 AI MOBILITY 45 7.3 MOBILE DATA AS THE ENGINE FOR AI 46 8.0 VENDOR ANALYSIS 48 8.1 IBM 48 8.2 OPTIMIZELY 48 8.3 AMAZON 48 8.4 NETFLIX 48 8.5 APPLE 49 9.0 APPS & FAQ 50 10.0 MOBILITY, SEARCH & BIG DATA 51 11.0 CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 55 List of Graphs Figure 1: General Areas of Artificial Intelligence 10 Figure 2: Artificial Intelligence Breakthroughs 1950-2013 12 Figure 3: Artificial Intelligence Timeline1941-1991 13 Figure 4: The Basic Picture Underlying Russell’s Account of Intelligence/Rationality 16 Figure 5: Fundamental parts of AI 17 Figure 6: Neural Network 18 Figure 7: Elements of AI 21 Figure 8: AI Tools 22 Figure 9: Robot Laws 24 Figure 10: Turing Test system of AI Justify 24 Figure 11: AI Vendor Revenue 2012 26 Figure 12: AI Based Global Dominant Players 27 Figure 13: Where is AI? 27 Figure 14: AI Application Areas 29 Figure 15: AI Implementations Region 29 Figure 16: Big Data Market Overview 2013-2020 35 Figure 17: Big Data Revenue by Segments 2012-2013 39 Figure 18: Big Data Revenue by Type 2012-2013 40 Figure 19: Hadoop Based Company Revenues 2012-2013 41 Figure 20: Big Data Drivers 41 Figure 21: Big Data and Sample Application 42 Figure 22: Big Data and IT Spending 42 Figure 23: AI and Operating System Market Size 45 Figure 24: Mobile and AI sector Investment 2010-2013 46 Figure 25: Mobile Based AI Field Revenue CAGR 25% 46 Figure 26: Recent stored Data-Petabytes 47 Figure 27: AI Global Market Trends 2012-2220 51 Figure 28: BI market will Grow Smoothly 51 Figure 29: Big Data Search India-USA-Singapore-AUS-S. Korea 52 Figure 30: Big Data, AI, BI Search Comparison 52 Figure 31: AI Based New Sectors and Opportunity Smart Device Market Share% 53 Figure 32: AI Based JOB sector-Java, C+HTML,PHP 53 Figure 33: Top Auto Data Capture Suppliers Revenues 2013 54 List of Tables Table 1: Significant AI Researcher 14 Table 2: Four Possible Goals for AI 16 Table 3: AI’s Domain of Study 17 Table 4: Comparison of AI with Conventional Programming. 23 Table 5: AI Implemented Fields 28 Table 6: 2012 Worldwide Big Data Revenue $ 35 Table 7: Most Transformational Technologies 2013-2020 35 Table 8: Sector Sales Analysis 36 Table 9: Top Business Priorities in AI 38 Read more : http://www.techandteen.com/

Monday, April 1, 2013

Hunger strikers, Bangladeshi Revolution

Spokesperson from Shaheed Rumi Squad, Shejuti Nodi, made the remark to the press on Saturday during the protest in front of the National Museum, just beside the Gonojagaran Moncho, Shahbag. In her speech, she said, "The protest has passed 90 hours. After completing 100 hours of protest we will send a letter addressing the Prime Minster." "We will stay at this place until Jamaat-Shibir is banned from politics. We will stick to our demand till the end," Nodi said. "Some of the protesters became ill and were hospitalized. Yet, we are firm in our decision to resume protest until met," she added.