Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Reservation

Reservation should be for all job fields.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Google's new releases

At day 2 of its I/O developer conference, Google announced a new version of Android (2.2 “FroYo”) and an Android-powered living room solution called Google TV. First let’s take a look at FroYo.

Android 2.2 (development kit out now, downloads and over the air updates coming “soon”) should have really been called version 3 because of all the neat features it contains. There’s something here for users and developers alike.

Android 2.2 user features

  • Flash 10.1, which opens up a whole world of web-based games and rich media not visible on other mobile platforms like iPhone.
  • Startling increases in performance, both of native Android applications and web applications. Google claims that Android 2.2 has the fastest mobile web browser, and backed up the claim with side-by-side comparisons of the previous version of Android and the Apple iPad.
  • Seamless installation of apps on SD cards. The original G1 had about 70MB of space available for all apps. With a big SD card you can have 16GB or 32GB. Actually the space is unlimited since SD cards are removable.
  • Enterprise features including pin numbers and remote wipe so your IT group will finally let you connect to your mail, calendar, and global address book on your Android phone.
  • Tethering and mobile hotspot. Now WiFi devices (netbooks, iPads, game systems) in the vicinity of your phone can connect to the Internet using your phone’s data plan.
  • Easier ways to keep your Android apps up to date. Like on the iPhone, you can press a button to take all updates at once. Or, you can tell particular apps that you trust to keep themselves updated without bothering you.

Some of these are catch-up features that other phones like the iPhone have had for a while, like Exchange pin numbers and remote wipe. But others leapfrog anything else currently available. Ain’t competition grand?

Android 2.2 developer features

I could go on and on about the new features for developers but here are the highlights:

  • Cloud Push API. Instead of polling for events in the background, Android apps can now register receivers for remote messages that come from the cloud. Other software, which might be running on other Android machines or might be on desktops or servers, send messages to the cloud for them to be delivered to your phone. For example, if you’re watching a video on your laptop and have the right software, you can press a button to send the video to your Android device where it will instantly start playing there too. Map coordinates, phone numbers, text messages, … the possibilities are endless.
  • Application Data Backup API. Android already remembers what apps you have bought and installed on your device through your Google cloud account. Now it can remember the data that goes along with those apps too. For example if you upgrade your phone your todo list or favorite recipies or browser bookmarks or exercise history can be migrated easily.
  • Flash AIR support. Now developers can take stand-alone AIR programs and install and run them on Android. I should mention this is just a pre-release at this point, but when it’s finally production, AIR programs should look and act just like native Android apps to the user.
  • Developers have the freedom to release apps with lots of audio and graphics that previously were not practical on Andrdoid.

Google TV

Do you recall the Web TV effort from about 10 years ago? It was supposed to let your TV act as a gateway to the Internet. Of course, 10 years ago we were talking dial-up speeds. No YouTube. No HTML5. No Flickr, or FaceBook or Twitter, or Chatroulette. And Web TV was completely closed. There was no ecosystem, and no open source. It’s amazing how much has changed since then, and Google is going to try again.

Google TV is an Android-based platform for merging web and TV. You take your regular HDTV with HDMI in, and add an inexpensive (~$200-$400) dedicated solid state Atom-based computer, plus a remote control that has a keyboard. Or you get a new TV that has the computer part built-in. You use the wireless broadband connection that you probably already have set up in your house. Then you turn this thing on and it looks like, well, regular TV. Ok, now what?

Press a button and a search bar appears. Type in the name of a show, and see options for where it is playing now or in the future on the TV, plus links to web-based resources for the show. For example, type in “House” and you can see Fox is currently running a new episode, there’s a re-run at 10pm you can record if you have a DVR, and a bunch of old episodes are available on Hulu and on Amazon.com for free or for purchase. And you might find that somebody did a spoof episode on YouTube, and there’s a fan club meeting around the corner, and, … you get the idea.

Don’t feel like a TV show? No problem, you can go to a web site to check up on news or sports, check your email, send a twitter update, and so forth. Every web site, including Flash based ones or sites with lots of Ajax and HTML5 effects, are available on the big screen. Google TV uses the full Chrome browser, so pretty much anything Chrome can do, Google TV can do.

And because it’s based on Android, you can browse the Android market and download and play your favorite games and other apps directly from your TV as well. Your TV probably doesn’t have a touch screen, but you can use the remote control that comes with the box to interact with the apps. Or you can run a remote control program on your Android phone and use that as a control for your big screen. Multiple phones can act as a remote for a single Google TV box. And did I mention that because of the Atom processor and graphics chip, Android apps are going to run faster on your TV than they do on any current ARM-based portable device?

Google has lined up support from Sony, Logitech, and Intel for the Google TV initiative. That’s a start, but not nearly enough for this thing to take off. There is a lot of skepticism that anyone can pull this off, and many will wait and see before committing. It may take a while (read: years), but this one has a lot of potential. After all there are over 4 billion TV watchers out there - an audience that dwarfs even the mobile phone market. The first hardware will be on sale in time for this year’s holiday season.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Government contributions in it

hello sir,
India and other country government contributions in it field such that area search to petroleum,
banking ,taxation,elector voting etc Banking field in paper is reducing so recruitment by fill up
form online and other working process online like that e-banking, Government is start new
police in India e-meter ,E-meter by every government billing submit and reservation by air,
bus all over India ,If any state in reservation seat of bus,air travel than easily identified this
seat is reserve, Every financial year in collection text by public ,Our government with help IT
to search petroleum in baadmar (mgalam), IT develop to decreasing the paper work and this
work do not harm nature and save nature so government is covered every field in this paper
work.

Government Contribution in IT

hi all

i think that government contribution is very important at every field. Without the government
no one field has been established successfully.

Today rural development is essential for the development of Indian economy. Government of India
realized the role of the Rural development and the contribution of I.T. in the development of Rural Markets. A large number of projects are introduced in the rural area with many upcoming projects in pipeline; which are likely to be introduced by the Government in the short span of time.

Rural Literacy is ranked at the topmost position of priority.

Government has already provided Info-kiosks (a rural version of cyber cafe) which provide basic communication facilities like internet connection and telecommunication services.

Government has set up various centers which are spreading the I.T. web in the rural area through which people can be benefited and exploit the resources available efficiently.

Goverment contribution to IT

Hey All,

Government has given their great contribution in IT sector. Government has their tie-ups with overseas companies so that they can start their industries in India. There are so many companies who need subsidies, place to start their work, core money etc. Government has provide so many loan facilities to the people using which they can start their business. Gov. also take initiative to promote the s/w and h/w. Since gov. is known for their reliability dats why people can trust over the products used by the gov. offices..

If gov has good relation with the other countries den growth chances will increase also because other countries will think over to start their business in India.
Gov. provide authorities and policies which wud help companies to setup..

Government Contribution to IT

Government is contributing to IT and they are promoting it. Government included IT in the syllabus at school level. Government has already started courses and degrees related to IT. In which students can learn more preciously.

Government is also reducing the taxes, duties on the hardware, due to this the cost of hardware is reducing and easily available to the end users. Government is also giving the benefits to foreign IT company, therefore company can easily open their offices and launch their products in India.

6 SEO Tips and Tricks

I have seen people think about SEO(Search Engine Optimization) when they are done with the website. Here, I’d like to share with all of you some of the good practices which one should keep in mind before building a website. Following the below items will definitely make a difference to your site’s performance in major search engines :

1. Content: Add good and descriptive content to your website. Not only good content but unique content is important too. You should write content that has information different than what is provided by other websites or web pages. Also you should add content on regular basis, this increases the ranking of the website. If you are using images to explain something in your website, don't forgot to 'alt' sub-element of 'image' element. In the 'alt' sub-element you can explain the content of your image.

2. Title: Next very important aspect of SEO is the title tag, that displays the text in the title bar of the browser window. This is highly rated by search engines as being the indicative of the page's content.

3. Meta tags: These are used to define keywords for search engine to use in their indexing. We can use two meta tags which can be used to describe the content of your website. They are "description" and "keywords". Fo this you can take a look at any popular site and can know how to use these tags to describe your content.

4. URL: Ideally the keyword or the search term should be the part of the URL. Url describes which page of you site is being accessed. Prefer using hyphen(-) instead of underscore ( _ ) in the URL. Following example will tell you how the search engine will interpret the words in each of the URLs:
kshipra-pandey.html would be interpreted as kshipra pandey.html
kshipra_pandey.html would be interpreted as kshiprapandey.html

Always prefer avoiding file extensions in URLs entirely(eg: .php , .aspx, .jsp, etc) as it exposes the implementation part of the site into the URL . So prefer to RESTful URLs. Using RESTful URLs will let you pass parameters without adding parameters in the URL. For example: normal URL >> www.website.com?uid=xxxxx&email=xxxxx@xxx.xxx and rest URL would be "www.website.com/xxxxx/xxxxx@xxx.xxx" and your URL handler component would actually grab uid & email and pass them to your controller.

5. Site maps: In the early days of the web, Sitemaps were a page on your site that helps the visitor to understand where are all the pages, it was usually in the form of graphical flow chart. Now a new method is being used i.e. submiting a Sitemap XML file to the search engines which helps search engines in understanding how to index all the pages and how to crawl, including the frequency that they change. You don’t want to have to do this manually as every time a new page is added it has to be updated automatically, so go for the automated tools that will update it and submit the update.

Now I will tell you after creating site map, what else you need to do:

Whenever search bot comes to your website, it first looks at the robots text file at the root of your website. This file tells robots where your site map XML is and which pages/directories it doesn't need to crawl. You can create a robots.txt file using Google webmasters tools.

So here I summarise the steps after you have created site map.

1) update your robots.txt file. Add this line to your robots.txt: Site map: http://www.example.com/sitemap.xml

2) Submit your site map to the popular search engines. You can submit your site map to Google, yahoo and Bing.
More info at Sitemap.org .

6. Inbound Links: You need to encourage as many inbound links to your site as possible since they are factored into most search engine’s ranking algorithms as essentially counting as votes for the autoritativeness of your site. You really need to focus on getting other sites to link to your landing pages with the right link text.

All these steps should make a considerable difference in the performance of your search engine results. Keep checking your website's performance in Google webmasters tools.