Showing posts with label mobile. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mobile. Show all posts

Monday, 29 July 2013

11 Mobile Etiquette You Must Know

Cellphones are ubiquitous and research shows that although most users think they have good mobile manners, many people report being irritated or annoyed by the use of the phones in public places.

Clearly there's a lack of understanding of what is and isn't acceptable in terms of cellphone etiquette. Following is a list of do's and don'ts: 



1>Do respect those who are with you. When you're engaged face-to-face with others, either in a meeting or     a conversation, give them your complete and undivided attention. Avoid texting or taking calls. If a call is        important, apologize and ask permission before accepting it.

2>Don't yell. The average person talks three times louder on a cellphone than they do in a face-to-face             conversation. Always be mindful of your volume.

3>Do be a good dining companion. No one wants to be a captive audience to a third-party cellphone               conversation, or to sit in silence while their dining companion texts with someone. Always silence and             store your phone before being seated. Never put your cellphone on the table.

4>Don't ignore universal quiet zones such as the theater, church, the library, your daughter's dance recital           and funerals.

5>Do let voicemail do its job. When you're in the company of others, let voicemail handle non-urgent calls. 


6>Don't make wait staff wait. Whether it's your turn in line or time to order at the table, always make                  yourself available to the server. Making servers and other patrons wait for you to finish a personal phone      call is never acceptable. If the call is important, step away from the table or get out of line.

7>Don't text and drive. There is no message that is so important.

8>Do keep arguments under wraps. Nobody can hear the person on the other end. All they are aware of is        a one-sided screaming match a few feet away.

9>Don't forget to filter your language. A rule of thumb: If you wouldn't walk through a busy public place with      a particular word or comment printed on your T-shirt, don't use it in cellphone conversations.

10>Do respect the personal space of others. When you must use your phone in public, try to keep at least           10 feet (three meters) between you and others.

11>Do exercise good international calling behavior. The rules of cellphone etiquette vary from country to country.

Good cellphone etiquette is similar to common courtesy. Conversations and text exchanges have a tendency to distract people from what's happening in front of them. Cellphone users should be thoughtful, courteous and respect the people around them.

Wednesday, 24 July 2013

6 YouTube Tricks You Probably Don’t Know


              This post intends to deliver tricks that will add more dimension to your experience on the YouTube platform, and allow you to enjoy some of the little-known shortcuts, hacks and special features you can use on Youtube.

1. Specific Start Time

         If you want to share just a certain portion of a video with a user, you’ll notice that there is no official option to do this. Normally you have to inform others which minute they can pull to start from. Bet you didn’t know that there is a handy hack to send a link to a user or embed a certain portion of the YouTube video in your website. Skip the fluff and get to the good stuff.

Here is how it works. Consider the following Youtube Video URL:
                        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r00ikilDxW4

After the URL link add #t=01m08s to set the starting point of the video at 1 minute and 8 seconds.

2. Auto Video Replay

            There are certain times when you get obsessed with a Youtube video, whether it’s a really catchy song or a funny video. Isn’t it annoying to always have to hit replay everytime you near the end? Why not activate the looping feature?

The what now? Let’s use the same YouTube video. Just replace youtube with the text infinitelooper in the URL and hit enter.


        It will redirect you to another YouTube third-party platform where you are also provided with the option of looping selected portions of the video.


3. Auto High-Definition Video Play

        Sometimes when you play a YouTube video the video quality has been set on default for you, usually at a lower quality video resolution. To prevent this from happening you can force the system to permanently play videos in an HD format.

        Grab the extension called Magic Actions for Youtube available only for Google Chrome and Firefox. Enable the option Auto HD in the extension and select the video resolution you would like to be played automatically. You can also set the mouse wheel to scroll up (and down) the volume of the video.


4. Accurate Keyword Searching

        There are a billion videos on Youtube so trying to find that specific Youtube video you want to watch is an adventure by itself. You might find yourself crawling through dozens of pages hoping to land the video you actually want to watch.

The solution for this time-consuming exercise is to add allintitle: before the keywords you are search for. What it does is basically provide you with only videos that include the chosen keywords
.


5. Omit Keywords

          You can opt for specific keywords to be in the search, or out of it. Let’s say you are searching for a tutorial about ‘register domain.’ Using the most conventional search form you will find tons of videos about how to register domain using Godaddy.

If you want to find other options that are not GoDaddy, you can always exclude the keyword from your search results i.e. ‘keyword -excluded keyword.’

Here is how it should look like.


6. Watching Videos with a Slow Internet Speed

           Youtube has released a robust feature called the ‘Feather Beta’. This feature is dedicated to users who want to run videos on a very slow internet connection. The system basically cuts down some bytes that limit the speed of video streaming in your browser.

To opt-in the feature you simply go to http://www.youtube.com/feather_beta and join the beta feature.



Tuesday, 23 July 2013

New iPhone 5S photos leak appear

New iPhone 5S photos appear, specs hint at 12 MP camera, higher CPU clock, quad-core GPU

           
          Parts for the iPhone 5S have leaked quite a few times before, and now we have another batch of what seems to be chassis waiting to be stuffed with internal silicon.

          The more interesting part here are the claimed specs accompanying them, which say that we'll get a 4" 2272x1280 pixels IGZO display accounting to whooping 652 pixels per inch<ppi>, meaning high brightness at frugal battery consumption, the same A6 SoC like in the iPhone5, but clocked higher, and a quad-core PowerVR SGX544MP4 GPU, instead of the tri-core unit we have now.
         

          The source also confirms 2 GB of RAM, NFC at last and the elusive fingerprint scanner we've been hearing about for a while, linked to mobile payment system of sorts, though we have to see the two gigs of RAM listed officially to believe them. As for the camera, it gets downgraded a bit in terms of resolution from the last leaks, claimed to be 12 MP instead of 13 MP now, but a dual LED flash system is confirmed. 

Monday, 22 July 2013

Actual Mobile Paying Device Through Credit Card

For those who fear Virtual Money Transfer and The Under Developing Countries GOOD NEWS !!!

iZette

           Enter iZettle, a Stockholm, Sweden-based company which wants to solve this problem by introducing a credit card reader which does work with smart cards.

           Instead of swiping a card, this little device lets you insert them into iZettle to read the chip contents. In that sense iZettle is not plugged on the headphone jack but on the Dock connector, making the device bigger than Square but I guess something’s gotta give.
         
          Aside from the regular card processing, users will also be able to share their spending with friends on Facebook and Twitter a la Blippy. The short iZettle promo video follows.



Same Kind of Thinking from Ezetap an Indian Company




Bangalore-based Ezetap has launched a new mobile point-of-sale device that will cost a lot less than similar products in the market, while meeting global security standards and RBI guidelines.

Rapid growth in India's online retail and financial service sectors is leading to a demand for secure point-of-sale devices, as companies move towards non-cash based transactions. Overall, credit and debit card based transactions in India are expected to touch 862 million this year, a growth of 33% over last year, according to a report by Atos Worldline India.

"India is the toughest market, very competitive and cost sensitive," said Ezetap co-founder Abhijit Bose, who expects to sell one million devices in the next two years. The Ezetap device, will be priced at around Rs 2,900, consists of a lightweight card reader that can be plugged into any smart device or feature phone used by a retailer. Customers need to only swipe their cards on the mobile to complete the transaction.

"Most people prefer cash on delivery. And it became difficult, when they did not have exact cash at the time of delivery," said Abhinay Choudhari, co-founder of online grocery store BigBasket.com, which has about 1.5 lakh customers. Experts said with the government promoting digital payments, the mobile point of sale market is expected to soar. "Millions of mom-and-pop businesses, or kirana shops, cannot afford expensive integrated point-of-sale solutions," said Uttam Nayak, group country manager for India at Visa.

There are a number of companies that offer mobile payment solutions, including Mswipe, Prizm Payments and Synergistic Financial Networks. "It is a very competitive space," said Nayak who expects the insurance and ecommerce industry to be the biggest adopters of mobile point of sale solutions.

Ezetap has bagged banking customers, such as Citibank and Yes Bank, as well as those in the ecommerce, telecom, insurance and hospitality sectors. The company has launched operations in Kenya and expects to enter the South-East Asian markets in the next three months.

SIM Card flaw makes millions of mobile vulnerable to hacking

sim cards
An eighth of all SIM cards used around the world could be at risk of fraud, theft, or being bugged, a German security expert has claimed.

It has been revealed that the encryption that is used by some mobile SIM cards can be a direct source for hackers in remotely controlling their host handsets. According to The New York Times report, this flaw is directly linked to cards using DES (Data Encryption Standard).

Karsten Nohl, the founder of Germany’s Security Research Labs, who has supplied some hacking achievements previously, brought in details of the attack to both the New York Times and Forbes.

angry phone women
According to Nohl, two targeted SMS texts could allow a hacker to send premium text messages, re-direct and record calls and even undertake payment system fraud of NFC-equipped devices.
Nohl said: “We can remotely install software on a handset that operates completely independently from your phone. We can spy on you. We know your encryption keys for calls. We can read your SMS’s. More than just spying, we can steal data from the SIM card, your mobile identity, and charge to your account.” Nohl also said that he can complete such operation in about two minutes, using the personal computer.

Karsten Nohl
Karsten Nohl
Nohl is preparing to present his findings to the annual Black Hat security conference coming up on July 31 in Las Vegas.He estimated that the flaw might affect as many as 750 million mobile phones.

Verizon and AT&T said they knew of Nohl’s research, but said their SIM profiles were not vulnerable to the flaw. AT&T added that it had used SIMs with triple Data Encryption Standards (3DES) for almost a decade; Verizon did not specify why its SIMs were not vulnerable.


“Give me any phone number and there is some chance I will, a few minutes later, be able to remotely control this SIM card and even make a copy of it,” Nohl says.

Nohl has already advised GSM Association and other chip makers to tighten up technology to block the kind of messages he had sent in the process. He also asked operators to comply with the newer standards of encryption. Nohl also warned consumers using SIM cards more than three years old to get new cards from their carriers.