Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Google Launches The Chromecast Streaming Device

Google Launches The Chromecast Streaming Device
It’s powered by Chrome and is designed to bring Google’s browser/OS to the biggest screen in the house.

 Initial orders of Google's brand new Chromecast wireless video-streaming dongle are now gone, though some users are still having luck getting one.


The $35 dongle, which plugs into the HDMI port of televisions and lets users stream content from multiple device platforms, is now listed as "coming soon" with no option to order it from Google's online store. Shortly after sales went up, it was listed to ship between August 2 and August 7, down from the 1-2 days for initial orders.

Google ChromeCast2Subscriptions may be required to use with certain content providers. Chromecast is compatible with WiFi-enabled Android 2.3+ smartphones and tablets; iOS 6.0+ iPhones, iPads, and iPods; Chrome for Mac® and Chrome for Windows®; and Chromebook Pixel. Power cord required (not shown).

The Chromecast is the first expansion of the Chrome operating system out of traditional forms of computing. Up until now, Chrome OS was a desktop operating system, designed for use on a laptop or monitor. Google retooled it for the living room and tapped mobile operating systems to provide the content.

Update: Already, third-party developers are taking advantage of Chromecast's SDK and API. One of the first to hop aboard may surprise you: The Washington Post. The DC-based newspaper and news outlet said in a statement to reporters that it would begin "integrating The Post’s upcoming new video offerings, PostTV, with Google’s Chromecast." The Post said it worked with Google engineers to optimize PostTV for Chromecast, and the channel is due to launch later this month.

It should be noted that The Washington Post is no stranger to experiments with new developer platforms: it was one of the first and only news companies to launch a Facebook "social reader" app back in 2011, along with the rollout of the Facebook Open Graph, though its initial popularity quickly fizzled and the company later pulled it off Facebook entirely, making it into a stand-alone offering. That is to say that: just because it's going to be on Chromecast doesn't guarantee PostTV will find an audience there.
Update 2: Chromecast is now available to order on Amazon.com, with one- and two-day shipping options currently in play. If you're itching to try it out as soon as possible, this is probably your best option. Amazon Prime members will even save money over the Google Play version and its comparatively expensive shipping

Tuesday, 23 July 2013

Create An Iphone | Create iPad Application | Create iPhone Game

Create An Iphone | Create iPad Application | Create iPhone Game
Now a days Iphone and Ipad are most usable devices, Everyone want to create his own application and games for his Iphone and Ipad.

Its really interesting and everyone is looking for how to Create An Iphone Or Ipad Application and game?.

If you wanna create your own Application for Iphone and for Ipad Visit Us for Iphone and Ipad Application Creation!
Technology advances so rapidly these days, it's easy to become jaded, to take for granted the minor miracles we can now accomplish using our phones.

For example, yesterday I met my wife for lunch in an unfamiliar area of town. We were both in the mood for Thai, so I pulled out my iPhone, fired up a certain app, and in seconds found several nearby Thai joints. Ah, but which ones were good and not so good? An abundance of user ratings answered that question.
How amazing is that? And it's just one example of how select apps can make life not just easier, but also better. Below I've rounded up five that I consider both essential and indispensable. Check my picks, then add your own to the list (in the comments, of course).

1. Bump (Android | iOS)
Because I'm not a mover and shaker in the business world (or even the outside world), I rarely had the need to use Bump's cool contact information-swapping capabilities.
But last month, the app got an upgrade that makes it crazy-handy: you can now use Bump to quickly and easily transfer photos to your PC.
How easily? Nothing-to-install-on-your-PC easily. You just fire up the app, choose the photos you want to transfer, open up the Bu.mp Web site in your browser, and then "bump" your phone on the space bar. Presto: done! What an insanely cool and useful time-saver.

2. Cozi (Android | iOS)
About a year ago I named Cozi one of the best apps you've never tried, and today I consider it one of the best apps, period. Honestly, I don't know how my family ever got along without it.
The app provides a shared calendar that's color-coded for each member of your family. Thus, you can quickly see who's going where, and when. (This is especially helpful for parents who need to know, say, what time soccer practice is being held and who's supposed to pick up the kids.)
There's also a shared shopping list, to-do list, and journal. Put them all together and you've got the ultimate family organizer -- one that works across iDevices, Android devices, and PCs. It even supports outside calendars. Amazingly, Cozi is still free.

3. eWallet (Android | iOS)
It's no longer possible to go through life without a password manager. There's so much private data to manage: bank accounts, e-mail passwords, frequent-flyer numbers, shopping site info, serial numbers -- the list goes on and on.
The wrong thing to do is stick all this data in a note or memo, where it's difficult to organize and easy for an phone thief to find. The right thing: install a password manager, one that syncs with your PC so you can access your passwords just as easily there as you can on the go.
eWallet may not be the absolute best password manager, but I've used it for years (dating back to when it was a PalmPilot app!), and it has served me well. It's a bit pricey at $9.99 (not including $19.99 for the Windows desktop companion), but the latest version includes built-in iCloud support, meaning it can automatically back up your password database and share it with any other iDevices you own.
Even if you don't choose eWallet, start using a password manager immediately. You'll be at amazed at how handy it is.

4. Pocket (Android | iOS)
Formerly known as Read It Later, Pocket clips Web content so you can, well, read it later. Though it's useful in any number of scenarios, I find it best for compiling my own mobile magazine.
For example, I enjoy reading Entertainment Weekly's "Mad Men" recaps -- but not while I'm sitting at my PC trying to work. As soon as I see that the latest recap has been posted, I simply click the Pocket bookmark-let in my browser. Now I can access it anytime, anywhere via the Pocket app, where it's beautifully formatted for mobile viewing.
Pocket is even smart enough to handle articles that continue across multiple pages, meaning you get the entire story, not just the first section.
 Yelp finds restaurants (and other businesses) near you and tells you at-a-glance if they're any good.
(Credit: Yelp)

5. Yelp (Android | iOS)
To quote Douglas Adams: "The History of every major Galactic Civilization tends to pass through three distinct and recognizable phases, those of Survival, Inquiry and Sophistication, otherwise known as the How, Why, and Where phases. For instance, the first phase is characterized by the question 'How can we eat?' the second by the question 'Why do we eat?' and the third by the question 'Where shall we have lunch?'"
Oh, how Adams would have loved Yelp. The app answers not only the question "Where shall we have lunch?", but also "Is that restaurant any good?" and "How can I express my displeasure with the waitstaff?"
Yelp finds all manner of nearby businesses, provides user reviews of those businesses, and lets you check in, Foursquare-style, so friends can keep tabs on your dining, shopping, and the like. But mostly it just helps you separate the wheat from the chaff, and for that it's utterly indispensable.
OK, those are my picks. Now let's hear yours. What apps have proven so incredibly handy, they're now an integral part of your daily life? Talk up your faves in the comments.

Latest Update :Royal Baby Born in London | Royal Baby Pictures

Latest Update :Royal Baby Born in London | Royal Baby Pictures
Royal baby PicturesIn London Royal baby boy was born on Monday to Prince William and his wife, the former Kate Middleton, after weeks of anticipation and excitement among fans of the royal family over the arrival of a new heir to the British throne.
Royal baby Pictures2Royal baby Pictures3The child was born at 4:24 p.m. as per London time, about 10½ hours after Catherine, the Duchess of Cambridge, entered St. Mary’s Hospital in central London in the early stages of labor. Palace officials said the infant weighed 8 pounds, 6 ounces.

Congratulatory messages are flooding in from around the world to mark the birth of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's son, the third in line to the throne.
 BBC royal correspondent Nicholas Witchell said the expectation is that they will leave hospital on Tuesday.
The birth will also be marked later with a series of gun salutes.
The duke was at the private Lindo Wing of St Mary's Hospital, west London, for the birth - and stayed with Catherine and the baby overnight

The infant -- no name has been announced -- elbows aside William’s younger brother, Prince Harry, who has now been demoted to fourth in line.

The newborn is Queen Elizabeth II’s third great-grandchild. The queen, who celebrated 60 years on the throne last year, is Britain’s longest-serving monarch after Victoria, who died in 1901.
Following tradition, the public announcement of the House of Windsor’s newest arrival was withheld until the queen and senior members of the royal family were notified. It was then posted on paper on an easel at Buckingham Palace and on social media networks worldwide.
The child’s name could take much longer to be unveiled. The world didn’t learn of William’s name until a week after his birth in 1982. Britain’s bookmakers have been taking bets for months as to the new royal moniker, the most popular choices for a boy being George and James. A very outside shot was given to the name Hashtag.
The birth gives another PR boost to a royal household already enjoying a surge in popularity, fueled in great part by the very modern romance between William and Kate, who were college sweethearts. A few public missteps and naked Harry photos notwithstanding, the dark days that descended on the monarchy after the shocking death of the baby’s grandmother, Princess Diana, in a 1997 car crash are mostly a distant memory.
Retailers are rubbing their hands over estimates that the royal birth could add more than $350 million to Britain’s sluggish economy through sales of memorabilia such as the mugs bearing the slogan "Born to Rule." That could help compensate for lost productivity from the national holidays declared for the queen’s jubilee last year and William and Kate’s wedding in 2011.

Many Britons were expected to raise a glass in honor of the birth, or perhaps just to beat the unusual heat wave gripping the country. The mercury hit the high 80s in London on Monday, baking the hordes of reporters and photographers camping out in front of St. Mary’s Hospital, near Paddington Station.
The duchess was booked into the private hospital’s exclusive Lindo Wing, where delivery of a baby costs more than $7,500. Cameras have been trained on the entrance for weeks in hopes of catching a glimpse of the pregnant duchess being whisked inside. The royal couple avoided the media circus by reportedly entering through a side gate about 6 a.m. Monday.
But now the wait is for the couple to appear on the hospital steps holding their newborn, echoing the moment when William was first presented for public inspection outside the same hospital by Charles and Diana.

Latest News : Anthony Weiner & Carlos Danger (A Chat Story)

Anthony Weiner & Carlos Danger (A Chat Story)
In an extraordinary news conference which was held on Tuesday beside his wife, Huma Abedin, Weiner confirmed an account on the gossip site the Dirty, Anthony Weiner basically knew this day would come: When  his sexual chats with women who were not his wife are released for all in the public to view.
which reported a series of explicit conversations and lewd photos that the former congressman exchanged with a young woman, all apparently under the nom de plume Carlos Danger. Weiner, who resigned from office when his habit of tweeting dirty selfies became public two years ago, has repeatedly stated that other such digital indiscretions could surface, a point he made again Tuesday evening. But as his wife looked on, he also confirmed that some of those erotic messages were sent after his resignation from Congress, and well into his redemption tour, including after a July 2012 People magazine article in which Abedin said that Weiner had spent “every day” since the scandal working to be the “best dad and husband” possible.

Abedin, who is perhaps Hillary Rodham Clinton’s closest aide, appears in Weiner’s ads and on the campaign trail. Nevertheless, she said she was “very nervous” in her first speaking appearance at a news conference, addressing reporters from in front of a cubicle wall. She said that through effort and “a lot of therapy,” the couple had worked out their problems. “Anthony has made some horrible mistakes,” Abedin said.
Mistakes and chances have become unknown variables in the new political math.
Weiner, after all, is operating in a political equation that allowed voters in South Carolina to forgive former governor Mark Sanford for his lusty non-hiking excursions and reward him with a seat in Congress. If anything, Weiner has emerged as a pioneer in post-paramour politics. This month, Eliot Spitzer, the former New York governor who resigned in disgrace after a prostitution scandal, announced that he, too, would again seek office, that of New York City comptroller. That’s the very position Weiner considered before deciding that losing a relatively low-stakes race could prove fatal to his future political ambitions. A respectable loss in a race for mayor, on the other hand, could help restore him to political viability.
And soon after entering the race, he didn’t seem to be losing at all. On the campaign trail in June, Weiner paused during an interview in front of a train station in the Forest Hills neighborhood of Queens, remarked that the station had been dedicated by Teddy Roosevelt, accepted a shout of “Good luck” and rejected the notion that he was running for mayor because it was a no-lose situation.
“Look,” said Weiner, wearing an American-flag tie. “I don’t think anyone goes through this, as hard as it is, and as much as you subject yourself to, if you don’t want the job. Or if you don’t think you are going to win. I just don’t believe that that happens. It’s certainly not happening in this case.”
Moments later, he talked about how his wife had been a “enormous asset” in the race thus far. On Tuesday evening, as even the prospect of a respectable defeat was endangered by Carlos Danger, Weiner had to lean on her more than either would have wanted but probably not more than either expected. “I love him,” Abedin said. “I have forgiven him, and as we have said from the beginning, we are moving forward.”
The opponents Weiner has all but eclipsed since entering the mayoral race were less willing to move on. Thus far reluctant to traffic in his sex scandal, on Tuesday they seized on the new exchanges as a chance to put the spotlight squarely on Weiner’s weakness. One said “enough is enough”; another talked about “pornographic selfies.”

Sunday, 21 July 2013

Download Free Updated Avast | Free Avast Antivirus

Download Free Updated Avast | Best Free Avast Antivirus

avast! Free Antivirus represents the best free antivirus protection currently available on the market. This edition is FREE OF CHARGE for non-commercial & home use. Its features include:

  • Anti-spyware built-in
  • Web Shield
  • Anti-rootkit built-in
  • Automatic updates
  • Strong self-protection
  • Virus Chest
  • Antivirus kernel
  • System integration
  • Simple User Interface
  • Integrated Virus Cleaner
  • Resident protection
  • Support for 64-bit Windows
  • P2P and IM Shields
  • Internationalization
  • Network Shield 

Title:Avast! Free Antivirus 8.0.1489
Filename:avast_free_antivirus_setup.exe
File size:112.04MB (117,478,104 bytes)
Requirements:Windows 2000 / XP / Vista / Windows7 / XP64 / Vista64 / Windows7 64 / Windows8 / Windows8 64
Languages:Multiple languages
License:Non-Commercial Freeware
Date added:May 10, 2013
Author:Avast Software