Wednesday, October 05, 2005

[tech4all] 30gigs invitation required

Can anyone send me an invitation for 30gigs ?
Thanks in advance
Ram


From: tech4all@yahoogroups.com [mailto:tech4all@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Fons van Steen
Sent: Tuesday, October 04, 2005 12:42 PM
To: tech4all@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [tech4all]

30GIGS.COM

 

Does anybody has invitations for obtaining an account with this exciting new email services

 

Thank you

DISCLAIMER:
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Re: [tech4all] Microcoding - A wonder

This is weird. I understand how it does everything except it keeps playing on my Secondary Screen which is disabled.

On 9/28/05, Surendiran.B < surendiran@yahoo.com> wrote:

Note: forwarded message attached.


B.Surendiran ,
If u have time Visit
Website:
http://suri.tk/
http://www.suri.0catch.com/



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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Sreedhar, Vl \(V.\)" <vsreedha@ford.com>
To: 
Date: Wed, 28 Sep 2005 19:04:57 +0800
Subject: Microcoding - A wonder
 

 

Amazing thing………


Please save the attachment '1.txt' in any directory.
Open Command Prompt. CD to the above dir.

Type debug<1.txt

Check what is happening......Keep wondering!

 
 

Thanks & regards, 
 sreedhar 






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Tuesday, October 04, 2005

[tech4all]

30GIGS.COM

 

Does anybody has invitations for obtaining an account with this exciting new email services

 

Thank you



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[tech4all] Metro- The PDF Killer [Microsoft vs Adobe]

Microsoft gunning for Adobe's PDF format?

By Ina Fried, CNET News.com
Published on
ZDNet News: May 3, 2005, 4:00 AM PT

When Bill Gates showed off the new Metro document format in Longhorn at a hardware conference last week, some analysts were quick to call it a PDF killer.

Indeed, there's plenty of overlap between Adobe's popular Portable Document Format and what Microsoft is planning to include in the next version of Windows. Metro is designed to do things PDF already does, namely to allow for the creation of files that can be printed, viewed or archived without needing the program that created them.

It's that omnipresence, analysts say, that Microsoft covets, laying the groundwork for a significant battle between the two formats.

"I'm sure this is a long-standing point of chagrin for Microsoft," said Jupiter Research analyst Michael Gartenberg. "Microsoft understands the power of controlling a document format. You wield quite a bit of power with that."

However the two companies have sought to downplay the competition.

"There is a crossover at the very basic scenario," Gregg Brown, lead program manager for Microsoft's digital documents unit, said following a presentation at Microsoft's annual Windows Hardware Engineering Conference (WinHEC) in Seattle last week. Brown said that if what someone wants to do is create a document and send it to someone else for viewing, both Metro and PDF offer similar abilities. But, he said, "PDF does an enormous amount more than that. We are focused just on that scenario."

With Metro, Microsoft basically wanted to create a file format that would handle two specific tasks. First, the software giant wanted a way to save files from within any Windows program that could then be opened, viewed and shared without needing the specific program that created it. Second, Microsoft wanted to use the same method for sending data to a printer that it uses for displaying data on screen. So Metro uses the same method for describing and understanding graphics and text that Longhorn's Avalon graphics engine uses.

But that is where Metro's ambitions end, Brown said, pointing out that PDF is useful for entirely different kinds of documents, such as multimedia files or electronic forms.

Adobe's Pam Deziel, director of product marketing for the company's Acrobat product line, agreed that PDF offered capabilities far beyond Metro's, describing the Microsoft format as a way to update the current Windows print architecture, which has become "a little long in the tooth."

But Gartenberg said Microsoft faces challenges even if it seeks only to supplant PDF as a way to view, share and print basic documents.

"The real question is why would someone do that as opposed to using PDF?" Gartenberg said.

The battle is an interesting one. Gartenberg noted that whenever Microsoft builds something into the operating system, "It's got a home-court advantage." However, PDF has been on the market for years,

with software not only on Windows and Mac computers but also available for Linux, handhelds and smart phones. Metro is slated to be a part of Longhorn, the next version of Windows, which is scheduled to ship in the second half of next year.

"Once again we are talking about something that Microsoft is planning to do versus something that is existing and shipping in the market and currently in its seventh revision," Gartenberg said. "It's a fairly daunting task for them."

This is not the first time Adobe and PDF have been in Microsoft's crosshairs. When Microsoft originally announced its Xdocs electronic form plans in 2002, Xdocs was seen as a threat to Adobe and PDF. Indeed, the InfoPath feature that was eventually added to Office is a competitor to Adobe's server-based document management tools, known as LiveCycle.

Whereas Microsoft is choosing to take PDF head-on, Apple Computer took a different approach when it created Mac OS X's print format. Apple uses PDF as its native printing format and also as an option for saving any Mac OS X file. Though it uses PDF, Apple did its own implementation of the format, using the PDF details Adobe has published.

In fact, one of the things that may help Adobe is that the company is not alone in supporting PDF. Because it published the basic details of the format, it finds itself competing against other PDF creation and management products. On Monday, for example, Arts PDF announced its latest PDF product, challenging Acrobat directly with Nitro PDF, a $99 product for authoring PDF files.

Deziel said the company was not caught off guard by last week's announcements from Microsoft. "We've had conversations around Longhorn going on for a fair amount of time," she said. "We were familiar with the basics of what they talked about at WinHEC last week."

Deziel said Adobe is not threatened by Microsoft's choice to create Metro. Over time, Adobe said, it expects that operating system makers will move into areas once handled by third-party software. There is room for both technologies, she said.

"We expect that the Adobe technology that is so prevalent in professional print production work flows...will continue to deliver value to customers but that as Microsoft enhances the platform that there will be people that take advantage of that technology as well," Deziel said.

Beyond just adding the features necessary to make Metro a reality, Gartenberg said Microsoft will also have to line up key partners, including printer makers that will write Metro-compatible drivers, and third-party software makers--both those that will build Metro support into Windows programs and those who will allow Metro files to be read and managed on non-Windows PCs and other devices.

Microsoft has said it plans to make the technology available in a royalty-free license and last week made an initial pitch to partners, saying there are opportunities to extend Metro beyond what will be done in the operating system.

In a presentation on Metro, Brown talked about some of the benefits of the Metro system, including efforts to create files that take up less space than other fixed-format document files. To do that, Metro looks for repeated data. For example, if a photo is used as a background in 20 PowerPoint slides, Metro includes only one copy. Also, the system saves only those font characters that are used.

That offers only a modest advantage in Western alphabets but can be a big deal with character-based languages, such as Chinese and Japanese.

 

Source:  http://news.zdnet.com/2100-3513_22-5692963.html?tag=nl


 



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Sunday, October 02, 2005

[tech4all] Papers, Projects, Resources...a single site

http://jminds.hollosite.com/

And, This site is maintained by a student Maheswaran
,who is currently doing Final yr BE CSE at Sona
College of Technology.

-Surendiran

B.Surendiran,
If u have time Visit
Website:
http://suri.tk/
http://www.suri.0catch.com/


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[tech4all] Need help about S7 300 PLC

Hi all
 is any 1 there in PLC field Following is my problem
 
I need to establish data xfer for following n/w config. plz tell me xact hardware & software config. procedures in STEP7

Three S7-300 stations each having S7 315-2dp.
1 station have IM153-2 for Dp io's.Let us say ST1 for this station & other as ST2 n ST3 rep

I've cinfigured ST1 as master & ST2 n St3 as Inteli. slaves
I need to access some DB area of ST2 & ST3 in ST1.Can i use FB14/15 "GET" "PUT" .If yes then wat will b the value in ID pin of FB14/15

Related documention or web-link will b gr8 help

Thank you
Anmol
 


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Re: [tech4all] Google ripped Gmail from Chinese site?

Do you think that it could be Google's Gmail but in china. Like Yahoo have done all over the world?
bharath <bharath_m_7@yahoo.co.in> wrote:
 
Gmail seems to be copied from www.gmail.cn (belongs to ISM)
www.gmail.cn is not online currently.
Check out its home page at web archive here:
Seems familiar with Google's Gmail? Read on... 
 
bharath
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     vs     
 
Gmail's long-lost Chinese cousin?
 ISM claims its Gmail service preceded Google's

By Sumner Lemon, IDG News Service
September 26, 2005
 

The multicolored letters look familiar. It's Gmail, but there's something different here.

 

you use Google's (Profile, Products, Articles) Gmail free Internet e-mail service, you can be forgiven for doing a double take when you visit the ISM Gmail Web site at http://www.gmail.cn. After all, the two Web sites share more than a passing resemblance to each other.

 

ISM Gmail is a free Web-based e-mail service offered by Beijing ISM Internet Technology Development Co., a small Chinese e-mail provider and domain registrar based in western Beijing.

 

Like Google's own free Web e-mail service, the ISM Gmail service employs a logo comprised of blue, yellow, red, and green letters. And the sign-in pages of the two sites display a shared fondness for minimalist design; although Google prefers blue bars along the top and bottom of the page, while the bars on ISM's site are green.

 

At first glance, it's easy to assume that the Chinese site is just a knock-off of the better-known Google e-mail service. There's just one problem: ISM claims that its Gmail service was here first. And there's evidence to back up that claim.

 

For example, ISM registered the gmail.cn domain name on Aug. 1, 2003, according to whois information provided by the China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC), which oversees the .cn top-level domain. That registration date predates Google's April 1, 2004, announcement of its Gmail service by eight months.

 

Moreover, an ISM manager who identified herself using only her surname, Wang, claimed the company developed the multicolored ISM Gmail logo in 2003, long before Google unveiled its own colorful Gmail logo. "We didn't know their logo would look like ours," she said in a telephone interview.

That claim could not immediately be verified.

 

According to Wang, Google approached ISM about its use of the gmail.cn domain and the Gmail name in August 2004, shortly after Google launched its own Gmail service in the U.S. Those talks didn't go anywhere, and the two companies are no longer in contact, she said.

For its part. Google would only say that it's looking into the matter. "We are aware of this and are investigating," wrote Debbie Frost, a company spokeswoman, in an e-mail.

 

Any resemblance between the two Gmails is purely skin-deep. Once you get under the hood, things look quite different. For example, the user interface employed with ISM Gmail is nothing like that used by Google's Gmail: there are no conversation threads, no labels and no search function. There's less space too. Instead of the more than 1GB of storage space that Google makes available to its Gmail users, ISM offers each user 300KB of storage.

 

ISM doesn't offer ads tailored to the content of e-mail. Instead, the only advertisements on the ISM Gmail site are a banner ad for ISM's own domain-name registration service and a rectangular ad that says, "In association with Amazon.com (Profile, Products, Articles)." But that's just for show.

"We don't have a relationship them. It's just a link," Wang said.

 

Today, ISM Gmail -- which stands for Global Mail -- has more than 300,000 users, Wang said. But getting the service up and running wasn't cheap, she said, claiming that ISM spent 20 million renminbi ($2.5 million) developing the technology for the service.

 

The ISM Gmail service is meant to be multilingual and currently supports two languages: English and the simplified version of Chinese. In the future, ISM plans to expand the number of supported languages to more than 50, including traditional Chinese, Japanese, and Korean, Wang said.

For now, when users sends an e-mail, they can choose between using an English e-mail address (username@gmail.cn) or an e-mail address that uses a username and domain name written in Chinese characters.

 

In a country like China, where most people can't read or understand the alphabet, having e-mail addresses and URLs (uniform resource locators) written in the local language has long been viewed by some observers as a crucial step toward making Internet access widely accessible.

 

While that may be true, offering a bilingual e-mail service hasn't helped ISM turn a profit with Gmail. The company had originally planned to charge users for its e-mail service but that wasn't possible after Google began offering its own service for free, Wang said. Once that happened, users felt that ISM should also offer its Gmail service for, she said.

 

Source:

http://www.infoworld.com/article/05/09/26/HNgmailcousin_1.html?source=NLC-TB2005-09-26



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