Friday, October 28, 2005
Microsoft's Mid-Market Plans
Microsoft is making a big strategic shift in its 5- year-old business-applications division toward a simple but so-far elusive idea: Different kinds of workers use computers differently, and software should be designed for an employee's role in the company. After two years of research, Microsoft managers have identified more than 50 everyday job roles at midsize companies they believe will benefit from desktop environments created just for them--everyone from a president or CFO to account managers in a sales department to workers on a manufacturing floor. Receptionists, too, get a unique data view on their PCs. Instead of dozens of screens and menus, workers will get Web pages intended to show only the information they're most likely to care about, often at a glance. Companies will be able to customize those entry points into Microsoft's applications, too. Microsoft will deliver the first two dozen of these role-based apps later this year as part of an upgrade to its Great Plains ERP suite. Next year, it plans to roll out 25 more, as upgrades to its Axapta and Navision business-app suites.
Monday, October 24, 2005
What's an iPod? The lowdown
What is an iPod?
Cassettes hold 10-12 songs. Compact discs hold 16-20 songs. An iPod, depending on its memory capacity, holds at least 500 songs! Get the drift?
The iPod refers to a class of portable digital audio players designed and marketed by Apple Computers. It stores and plays music, but without the aid of cassettes or discs.
You can attach a set of headphones to your iPod and listen to music like you would listen to your Discman or Walkman. And, like your computer, this device also stores music and information.
The amount of music you store in an iPod is directly related to the memory of its hard drive or flash drive and can vary according to the model. But more on that later.
Let's get back to our definition of an iPod. In a nutshell, it's a music player that is big enough to hold your music and small enough to slip into your shirt pocket or even into a chewing gum packet!
Features
iPods are more than just music players. They have a host of features that effectively act like a portable hard drive and can store a lot of information. These include:
~ Music
Store and listen to music all day long or as long as your battery lasts. From 100 songs to more than 10,000 songs, the iPod's capacity varies but the fun doesn't! Connect your ear phones or head phones to the iPod and start grooving.
~ Podcasts
Download and listen to music from podcast directories. Podcasting is a method of publishing audio broadcasts via the Internet, allowing users to subscribe to a set of new files (usually MP3s). It allows users to subscribe to a feed and receive new files, usually free. Podcast directories are a list of songs and other radio like shows that have been uploaded on to the Iinternet which can be downloaded to your iPod and heard.
Here are some Podcasting sites you might want to check out: Podcast Alley, iPodderX, PublicRadioFan, and iPodder.org.
~ Photos
Store photos transferred either directly from your camera or your computer. This way, the memory cards in your digital cameras will not get flooded with pictures. For more on how to do this, and a number of features mentioned below, your iPod manual is an extremely user-friendly guide.
~ Calendar and contacts
Keep a tab on all your dates and appointments and also maintain a directory of your phone numbers.
~ World clock
Stay abreast of the time around the world. Personalise your iPod to show different country timings and zones. The clock feature also lets you set alarms to ensure you are on time for all your chores.
~ Games
Play games if the music doesn't satisfy your appetite for fun.
How does all this work?
When you buy an iPod, it is empty space that you have purchased. This space can be utilised for the features supported by the iPod.
i. The concept of iTunes comes in here. iTunes is the software provided by Apple to transfer music from your computer to the iPod. The iTunes installer CD is provided by Apple free of cost when you buy an iPod.
The iTunes software is like a music manager installed on your computer. It stores all the songs your computer has and makes it easy to transfer them to your portable device, the iPod. This is the only way to transfer music from your computer to your iPod.
ii. Now that the music is on the computer, let's see how to transfer it to the iPod. This happens through your computer's Universal Serial Bus port 2.0, a plug-and-play interface between a computer and add-on devices (such as mobile phones, audio players, scanners and printers). The USB port is now available on all computers, but, if your machine is older and has no ports, try this. The USB acts as a buffer between the computer and the iPod and facilitates transfer of information.
In essence, the iPod has to be connected to some other device for it to gain information.
What more can I do with my iPod?
Your iPod is like clay, which can be modeled into anything you like. This means that, since the iPod is just memory space or a hard drive, we can use a lot of applications on it (do different things with it) as long as it is compatible with the device.
All these applications mentioned below are accessories and hence have to purchased separately at iPod stores or downloaded from the Internet.
iTalk
A programme that helps you record your own voice or anything you want on the device.
iTrip
An FM transmitter which when, connected to your iPod and tuned into a local radio station, enables you to listen to your iPod in your car.
Media Reader
A software that helps you transfer and store photos from your camera to your iPod.
iPod Wizard
This programme lets you modify the graphics and fonts that come with your iPod so that, for example, you are greeted by your own company logo or a photo when you start it up.
Models and figures
Apple has a variety of Apple models that would suit almost all budget sizes.
iPod Shuffle
512 Mb priced at Rs 5,000
1 Gb priced at Rs 7,500
The iShuffles are base model players and hence you cannot view photographs on them unlike the other higher end models.
iPod Nano
2 Gb priced at Rs 10,000
4 Gb priced at Rs 12,000
This product is pretty slick in size and looks.
iPod
20 Gb priced at Rs 15,000
60 Gb priced at Rs 20,000
If the price of the 60 Gb iPod has stunned you, let me give you an example. Most of the personal computers used have a memory space of anything between 20 to 40 Gb. So, at 60 Gb, this player is a monster.
iPod u2
20 Gb priced at Rs 18,000.
This one is a special edition with signatures of the rock band U2 inscribed at the back. To pay more just for certain rock stars' signatures may not entice everyone.
Me and my iPod
Wondering when to you use your iPod? Here are some ideas.
During your commute
Get ready for the day ahead with some music, played through your car speakers or, if you're on the bus or train, through a pair of headphones.
At work
~ Store files to take home or for a review with a client.
~ Keep your calendar, contacts and to-do lists on your iPod.
~ Show clients your entire product line when you make sales calls.
At home
~ Connect iPod to powered speakers or a stereo system.
~ Purchase music or subscribe to free podcasts from the iTunes Music Store. Download music and podcasts to your iTunes Manager on your computer and transfer it to your iPod through your computer.
~ Just like you can connect your iPod to your stereo system, you can also connect your iPod to your television to either see the information or listen to the music stored on the device.
On campus
~ Listen to music between classes.
~ Don't miss class: Use iPod's built-in Alarm Clock.
~ Take files from your home computer to a computer lab or vice versa.
On vacation
~ Going on a trek? Extend battery life with the optional backup battery pack. This pack is powered by the normal AA sized batteries that are easily available.
~ Download guides to restaurants and other attractions. Get the information on your computer and then you can transfer it to your iPod before you set out for your vacation.
~ Free space on your memory cards by copying digital images to your iPod hard drive with the iPod Camera Connector.
DON'T MISS!
Friday, October 14, 2005
Happy birthday President
The father of India’s nuclear programme and president Dr Abul Pakir Jainulabdeen Abdul Kalam turns 74 on Saturday. Despite having no political experience, the scientist-turned-statesman has displayed exemplary reasoning and determination during his term in office. Known as a person of high integrity and immense caliber, the brilliant scientist occupying the highest office in the country has always believed that “You don’t have to be a manipulator in order to be successful.” And while the scientist in him has tried to arrive at solutions with a practical bent of mind, the poet in him has always looked at life and its inherent beauty. A people’s person, Dr. Kalam dreams of converting India into a developed country by 2020.
Consumption is communication - and why i blog ?
Consumption is communication (sometimes).
You invest your time writing your blog because the thoughts on your blog tell people who you are, what you stand for, and what you believe in.
Your blog entries communicate that you are smart, funny, charming, and well endowed.
Now imagine if someone followed you around with a megaphone and recited your blog entries to anyone within earshot. You would make damn sure you had a good blog. You would make sure your blog was up-to-date, well written, tasteful, and a reflection of who you are.
That’s what a ringtone is: a blog with a megaphone.Thursday, October 06, 2005
Celebrating the Century of blog posts.
Blogging has been very important in my personal and professional career.
As my professional IT career started with “BLogstreet”, I was close to the Blogosphere, Thanks for rajesh for giving me opportunity to work for blogstreet.
Veer and Harsh helped me to put my blog with my own domain name. Thanks to them.
I thank to all the readers of blog and all my friends who inspired me to continue with blogging.
Advertising's Holy Grail?
The Economist writes that "the holy grail of advertising is within reach."
“HALF the money I spend on advertising is wasted,” John Wanamaker, the owner of America's first big department store, allegedly said in the 1870s. “The trouble is, I don't know which half.” It has been the advertising industry's favourite witticism ever since. But it may expire soon, at least in the online world. This week, Microsoft unveiled a new system for placing advertising hyperlinks on its MSN internet search site that could help it to close the gap with Google and Yahoo!, the two most popular search engines and the leaders in so-called “paid-search” or “pay-per-click” advertising. (MSN currently uses Yahoo!'s advertising technology.) The basic idea behind pay-per-click is that advertisers bid in an online auction for the right to have their link displayed next to the results for specific search terms—“used cars”, for instance, or “digital cameras”—and then pay only when a web surfer actually clicks on that link (hence “pay-per-click”). Since the consumer has already expressed intent—first by typing in the search terms, then by choosing the advertiser's link—he is more likely to make a purchase. From the advertiser's point of view, this reduces some of the waste that bothered Mr Wanamaker.