Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Top 10 List Web Applications Site 2010 - 2011

Top 10 List Web Applications Site 2010 -2011
Get The Latest Updates On Top 10 List And Info At Coolfun2012.blogspot.com
Top 10 Web Applicationstop ten web pages top 100 web sites top 10 website software top 100 web design top ten web browser top 10 web design softwaretop 10 web application vulnerabilities top 10 web browser games

The web has changed our world in so many ways, providing information at our finger tips, giving faster communication, allowing easier exploration of our world and increasing our productivity…unless you are a surfing zombie. If you are then this list may not be for you. This list of the top 10 web applications will introduce you to some web apps that you may not know about. We certainly hope you find a treasure or two. The Internet is full of useful and fun applications and new ones come and go every day. In fact this list will probably be out of date in a month to some degree, but that is what makes the web so exciting. So enjoy this list while it lasts and take time to see how some of these web apps can help you. Think we left off a web app? Let us know in the comments.

10. TiddlyWiki

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Everyone knows Wikipedia, the wiki anyone can edit. But wouldn’t it be great if you had your own wiki that only you could edit? Anytime you had some new information, just go on it and enter a topic and write about it. It’s like your brain in a webpage. Well that’s where TiddlyWiki comes in. It lets you do just that. You have full control over what it looks like and how it behaves. Best of all, it’s a single file. Save it as a document and share your knowledge with other people. Put it on a flashdrive and record on-the-go. TiddlyWiki can change your life if you’d only utilize its potential. Best of all, it’s free. Visit http://www.tiddlywiki.com

9. Netvibes

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Meet your new homepage. Netvibes will bring you all your favorite RSS feeds, blog posts, news, weather, music, videos, e-mails, anything you name, all in one page. It even updates in real-time, so every time you visit the page you’ll get a whole new dose of information. Very customizable and visually attractive, Netvibes is definitely a home page worth having. Take a look for yourself. Visit http://www.netvibes.com

8. Jott

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Have trouble remembering appointments or dates? Just jott it! Or maybe you lose all your sticky notes and index cards and forget to write things down in your planner. But if you’re like most people, you have a cell phone, and that’s always turned on. This is where Jott works its magic. You can program it to send you a text message, or call you and tell you, or even leave you a voice mail. Tell it whatever message you want. It’s your own personal transcription service. Visit http://jott.com

7. Peepel

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The Peepel Online Office Suite is truly something worth checking out. There’s no need to shell out hundreds of dollars for Microsoft Office, or spend hours trying to desperately find a cheaper alternative. Just go on the site. Or maybe you’re tired of spending money upgrading your office suite software every few months. Maybe Microsoft programs just take too long to start, and you spent all your money on expensive software so you can’t afford a faster computer. Just go to Peepel. With enough features to rival even the most expensive software, you can easily accomplish whatever writing needs you may have on-the-go with Peepel’s word processor. Or maybe you need to make a spreadsheet. Peepel has that too. The best apart of Peepel, besides the fact that it’s free, is that you can open multiple applications and multi-task all in one browser window. Now that’s innovation. Visit http://www.peepel.com

6. Youconvertit

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What if you have a major presentation saved on your flashdrive and you desperately try to open it to a team of impatient and grumpy executives? What if the software you used to create it at home isn’t friendly with their fancy, corporate software? What do you do? Just go to Youconvertit. It easily allows you to convert any image, video, document, and even units to virtually any format / type. Fast, easy, and free, Youconvertit is worthy of a bookmark. Visit http://www.youconvertit.com

5. Facebook

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If you haven’t heard of Facebook, well that’s just pathetic. Facebook is the number one social networking site and probably the best. First of all, millions of people use it; odds are that everyone you know is probably on it. Facebook makes it easy to find people and connect with them whether it be your best friend or some kid you knew in the third grade. With an extensive and often updated list of applications, Facebook embeds thousands of web apps in itself. Fun, easy-to-use, and practical as well, Facebook may be a time-drainer, but if you absolutely must know what’s going on in all your friends’ lives, it’s a must. Visit htpp://www.facebook.com

4. Cooliris

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Cooliris is a browser extension that will make your normal, boring web surfing experience into something fully interactive and cinematic. It turns the pages into an extensive “3D Wall.” You can easily browse thousands of images, videos, and other media quickly and easily. It’s very customizable too– you can change the theme, background, number of rows, angles, slideshow speed, and more. Instead of manually clicking and searching through webpage after webpage, you can simply browse the never-ending wall with total ease and comfort. All you need to do is download, and the download’s free. Visit http://www.cooliris.com

3. Meebo

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Meebo is great because it’s a universal messenger that you can access on the web. Meebo basically pioneered web messenging. It’s compatible with AIM, Yahoo, MSN, Myspace, and even its own instant messenging platform: Meebo! Absolutely no installation or downloads are required; just log-in and go. It’s totally secure so you don’t have to worry about any security issues; and plus, it’s free. Visit http://www.meebo.com/

2. Hulu

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Hulu has the ability to completely replace your television set. You don’t even have to install any software or make an account. Just go to the website and you’ll instantly see video clips, full TV episodes and seasons, and even feature-length films. It is very easy to use its methodical service; you can either search or browse for your media. They make money off of tiny commercials and sponsored video clips embedded in your viewing. A very small price to pay. You may think of streaming video like youtube-quality, which is nearly unwatchable. But Hulu is nothing like that. In fact, they even have HD channels. All you need is an internet connection. Oh, and it’s free. Visit http://www.hulu.com

1. Pandora

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Pandora is your revolutionary radio station. It only plays the music you like. Type in the name of a song and it’ll play it, or if it can’t find it, it’ll play songs similar to it. Type in the name of an artist and it’ll play one of their songs, or bands similar to them. Using an advanced system, it’ll play songs with similar rhythms, beats, and music to whatever you type in. It’s not only a great way to listen to music, but to find music. You can create an account so it’ll keep track of all your personal radio stations. Best of all? It’s free. Visit http://www.pandora.com

Top 10 Websites Useful For 1 Minute

Top 10 Websites Useful For 1 Minute If you need absolutely anything, the Internet is ready to serve you. Alas, websites these days have grown so overly complex, it’s easy to forget the smaller, useful websites that serve their purpose quickly and let you get on with your life in less than a minute. Heck, some websites are so useful you may need them on a daily basis…but whatever your needs may be, these ten sites promise to make it a quick, painless visit:

10. Is it Down for Everyone, or is it Just Me?

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Nothing’s worse than clicking on a website and waiting eons for it to load. But when it’s a larger site that’s giving you problems, you have to wonder…would this be fixed with a quick router reset? Is the problem on my end? Well, simply go to this website, type in the site that’s giving you problems, and get your answer quickly. Who knows, maybe it’s down for everyone too. And yes, you’ll be the first one on the Internet to type in downforeveryoneorjustme.com in the form, you crazy dog you.
downforeveryoneorjustme.com

9. Ding, it’s Up!

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…and if that site does happen to be down for everyone, just hit this site and type in your email, phone or Twitter name. Ding, it’s Up! will contact you as soon as the website is back online, eliminating the next few hours of constant refreshing and browser clearing hassles. It can also email/contact you when a site goes down, which might come in handy for webmasters.
Ding, it’s Up!

8. Valebrity

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For every celebrity Twitter page that goes up, five dozen fake celebrity Twitters are created. Nothing is worse than following GBusey on Twitter only to wonder, say, are these weird random thoughts really from the mind of Gary Busey, or some completely wacko nutjob? Such a fine line divides the two.
Well wonder no more, as you type in either the Twitter username or the actual celebrity name on Valebrity and pull up their official Twitter page for your stalking pleasure. And for the record, GBusey is sadly fake.
Valebrity

7. Memorari

memorari
There are certainly many easy ways to remember something- program it in your cell phone, tie a ribbon around your finger, maybe write a note to yourself and stick it in your wallet. But, like, a lot of that requires effort, man. Well strain no more with Memorari, which will remember what you need and remind you at the specified time, date, and communication method via phone, IM, email, etc.
Memorari

6. HowJSay

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Get a heads up on your big fancy vocabulary words with HowJSay, which says over 100,000 words aloud for you to hear. Just type in the word and listen to its pronunciation. To think, I’ve been mispronouncing debris all these years. Ah well, I’m sure no one noticed.
HowJSay

5. Umbrella Today

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Weather is easy enough to obtain online, but what about rain? Decipher the 20% chance of rain with Umbrella Today, which instantly tells you whether or not it’s umbrella carrying weather with a simple input of a zip code. Also available as an iPhone app if you like paying for stuff that’s free.
Umbrella Today

4. HelloTxt

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If you’re not like me, then you probably have multiple accounts in social networking sites all across the Internet. With HelloTxt, you can post a status update instantly with a number of sites at the same time. While you do have to register first, the amount of time saved is pretty substantial.
HelloTxt

3. Pic Resize

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Yes mom, I did get those pictures from Florida. Yes, the 3200×2400 10mb attachment, I got that. Uh…say mom, maybe next time you can use Pic Resize, which can resize a photo quickly via upload and saves it to your computer or keeps it online for you to link to. Can you look at that site, preferably before the senior family reunion pool party? Thanks mom.
Pic Resize

2. What Does the Internet Think?

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Before getting into any more debates, see if you can have the weight of the Internet to support you with What Does the Internet Think? It uses search engines to pull up data on whether or not your keyword is positive, negative, or maybe a bit of both. Fun to use, but if my experiences are any indication then results may vary if you use them in your college thesis to support any arguments (“as you can see, the Internet knows I’m right.”)
What Does the Internet Think?

1. RunPee

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Fact: any time you pay for a premium movie ticket, you will have to go to the bathroom during the film, during what could be the worst possible time, with a restroom that’s the furthest possible from your theater. RunPee alleviates this problem with time stamps that tell you when a safe time is to use the restroom, as well as providing a quick summary of what you missed while you’re away.
RunPee
By David Galindo

10 Helpful Websites You Have Never Heard Of

10 Helpful Websites You Have Never Heard Of

The following websites are loaded with helpful information that new ... The sites here are packed with helpful information At http://coolfun2012.blogspot.com
It’s easy to get lost on the internet among the millions of useless websites and the couple dozen or so good ones. Unfortunately, some of the few good ones go way under the radar, and you’ve never even heard of them, let alone visit them. Ranging from practical and educational to just plain fun, these are sites you’ll want to bookmark.

10. Zeer

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If there was a website that could save your life, it’d be Zeer. Zeer displays the nutritional labels for every kind of packaged food you can buy, and then lets you comment / rate your favorite, or perhaps least favorite, items. Trying to get into better shape or become healthier? Maybe you’re a vegetarian and you want to know if that tasty snack you saw had any beef in it. You thought you saw some beef-like texture for sure. Or maybe you want to know if that new Doritos flavor is any good. All your questions and more can be answered here.
http://www.zeer.com/

9. Bartleby

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Wikipedia’s overrated and about to become outdated. Bartleby provides you with unlimited access to various books and other information free of charge. The categories are reference, verse, fiction, and nonfiction. It’s very easy to find exactly what you’re looking for, whether it be Aesop’s fables or Shakespeare or even The Bible. The site also has a built-in encyclopedia, dictionary, thesaurus, and quotation dictionary as well.
http://www.bartleby.com/

8. 5min

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Forget Ehow, Wikihow, or any other how-to website out there. 5min is your “one-stop shop for instructional videos and DIY projects.” It’s always easier to learn watching someone do it rather than reading about it. It’ll only take 5 minutes of your time and its videos range from “Tto Zurich, Switzerland” to “Yoga to Cure Constipation?” Or you can become a teacher, create an account, and upload your own videos.
http://www.5min.com/

7. Tryphone

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You can test drive a car, why shouldn’t you be able to test drive a phone? Don’t rely on CNET reviews and friend’s suggestions to buy your next phone, try it for yourself. Use their fully interactive online virtual headsets and try out the buttons, applications, services, content, and more. Every phone’s in crystal clear quality and literally, what you see is what you get. There are also user reviews, phone specifications, and other information on the site as well. Never feel uncertainty again when buying your next phone.
http://tryphone.com

6. Newsmap

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Google News is an amazing source of news. Constantly updated, reliable, and lots and lots of it. But maybe that last one’s not such a good thing. You’re busy but you still want to be informed, but it’s just so hard to discern what’s important and what’s not with Google News. That’s where Newsmap comes in. Newsmap is a graphical representation of Google News that makes it easy for you to find the news you actually care about. It relies on something called a “treemap algorithm” for this. Basically, more popular and important stories appear larger, while the lesser stories are smaller. Stories are also arranged by theme and represented by different colors. See for yourself.
http://newsmap.jp/

5. DailyLit

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Despite popular belief, many people do actually enjoy reading books, but they just can’t find any time to set aside for this underrated hobby. The DailyLit fixes that easily. First, you choose the book you want to read. The older books are free, while the more modern classics might need a purchase. Then you choose the time and day you want to read it. Maybe you want to read it every day at 8 P.M. And that’s it. DailyLit will send you short installments of the book via RSS or e-mail and you can read it on a mobile device like an iPhone or on your computer. Before you know it, you’ll have finished the book, and it’ll have taken you less than 5 minutes a day.
http://dailylit.com/

4.  Tripit

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Traveling is a hassle. You have to keep track of all your transportation, reservations, and if you like to play it safe, your receipts. Well Tripit collects all those pesky little details and makes it into an easy-to-use master itinerary. Not only that, Tripit throws in maps, some local attraction suggestions, a few weather reports, and much more. You can access this itinerary online or from a mobile device like a cell phone, so keeping track of it couldn’t be easier. Don’t plan a trip again without Tripit.
http://www.tripit.com/

3. Power

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There’s no doubt that social networking has become something much, much more than just catching up with old friends who want nothing more to do with you. But there are just so many websites, Facebook, Myspace, Twitter, and everyone uses different ones. How can you possibly keep up with everyone? Power solves this problem and more. Power allows you to log in once, just once, and with that one click, you’re synced with a long list of social networking sites. All the status updates, messages, and posts in a single place. You can even use MSN messenger in the site itself.
http://www.power.com/

2. Boxee

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Think of the copious amounts of videos that exist all across the vast World Wide Web today. This is where Boxee comes in and helps us maintain whatever sanity we will have while embarking on this impossible quest of entertainment. Boxee gathers the videos from a plethora of websites like Hulu, Youtube, and even Cnn.com, and feeds it to you in a very aesthetically pleasing and easy-to-use interface. You can even organize the videos, images, and music on your own computer with Boxee. The best part of Boxee? The community. Boxee suggests media to you mainly via your friends—you form friend groups with other Boxee users and you can see what they’re watching or even suggest your own videos to them.
http://www.boxee.tv/

1. Wikibooks

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You’ve heard of Wikipedia, but do you know Wikibooks? It’s in the same easy-to-use interface, but a totally different concept. Wikibooks is a community that was made to create a free online library of educational textbooks that anyone can edit. Just one click can get you a plethora of information you never thought even existed or let you become an expert in a subject you’ve always wanted to know. As of right now, there are over 36,843 pages of information in a multitude of textbooks. You can teach by adding your own knowledge to the content, or be taught by just visiting. Maybe the English language isn’t your forte (how are you reading this?).
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Main_Page
by Johnny Dunn
Looking for more great sites? Find the best websites at VeryBestSites.com
 Helpful Websites  physics word problems helpful websites helpful websites middle school helpful websites university useful websites helpful websites college student shelpful websites teachers

Top 10 Internet Illnesses

Top 10 Internet Illnesses
FACT: You use most of your body when you are sitting at a computer typing on a keyboard – not just your eyes and fingers. Your muscles allow you to sit in an upright position and all of your organs are working (sometimes, even your brain).
Sadly, despite this amazing fact, surfing the Internet does not qualify as a workout.
Is your surfing position an Igor-style hunch rather than a hang ten? Do you have the wild, crazy Igor eyes to match? Then you need to read this list!
Eligibility: To get on the list, the condition must be directly related to Internet use (I’m defining condition as an illness, disorder, or injury).
Rank: Ranked by the seriousness of the condition and number of people affected, as interpreted by me (it’s my list).
As always I will personally reply to any recommendations or complaints in the comments below, so go nuts (but not nuts like #3 below, please…)
Top 10 Internet Illnesses Health & fitness. ... Top 10 Internet Illnesses. You use most of your body when you are sitting at a computer .

10. Eyestrain

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When you use your eyes a lot, they get strained- so when you stare at a computer screen intensely for hours it isn’t a surprise when your eyes get sore. According to mayoclinic.com: “Although eyestrain can be annoying, it usually isn’t serious and goes away once you rest your eyes”, placing it firmly in tenth place on this list.

9.  Health Anxiety/Pain Catastrophization

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Some people have a tendency to misinterpret or over-interpret pain signals.  According to Wikipedia, “psychologists refer to this as pain catastrophizing (the tendency to think the worst when one feels pain).” According to the same source, health anxiety is a “sense that something is seriously wrong that does not lessen with normal test results and reassurance from health professionals.”
Thanks to all of the scary medical information available on the Internet (some of it’s even true), people who never experienced health anxiety or pain catastrophization before are now freaking out. Speaking from experience, the Internet can make a borderline hypochondriac cross over into crazy town. Thanks a search on the Internet, a sudden case of the late-night sniffles could be nasal polyps or even diphtheria. We’re not saying it is for sure, but there’s a chance… pleasant dreams!

8. Headaches

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There are three different types of headaches associated with Internet use:
Tension Headaches – The term ‘tension headache’ is misleading. These headaches are not caused by stress but often due to strain to your neck or eyes. According to mayoclinic.com, they “can last from 30 minutes to an entire week”.
Chronic Daily Headaches - You suffer from these if you have a headache for more than half of the days in a month.
Stress Headaches – Apparently it’s not the big stress that causes your head to hurt. It’s the small annoyances all day long. So, if you spend a lot of time on the Internet it may be time to switch to a faster connection or upgrade to a new computer if you spend a lot of time staring hopelessly at your computer screen while it downloads information or crashes on you.

7. Back Pain

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Poor posture results in back pain, particularly when it is accompanied by obesity, smoking, or lack of exercise. Now I’m sure there are many people out there who sit on a Pilates ball and crunch carrot sticks while they spend hours each day Digging, Stumbling, or Tweeting – but, if you’re the Internet equivalent of a couch potato you might want to cut back on the corn chips and do some sit ups or something…
We interrupt this list while the writer goes to take a Tylenol or two – her back is killing her!

6. Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT)

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If you’ve been on an airplane in the last few years you’ve probably seen the warning information about Deep Vein Thrombosis: it’s “the formation of a blood clot in a deep vein” (Wikipedia). Also known as “economy class syndrome”, air travelers who don’t move around and are dehydrated are particularly vulnerable to this kind of blood clot.
The key points here are immobility and dehydration: If you are so immersed in your “Second Life” that you don’t remember the last time you went outside or drank a glass of water in this life, you are at risk. I couldn’t find any Internet related DVT cases documented, but I still think it deserves 6th place because a DVT blood clot can dislodge itself, travel to your lungs, and kill you. Zoiks!
So, move those legs around or try to type standing up for a change… oh no wait, that would be bad for your back…

5. Munchausen Syndrome

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The Internet provides endless chatrooms, online support groups, and social networking sites where people can share their problems, seek advice, and get sympathy.
I was shocked to learn that some people actually fake illnesses or tragedies just to get attention. They pretend to be victims of rape, assault, abuse, and serious illness in order to get attention: a symptom of Munchhausen Syndrome. And, according to an article at the BBC News website, the “internet may be encouraging people to pretend they are ill in order to get attention, according to US research.”
In the same news article quoted above, a Dr. Feldman from Alabama explains that persons with this syndrome can be treated with “a chance to get… attention from medical professionals in a psychiatric setting. However, most patients do not want this. They want to have a serious medical ailment and not a psychiatric illness” (news.bbc.co.uk).

4. Facebook Depression

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According to the Daily Mail, Facebook and other social networking sites make teenage girls “prone to anxiety and depression”. Along with texting and emailing, these sites allow teens to coruminate (a fancy word for talking about things over and over and over again). According to the same article, “repeated conversations among adolescent girls, particularly about romantic disappointments, worsen their mood and create negative emotions” (www.dailymail.co.uk). Prior to this teenage girls apparently did not dwell on topics such as ‘do my bangs look funny’ or ‘why didn’t he call?’ for hours and hours and then sulk in their rooms.
These are the results of a study conducted on 83 teenage girls at Stony Brook University (NY). One of the doctors, Dr. Davila, offers this antidote for teenagers who continuously talk about the same problem: “They could change the subject”.
Parents of teenage girls everywhere now plan to send their daughters to Stony Brook University so that they too can learn to deduce blatantly obvious solutions to things that everyone already knows.

3. Internet Rage

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While it might be argued that Internet Rage itself is not really harmful to your health, it can lead to Internet stalking and perhaps even violence – so if you are the one inciting the rage then you should beware.
According to Tim McDonald of www.newsfactor.com, one of the sources of Internet rage is “information overload”. He explains, “the sheer volume of information available on the Web — and the slowness in accessing it — causes a great deal of stress, according to the independent survey commissioned by WebTop, a British Web indexing company.” He also reports that a study “found that 68 percent of the 200 people surveyed found computer glitches more stressful than spending a weekend with a partner’s parents, and 38 percent found them more stressful than being stuck on public transportation.”
Internet Rage manifests itself all over the place, from the comment section of a blog post to the headlines on your local news station.
Browse the comments under a Youtube video, a website’s forum, or on someone’s blog and it doesn’t take long to find some very nasty words. Perhaps the anonymous nature of the Internet encourages people to say what they really think. The worst part of this is that it’s contagious- your angry comment angers others, and the downward spiral continues.
Please let me point out that when your therapist suggested that you ‘write your feelings down’, she didn’t mean in the comments section of a blog. If you can’t restrain yourself, then try to limit yourself to sites that actually want your harsh words, like justrage.com or mybiggestcomplaint.com.
Some people say, ‘get over it’, but I think we have a right to be appalled and upset by fellow human behavior. It brings us all down, so stop passing your bad vibes onto other people, already!
And, by the way, you’re not as anonymous as you think so you might want to stop before you enrage someone who is even more of a nut job than you are. A Mr. John Jones experienced this in 2005, after getting into an argument with another man in a Yahoo chatroom, who then used “details obtained online… traveled 70 miles to Mr Jones’ home… and beat him up with a pickaxe handle” (new.bbc.co.uk). Yikes!
Okay, so enough Internet Rage – there’s only two more spots left on my list and then next one is a real pain in the neck:

2. Upper Limb Disorders (ULD)

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Upper Limb Disorders include: neck tension syndrome, carpal tunnel syndrome, cubital tunnel syndrome, tendinitis (mainly hands/wrists), tenosynovitis, bursitis, repetitive strain injury (RSI), and Thoracic Outlet Syndrome. All of these ailments can be linked to Internet use.
RSI Repetitive Strain Injury – the modern version of writer’s cramp, you experience pain and strain when you overuse one of your upper limbs (i.e. arms). “The basis for this illness concept is the idea that one can overuse a tool, such as a computer keyboard… in a way that causes tissue damage leading to pain” (Wikipedia).
Thoracic Outlet Syndrome – “The two groups of people most likely to develop TOS are those suffering neck injuries in motor vehicle accidents and those who use computers in non-ergonomic postures for extended periods of time” (Wikipedia).
Upper Limb Disorders earn second place on this list due to the overwhelming list of disorders they encompass and the fact that I couldn’t come up with anything funny for them (so they must be quite serious).

1. Internet Addiction

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This is Number One for two big reasons: it actually has the word Internet in the title of the affliction and also because it has been fatal in some cases.
The nature of the addiction is also pervasive: when it comes to the Internet, someone can “be addicted to nearly everything, starting with pure act of typing, visiting chat rooms, shopping on-line and ending up with multiplayer games, which users characterize as “heroinware.” (www.infoniac.com).
Also, it’s so real that there are rehabilitation centres for treatment. In a NY Times article, Martin Fackler describes Internet Addiction rehab in South Korea: “Drill instructors drive young men through military-style obstacle courses, counselors lead group sessions, and there are even therapeutic workshops on pottery and drumming.” He goes on to explain the seriousness of Internet Addiction in South Korea, “It has become a national issue here in recent years, as users started dropping dead from exhaustion after playing online games for days on end…”
Are you addicted?
  • Are you unable to limit your use of the Internet? Does it take up most of your free time?
  • Do you lose your sense of time when you’re online?
  • Do you take steps to allow yourself to stay online longer? (Do you stock up your desk with several meals? Wear a diaper? Drink energy drinks? Are you always improving your computers or your software?)
  • Do you experience withdrawal symptoms when you are prevented from getting online? (Anger, craving, restlessness, moodiness, irritable, depression)
  • Do you use your computer to escape reality?
  • Do you lie to others about your computer use?
  • Are you social isolated in the real world?
  • Have you traded your real life experiences for emotions that you now experience on the Internet through social networking, games, and porn?
  • Have you risked a real life relationship or your job over your Internet use?
If you were able to answer yes to several of these questions, please seek professional counsel for your Internet Addiction. Conveniently (and ironically) there are many online resources for you:
  1. Net Addiction
  2. Daily Strength
  3. Internet Addiction
Top 10 Internet Illnesse stop 10 mental illnesse stop 10 worst diseasestop 10 rare diseasestop 10 killer diseasestop 10 deadliest diseasestop 10 weird diseasestop 10 killing diseasestop ten diseases world

20 websites that changed the world

20 websites that changed the world

20 websites that changed the world by you.

Sites that revolutionised the way we lead our lives

If there was one site that would change the world for ever, it would be the first ever website, created by internet pioneer Tim Berners-Lee.
It went online on 6 August 1991 offering people help with using the brand new 'World Wide Web', rather modestly described as a "wide-area hypermedia information retrieval initiative aiming to give universal access to a large universe of documents". It's now archived at .http://adf.ly/4jvh
If Berners-Lee had known what was to come, he might have added: "This is going to be awesome!"
2. GeoCities
Fascinating as it was back then, the web wasn't a whole lot of fun and after four years of pages created by scientists and academics, David Bohnett and John Rezner, who ran a web directory called Beverly Hills Internet, turned their company into GeoCities, giving anyone the ability to create their own site for free.
"There was a time when half the internet seemed to be on GeoCities and I don't think that this can be underestimated," says Rob 'CmdrTaco' Malda, founder of Slashdot. "GeoCities made it possible for anyone to put something online for nothing. This was a huge deal."
3. Blogger
GeoCities made it easy for anyone to build their own site, but in August 1999, Blogger made it even easier. Now anyone could post a diary of what they had for dinner or why they hated their parents. Acquired by Google in 2003, Blogger continues to enable everyone to document their lives without needing to get their hands dirty with HTML. As does WordPress, TypePad, Tumblr and a million other services that have since appeared. GeoCities was purchased by Yahoo! in 1999 and lives on as Yahoo! GeoCities, though we've never heard anyone say "Check out my Yahoo! GeoCities page."
4. Yahoo!
One thing that Yahoo! will be remembered for, though, is its search directory, without which most of us would never have found GeoCities in the first place. Founded by Stanford University graduate students Jerry Yang and David Filo in January 1994, Yahoo! was a manually compiled directory of sites. "Remember when you bookmarked Yahoo! indexes because they were actually comprehensive sources on a subject?" says Rob Malda. "Good times."
But those good times weren't to last. Computer-compiled search listings from AltaVista and, later, Google, were to rise in popularity, leaving Yahoo! behind, perhaps distracted with building its community features such as chat rooms, email and message boards. "They were an early leader but went down a path of being more marketing- oriented than technology-oriented," says Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales. "I hope they recapture the idea of pushing the forefront of technology."
5. The internet-connected coffee machine
When you're chatting with friends on your webcam, who'd have thought you owe all that to a coffee pot? The internet-connected coffee machine from Cambridge University went online in November 1993, so university staff could check on whether there was coffee in the pot before walking down several flights of stairs.
A year later, student Jennifer Ringley installed a webcam in her dorm, giving viewers a regularly updated window into her life on the JenniCam. Usually mundane, but not shying away from appearing nude or having sex, Ringley attracted an estimated three to four million viewers, some of whom were paid subscribers. But on 31 December 2003 Ringley shut her site down to lead a quieter life, out of the public eye.
Cambridge University's coffee machine is also living a more private life these days, but you can read more on its history at www.cl.cam.ac.uk/coffee/coffee.html.

6. Danni's Hard Drive
So the early 90s were an innocent time, but that all changed when, in the spring of 1995, model Danni Ashe created Danni's Hard Drive. Ashe started out in newsgroups after hearing her pictures were being posted there and soon after that she hired some programmers to build her site.
Not satisfied with the result, Ashe studied HTML and built her own site, which she ran single-handedly for over a year before bringing in extra staff. Ashe went on to become the Guinness World Record holder of the title 'Most downloaded woman on the Internet', in December 2000, when it was confirmed that her image had been downloaded over a billion times.
7. MP3.com
It wasn't just photos that we'd be downloading, though. In 1998, along came MP3.com, without which there would have been no Napster, and no iTunes. MP3.com was to popularise the MP3 format of digital music, offering downloads of unsigned bands, which people would have downloaded and transferred to their iPods, had the iPod actually been around at the time.
"I remember downloading my first few MP3s from MP3.com while ripping my own CDs. It took something like eight hours to rip and encode a single CD," says Slashdot's Rob Malda. "A year or two later, tiny devices like the Rio paved the way for the iPod. I can't tell you how powerful it felt to browse what felt like an infinite number of songs."
8. eBay
In September 1995, programmer Pierre Omidyar founded AuctionWeb, later renamed eBay. It's been responsible for turning stay-at-home mums into successful businesswoman, and lists Damon Albarn, Gordon Ramsay and Meg Matthews among its sellers. It's also known for a decommissioned nuclear bunker and the image of the Virgin Mary in a decade-old toasted cheese sandwich.
Brian Groth, product manager for Windows Live at Microsoft is a fan: "Not many sites can claim to have created and ridden their own zeitgeist, but eBay did – and it still is! Its simplicity is its genius and the feedback system is a shining example of how seamlessly self-regulating internet communities can work. A further testament to its success is that it's the only website on this list that's created a viable new career choice – the professional eBay trader." eBay was ahead of its time, adds Wikipedia's Jimmy Wales. "It really was Web 2.0 before Web 2.0 was cool. eBay is all about having ordinary people contributing the vast majority of what's going on at the website."
9. Amazon
Another company that was Web 2.0 before the term was coined is Amazon, founded by Jeff Bezos in 1994. Bezos had originally planned to call the site Cadabra, until in a moment of clarity he realised it sounded uncannily close to 'cadaver'. And so Amazon was born, initially offering books but now selling everything from watches to lawnmowers. Not only did it popularise online shopping but its focus on user reviews paved the way for sites such as TripAdvisor and Epinions.
Match.com's Jason Stockwood says of Amazon: "Many people had huge reservations about using the internet, and even more about ecommerce. Amazon led the charge, and continues to play a crucial role in encouraging a wider demographic to feel comfortable surfing."
10. Boo.com
Not every site was as successful. Boo.com was set up at the end of 1999 selling branded fashion clothes, but went into receivership just six months later, after burning through more than £100 million. The site was big on Flash, with its 3D views of clothes and virtual shop assistant Miss Boo. 56k modems weren't ready for it and shoppers stayed away in their droves. But perhaps Boo was just before its time: does a 3D view of the product you're browsing really sound so ridiculous now?

11. Wikipedia
If Amazon championed user reviews, Wikipedia was to take user-generated content to another level, with an online encyclopedia anyone could edit. Sounds like a recipe for disaster, but where errors or downright lies appear, they're quick to be corrected by the site's users. "Yes, the information is imperfect," says Jason Stockwood, "but the rigidly democratic nature of the site means that Wikipedia is a true embodiment of what the internet revolution originally promised."
12. Slashdot
If you'd rather comment than review, then you owe a debt to Slashdot, a site where people submit news stories for discussion. Created in September 1997 by Rob Malder, it continues to be a must-read destination for anyone interested in technology. Drew Curtis followed up with FARK.com, and Kevin Rose with digg.com. Commenting on stories has become so widespread that it now seems odd to arrive at a site where there are no comments.
13. The Drudge Report
It's hard to believe now, but it used to be that the mainstream media was where you went for serious, trusted news and the web didn't get a look in. But on 17 January 1998 The Drudge Report was to change that, when it broke the Monica Lewinsky scandal to the public after Newsweek decided not to publish the story.
Reporting on the event on 25 January 1998, BBC News said, in what sounds obvious and naive all these years later, "In the future, academics, politicians and journalists aren't likely to dismiss the internet so quickly."
Now news is regularly broken by specialist blogs before you read about it in the morning paper. That's assuming you even buy a morning paper any more.
14. YouTube
And where do you watch your TV? Started in a garage by three former PayPal employees, one site went on to shake up the TV industry, and was acquired by Google for $1.6 billion. All that for a company that's less than four years old. You've probably heard of it: it's called YouTube.
"You used to find a text search result for every keyword you could think of," says Torsten Schuppe, marketing director at eBay. "Now you find a video for every keyword you can think of! I've been told people upload 10 hours of video content every minute – that's huge!"
15. Gabocorp
Until Flash came along in 1996, the web was much like Ceefax, with a few animated GIFs and PC-crashing Java applets thrown in. But the arrival of Flash was to herald a new era in web design. The sign of things to come appeared in 1997 in the form of Gabocorp (archived at thefwa.com/flash10/gabo.html). Suddenly the web was no longer static.
"This was the equivalent of TV going colour," says Rob Ford, founder and principal of Favourite Website Awards. "Gabocorp made us realise we could now make things move, add sound and generally be far more creative than the days of blue hypertext links that turned purple on-click. Animated GIFs took a body blow while lake applets took the knockout punch. Gabo Medoza, for me, is a true web pioneer: we all owe his creativity and vision for where we are today."
16. Legal & General
On the accessibility front, an encouraging early example of accessible web design produced by a commercial company was that of Legal & General.
Julie Howell, director of accessibility at digital agency Fortune Cookie explains: "Legal & General were concerned that their website was needlessly excluding disabled people, so undertook a site refresh that took into account the W3C Web Accessibility Initiative Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 (WCAG 1.0). While the company's main intention was to make the site easier for disabled people to use, the business returns were quite astonishing and proved that accessible design can be good for everyone: conversion increased by 300 per cent, maintenance costs reduced by 66 per cent, natural search listings improved by 50 per cent and page load time reduced by 75 per cent. If Legal & General can do this, what excuse do other companies have for not doing it?"
17. Hotmail
Free email for all, accessible anywhere – that was the promise of Hotmail. Founded by Jack Smith and Sabeer Bhatia, it was launched in 1996 and sold to Microsoft in 1997 for around $400 million.
18. Classmates.com
Hotmail helped us keep in touch with people we knew, but Classmates.com, launched in 1995, helped us get back in touch with people we hated at school and never kept in contact with. Four years later, the UK followed suit with Friends Reunited, which made the mistake of charging a fee to get in touch with old school pals. Then Facebook stepped in, offering the same service for free – and now we can all see that the person we fancied at school isn't quite so hot any more.
19. Match.com
Having exhausted old school friends for potential mates, where to turn? Match.com opened the entire internet community up for grabs. Going live in 1995, it was the first popular online dating site, and is also notable for being one of the first sites to persuade internet users to part with their cash for a subscription. Today, online dating is rapidly becoming the new, natural way to meet and (hopefully) fall in love.
20. HotWired
And finally, if you haven't fallen in love, how about something to hate? In 1994, web magazine HotWired pioneered banner ads. Bastards.

 

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

China Super Computer beat Europe and Japan

China Super Computer beat Europe and Japan http://carikita.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/super-komputer.jpg
China supercomputer that have second ranked fastest machines beat Europe and Japan system. China is forecast to have the fastest super computer.
Dawning nebulae that exist at the National Supercomputing Center in Shenzhen, China reached a speed of 1.27 petaflops computing, equivalent to one thousand trillion mathematical operations each second, in the latest ranking of the world’s 500 fastest computers.
The ratings are published for the public on Monday (31 / 5) and at the International Supercomputer Conference, Hamburg, Germany.
Supercomputers are used by scientists and experts to solve diverse problems, such as weather simulation or automotive design. The fastest computer in the world today is based Jaguar Cray supercomputer at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Tennesssee. Last November, this computer has been measured sebedar 1.74 petaflops.
In order of ranking in the previous year, China was in fifth position for the fastest computer, a system based on the National Supercomputing Center in Tianjin, China, where the machine is ranked seventh this time.
United States seem still dominates supercomputer, in which this country with the most machines in the top 500 list. United States has 282 supercomputer into the list of 500 fastest computers in the world, and this amount increased from 227 when combined in this ranking last November.
On the other hand, China seems to intensely challenging American domination. There have been some estimates that China will make systems based on components designed in China in June. Nebule based on chips from Intel and Nvidia.
This new system based on microprocessor yagn-designed and manufactured in China, which diharakan completed by the end of the year. According to experts and researchers, the new machines could become the world’s fastest machines.
“I would not be surprised if at the end of this year they exceeded the power of the state combined scientific computers in Europe and get first position in 500 big,” said Jack Dongarra, a computer scientist at the University of Tennessee and one of the researchers who compiled the rankings twice in year.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

An editorial take on Google Chrome OS

An editorial take on Google Chrome OS

 
 
Google chrome os – The OS in developmental stage, The so-called netbook os, The always ON os, the browser os, the google os, the web os – You’ll find so many acronyms for the new os which is being developed by the so-called alien group of googlers. Google has effected almost every sphere of online experience and the way we are on www. As their products and services are remarkably one of the best and leading, it is easy for them to enter into any feature and feature dominance into that particular zone.
Cloud computing is concerned feature of this new os. Google is pioneer in cloud computing. If you don’t know about this phrase, let me tell you in crude terms – the word cloud acts as metaphor for internet. With cloud computing, it means computing online. You do your work online using a third-party service and you pay on usage terms.
Google chrome os is primarily designed keeping in view the netbook users. Hence it would be faster, always on, instant os. It would feature a very advanced browser which will handle all major operating functionalities and support cloud computing at its max. It would consume less resources and confirm to more productivity. You’ll for sure enjoy watching videos and listening to music without which computing is not possible for a common working man. Games and other applications would be developed but they would be web-based. In fact, each of applications, programs, games – all will run under chrome browser interface. There would be no installation and uninstallation issues. It would be secure as each time the os will boot, it will check its file integrity and will fix automatically if something has been changed. Chrome doesn’t trust another application. It trusts itself.  Ya it would support existing netbooks. Support for drivers and other such complicacies would be worked upon.
Chrome os Basics
Chrome os Basics
Let me summarise few features of Google Chrome OS in few points :
1) Netbook OS – primarily designed for netbook computing.
2) Simple interface – Things will need minimal user interaction. It avoids unnecessary processes.
3) Cloud Computing – It follows cloud computing concept (everything in your browser) with web and browser-based applications and toolkit. Applications designed for google chrome os would surely run on other os be it Linux, mac, windows.
4) Security – No risk of virus, trojan, malware. It checks its file integrity and originality at the startup.
5) No software installation – You won’t need to go through installation and uninstallation issues related to various applications and softwares.
6) Open Source & Free – Google Chrome os is open source and would be available for free to use.
google chrome os screenshot
google chrome os screenshot
I even heard that you can’t run other browsers. As they say, other browser makers can build their own os since chrome is open source. What about other applications ? Well, all applications like ms office, adobe applications will function online and on web platform only. What about doing things offline ? The answer would be in practice with development of HTML5.
Google Chrome os source code has already been released for developers so that open source community can contribute from this stage onwards. You can download Google Chrome OS source code . Developers can compile and run chrome os for testing and for further development. While GDGT has compiled one for interested users, you can download compiled version and run it using virtual box. Download Google chrome os compiled by GDGT . I don’t recommend general users to waste their time testing this. Its meant for developers. At the same time, I advise general users not to download any os claiming to be chrome os from torrents or other sources.
Expect difference from Google. They are not going to put another similar os to existing os lineup. The new chrome os will specifically fit a particular group of people and particular range of computers (netbooks). While much can’t be said about this os at this time, more to come, keep your eyes on us. We’ll inform you at the earliest!

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Top 10 Job Hunting Websites

Top 10 Job Hunting Websites

Find the job that’s right for you.

Yahoo Hot Jobs
1- Yahoo! HotJobs
Find your dream job! Search for jobs, post your resume, compare salaries and find career advice and research. Thousands of new jobs listed daily.

Job Central
2- JobCentral.com
Find local jobs and apply online via company employment career sites. No middle man. Job Central is a free service of Direct Employers Association.

College Recruiter
3- CollegeRecruiter
Click Here! Internship for College Students & Entry Level Job Recent Graduates! Careers, Job Postings, Internships, Resumes, Cover Letters, Salaries, Interviewing and Employers.

Career Builder
4- CareerBuilder
Search 1.6 million Jobs on CareerBuilder.com.  Find new employment or work. Fresh job listings posted daily.  Have jobs emailed to you. Explore career opportunities.  Search and apply online today.

Monster Jobs
Monster Jobs
5- Monster.com
Find the job that’s right for you. Use Monster’s resources to create a killer resume, search for jobs, prepare for interviews, and launch your career.
Job
Job
6- Job.com
Search for jobs and apply to jobs in the United States.  Over a million of the best American jobs are listed on AmericanJobs.com.  It’s free and easy.
Career
Career
7- Career.com
Search for high quality job of experienced and fresh graduates, You can search job in all fields for free and upload resume.
True Careers
True Careers
8- TrueCareers.com
Search thousands of job listings and see who’s hiring. Post a job or resume and get free career advice. Preferred job search for educated professionals.
Indeed Jobs
Indeed Jobs
9- Indeed.com
Job Search by Indeed. one search. all  jobs. Search millions of jobs from thousands of job boards, newspapers, classifieds and company websites on indeed.com
Net Temps Jobs
Net Temps Jobs
10- Net-Temps.com
Search from thousands of new jobs, post your resume, apply online. Use our career development resources to help you land your next job.

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