রবিবার, ১৬ জুন, ২০১৩

Microsoft Office Mobile for iPhone hands-on

Microsoft releases Office for iPhone, available now for Office 365 subscribers only handson

It wasn't a question of whether Microsoft would release Office for iOS, but when. The company just released a free Office Mobile app for the iPhone, and it's available today in the US, with other regions to follow over the coming days. Before you all go rushing off to the download link, though, there's something you need to know: an Office 365 subscription is required in order to use the app. That's a bummer for people who bought a traditional copy of the suite, or who normally use other word processors, but it makes perfect business sense for Microsoft. After all, the company doesn't want to give folks too many reasons to use iOS, and it also needs to protect the precious revenue stream that is Office sales.

In any event, if you do have a 365 subscription, you'll be delighted to know that the iOS app does not count toward your limit of five PC / Mac installations. Rather, you get to install the application on up to five iPhones, the same way you can put the full suite on up to five computers. Also, in addition to merely viewing whatever Word, PowerPoint and Excel files you already had stored in SkyDrive, you can also make light edits. Additionally, you can create new documents from your phone, though this only applies to Word and Excel, not PowerPoint (understandably so, we think). Again, the app is available today in the US, and for the iPhone, specifically; for the iPad, Microsoft is steering people toward its Office web apps. As for other platforms, the company won't comment on whether an Android version is in the works. At any rate, all you iPhone owners with 365 subscriptions can get your download on now. And then you can read on past the break, where we've got some screenshots and hands-on impressions at the ready.

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Source: iTunes Store, MS Office News blog, MS Office Technical blog

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/H8JIZTmF7ZE/

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শনিবার, ১৫ জুন, ২০১৩

Professional Dental Tips To Keep Your Mouth Healthy - Weight Loss ...

Most people recognize the value of good oral care, but nobody wants to spend a lot of time on it. Fortunately, there are methods that can make it easier. The following advice with help you with dental care.

Brush your teeth two times a day. The ADA recommends doing this, so it's based on sound advice. Brush teeth every day, as this is the least you should be doing for your dental care routine. These are also great times to floss.

Switching to a different type of toothpaste may help you deal with heat- and cold-sensitive teeth. However, it is a good idea to visit your dentist first, before you make any changes. If your teeth are being aggravated by something aside from your toothpaste, your dentist should be able to let you know.

Do not eat too many foods that are acidic or high in sugar. Sugary foods can harm your teeth. If you must eat sugary foods, drink water as well. Brushing your teeth immediately after consuming sugary foods may also mitigate the damage.

Cavities come about when the enamel is weakened. Bacteria causes this weakening, and the end result is a cavity. Make a dentist appointment every six months to prevent any dental issues. Your dentist may periodically x-ray your teeth; this allows for identification of cavities.

Cavities are caused when your enamel weakens. Bacteria breaks down and weakens enamel. To help improve your dental health, visit a dentist twice a year. Your dentist can even take x-rays. These will help ensure that no new cavities are forming.

See a dentist right away if your teeth chip or you are in pain. If you wait, you could simply be causing more problems for yourself. Getting the problem fixed right away may cost some money now, but it will save you money later.

Medications can be responsible for halitosis and dry mouth. If you do not produce enough saliva, it is more likely that cavities will develop and that you will experience discomfort. Ask your doctor if your prescription medication might be causing dry mouth. If so, it may be possible to switch medications. If it isn't, your dentist might have some good dry mouth solutions.

Go to your dentist often. Getting your teeth checked on a regular schedule prevents your teeth from developing problems. Your dentist can also spot anything out of the ordinary and provide helpful advice and treatment early on to prevent problems later. Even the most seemingly minor dental concern can have serious consequences further down the road.

A lot of people want to get their teeth whitened. There are many teeth whitening products available on the market. To make sure that establish an effective dental care routine, you should use the information you just read while you begin your search.

Source: http://weightlossand-fitness.blogspot.com/2013/06/professional-dental-tips-to-keep-your.html

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This Submersible Skatepark Is Drainage in Disguise

This Submersible Skatepark Is Drainage in Disguise

Skateboarding's earliest shredders cut their teeth in empty pools and drainage pipes, but extreme sport-boardin' has come a long way in the years since. There are plenty of devoted skateparks out there now, but this one in Denmark goes back to those roots by doubling as a functional drainage system.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/rXBQuY04zZY/this-skatepark-is-a-drainage-system-in-disguise-513417730

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শুক্রবার, ১৪ জুন, ২০১৩

Nintendo's Eiji Aonuma on the Wii U's stumbles, Virtual Console support and a 'need to evolve'

Nintendo's Eiji Aonuma on the future of Zelda, the Wii U's stumbles and a 'need to evolve'

It's cool to be different. That's the message we typically feed our children when they come up against peer opposition. It's also an attitude Nintendo's adopted time and time again when its penchant for innovation, aversion to hardcore gameplay and reliance on classic franchises have put the company in a perceived last place position. But, as it's continually proven -- and most successfully with the Wii -- you can't ever definitively count the Mario hitmaker out. There always seems to be an ace in the company's IP sleeve that keeps bringing gamers and its diehard fanbase back to the fold. But we have to wonder: how long will that last? It's a question we posed directly to Eiji Aonuma, Nintendo's Most Valuable Player #2 and Zelda mastermind, this week at E3. And his answer might surprise you: "If we don't change we might die. We need to evolve. Things need to change. Things need to grow." It's a sobering admission, especially considering the source.

"If we don't change we might die. We need to evolve. Things need to change. Things need to grow."

The IP ace this time around falls upon the Zelda franchises' shoulders, except not in the way we've come to expect. The two newest titles in the series, headed to the 3DS and Wii U, also happen to be recycled efforts: a reimagining of A Link to the Past and an HD reboot of the Wind Waker, both headed up by Aonuma. Perhaps it's just a consequence of franchise fatigue and player familiarity, but there's something more alarming, more distressing about this back catalog mining; something Aonuma's all too aware of. It's also something he's actively steering his production teams away from, while at the same time attempting to take it all in as a greater lesson for a company so tethered to video gaming past. So to catch some deeper perspective on Nintendo's next-gen leanings, its level of self-awareness and the future of Zelda, we sat down with Aonuma for what turned out to be an honest and refreshing chat.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/13/nintendo-eiji-aonuma-interview-zelda-wii-u-e3/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Can you feel me now? New array measures vibrations across skin, may help engineers design tactile displays

June 14, 2013 ? In the near future, a buzz in your belt or a pulse from your jacket may give you instructions on how to navigate your surroundings.

Think of it as tactile Morse code: vibrations from a wearable, GPS-linked device that tell you to turn right or left, or stop, depending on the pattern of pulses you feel. Such a device could free drivers from having to look at maps, and could also serve as a tactile guide for the visually and hearing impaired.

Lynette Jones, a senior research scientist in MIT's Department of Mechanical Engineering, designs wearable tactile displays. Through her work, she's observed that the skin is a sensitive -- though largely untapped -- medium for communication.

"If you compare the skin to the retina, you have about the same number of sensory receptors, you just have them over almost two square meters of space, unlike the eye where it's all concentrated in an extremely small area," Jones says. "The skin is generally as useful as a very acute area. It's just that you need to disperse the information that you're presenting."

Knowing just how to disperse tactile information across the skin is tricky. For instance, people may be much more sensitive to stimuli on areas like the hand, as opposed to the forearm, and may respond best to certain patterns of vibrations. Such information on skin responsiveness could help designers determine the best configuration of motors in a display, given where on the skin a device would be worn.

Now Jones has built an array that precisely tracks a motor's vibrations through skin in three dimensions. The array consists of eight miniature accelerometers and a single pancake motor -- a type of vibrating motor used in cellphones. She used the array to measure motor vibrations in three locations: the palm of the hand, the forearm and the thigh. From her studies with eight healthy participants, Jones found that a motor's mechanical vibrations through skin drop off quickly in all three locations, within 8 millimeters from where the vibrations originated.

Jones also gauged participants' perception of vibrations, fitting them with a 3-by-3 array of pancake motors in these three locations on the body. While skin generally stopped vibrating 8 millimeters from the source, most people continued to perceive the vibrations as far away as 24 millimeters.

When participants were asked to identify specific locations of motors within the array, they were much more sensitive on the palm than on the forearm or thigh. But in all three locations, people were better at picking out vibrations in the four corners of the array, versus the inner motors, leading Jones to posit that perhaps people use the edges of their limbs to localize vibrations and other stimuli.

"For a lot of sensory modalities, you have to work out what it is people can process, as one of the dictates for how you design," says Jones, whose results will appear in the journal IEEE Transactions on Haptics. "There's no point in making things much more compact, which may be a desirable feature from an engineering point of view, but from a human-use point of view, doesn't make a difference."

Mapping good vibrations

In addition to measuring skin's sensitivity to vibrations, Jones and co-author Katherine Sofia '12 found that skin has a strong effect on motor vibrations. The researchers compared a pancake motor's frequency of vibrations when mounted on a rigid structure or on more compliant skin. They found that in general, skin reduced a motor's vibrations by 28 percent, with the forearm and thigh having a slightly stronger dampening effect than the palm of the hand.

The skin's damping of motor vibrations is significant, Jones says, if engineers plan to build tactile displays that incorporate different frequencies of vibrations. For instance, the difference between two motors -- one slightly faster than the other -- may be indistinguishable in certain parts of the skin. Likewise, two motors spaced a certain distance apart may be differentiable in one area but not another.

"Should I have eight motors, or is four enough that 90 percent of the time, I'll know that when this one's on, it's this one and not that one?" Jones says. "We're answering those sorts of questions in the context of what information you want to present using a device."

Roberta Klatzky, a professor of psychology at Carnegie Mellon University, says that measurements taken by Jones' arrays can be used to set up displays in which the location of a stimulus -- for example, a pattern to convey a letter -- is important.

"A major challenge is to enable people to tell the difference between patterns applied to the skin as, for example, blind people do when reading Braille," says Klatzky, who specializes in the study of spatial cognition. "Lynette's work sets up a methodology and potential guidelines for effective pattern displays."

Creating a buzz

Jones sees promising applications for wearable tactile displays. In addition to helping drivers navigate, she says tactile stimuli may direct firefighters through burning buildings, or emergency workers through disaster sites. In more mundane scenarios, she says tactile displays may help joggers traverse an unfamiliar city, taking directions from a buzzing wristband, instead of having to look at a smartphone.

Using data from their mechanical and perceptual experiments, Jones' group is designing arrays that can be worn across the back and around the wrist, and is investigating various ways to present vibrations. For example, a row of vibrations activated sequentially from left to right may tell a driver to turn right; a single motor that buzzes with increasing frequency may be a warning to slow down.

"There's a lot of things you can do with these displays that are fairly intuitive in terms of how people respond," Jones says, "which is important because no one's going to spend hours and hours in any application, learning what a signal means."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/GkStDAspju8/130614082649.htm

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Hands-free talking and texting are unsafe for drivers, study shows

June 12, 2013 ? Using hands-free devices to talk, text or send e-mail while driving is distracting and risky, contrary to what many people believe, says a new University of Utah study issued today by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety.

"Our research shows that hands-free is not risk-free," says University of Utah psychology Professor David Strayer, lead author of the study, which he conducted for the foundation arm of the nonprofit AAA, formerly known as the American Automobile Association.

"These new, speech-based technologies in the car can overload the driver's attention and impair their ability to drive safely," says Strayer. "An unintended consequence of trying to make driving safer -- by moving to speech-to-text, in-vehicle systems -- may actually overload the driver and make them less safe."

"Just because you can update Facebook while driving doesn't mean that it is safe to do so," he adds. "Don't assume that if your eyes are on the road and your hands are on the wheel that you are unimpaired. If you don't pay attention then you are a potential hazard on the roadway."

In a 2006 study, Strayer first showed talking on a hands-free cell phone was just as distracting as using a hand-held phone while driving, but the message has failed to fully connect with the public, with many people believing hands-free devices are safer. But now, with the backing of the AAA, Strayer hopes people realize they are risking their lives and those of others by using distracting hands-free phone, e-mailing, texting and social media technologies while driving.

Strayer conducted the study with these other members of the University of Utah Department of Psychology: Joel M. Cooper, research assistant professor of psychology; and doctoral students Jonna Turrill, James Coleman and Nate Medeiros-Ward and Francesco Biondi.

New research reveals that voice-activated in-car technologies dangerously undermine driver attention

Hands-free technologies might make it easier for motorists to text, talk on the phone, or even use Facebook while they drive, but new findings from the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety show dangerous mental distractions exist even when drivers keep their hands on the wheel and their eyes on the road.

The research found that as mental workload and distractions increase, reaction time slows, brain function is compromised, drivers scan the road less and miss visual cues, potentially resulting in drivers not seeing items right in front of them including stop signs and pedestrians.

This is the most comprehensive study of its kind to look at the mental distraction of drivers and arms AAA with evidence to appeal to the public to not use these voice-to-text features while their vehicle is in motion.

With a predicted five-fold increase in infotainment systems in new vehicles by 2018, AAA is calling for action as result of this landmark research.

"There is a looming public safety crisis ahead with the future proliferation of these in-vehicle technologies," said AAA President and CEO Robert L. Darbelnet. "It's time to consider limiting new and potentially dangerous mental distractions built into cars, particularly with the common public misperception that hands-free means risk-free."

Cognitive distraction expert David Strayer and his research team at the University of Utah measured brainwaves, eye movement and other metrics to assess what happens to drivers' mental workload when they attempt to do multiple things at once, building upon decades of research in the aerospace and automotive industries. The research included:

-- Cameras mounted inside an instrumented car to track eye and head movement of drivers.

-- A Detection-Response-Task device known as the "DRT" was used to record driver reaction time in response to triggers of red and green lights added to their field of vision.

-- A special electroencephalographic (EEG)-configured skull cap was used to chart participants' brain activity so that researchers could determine mental workload.

Using established research protocols borrowed from aviation psychology and a variety of performance metrics, drivers engaged in common tasks, from listening to an audio book or talking on the phone to listening and responding to voice-activated emails while behind the wheel.

Researchers used the results to rate the levels of mental distraction drivers experienced while performing each of the tasks. Similar to the Saffir-Simpson scale used for hurricanes, the levels of mental distraction are represented on a scale:

-- Tasks such as listening to the radio ranked as a category "1" level of distraction or a minimal risk.

-- Talking on a cell-phone, both handheld and hands-free, resulted in a "2" or a moderate risk.

-- Listening and responding to in-vehicle, voice-activated email features increased mental workload and distraction levels of the drivers to a "3" rating or one of extensive risk.

"These findings reinforce previous research that hands-free is not risk-free," said AAA Foundation President and CEO Peter Kissinger. "Increased mental workload and cognitive distractions can lead to a type of tunnel vision or inattention blindness where motorists don't see potential hazards right in front of them."

Based on this research, AAA urges the automotive and electronics industries to join us in exploring:

-- Limiting use of voice-activated technology to core driving-related activities such as climate control, windshield wipers and cruise control, and to ensure these applications do not lead to increased safety risk due to mental distraction while the car is moving.

-- Disabling certain functionalities of voice-to-text technologies such as using social media or interacting with e-mail and text messages so that they are inoperable while the vehicle is in motion.

-- Educating vehicle owners and mobile device users about the responsible use and safety risks for in-vehicle technologies.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/vc5Bivjf3Lc/130612092949.htm

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Hosted exchange spam filter - Powered by vBulletin - WinDrivers.com


Hi all,

A client of mine uses hosted exchange solution for his business with 10 computers and few weeks ago the company that provides the hosted exchange solution asked to switch the MX records because they said that google stops providing postini spam filter and they will start using spam expert spam filter instead.
the MX records were updated last week and people in the client's company are complaining of losing some important incoming emails and also getting more junk than before.
The hosted exchange company said they haven't experienced these kind of problems with the migrated clients, and there isn't another spam solution they can provide.
I asked them to cancel the spam filter for now and try to think about solution I can offer to the client :
1. 3rd party spam like spamfighter (I mean the free version, Just hope it'll work with hosted exchange settings)
2. Migrating them to google apps which to my understanding provides good spam filter compatible with previous postini

What do you think ? Any other solution you can suggest me ?

Thank you

Source: http://forums.windrivers.com/showthread.php?87895-Hosted-exchange-spam-filter

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