Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts

Friday, August 13, 2010

oracle google / Oracle sues Google over Android operating system

oracle google / Oracle sues Google over Android operating system







Setting the stage for a clash of two Silicon Valley titans, Oracle said Thursday that it has filed a federal lawsuit alleging that Google's popular Android operating system was built on Oracle's Java software without permission.

Android, which was first released in late 2008, has seen surging adoption by computer manufacturers as an operating system for smartphones and other portable gadgets. Oracle's lawsuit accuses Google of knowingly infringing on Java patents and copyrights that Oracle acquired when it bought Sun Microsystems earlier this year.

While Redwood Shores-based Oracle did not specify the amount of damages it will seek, one analyst said the stakes could be high. But he also suggested the lawsuitmay be a strategic move by Oracle in the course of a larger negotiating effort.



"At the end of the day, it could mean a fair amount of money," said Al Hilwa, a software industry expert at the IDC tech research firm. Based on other similar past disputes, he added, it's likely that the two companies have been negotiating quietly for months.

"Going public with a lawsuit may well be part of a strategy by Oracle for trying to force the issue," Hilwa said.
Mountain View-based Google declined to comment and said it had not seen the lawsuit. An Oracle spokeswoman declined to say whether the two companies held any talks before the lawsuit was filed.
The suit came as a surprise to many in the industry, and it may ultimately turn on complex points of intellectual property law. Sun Microsystems, whose engineers developed the widely used Java programming language and related tools, decided several years ago to release key elements of the Java code under an open-source license that allows others to use it freely.


"Java is essential for Android," said Hilwa, adding that "since Android has been out there for more than a year, most people would have expected they were in compliance with whatever license terms apply."
Google makes little money directly from Android, since it is distributed as an open-source operating system. But Android's growth means more search revenue for Google, as consumers use their smartphones to search the Web.

While Google does not break out its revenue from mobile search, a company official recently announced that Google searches from Android devices grew by 300 percent during the first half of 2010.
Android is now the most popular smartphone operating system in the United States, according to the Gartner research firm, which said it is on the verge of becoming the second-most-popular in the world, closing in on Research In Motion's BlackBerry.



Friday, July 30, 2010

Extreme Technology Trends / Technology Trends / technology news








The new technology is really hard to follow nowadays. Many interesting ideas creates new technological developments which are hard to believe. The human brain and imagination starts the fire and extreme technologies enter into our lives. Here is the top 10 extreme technology trends come out to blow our minds.


Geo-Engineering
-----------------

With the improvements in technology and the enormous increase in population, the pollution problems start to threaten our lives. Technology, the reason of this problem, will also be the solution to this pollution by means of geo-engineering. The sophisticated tech will fix to engineer climate, water and soil.

Nano-Medical Devices
------------------------

Nano-technology is not as attractive as it was when it’s first come out. But the effects of nano-technology in medical area is extremely important. This technology even helps restore organs and reduce cancers.

Practical Quantum Computing
------------------------------

Our computers started to be our lives for a couple of years. That’s why we need to protect the enormous data in our computers by the help of encryption. Quantum computing technology helps us about this really serious topic. Also this technology provides us the data mining opportunity.

Stem Cell Organs On-Demand
-------------------------------

A perfect leap for the health technology. The stem cell technology will help us to prolong life and be healthier.

Reality Mashups
--------------------

This year the convergence of technology that connects people, from RFID to Wi-Fi, the Internet, cell phones and to cars will bring two billion people together over wireless global networks. When you combine geographic information with voice, video and search, you have one global dynamic trading and Connectivity Cloud.

Personal Robots
-----------------

They are the new helpers, new friends and new comedians of ours. They are coming soon and not as expensive as you think.

Immersive Web
-----------------

This technology will make you feel the internet. That will deliver you sensation, experience and emotion. The cyber world will be one step closer to you.

iHealth
-----------

Be well informed about your health whenever you want. New wearable devices and information applications will empower you with real-time information customizes to monitor and track the health status, measuring risks and so on. You can learn anything about your ongoing health movements.

CyberJacks
-------------

A new breed of rogue for-profit apolitical hackers will prey on banks, consumers and business, hacking into databases and stealing identities for the highest bidder in online identity trade marts. More networks get connected the more at risk.

 Green Tech
--------------

All the companies are now aware of the negative effects of the technology to our planet. That’s why the green technology is come out to decrease these effects. From fuels, to clothes, to hybrid cars, green tech will offer new alternatives to consumers and business alike.

All of these technological developments may seem a bit frightening, but when you get the control of them, they really become a big part of your life. No one can resist their usableness and life becomes hard when you try to live away from these technological developments.

nick.com / iwin iCarly iWin “iGot a Hot Room” Sweepstakes / nick.com/icarly, nick.com/win, nick.com/i win, www.nick.com/iwin, iwin




Nick.com/iwin:iCarly Sweepstakes at Www.nick.com/iwin – Did you watch Nickelodeon’s “iCarly” this evening? If you did, you are fully aware that we saw what Carly’s (Miranda Cosgrove) bedroom looked like for the very first time in the new episode/season premiere called “iGot A Hot Room” after three long years.

If you liked the items that you saw in the show tonight simply go to www.nick.com/iwin or to nick.com/iwin for a chance to win the cool stuff that Spencer and his friends used to rebuild the room for his sister after burning it down with a birthday gift.




The iCarly iWin a Hot Room sweepstakes will last couple of hours but the website is currently out of service due to heavy traffic (it seems that everyone who saw that episode wants a piece of the crazy room).

Just keep trying over and over until you get a chance to participate in the contest so you can win one of the following 7 things that were in the room such as the hand-made, gummy bear chandelier made of approximately 10,000 hand-strung gummy bears; a bench modeled after a classic ice cream sandwich; a giant cupcake side table; a high-tech closet with a touch pad clothing selector; and a trampoline so Carly can literally jump into bed!

All the best, I hope you win something, especially the adorable cupcake table.
Let me know what you won and share your thoughts on the brand new episode below in the comment section.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

how google search engine works / Google / PigeonRank System

The technology behind Google's great results
=================================

As a Google user, you're familiar with the speed and accuracy of a Google search. How exactly does Google manage to find the right results for every query as quickly as it does? The heart of Google's search technology is PigeonRank™, a system for ranking web pages developed by Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin at Stanford University.



PigeonRank System
==============

Building upon the breakthrough work of B. F. Skinner, Page and Brin reasoned that low cost pigeon clusters (PCs) could be used to compute the relative value of web pages faster than human editors or machine-based algorithms. And while Google has dozens of engineers working to improve every aspect of our service on a daily basis, PigeonRank continues to provide the basis for all of our web search tools.

Why Google's patented PigeonRank™ works so well

PigeonRank's success relies primarily on the superior trainability of the domestic pigeon (Columba livia) and its unique capacity to recognize objects regardless of spatial orientation. The common gray pigeon can easily distinguish among items displaying only the minutest differences, an ability that enables it to select relevant web sites from among thousands of similar pages.

By collecting flocks of pigeons in dense clusters, Google is able to process search queries at speeds superior to traditional search engines, which typically rely on birds of prey, brooding hens or slow-moving waterfowl to do their relevance rankings.

diagramWhen a search query is submitted to Google, it is routed to a data coop where monitors flash result pages at blazing speeds. When a relevant result is observed by one of the pigeons in the cluster, it strikes a rubber-coated steel bar with its beak, which assigns the page a PigeonRank value of one. For each peck, the PigeonRank increases. Those pages receiving the most pecks, are returned at the top of the user's results page with the other results displayed in pecking order.

Integrity
=======

Google's pigeon-driven methods make tampering with our results extremely difficult. While some unscrupulous websites have tried to boost their ranking by including images on their pages of bread crumbs, bird seed and parrots posing seductively in resplendent plumage, Google's PigeonRank technology cannot be deceived by these techniques. A Google search is an easy, honest and objective way to find high-quality websites with information relevant to your search.

How Google Works / Google

How Google Works
==============

If you aren’t interested in learning how Google creates the index and the database of documents that it accesses when processing a query, skip this description. I adapted the following overview from Chris Sherman and Gary Price’s wonderful description of How Search Engines Work in Chapter 2 of The Invisible Web (CyberAge Books, 2001).

Google runs on a distributed network of thousands of low-cost computers and can therefore carry out fast parallel processing. Parallel processing is a method of computation in which many calculations can be performed simultaneously, significantly speeding up data processing. Google has three distinct parts:

•Googlebot, a web crawler that finds and fetches web pages.
•The indexer that sorts every word on every page and stores the resulting index of words in a huge database.
•The query processor, which compares your search query to the index and recommends the documents that it considers most relevant.
Let’s take a closer look at each part.

1. Googlebot, Google’s Web Crawler
==========================

Googlebot is Google’s web crawling robot, which finds and retrieves pages on the web and hands them off to the Google indexer. It’s easy to imagine Googlebot as a little spider scurrying across the strands of cyberspace, but in reality Googlebot doesn’t traverse the web at all. It functions much like your web browser, by sending a request to a web server for a web page, downloading the entire page, then handing it off to Google’s indexer.

Googlebot consists of many computers requesting and fetching pages much more quickly than you can with your web browser. In fact, Googlebot can request thousands of different pages simultaneously. To avoid overwhelming web servers, or crowding out requests from human users, Googlebot deliberately makes requests of each individual web server more slowly than it’s capable of doing.

Googlebot finds pages in two ways: through an add URL form, www.google.com/addurl.html, and through finding links by crawling the web.



Unfortunately, spammers figured out how to create automated bots that bombarded the add URL form with millions of URLs pointing to commercial propaganda. Google rejects those URLs submitted through its Add URL form that it suspects are trying to deceive users by employing tactics such as including hidden text or links on a page, stuffing a page with irrelevant words, cloaking (aka bait and switch), using sneaky redirects, creating doorways, domains, or sub-domains with substantially similar content, sending automated queries to Google, and linking to bad neighbors. So now the Add URL form also has a test: it displays some squiggly letters designed to fool automated “letter-guessers”; it asks you to enter the letters you see — something like an eye-chart test to stop spambots.

When Googlebot fetches a page, it culls all the links appearing on the page and adds them to a queue for subsequent crawling. Googlebot tends to encounter little spam because most web authors link only to what they believe are high-quality pages. By harvesting links from every page it encounters, Googlebot can quickly build a list of links that can cover broad reaches of the web. This technique, known as deep crawling, also allows Googlebot to probe deep within individual sites. Because of their massive scale, deep crawls can reach almost every page in the web. Because the web is vast, this can take some time, so some pages may be crawled only once a month.

Although its function is simple, Googlebot must be programmed to handle several challenges. First, since Googlebot sends out simultaneous requests for thousands of pages, the queue of “visit soon” URLs must be constantly examined and compared with URLs already in Google’s index. Duplicates in the queue must be eliminated to prevent Googlebot from fetching the same page again. Googlebot must determine how often to revisit a page. On the one hand, it’s a waste of resources to re-index an unchanged page. On the other hand, Google wants to re-index changed pages to deliver up-to-date results.

To keep the index current, Google continuously recrawls popular frequently changing web pages at a rate roughly proportional to how often the pages change. Such crawls keep an index current and are known as fresh crawls. Newspaper pages are downloaded daily, pages with stock quotes are downloaded much more frequently. Of course, fresh crawls return fewer pages than the deep crawl. The combination of the two types of crawls allows Google to both make efficient use of its resources and keep its index reasonably current.


2. Google’s Indexer
===============

Googlebot gives the indexer the full text of the pages it finds. These pages are stored in Google’s index database. This index is sorted alphabetically by search term, with each index entry storing a list of documents in which the term appears and the location within the text where it occurs. This data structure allows rapid access to documents that contain user query terms.

To improve search performance, Google ignores (doesn’t index) common words called stop words (such as the, is, on, or, of, how, why, as well as certain single digits and single letters). Stop words are so common that they do little to narrow a search, and therefore they can safely be discarded. The indexer also ignores some punctuation and multiple spaces, as well as converting all letters to lowercase, to improve Google’s performance.


3. Google’s Query Processor
=====================

The query processor has several parts, including the user interface (search box), the “engine” that evaluates queries and matches them to relevant documents, and the results formatter.

PageRank is Google’s system for ranking web pages. A page with a higher PageRank is deemed more important and is more likely to be listed above a page with a lower PageRank.

Google considers over a hundred factors in computing a PageRank and determining which documents are most relevant to a query, including the popularity of the page, the position and size of the search terms within the page, and the proximity of the search terms to one another on the page. A patent application discusses other factors that Google considers when ranking a page. Visit SEOmoz.org’s report for an interpretation of the concepts and the practical applications contained in Google’s patent application.

Google also applies machine-learning techniques to improve its performance automatically by learning relationships and associations within the stored data. For example, the spelling-correcting system uses such techniques to figure out likely alternative spellings. Google closely guards the formulas it uses to calculate relevance; they’re tweaked to improve quality and performance, and to outwit the latest devious techniques used by spammers.

Indexing the full text of the web allows Google to go beyond simply matching single search terms. Google gives more priority to pages that have search terms near each other and in the same order as the query. Google can also match multi-word phrases and sentences. Since Google indexes HTML code in addition to the text on the page, users can restrict searches on the basis of where query words appear, e.g., in the title, in the URL, in the body, and in links to the page, options offered by Google’s Advanced Search Form and Using Search Operators (Advanced Operators).



Let’s see how Google processes a query.
1. The web server sends the query to the index        servers. The content inside the index servers is similar        to the index in the back of a book--it tells which pages        contain the words that match any particular query       term.          2. The query travels to the doc servers, which   actually retrieve the stored documents. Snippets are    generated to describe each search result.       3. The search results are returned to the user          in a fraction of a second.




Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Cisco and EMC planning to partner up and go after large datacentres

                                                              

Networking giant Cisco Systems and storage area networking company EMC may be teaming up to form a new joint venture to provide technology services to big companies, the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday.

Citing unnamed sources who have been briefed on the plans, the Journal story said the new joint venture, codenamed Alpine, would target large businesses and would focus on installing Cisco server and networking gear and EMC storage equipment into datacentres.

It's unclear when the joint venture might be announced, according to the newspaper. So far, Cisco has declined to comment on the speculation. And an EMC spokesperson provided a statement to the WSJ reiterating that the companies have always been close partners and will continue to be in the future.

Indeed, Cisco has been reselling EMC storage gear for years. Cisco also owns a stake in virtualisation software company VMware, which operates as a unit of EMC. So it makes sense that the companies would team up on a new services venture.

What's more, Cisco has been making a big push into the datacentre market. Earlier this year Cisco announced a new datacentre architecture it calls Unified Computing. This new architecture includes new hardware from Cisco, namely blade servers, an interconnection "fabric," a chassis for the blade servers, fabric extenders and network adapters. It also includes coordinated support and software integration from partners such as Intel, Microsoft, EMC, and VMware.

Cisco sees the datacentre market as a multibillion-dollar opportunity. The company anticipates a greater need for storage and high-speed networking within datacentres as more services and content come online. At the same companies are starting to virtualise their datacentres to make those operations more efficient.

Cisco and EMC each already have service businesses of their own. EMC generated about $4.8bn in revenue in 2008 from its services business, according to the Wall Street Journal. This was about 32 per cent of the company's overall revenue.

The Journal also said that Cisco's services business generated about $7bn to the company's coffers in fiscal 2009, which was about 19 per cent of total revenue.

Most of the services that Cisco provides are for products that have already been sold. But the new joint venture would be different because it would entail designing and implementing products to fit into a datacentre. And as datacentres become more complex, it makes sense that Cisco and EMC would want to develop a service to help customers design a datacentre that would use their products.

Traditionally, Cisco has relied on partners such as HP and IBM to provide these services and help sell its gear to customers. But with the introduction of Cisco's new datacentre server products, Cisco's partners are looking more like competitors.

The move to create a services business looks to be part of Cisco's overall strategy to diversify its business. The company's bread and butter is still providing routers and switches to large companies and service providers to power the internet. But over the past couple of years the company has begun to move aggressively into new areas like IP telephony, videoconferencing and consumer electronics and home networking gear.

Cisco has also dipped its toe into other services markets. For example, with the acquisition of WebEx, the company now offers corporate users a hosted collaboration service. It has also recently launched a hosted web service it calls Eos that allows media and entertainment companies to create, manage, and grow online communities by providing tools to create websites.

Cisco Cius / Cisco means business with Android tablet

The Cius has a front-mounted HD camera for videoconferencing, along with a five-megapixel rear-facing camera that can transmit video and capture still images.

It also packs dual noise-cancelling microphones for audio conferencing.











                                                              



The innovative Cisco Cius is an ultra-portable, mobile collaboration business tablet that offers access to essential business applications and technologies.



Applications Capabilities:

    * 802.11a/b/g/n Wi-Fi, 3G/4G data and Bluetooth 3.0 help employees stay connected on and off-campus
    * HD video (720p) with Cisco TelePresence solution interoperability for lifelike video communication with the simplicity of a phone call
    * Virtual desktop client enables highly secure access to cloud-based business applications
    * Android operating system, with access Android marketplace applications
    * Collaboration applications including Cisco Quad, Cisco Show and Share, WebEx, Presence, and IM

Tablet Highlights:

    * 7” diagonal, high-resolution color screen with contact-based touch targets delivers an elegant, intuitive experience
    * HD Soundstation supports Bluetooth and USB peripherals, 10/100/1000 wired connectivity and a handset option
    * Detachable and serviceable 8-hour battery for a full day of work
    * Highly secure remote connections with Cisco AnyConnect Security VPN Client
    * HD audio with wideband support (tablet, HD Soundstation)

For details on availability, contact your Cisco or Channel Partner account representative.