by admin - Published: April 12th, 2010 -

facebook-droidAlthough the iPhone, the BlackBerry, Windows Mobile and the Symbian S60 platforms have had official Facebook applications for some time, today marks the first official release of a mobile version of the social network for Google Android.

Don’t be misled by the Fan Page – this app was developed by the Facebook team, as first reported by VentureBeat. However, I installed it on a T-Mobile MyTouch 3G and I have to say, I’m a bit disappointed, as the app isn’t quite as useful or robust as Facebook mobile apps for other platforms.


facebook-droid2

Essentially, you can view your wall, read your news feed, update your status and comment or “like” posts on your news feed. That’s it. No private messaging view. No ability to approve friend-requests. No ability to upload photos directly to Facebook. The iPhone-enhanced Facebook website (which Android phones can display) has more options and is equally readable.

Facebook tells us there are a few Android specific features, however: “The ability to place a Facebook widget on the home screen of the phone, to quickly read the latest status updates … receive notifications when you get a Facebook message, a friend invite or event invitations … quick and easy access to the phone numbers of your friends on Facebook, and allows you to give them a call with just one-click by using the Android’s Live Folders”

I suppose all apps have to start somewhere — hopefully the Facebook for Android will catch-up to its mobile-counterparts quickly.

(Photo from Android and Me))


Reviews: Android, Facebook, Symbian S60, iPhone

Tags: android, Android Market, facebook mobile

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by admin - Published: April 12th, 2010 -

2009-07-12_162425

Se utilizziamo Internet Explorer 8 ed apriamo una nuova scheda abbiamo più possibilità di scelta; infatti sarà possibile aprire l’ultimo sito web visitato, avviare la sessione in modalità di navigazione anonima (Private browsing) o infine utilizzare un accelerator.

Invece quando apriamo una nuova scheda in Firefox visualizziamo una pagina vuota a meno che non abbiamo installato l’add-on che voglio segnalarvi oggi.

(…)
Continua a leggere Miglioriamo l’apertura di una nuova scheda in Firefox, su Geekissimo


© Pierfrancesco Petruzzelli (pierfrancesco99) per Geekissimo, 2009. |
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by admin - Published: April 12th, 2010 -

Davvero notevole questo jquery.scrollable. Si tratta di un plugin per il celebre framework in grado di applicare un comportamento e un’interfaccia a scrolling a qualunque elemento HTML. Come chiarito dagli autori, si presta bene in situazioni come quelle rappresentate da news ticker, playlist di video, cataloghi di prodotti, gallerie di immagini, etc.
Ben documentato, il plugin [...]

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by admin - Published: April 12th, 2010 -

Nuovo sitemap generator by googleIl sitemap generator di Google ha ormai qualche anno (è stato annunciato nel giugno 2005) e già tanti altri hanno creato alternative rispettabili, adesso però BigG ha rilasciato un nuovo generator open source.

La nuova versione utilizza più metodi per trovare gli URL sul sito analizzato (traffico, files di log, files presenti sul server), il che rende l’operazione più precisa ed al contempo più veloce; si possono salvare più tipi di files: Xml (secondo lo standard per le sitemap), Mobile (per siti dedicati ad utenti mobili) e Code Search (per siti che mettono a disposizione codici sorgenti).

Si consiglia a tutti gli webmaster di provare il nuovo sitemap generator ed aggiornare le proprie informazioni, che sono fondamentali per essere meglio trovati ed indicizzati da tutti i motori di ricerca, non solo Google.

Via | GoogleWebmasterCentral

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by admin - Published: April 12th, 2010 -
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by admin - Published: April 12th, 2010 -

architettura di un load balancing

E’ stata rilasciata oggi l’ultima versione di Balance, un semplice proxy TCP open source, rilasciato sotto licenza GPL, in grado di eseguire distribuzioni di carico tra diversi server.

Una volta posto in esecuzione, Balance accetta le connessioni in ingresso su una specifica porta ed esegue il forward della connessione su un gruppo di host. Se il gruppo è composto da due o più host, Balance inoltra la richiesta a un solo host del gruppo secondo l’algoritmo Round Robin. E’ possibile al massimo creare 16 gruppi, ciascuno composto al più da 16 host.

Balance non possiede interfaccia grafica: il suo comportamento è controllato a runtime attraverso semplici comandi di shell.

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by admin - Published: April 12th, 2010 -

Centomila dollari, suddivisi in due premi da quarantamila e sessantamila bigliettoni. Ecco la spaventosa cifra messa a disposizione dalla società di sicurezza TippingPoint agli hacker che a Vancouver, dal prossimo 24 marzo, si sfideranno al Pwn2Own 2010, per “bucare” i browser e i cellulari più “in” del momento.

Come tutti voi ben saprete, il Pwn2Own è una delle manifestazioni tra più interessanti del mondo informatico, nel corso della quale una nutrita selezione di hacker – esperti e meno esperti – fa a gara per mettere a nudo le falle di sicurezza presenti in alcuni dei prodotti software più usati al mondo.

Quest’anno, però, le attenzioni dei concorrenti non dovranno concentrarsi solo sui “soliti” browser Web (IE, Firefox, Chrome e Safari), bensì anche sui cellulari di ultima generazione: iPhone 3GS, Blackberry Bold 9700, Nokia E62 e Motorola Droid su tutti (anche se gli ultimi due non sono ancora confermati al 100%). E sarà proprio chi riuscirà a scovare “il difetto” in questi graziosi dispositivi mobili che intascherà il premio più alto, quello da 60.000$.

(…)
Continua a leggere Pwn2Own 2010, chi verrà “bucato” per primo?, su Geekissimo


© naqern per Geekissimo, 2010. |
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Sei un iPhone-Maniaco? Collabora con iSayBlog!

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by admin - Published: April 12th, 2010 -
Passwords are like underwear...

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Guest post: Dan Salcedo is founder of the DC based international development organization OpenEntry, with the mission of helping small and medium enterprises (SMEs) worldwide benefit from the exciting new opportunities opened up by global e-commerce. Working with a team of volunteer developers, he built a catalog generator that enables SMEs in developing countries to create their own free e-commerce catalogs, managed via a Google spreadsheet.

Years ago, I noticed artisans in developing countries were selling their items to a long chain of middlemen that only paid them 10-15% of the final retail price, even through conventional fair trade channels. So I launched a non-profit organization to help artisans disintermediate all the middlemen by selling directly through e-commerce catalogs that they could create and manage themselves. We recently relaunched our OpenEntry catalog generator using a bunch of Google tools including Docs, Sites, Checkout, Picasa Web Albums, AdSense, and Apps Engine. And our User Manual, built on Google Sites, is full of YouTube videos. This enables us to offer totally free e-commerce catalogs (software, hosting, user support) to artisans and SMEs worldwide including the following:

Nature Nepal-Herbal Care
Nepal
MerevilleyTrust
India
Pollee Unnyon Prokolpo
Bangladesh
Each catalog is managed by filling out a Google spreadsheet with three sheets containing information on the company, products, and additional pages (see products sheet below).


The images are stored on Picasa Web Albums and sellers use Google Checkout (as well as PayPal and 2Checkout) to accept credit card payments. Google Sites helps users generate attractive HTML that can be added to some of the spreadsheet fields to improve aesthetics. Google App Engine reads the spreadsheet, then generates the catalog hosted on Google servers. These tools also made it surprisingly easy to enable OpenEntry catalogs to be managed with a smart phone.

Google recently added a feature enabling the ownership of their spreadsheets to be transferred to a third party, which makes it easy to transfer spreadsheets to the final SME vendor. This is very good news because it enables the OpenEntry User Support team in Nepal to set up catalogs and transfer ownership to the SME vendor who can then operate it securely. This also means we can now transfer blocks of catalog accounts to young, ambitious entrepreneurs anywhere in the developing world, enabling them to start their own legitimate enterprises. Even though the OpenEntry catalogs are free, the entrepreneurs can charge for setup, digital images, custom templates, training, maintenance, etc. And they can even do it from an Internet cafe until they can afford their own computer. This reinforces the conclusion of the United Nations Development Program evaluation of our platform (under its previous name, CatGen) that generated 4000 jobs for artisan women and “a relatively inexperienced group of young IT professionals” in Nepal.

Because this is a non-profit initiative, OpenEntry is seeking volunteers to help with a variety of technical tasks starting with template design.

Posted by: Dan Salcedo, Founder and CEO of www.OpenEntry.com, dsalcedo@OpenEntry.com

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by admin - Published: April 12th, 2010 -
Redis started as an internal project more or less one year ago. Initially it was not meant to become an open source project. The initial goal was just to make it simple for us to scale a few critical things in different web applications.

But it was hard to resist the open source soul there is in me :) It’s been more than ten years that I have contributed to the open source world. Code sitting just inside your HD is a waste in many ways. So a few weeks later I released the first public version of Redis, and it started to grow in users, who in turn pushed me to add features and provide more stable code.

In little time Redis was a bigger effort that my "real" work, that is, the work I was doing for my two companies (I'm the founder of two small companies, and I work with my friends here, doing web apps and iPhone apps).

Basically this year was full of good things, I saw Redis becoming more and more popular, and learned a lot of stuff in the process. I saw the Redis community growing, full of interesting people willing to share their knowledge. But at the same time it was hard, I had my work, and I had Redis to develop. And while initially Redis was just an hobby and the code itself was very small, it started to get more complex, and to get more interesting features like sorted sets, virtual memory, append only file.

To put this in the right context, take in mind that Redis is a DB. When you receive a bug report, it's not like "VLC is crashing playing this particular FLV video". There are people doing real business with Redis, with their real data. You have to fix the issues ASAP, you need to provide very stable code, or at least this is how I see it. Your users are your customers, not just people downloading some hackish code trying to make it working.

Business models

This are the reasons why I started searching for a viable business model for Redis. My problem was that I was not willing to do services, that is, consultancy or specialized versions of Redis for specific companies needs: I wanted to spend most of my time hacking on Redis, not trying to make it working in different real-world contexts.

So I needed a product based business model. How would I achieve that without closing Redis itself?

My best answer was to start building Redis Tools, a set of tools to make it simpler to work with Redis, to get statistics about the dataset, to check how it was working. The idea was to sell this tools for a reasonable price, in order to have income strong enough to switch full time into Redis development.

But to develop commercial quality tools, write documentation for them, offering minimal support, handling the logistics part, is not trivial, and Redis Tools are not exactly something you can easily sell in large numbers, as the potential customers are companies using Redis seriously.

Fortunately there was an alternative, a number of companies started to contact me about hiring me to work at Redis full time. In a few weeks the condition was totally shifting, from searching for a business model with little hopes of success, to choosing the best company to join in order to bring Redis development to a completely new level.

VMware

One of the strongest indications that VMware was the best home for Redis was how our contacts started: with chats about VM internals.

Yes, because VMware is a technological company. A strong technological company, where there are many people doing similar work to the one I do for Redis everyday. They wanted to know more about Redis internals, use cases, possible optimizations, and so forth. Since the early stages the stress was in the technology.

Another awesome factor was how VMware is committed to leaving Redis completely open. They want me to develop Redis to continue helping developers to get the most out of it, in a better way than was possible before.

Not only Redis will remain a totally open source project, but Redis Tools will be open sourced also (and this was an idea I got from VMware itself!).

This is why I’m truly excited about joining VMware: together we’ll build a better, free Redis, bringing Redis development to another level.

I’m very glad VMware is offering me such a great opportunity. But in practical terms, what will change in the Redis development? Well, not so much, apart me having much more time and support. I’ll continue working from home, here in Sicily, I’ll continue pushing features forward in little time. Even if you think Redis was already stable enough for being such an young project, with VMware I’m sure we can establish better quality assurance processes.

Another thing I will enjoy is to be able to spend some time writing the Redis book I started many months ago, but was unable to finish due to time constraints.

VMware is making all this possible, and I’m sure you’ll enjoy the work we’ll do around Redis as much as I will.

Ah and I didn’t invented all this myself ;) You can check the VMware blog post written by Derek Collison of the VMware Cloud Service Division ;)

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