সোমবার, ৫ আগস্ট, ২০১৩

When it comes to Windows RT, Microsoft will be the last man standing


I believe that you're right. Have seen one in action & wasn't impressed at all. It is very well possible that one could buy one of these & never want a Windows brand product again.

And unlike Windows 8, there's a lot of add-on hardware that won't work. Accessories must be "Windows RT" certified. Apps has to be obtained direct from the MS Store, which further handicaps the user.

And to think, judging by the specs, who in their right mind is going to give $1,000 for this?

Acer Iconia W700 - Microsoft Windows

These are overpriced toys & Windows RT is a joke. MS, as always, gets on the wagon too late. Tablets & phones aren't what made MS what is is today (or was until 2012), sales of Windows & Office were.

Come the year 2020, MS likely won't have the 90+% user share that it now has, if they keep shoving this product line down users throats. The majority of portable users still prefers the 15.6" - 17.3" notebooks over low powered toys.

Cat

Source: http://www.forumswindows8.com/news/when-comes-windows-rt-microsoft-will-last-man-standing-9645.htm

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Talal Abu-Ghazaleh University and the British Council Sign Regional Agreement

17-Jul-2013

TAGI-UNI will market the British Council's Online English Test- APTIS in Jordan, Kuwait, Bahrain and the UAE?

According to the agreement signed by TAGI-UNI President HE Dr. Talal Abu-Ghazaleh and Director of the British Council Mr. Marc Jessel, the British Council shall give TAGI-UNI the permission to market and deliver Aptis on behalf of the British Council via its affiliates in Jordan, Kuwait, Bahrain and the UAE TAGI-UNI will retain the right to promote and deliver Aptis in all countries mentioned, work closely with the British Council - Jordan and ensure to set up an Aptis centre.

Dr. Abu-Ghazaleh said: "We welcome this partnership with the British Council which will result in developing the English language especially among youths in addition to other languages which we teach such as Chinese through TAG-Confucius Institution and French, German, Spanish and Italian in addition to Arabic. We will make sure to market and develop these services in all countries."

Mr. Jessel expressed his happiness of the signing saying: "This partnership with an elite university such as TAGI-UNI will assist us in increasing our contribution in the professional development of youth in Jordan and the region and we believe that Aptis will be one of the main tests of English language in evaluating global organizations in the academic and business sectors.

Meanwhile, Ms. Ameera Manna, the British Council Exams manager, said:"Aptis forms a leap in how to assess the level of English language, as Aptis flexibility will be instrumental in the accurate assessment."

The British Council creates international opportunities for the people of the UK and other countries and builds trust between them worldwide. It is on the ground in six continents and over 100 countries bringing international opportunity to life, every day. Each year, the Council works with millions of people, connecting them with the United Kingdom, sharing its cultures and the UK?s most attractive assets: English, the Arts, Education and its ways of living and organizing society.

About Talal Abu-Ghazaleh University

Talal Abu-Ghazaleh University (TAGI-UNI) is the cloud-based gateway to the world?s best education. TAGIUNI partners with leading international education institutions around to deliver accredited, world-class education to a global student body. TAGIUNI began securing partnerships in mid-2012 and has since then signed agreements with Thunderbird School of Global Management, Canisius College, Walden University, the University of Liverpool, Marconi University, Bowling Green State University, the British Council, the International Training and Development Group, Open Thinking, inlingua Cheltenham, Genashtim Innovative Learning, and Pearson-Edexcel.

Source: http://www.tagorg.com/news.aspx?id=12325&group_key=news&lang=en

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'Marvel's Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D.': Clark Gregg Talks The Return Of Coulson, Joss Whedon On Ties To The Movies

The cast and executive producers of Marvel's "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." took the stage at the Television Critics Association Summer 2013 press tour to declassify more intel on ABC's anticipated comic book series, a show which apparently stemmed from the desire to find a way for Clark Gregg's character, Agent Phil Coulson, to return from the grave after the events of "The Avengers."

Gregg admitted that he'd felt a certain finality after a "certain Asgardian fellow" impaled his character during the blockbuster movie. "I made jokes ... 'Is there a rewrite coming?' And it was really clear that I was dead. I had a great run and I thought what Joss did with the character was a magnificent resolve." Then, writer-director Joss Whedon called him five months after "The Avengers," promised him that Coulson's return wouldn't undermine the reality of the movie, and after hearing Whedon's plan, Gregg said, "I was very on board."

Executive producer Jeph Loeb added, "There was never going to be a show called 'Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.' without Clark. That's the way it started ... 'We know we want Clark; how do we start there and move out?' And then Jed and Maurissa and Joss came up with all these wonderful characters that are aboard the bus and will take us each week to a brand new epic adventure."

Loeb also reiterated that "Marvel is one universe" across its mediums -- publishing, games, TV shows and movies -- and that they'll "try to follow the continuity as best [they] can," relying on fans to tell them if something contradicts something else they've released.

Still, Loeb emphasized that the series is for both newcomers and existing fans of the Marvel universe. "Our hope is that everyone who is watching TV at 8 p.m. on Tuesdays is watching our show."

Executive producer Jeffrey Bell agreed, "We hope this is big and broad enough for everybody, but that there are specific things that Marvel fans will recognize."

Whedon said that, in terms of synergy between the series and the Marvel cinematic universe, "There will be as much as we can allow. We're still working that out. It's a fluid process. The important thing is it?s a fun opportunity, but it?s not the reason behind the show. We don?t want just to be an Easter egg farm. We want people to come back because of these people and not because of some connection to the movie universe. This show has to work for people who aren?t going to see those movies and haven?t seen them before."

The series has an admirably cinematic look and scope, something that Bell said resulted from the experience of the writers, director and behind-the-scenes crew. "Both Marvel and ABC have been very generous with us. We have a responsibility to Marvel to look awesome and terrific," he said. "But really, it's these people and their lives that we hope you'll come back to every week."

Although fans will inevitably be lured by Whedon's signature wit and one-liners, showrunners Maurissa Tancharoen and Jed Whedon wrote one of the pilot's most hilarious scenes, which bodes well for the show when Joss steps back to focus on "The Avengers: Age of Ultron" sequel.

"I got the best writers I know to do this and and actors who can do pretty much anything so that I could do less -- that's always the way to run a show," Joss admitted of leaving the series in his brother and Tancharoen's hands.

Joss also praised Marvel and ABC's lack of notes. "We've gotten trust, which is different than freedom ... My collaboration with the with Marvel on the movie was pretty extraordinary and, for me, unprecedented. It wasn?t a question of them getting out of the way. We really worked that story together. ABC and Marvel have been very active in making sure the show is what they want for their company and their network and their audiences and, at the same time, very supportive of the vision that we first laid out to them. The most important thing is that we all are trying to make the same show. It?s not really about 'Oh, we?re past them, and we don?t want have to deal with them.' We?re all on the same page, which has occasionally not happened to me [in my TV work]," Joss noted.

"They wanted to make sure our investment in characters and their interaction and their evolution was as big as the case of the week. They wanted to make sure that people were coming for the recurring story, as well as for the story that would conclude in a single episode, which, to me, is how I?ve done all of my shows. So they basically said, 'Would you please do it that way that you do it and not learn a new skill?' And that made me very happy."

Still, Joss said that he planned to be involved "as much as an executive producer can who's also making a movie."

The show features a diverse cast and an array of accents, including Scottish actor Iain De Caestecker, and English Elizabeth Henstridge, who pointed out that their different nationalities contribute to the authenticity of the group: "This is a team of misfits coming together," she said. "None of these people are home and they're finding their home with each other."

Gregg added, "As someone who has been working for S.H.I.E.L.D. for some time now ... one of the things that always excited me about S.H.I.E.L.D., both in the comics and in the cinematic universe and now the television universe, is that it's a transnational organization that's protecting humanity and bringing different parts of humanity together in the wake of 'The Avengers,' and so that always felt very organic to what S.H.I.E.L.D. is."

The producers also plan to film internationally to add to the global scale of the organization.

Joss is no stranger to writing about outcasts and misfits, and admitted he was attracted to "the idea of the people who don't have the superpowers; who didn't get the hammer; who didn't get the super-soldier serum; the idea that everybody matters ... the underdog, the common man. Clark was that sort of audience proxy in the movies, and the show is about that sense of, 'What about the rest of us? How do we cope with this?' It's television, so they're incredibly good at what they do and ridiculously attractive, but they still don't fall under the category of super."

He added, "I'm always interested in people who are in very pressure-cooker situations that are not necessarily world famous for it. I like the people who are on the fringe of things. We have this organization, we have the history from the comic books, but these guys are out there by themselves. It's going to be both an advantage and real trouble for them. We can bond with them in a way that they don?t have every resource, and they don?t have the answers [thanks to some] deus ex machina at the end of every episode: ?Here comes S.H.I.E.L.D. to solve it.? It?s up to these guys. And that?s what really makes a group bond, and that?s the sort of thing I like to write."

Jed described the format of the show as facing a "challenge every week ... and hopefully the characters will be dealing with each other enough that there's stuff to weave into these standalone episodes."

Joss promised, 'Every week, it's not going to be some new hero; there could be a device, a mystery ... There are so many aspects to what's happened since everybody in the world found out there's a superhero team and aliens that invaded New York." He added that he was excited to dig into "the spy stuff, the hero stuff, the heartfelt stuff," so that "every week ... feels a little different."

Joss noted he could neither "confirm nor deny" whether "Angel" alum J. August Richards would return after the pilot, but, he said, "I thought he was great too, so do that math."

Unlike some of "Buffy" and "Angel's" more surreal installments, Joss officially ruled out a musical episode on "S.H.I.E.L.D.," but admitted that there was the potential for creative storytelling choices. "It has to come from the show. 'Buffy' lent itself to a musical because it was so hyperbolically emotional," he said. "But there is an element of absurdity in the Marvel universe that is satirical and bizarre -- the fact that we can tap into that will stop the show from feeling too self-indulgent or dry ... We're not looking for a cool angle -- it's always going to be built from the characters."

As for future plans after writing and directing the "Avengers" sequel, Joss said that he's not married to returning to TV or movies specifically. "The goal is never about the medium -- it's always about the next story," he said. "It's all about the thing I've never done before ... I like not knowing what's next; it's all about making people care about people. I just want to keep telling stories, and if someone pays me, that's also good."

"Marvel's 'Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." premieres Tuesday, Sept. 24 at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.

  • Marvel's "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D."

    Cobie Smulders ("How I Met Your Mother") will reprise her role as Agent Maria Hill from "Marvel's The Avengers" in the pilot episode of Marvel's "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." set to premiere Tuesday, September 24 at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.

  • Marvel's "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D."

    Cobie Smulders ("How I Met Your Mother") will reprise her role as Agent Maria Hill from "Marvel's The Avengers" in the pilot episode of Marvel's "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." on ABC -- seen here reunited with Clark Gregg's Agent Coulson.

  • "Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D."

    Iain De Caestecker and Elizabeth Henstridge star in Marvel's "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." on ABC.

  • "Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D."

    Clark Gregg, Iain De Caestecker and Elizabeth Henstridge star in Marvel's "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." on ABC.

  • "Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D."

    Chloe Bennett and Clark Gregg star in Marvel's "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." on ABC.

  • "Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D."

    Chloe Bennett and J. August Richards star in Marvel's "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." on ABC.

  • "Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D."

    Ming-Na Wen star in Marvel's "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." on ABC.

  • "Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D."

    Clark Gregg and Joss Whedon talk between scenes while shooting Marvel's "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." for ABC.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/04/agents-of-shield-clark-gregg-coulson_n_3705367.html

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Verizon Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini leaked in these pictures

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Source: pocketnow.com --- Saturday, August 03, 2013
The Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini paid us a visit and stayed just enough for us to dissect it. It even managed to get a notable score of 8/10 in our full review ! Apparently, it the recent rumors (and leaks) are true, the phone will soon pop up on Verizon?s line-up. The phone, codenamed? SCH-i435, has already popped up in certifications, but the image above is rather telling. We can see the same phone with ... Continue reading ? The post Verizon Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini leaked in these pictures appeared first on Pocketnow . ...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/pocketnow/~3/dZrcS9IEndM/verizon-samsung-galaxy-s4-mini

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This Week's Top Downloads

This Week's Top Downloads

Every week, we share a number of downloads for all platforms to help you get things done. Here were the top downloads from this week.


This Week's Top Downloads

Contacts+ for Android Is One of the Best Contact Managers We've Used

Android: Contacts+ is one of the most useful address books we've seen. It combines photos with information from all your connected services: Google and Google+, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and more. One tap opens a contact card, another calls or emails a friend, and a few more catches you up with their digital lives.


This Week's Top Downloads

Lux Automatically Adjusts Your Screen Brightness, Gets Incredibly Dim

If you aren't satisfied with how Android controls your device's screen brightness (is anyone?), Lux is a simple alternative that is easy to configure, while still offering a ton of options.


This Week's Top Downloads

Treehouse for iPad Makes Learning to Code on the Go Simple

iPad: We're fans of the learn to code company Treehouse's web app because it makes learning design and coding fun. Now, the web app is available on the iPad, and includes all types of lessons to get you started.


This Week's Top Downloads

New MetroTab Adds Live Tiles to Chrome's New Tab Page

Chrome: If you like the look of Windows 8's Start Screen but you're not keen on using it in Windows, New MetroTab for Chrome lets you use it for your new tab page. You get tiles for bookmarks, favorite sites, email, and more. If you're looking to spruce up "about:blank" with something more useful, this will do the trick.


This Week's Top Downloads

Receiptmate Scans Your Receipts and Saves Them to Evernote

iOS: Saving paper receipts is a tedious and messy project. Receiptmate makes it easier by scanning your receipts and then saving them directly to an Evernote notebook.


This Week's Top Downloads

MarkdownPad Renders Markdown in Real Time, Exports Clean HTML

Windows: Markdown is an awesome formatting language that lets you create rich documents using plain text syntax, and MarkdownPad puts it to great use Windows.


This Week's Top Downloads

Crowsflight Guides You to Your Location Without Wasting Battery

iPhone: Your GPS and cellular data connection drain your battery faster than anything else, so if you can avoid using either for navigation purposes you can avoid a dead iPhone. Crowsflight sets a plan for the places you want to go, downloads the relevant maps, and only uses your compass to help you reach your destination.


This Week's Top Downloads

Swell Is Like Pandora for News, TED Talks, Comedy, and More

iOS: Swell plays informative and entertaining stories from sources like NPR, ABC, the BBC, TED Talks, stand-up comedy routines, and more, streamed to your iPhone. The app even learns as you listen, skip, and select new things to listen to, and every time a story finishes, a new one you'll love plays right behind it.


This Week's Top Downloads

Dialogue Answers Your Smartphone's Calls Right from Your Mac

Mac: For all the integration you typically get between your desktop computer and your smartphone, one place where they don't really communication is calling. Dialogue is an app that makes it so you can answer incoming calls right from your computer.


This Week's Top Downloads

Transit Public Transportation App Arrives on Android

Android: Google Maps and the like have public transportation functions. If you're looking for a dedicated app, previously iOS-only Transit is now available on Android.


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/cGLaZ6V6ne4/this-weeks-top-downloads-1013017776

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রবিবার, ৪ আগস্ট, ২০১৩

The iPad Pact: Don?t Let Tablets Get a Bad Rap the Way TV Has

Child Development

Posted on August 02, 2013 - 03:40:19 by

If you listen to the American Academy of Pediatrics, TV gets a pretty bad rap. I maintain that a little bit of it is not just OK but practically essential for us parents who live in the real world. It's those parents who leave their set on all day as background noise who really make the rest of us look bad. Still, the point is increasingly moot, because these days, my kids would rather play with iPads anyway.

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Well, there's some good news. The American Academy of Pediatrics has been mostly silent on the subject of kids and iPads while they're waiting for data to come in. The AAP even has its own app, so who are they to judge?

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OK, parents.This is our moment. We may have lost the TV battle, but there's time to convince the experts that we can be trusted with these wonderful new gizmos. So while the jury's out, let me suggest some guidelines for responsible iPad usage that'll keep tablets from getting demonized the way TV has:

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1. Do fill your iPad with fun educational apps. iPads aren't cheap, but at least most of the apps are. Better still, there are a ton of educational apps like Monkey Preschool Lunchbox and Endless ABC that are fun and intellectually stimulating, too. They teach important concepts and reward kids for learning. If you have to plant a kid in front of an iPad for a few minutes, it's nice to know they're at least getting acquainted with the alphabet.

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2. Don't let the iPad take over your job as a parent. Sure, your iPad can read books to your kids, but that doesn't give you the OK to stop doing it. Yes, it's great for them to hear Cinderella speak in her own voice, but that's never going to be as good as hearing Daddy's impression of her, or Mommy's take on Sam-I-Am... if only because it's good for kids to laugh at their parents once in a while. Likewise, an iPad is never going to teach your kid to ride a bike or nag him to finish his vegetables, so you're not off the hook there, either.

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3. Do monitor them. I don't hover over my kids and watch everything they do on the iPad, because that would defeat the purpose of using it to help me get stuff done. But I do check in regularly to see what they're up to. After all, I don't want them resetting my high scores on Candy Crush.

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4. Don't let your tablet become just another TV. My kids know how to find Netflix on the iPad, but most of the time, I limit them to using interactive apps. They usually find those more fun anyway.

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5. Do let them explore. One of the most amazing things about watching kids play with iPads is how little guidance they need. The interface is so intuitive that they can usually figure out how to get it to do what they want, or at least get distracted by something more interesting while they're trying. They don't need me to micromanage every swipe of their fingers, so I don't. I just watch them, amazed at what they're able to accomplish on their own and confident that, as they grow up, they'll be able to handle the tools their generation will use to navigate technology.

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6. Don't let your kid use an iPad at the playground. Yes, I've seen kids do this. It's kind of like wearing headphones to the symphony so you don't miss the baseball game. You might as well have stayed home. In the same category, if a little less offensive, are parents who let their kids use iPads at restaurants. I admit I've caved to my kids on this one a couple of times when they were extra-cranky and threatening to disrupt other patrons. In general, though, they're there to have dinner with me, not the Temple Run guy. If an iPad becomes a means to avoid interacting with your kids, then that's a problem.

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7. Do disable in-app purchases. Like I said, kids are pretty good at getting the iPad to do whatever they want, and that includes downloading the $4.99 neon colors for their "free" coloring app or unlocking the $9.99 cephalopod pack for their virtual fish tank. Go to Settings -> General, enable restrictions and put a passcode on your device. Then don't tell your kids what it is! If they want to buy something, they have to get you to do it for them.

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I truly believe as a parent that iPads are good for my kids -- and, I'll be honest, they're good for me, too. Without the distraction value they provide, I'd never get a chance to make a phone call uninterrupted. So let's not let the irresponsible parents ruin tablets the way they did with TV. Let's make a pact to use iPads as an enhancement to parenting, not a replacement for it.

Source: http://moms.mylifetime.com/parenting/the-ipad-pact-don-t-let-tablets-get-a-bad-rap-the-way-tv-has

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