Friday, June 25, 2010
PANOPTICLICK : Your Browser Finger Print
Friday, June 18, 2010
INTEL : UPCOMING PROCESSOR'S
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
'Microrings' - Ultimate Wireless Communication
WiFi Amplified 10 times : Here comes WiGig™
"GOOGLE STREET VIEW" - FIGHTING PRIVACY ISSUES
Saturday, June 12, 2010
Mobiles & Brain Cancer : WHO Speaks.
Where does your Website Rank in the web?
Friday, June 11, 2010
Google and Caffeine : The Secret Link
Wednesday, June 09, 2010
Securelist.com : Informative attempt by Kaspersky Labs
What material Laptops are Made of?
1. Ever wondered what a typical laptop is made up of and where does all that material source to.......read on...it is interesting to know the effort......
China: ABS, PMMA, Epoxy, PVC, Polyoxymethylene, PP, SBR, elastomer, PET, Magnesium Germanium, Terbium
Russia: Steel, Ferrite, Ruthenium
Chile: Copper
South Korea: Glass, Cadmium
Australia: Titanium,Nickel
Peru: Indium
India: Barium
Khaidarkhan: Mercury
Canada: Aluminium, Uranium
South Africa: Cadmium, Chromium, Platinum, Manganese
Japan: Stainless Steel, Selenium
Brazil: Silicon, Tantalum
Zimbabwe: Lithium
Congo: Cobalt
Mexico: Bismuth
Tajikistan: Antimony
2. Thanks http://www.sourcemap.org
Tuesday, June 08, 2010
Prisoners all set to est BPO : A first from Cherlapally Central Jail
Monday, June 07, 2010
XINGYUN : World's Fastest Computer
2. Such is the astonishing ..or I say beyond imagination power of this officially disclosed SUPERCOMPUTER named "Xingyun" from China that runs at more than one quadrillion (one thousand million million) calculations per second.
3. XINGYUN is now the server of ‘Dawn 6000’ which has been jointly developed by Dawning Information Industry Co. Ltd, Chinese Academy of Sciences Calculation Institution and the South China Supercomputing Centre. It has been developed for DNA sequencing and for cloud computing.
4. Perhaps there is no end to improvement.....tomorrow will come up with much much higher speeds then XINGYUN......wait and watch.....
Monday, May 31, 2010
SHADOWS IN THE CLOUD
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
I M IN "CHIP"- MAY MONTH EDITION 2010
Monday, May 03, 2010
EAVES DROPPING RISK : EMR
5. Van Eck phreaking is a major security concern in an age of increasing pervasive computing. High-security government agencies are protecting themselves by constructing safe rooms that through the use of metallic shielding block the EMR from emanating out of the room or by grounding the signals so that they cannot be intercepted. It is possible, though costly, for individual users to shield their home computer systems from EMR leakage.