ICT লেবেলটি সহ পোস্টগুলি দেখানো হচ্ছে৷ সকল পোস্ট দেখান
ICT লেবেলটি সহ পোস্টগুলি দেখানো হচ্ছে৷ সকল পোস্ট দেখান

সোমবার, ১৬ মার্চ, ২০০৯

Just See, who is watching your web site!

If you have web site, you must want to know from where your visitors are coming. What the key words are they using or how many time they are clicking


on your page. You may use hit counter to track who many people are visiting into your web site. But this is not enough to moderate your web page. In this case http://www.web-stat.com/ is a very good solution for you. This will let you know the following information:
Traffic Origin
referrers
keywords
recent referrals
Referrer Tracker
Traffic Location
live map of recent visitors
static map of recent visitors
cumulative world map
geolocation recent visitors
countries regions cities


Traffic Over Time
per day all days
per month
per day of week
per hour of day
Navigation
page views
entrance pages
exit pages
click-paths
conversions
Equipment Used
browsers
operating systems
screen sizes
screen colors
Watchdog
your site's downtime per day
per month
per day of week
per hour of day
detailed log
By using this you will be able to view live recent visits and export all of this into excel page on your local computer.
It is very user friendly and useful indeed.







বৃহস্পতিবার, ৫ মার্চ, ২০০৯

Can WiMAX Replace Cable?

Senior Technology Correspondent Gary Krakow reports from Baltimore at the rollout of Sprint's 4G wireless network -- and the possibility that it could soon replace your cable or DSL Internet connection

রবিবার, ১ ফেব্রুয়ারি, ২০০৯

Facebook is a handy networking tool.......So Start it now.....



The founder and CEO of Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, recently wrote about the site's popularity on his own Facebook page. "If Facebook were a country, it would be the eighth most populated in the world, just ahead of Japan, Russia and Nigeria," Zuckerberg noted. The site allows users to set up a profile, complete with as much personal information as desired. Then users ask others on the network to become their Facebook friends.


Kathryn Brown, a freelance writer and mother of two young daughters, vowed to steer clear of "social networking sites, fearing that it would send the wrong message to potential clients," she explained. "You never know how these pages will be interpreted.
"I signed on, with reservations, to get news about an upcoming Charleston High School class reunion. After reconnecting with so many old friends, I realized that I had allowed too many people to drift out of my life. I'm trying to make up for years of not maintaining relationships that were healthy. I simply got busy and wrapped up in mortgages, meatloaf and minivans. I disappeared after going headfirst into career and then motherhood," Brown said. "Facebook is a wonderful, virtual playground for adults who have responsibilities that prohibit them from going out and mingling with people on a regular basis. As a wife and mother who spends most of her time at home, being able to scribble on someone's wall or view their photo albums makes me feel connected to the outside world."



Meg Stallard, a self-proclaimed "social butterfly," former elementary schoolteacher and mother of two toddlers, has more than 570 friends on her Facebook page. She uses it to stay in touch with friends, as well as to line up babysitters when necessary. "I am online with many of my old 'tech-savvy' students who are now in high school. I am also friends with their parents," she said. She loves the connections made possible by the Web site.


Diana Sole, president of MotionMasters and mother of three children ages 24, 22, and 14, set up her account a couple of years ago when she was working on her MBA and all of the "traditional age" students were talking about their pages.


"My son, Chris, is 24 and doesn't use Facebook much, but his wife keeps in touch with a lot of their friends that way. I haven't mustered the courage to ask if she'd like to be friends with her mother-in-law yet. But I know she really likes keeping connected through Facebook, especially since they live in Los Angeles. I also haven't had the courage to ask my 14-year-old daughter!"


Many people get creative with their Facebook photos, changing them frequently and showcasing interesting moments in their lives. Tabit's recent photo features her on her way to the Obama inaugural, but last month's picture showed her with West Virginia University basketball coach Bob Huggins.


"Facebook is definitely a business tool, but I use LinkedIn as more of the 'professional' tool. I don't add folks to my Facebook account unless I know them more informally," James said. "I do not share things on Facebook or other tools that would embarrass me, although I'm sure there are times certain folks don't get my style of humor."


"One of the neatest Facebook adventures was reconnecting with someone I used to work with almost 20 years ago," Smallridge said. "Likewise, I found an old college friend who now lives in Greece and it's been great bridging 26 years since graduation."





Source:http://wvgazette.com/HomeandStyle/200901290832

বৃহস্পতিবার, ২২ জানুয়ারি, ২০০৯

Google helping tourists around New York City



New York City, along with Google, launched a new website that is designed to help tourists and residents find their way around the city, and plan their days out. As a recent first-time visitor to the Big Apple, a site like this would have actually been quite useful.
Mayor Bloomberg says he hopes that “nycgo.com becomes the official online resource for tourists and residents looking for an activity or a place to go”. The site appears to have lots of information, and can definitely direct people in the right direction.
There seems to be a market for specific localized information sites like this one, and it makes sense for companies like Google to try and be a piece of them.

Source:http://blogs.zdnet.com/Google/?p=1235

বুধবার, ২১ জানুয়ারি, ২০০৯

MicroWorld Launches eScan 10 Antivirus Software


MicroWorld, recently announced the release of its eScan 10 antivirus software. It is an antivirus content security and firewall software.
Specifically designed to offer users with better security, the antivirus has been built with lots of proactive technologies and advanced algorithms.
The antivirus comes with a new simplified GUI, which permits even those not familiar with technology to operate the application without any difficulty. The software provides multi-level security with advanced configuration controls for tech savvy users.
Awarded the VB100% certificate recently by Virus Bulletin at a pre-release test, the antivirus software provides comprehensive protection against Viruses, Worms, Trojans, Spyware together with other security threats.
Moreover, the software also provides protection from threats infecting via email, web downloads, chatting through its speedy and heuristic scanning ability.
eScan 10 also has an inbuilt Advanced Firewall that prevents systems from network based attacks.
Mr. Govind Rammurthy, CEO and Managing Director, MicroWorld stated, “The eScan 10 is equipped to deal with all possible risks and thereby add great value to the field of information security. We will continue to provide our customers with advanced solution and protect them against all kinds of existing and emerging security threats.”
MicroWorld has partnered for half a million euro deal in Germany. In Mexico, the company has signed up an agreement worth half-a-million dollar deal with Snap IN Data and it has also partnered with LFRs in United States.
Besides all this, the company will also be making available their products in South Africa, Paraguay, Malaysia and Tunisia via official tie-ups.
The product is available in three different versions for home users, SMBs and the enterprise market. The home user version is priced at Rs 1,000.

শনিবার, ১৭ জানুয়ারি, ২০০৯

India govt rejects Satyam bailout


INDIA'S government dashed investor hopes of any bailout Thursday for fraud-hit Satyam as shares of India's fourth-largest information technology company tumbled by over 30 per cent."This government is not going to directly or indirectly subsidise wrongdoing and fraud," junior Industry Minister Ashwani Kumar told reporters in New Delhi.At the same, the government would try to do whatever it could to save the jobs of Satyam's 53,000 employees, he said.Corporate India has been stunned by Satyam founder-chairman Ramalinga Raju's revelations last week that he falsified the company's accounts by over one billion dollars, jeopardising the outsourcer's survival and casting a cloud over financial reporting standards in the country.Shares of Satyam fell 32.22 per cent or 9.65 rupees to 20.30 rupees Thursday as talk faded of government help, dealers said.The stock of the New York-listed company has plunged nearly 90 per cent since Raju's dramatic confession that 94 per cent of the cash on Satyam's books did not exist.Economic Affairs Secretary Ashok Chawla also said there was no plan for a bailout for Satyam, although Commerce Minister Kamal Nath had earlier said the government was willing to consider support for the cash-strapped company based in the southern city of Hyderabad."Not at this stage," Mr Chawla said when asked if the government would offer a bailout.Newly appointed Satyam director Deepak Parekh told reporters in New Delhi the company had "receivables" or money owing worth 17 billion rupees ($551.6 million dollars) and that the company could mortgage assets to raise funds.Mr Parekh, chairman of India's Housing Development Corp, was one of three directors named by the government to Satyam's board to restore the company's credibility after the scandal broke."Until we know the real position, how can we speak of a bailout?" Parekh asked after meeting Corporate Affairs Minister Prem Chand Gupta.Two global accounting houses, KPMG and Deloitte, appointed as interim auditors, have been asked to restate Satyam's finances.PricewaterhouseCoopers, which had audited Satyam's accounts, had said its reports might be "unreliable" in light of Raju's admission that he fudged the books.Mr Raju, his brother and co-founder B. Rama Raju and chief financial officer Srinivas Vadlamani, are in jail facing charges of criminal conspiracy, cheating and falsification of records.Another new board member, Kiran Karnik, said the board would focus on raising funds from equity partners and banks to solve its cash crunch.Mr Karnik, a former chief of the National Association of Indian Software and Services Companies, said Satyam needed funds to meet working capital requirements and pay staff but did not disclose how much."Our only concern is to keep the show going and hold on to the clients and the workers," he told the Times of India.Late Thursday the government appointed three more new members to Satyam's board, including Tarun Das, chief mentor of India's leading industry lobby group Confederation of Indian Industry. The government has named businessmen considered pillars of India's corporate establishment to Satyam's board, which now has six members. The expansion came two days before the board was due to hold its second meeting. Analysts say the company's survival hinges on whether it can retain its customers. Meanwhile, Satyam announced it was continuing "to search for suitable candidates for the chief executive and chief financial officer." The new board is working toward making Satyam financially viable before any merger or sale is considered, Mr Kiran said.



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Regional broadband grants face cuts in Australian


THE federal Government can expect to cut millions of dollars in grants from its long-running rural broadband subsidy scheme after it classed Optus' 3G network as equivalent to service available in metropolitan areas.
It was speculated in the media that the Government would make the move late last year but a letter from the Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy to state regional broadband development boards confirmed that the decision had been taken. The decision means that the Government will approve far fewer grants under its Australian Broadband Guarantee (ABG) - which received $270 million in the last budget - as all but a few providers will serve consumers within reach of Optus 3G service. Peter Hall, the department's ABG manager, wrote to state regional development boards late last week to notify them of the outcome of independent testing of the Optus 3G network. "As a result of this research, the Department has determined that Optus Networks' 3G wireless broadband services meets or exceeds the ABG metro-comparability thresholds for commercial broadband (Category A) services. The Department has now listed Optus 3G wireless broadband services on the Broadband Service Locator pursuant to section 4.2.4 of the ABG Program Guidelines. "The Department will shortly finalise all applications from ISPs who are seeking registration under the ABG program and, where relevant, we will be in contact with each applicant to discuss how the listing of Optus 3G may impact on their application,” he wrote in the letter seen by The Australian. A spokesman for Communications Minister Senator Stephen Conroy said: “the purpose of the ABG is to ensure that metro-comparable broadband is available to all Australians. If it is available from a sustainable commercial operator then there is no need for tax-payers to subsidise.”The Department’s decision followed network coverage tests on the Optus 3G network. Optus has previously claimed its network covered 96 per cent of the population at the end of 2008 and that it would cover 98 per cent by the end of 2009.
The federal Government declined to reveal its estimate of the carrier's 3G network coverage.“The coverage of the Optus 3G network is commercially sensitive and is a matter for Optus. However, premises within Optus’ 3G coverage area will be identified on the Department’s Broadband Service Locator as being served by Optus and not eligible for an ABG service,” Senator Conroy’s spokesman said.Industry sources said the decision would decimate the number of providers eligible for grants and that satellite providers would dominate the few remaining providers to qualify under the scheme. Non-satellite providers still listed under the scheme include Internode, McPherson Media, Ocean Broadband, SkyMesh, Westvic Broadband and Wideband Networks. The Government's rural broadband subsidy scheme has been in operation under various guises since mid-2005. The schemes were designed to give regional internet providers a business case to build broadband infrastructure in commercially unsustainable areas. The Government initially allocated $107.8 million to its HiBIS and Broadband Connect subsidy schemes. Since then the federal Government has expanded the budget to accommodate $450 million worth of claims. It’s currently winding down spending on the strategy. The federal Government has budgeted $85.8 million to run the ABG scheme up to the end of the current financial year. It estimates that spending for the scheme will drop to $69.3 million next financial year and $54 million for the 2011 financial year.