Paa

Is intelligent and entertaining

The one crew member from Paa I hurried to look up on the internet, apart from the make-up artists, was the dialogue writer. Turns out, it’s director R Balki (of Cheeni Kum fame) who’s written the film’s crisp conversations.

Talking about the internet, there is a charming dialogue in the movie when 11-year-old Auro (Amitabh Bachchan) looks up an errant politician on the computer saying ‘Google se bach ke kahan jaoge’ (you can’t run away from Google).

It’s difficult then, not to fall for Auro, the possessor of a dry humour that consistently produces gems like the one above. We flashback to his mother, medical student Vidya’s story (Vidya Balan), who, after an affair with a political science student, Amol (Abhishek), gets pregnant and is disappointed when she is asked to get an abortion.

She speaks to her mother (Arundhati Naag, superb) who had brought up Vidya all alone after her husband’s demise. When plainly asked whether she wants to keep the baby or not, Vidya decides to go ahead with the pregnancy. Already wondering how she’ll bring up a child all alone, she’s shattered to know her newborn is suffering from progeria, a rare disease causing premature ageing in children.

At that moment, when you see Vidya Balan’s expressions on learning that her child is likely to have a life-span of only 13 years, you feel every bit of her anguish. All grown-up now and studying in a school, how an adolescent Auro rediscovers his Paa after 11 years forms the rest of the story.

The finest quality of the film is its refusal to coax pity out of the viewer - either for Auro or for single mother Vidya. A successful gynaecologist, Vidya is shown to provide Auro with all the comforts - from a nice car to a computer and even a play station. Together with Vidya’s mother, they form a cosy unit always good-naturedly ribbing one another. The inclusion of the Paa happens only after the interval, reminding you of Taare Zameen Par where Aamir enters the story around the middle.

You adore Amitabh Bachchan’s performance while applauding his commitment to his craft. Reportedly, it took a 60-plus Bachchan five hours to wear the prosthetic make-up for six hours of shooting, with another two hours to take it off. So truthful is this performance, you begin recognising Auro as an existing character with flesh and blood and forget you’re watching Amitabh Bachchan.

Abhishek Bachchan is also excellent as the do-gooder politician, who never agrees with his father’s (Paresh Rawal) seasoned opportunism. The story is as much Vidya’s as Auro’s and Vidya Balan is fabulous as the proud, independent single mother. Kids playing Auro’s friends, especially Pratik as his best bud, are fabulous.

In the technical department, the first mention must go to make-up artists Christien Tinsley and Dominie Till for painstakingly and expertly converting Amitabh Bachchan into Auro. Cinematography by P C Sreeram, editing by Anil Naidu and art by Sunil Babu are top-notch.

Styling, too, deserves special mention. Vidya Balan’s lovely saris are matched by a thick-strapped ‘working-woman’s’ wrist watch and subtle earrings. However, it's a little odd that the foreign-educated doctor doesn’t have any contemporary western clothes in her wardrobe. Abhishek’s clothes are delightful as is Auro’s oversized hooded shirt that he picks up for a special occasion.

Music by Illayaraja and lyrics by Swanand Kirkire make for hauntingly beautiful songs. Just for the Ittefaq song and its wonderful picturisation, this writer intends to watch the film again.

Some might fear Paa would be a depressing, melodramatic film or a shadow of 2005’s heavily emotional Black. It’s not, and neither does it have any link to The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.

For a couple of moments, the film does turn your eyes moist, but there are dozens where you’ll enjoy Auro’s antics. Of course, you wonder about the film’s anti-abortion stand and it’s propensity to encourage child-bearing - in a rather awkward scene, Dr Vidya tells a couple, who confess they’re too busy to have a child, that they ought to have one as life changes for the better after a baby.

The melodramatic finale, too, seems unnecessary and it appears that the director, who had so boldly shown a mother raising her child without getting married, cops out towards the end.

These are minor complaints still, in a film that holds you from the first scene to the last. R Balki outdoes himself with a film that’s intelligent, entertaining and visually arresting.

It’s indeed a pleasure presenting four stars to a film after years. You don’t want to miss this one.

Rating: Four stars

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Posted 4 days ago

Opera 10.10: Web Browser and Web Server In One

 

opera_uniteWith such strong competition from Mozilla and Microsoft, the only thing Opera can do to stay competitive is to innovate. And one has to hand it to them: although it doesn’t have a huge user base in the desktop web browser space, Opera is always one step ahead of the rest, for better or for worse.

With version 10.10, Opera (Opera) has taken its biggest step into the unknown so far, marrying the web browser with the web server. It definitely makes it unique in the world of web browsers, but there’s always the lingering question whether all these new features are really something we need, or is it just confusing the users?

With Opera Unite integrated into the browser, the web becomes a read/write affair. You can share photos (10 GB of them), stream music, serve a chat or even an entire web site directly from your browser. At Opera, they have high hopes for the technology. From the official site:

“Our devices will evolve. From in-dash computers in trucks to entertainment systems in airplanes, and from a netbook in North Dakota to a phone in North Africa, every device is both a consumer and a provider of content.”

The idea is certainly interesting, but the web has been moving in another direction in the past couple of years: the cloud. Instead of having stuff run on your computer, your applications and your data reside in the cloud, with all the resources and the know-how provided by a company like Google (Google). So yes, with Opera Unite, you can host a web site on your own home computer, but you might run into bandwidth issues; with Google Sites, you can easily create a web site without worrying about bandwidth, but you’re at Google’s mercy, so to say. So far, despite possible privacy and security issues, cloud computing has been taking over, and it’s hard to imagine Opera turning the tide in the other direction. Some Unite applications, however, like the media server or the chat, are quite useful and might win over some converts for the Norwegian browser.

Other interesting features in the new Opera 10.10 include Opera’s Turbo technology, which speeds up browsing by compressing web pages on Opera’s servers and delivering you the “lite” version, Opera Link, which lets you synchronize data across several computers, a slick new look with a resizable tab bar, and a BitTorrent-enabled download manager. See the full list of features here.

opera10.10

 

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Posted 15 days ago

Social search startup Aardvark hires search and mobile experts, building iPhone app

Aardvark began opening its social search engine to more users earlier this month, and now the ambitious company is starting to reveal more of its future plans. It’s bulking up its Google-heavy technical team with Sameer Paranjpye, the Director of Yahoo’s grid computing group and a founding member of the Hadoop project. It’s also taking aim at the mobile market, hiring on Ben Keighran, the founder of mobile messaging service BluePulse. I caught up with Keighran earlier today and he sketched out what sounds like a very useful iPhone application — it will let you get answers from friends wherever you are.

But hold on, what is Aardvark?

Put simply, it’s a new way to get answers from your friends. You email or instant-message your question to Aardvark, it figures out around half a dozen people you know who might have a good answer, then emails or IMs them for a response and sends what they say back to you. “Aardvark is supposed to work like a contact,” co-founder Max Ventilla tells me. “It should know you, understand what you want and make one-off introductions to the right person who can answer your question.”

What problem is this solving? Search engines are great for providing links to information that is online but sometimes a real conversation with a friend (or friend-of-friend) can provide much better information than a web page.  After all, there’s far more knowledge and experience in people’s heads than there is written on web pages.  Aardvark isn’t going to approach the utility of Google for information about things like “San Jose weather” or “history of computers” but it can connect you to the right person in your network if you’re looking for great live rock music or a tasteful restaurant for a date. In contrast to web search engines, Aardvark is trying to answer such subjective answers subjectively — a sort of real-time, personalized Yahoo Answers, and loosely similar to human-powered search engines like ChaCha.

How does Aardvark work? It analyzes social data about you and your friends, pulling in information like your email and chat contacts, and who your friends are on Facebook. If you give it access to Facebook — using the social network’s Connect service for exchanging social data with third-party sites — it will gather information from your and your friends’ profiles, like what geographic or work networks people are in and what their interests are. So, for example, if one of your friends on Facebook includes “action movies” in the interests section of their profile, they might be more likely to receive a question you send out about which Arnold Schwarzenegger hit you should rent tonight. Ventilla says about 40 percent of Facebook profiles contain enough information to be highly useful for Aardvark.

But Aardvark is trying to gather as much social data as possible, from everywhere. You can also directly provide Aardvark with keywords about your expertise, and when you invite friends you can tell Aardvark what you consider them to be experts in. And look for it to start tapping into other social networks that provide user data to third-party developers — the opening up of Facebook and other social networks over the last couple of years was one of the inspirations for starting the company, Ventilla tells me.

To be clear, though, social data is just one piece of what Aardvark does. The company, which is not shy about its engineering talent, uses machine learning software to figure out what people are intending to ask about when they ask a question — then it pairs that question with your friends. For a deeper look at how everything works, take a look at our write-up last fall.

Where Aardvark is going

In testing so far, around 70 percent of active Aardvark users respond to a targeted question, more than 90 percent of questions get answered — and over half of all questions get answered in under five minutes. But the results aren’t always perfect. The company is bringing in Paranjpye to help the service improve and scale. He’s a former search engineer at Yahoo — and before that he was a search engineer at Yahoo-acquired seminal search company Inktomi. In his most recent Yahoo position, he built up the 40 person Yahoo team working on grid computing initiatives and was one of the main architects of Hadoop: a software framework to build applications for processing thousands of petabytes of data. At Aardvark, he’ll be doing related work, helping to improve the speed and accuracy with which questions get paired with people.

Refining the core product is necessary for the company to start making money. For example, it’s already sending affiliate traffic to Amazon. The more successfully that questions can be paired with people to answer them, the more opportunities for this sort of revenue. Longer term, the company hopes to gain new insight on human behavior by watching what its users do in aggregate. One day, for example, a company might use Aardvark’s technology to help people communicate quickly across large organizations. A multinational corporation with tens of thousands of users could use it so a salesperson in one country could instantly ask a question of the right technologist in another country — more efficient than an email list. To that end, the company is already testing out a way to create groups of users within the site around particular themes.

Which brings us back to mobile. One of the most obvious use cases for wanting to get an expert answer from someone you know is when you’re away from the computer — like when traveling in a foreign city and trying to find a fun place to go out at night. You can already use Aardvark on your phone using mobile email or a third-party mobile IM client, but the company aims to make it even easier through mobile applications and SMS. First up for development is an iPhone application, Keighran (pictured) says, that will let you either type in a question or speak it into the phone. The message will then go into the Aardvark system, appearing in front of the experts you’re connected to on the site — sort of like a local review site, but live and just with your friends.

How it Works

Aardvark works the same way on the iPhone as it does over IM or email:
1. Ask your question in plain English, like you would to a friend.
aardvark_img1A list of your previous questions and answers…

2. Aardvark discovers someone who’s online now and can give you an answer right away.
aardvark_img4
You’ll get a PUSH notification with an answer within minutes.

3. You can also answer questions for your network!
aardvark_img2See open questions about topics you’re interested in.

Special Features

  • Built-in location detection
    Aardvark will find answerers in your neighborhood, automatically.
  • Language engine analyzes your question to find key topics
    Or you can select from a list.
  • Get notified when someone answers your question
    Or when there’s a question you can answer.
  • Connect to friends
    Using Facebook Connect, or email invites from your address book
  • Secret Aardvark Shake
    Find the screen where a little shake gives a surprise…


Thank You!

We’ve been working extremely hard on the Aardvark iPhone app for several months.  Ben Keighran and his team (Gene Tsai, Nick Maher, and Brad Robinson) deserve a special thank you here.  Ben is Aardvark’s lead advisor for mobile products, and he led the charge on the iPhone app, from the initial designs through the final implementation details.  Thanks guys!

Also a shout out to our friends at CarbonFive who helped us build the very first prototype of the iPhone app. As always, extremely valuable to have an early version that we can use to gather user feedback and learnings along the way. Thanks CarbonFive!

And I want to give a special thanks to all of our amazing users who volunteered to help us by testing early version and giving useful feedback along the way.  We absolutely could not have produced such a great app without your help — we’ve included a special “thank you” in the App itself :-)

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Posted 2 months ago

StormOnDemand

http://www.stormondemand.com/

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Posted 2 months ago

FUNNY PEN DRIVES

                                                         
Click here to download:
FUNNY_PEN_DRIVES.zip (346 KB)

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Posted 2 months ago

Nokia introduces Booklet 3G 'mini laptop'

Nokia rocked the world this morning by introducing its spin on the laptop, called the Booklet 3G. If you're the rude sort (like us) you could call it a fancy netbook, what with its Atom processor and 10.1-inch display, but that screen is higher res than your average Eee, and it also sports integrated 3G wireless and a hot-swappable SIM card, so it's definitely trying to define its own niche. It looks to be running Windows 7, which isn't particularly netbooky, and also has integrated A-GPS with a copy of Ovi Maps, HDMI output, a rated 12 hour battery life, and the usual Bluetooth and WiFi connectivity, all in a 2cm (.78 inch), 2.7lb aluminum body that's understated, sophisticated, and should make most Nokia fans very happy -- Nokia fans who are looking for a tiny laptop, anyway. There's a fancy promotional video after the break, and while we don't have any anticipated release date or price just yet, we'll be learning more at Nokia World 09 on September 2. We promise not to make too many Foleo references.

Gallery: Nokia introduces Booklet 3G 'mini laptop'


Nokia has just whipped the dust sheet off the Nokia Booklet 3G. A brand new breed of portable device for Nokia, this mini laptop PC sees the company step foot on freshly cut turf, and we’re a little dumb-struck with excitement at the prospect of the experience that this bite-size Booklet promises to deliver when it arrives. Not to mention what it means bigger picture, and how this product could affect the entire mobile landscape for the better (we’ll save that for another story), but let’s not get ahead of ourselves just yet.

First, let’s get down off our tip-toes, take a deep breath, and soak up all the initial details on what the upcoming Nokia Booklet 3G mini laptop is set to deliver when it lands on laps. Read on for every shred of info currently available on this landmark new product, and get the first close-up look at the Nokia Booklet 3G mini laptop in our photo gallery.

The new Nokia Booklet 3G will be a Windows-based machine, supported by an efficient Intel Atom processor that promises the performance of a full-function PC. It’s efficiency credentials are boldly punctuated with battery life that stretches up to 12 hours (with normal daily use, of course – don’t expect a 12-hour Quake-fest off a single hit of juice).

Turning our attention to mini matters of a tape-measure nature, the Nokia Booklet 3G comes toting a glass 10.1-inch HD display (it has an HDMI port for HD video out). This lives within its smart aluminium shell which measures in at just 2cm thin and tips the scales at around a kilogram to ensure it’s extremely portable.

Connecting at speed is crucial with a product of this nature, so the Booklet 3G has been designed with fast downloading and uploading front of mind – it’s 3G/HSPA ready for rapid mobile broadband anywhere-access on the move. Wi-Fi has also been wedged into it’s slim body. Plus, it supports hot-swappable SIM card functionality.

It’s talents don’t end there, with Nokia’s mini laptop PC also featuring onboard assisted-GPS with Ovi Maps neatly sat in the passenger seat. There’s a single front-facing camera nestled above the 10.1-inch HD screen for video chat, with Bluetooth and a built-in SD card reader also making appearances.

You may be wondering why Nokia is adding to its range of products with an ultra portable laptop PC? Well, Nokia’s Executive Vice President for Devices, Kai Oistamo, summed it up simply as follows:

“A growing number of people want the computing power of a PC with the full benefits of mobility. We are in the business of connecting people and the Nokia Booklet 3G is a natural evolution for us. Nokia has a long and rich heritage in mobility and with the outstanding battery life, premium design and all day, always on connectivity, we will create something quite compelling. In doing so we will make the personal computer more social, more helpful and more personal.”

There’s already a lot of info to digest here, but there are still more details to come at Nokia World 09 on 2 September – expect official word on where the Nokia Booklet 3G will be available, news on how much it’ll cost, along with a detailed list of specs for the number-hungry among us.

In the meantime, share your opinions on the new Nokia Booklet 3G in the comments section below, and be sure to follow all our coverage of Nokia World 09 right here on Conversations.

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Posted 3 months ago

posterous

Hi Still Dreaming Nerd

Just wanted to update you with what's been going on over at Posterous-- lots of new features and more on the way all the time. Here's the biggest three features we launched since the last time we talked...

Now Available for your iPhone

PicPosterous - Your new iPhone instant camera

The new Posterous iPhone app removes all the friction with posting photos and video online. PicPosterous is designed to be a replacement for the Camera app on your phone, posting photo sets and video to your Posterous site live, as you take them. Learn more Â»

It's free and available NOW from the iPhone App Store. Download it now Â»

Autopost 2.0: Now supports YouTube, Vimeo, Picasa, FriendFeed, Delicious and more

We've added more media, microblogs, and bookmark sites. Now we even autopost video! Learn more Â»

Posterous + Google Maps = crazy delicious

Photos you take that have geocoded information (e.g. from your mobile phone) now automatically get a location and map indicator. Links to Google Maps now become instant map widgets in your post too.
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What else is new?

Posterous adds new autoexpansion sites...
Github Gists, TrailerAddict.com, The Daily Show, YouTube HD videos and Screencast.com. That means you can paste any URL from those sites and we'll expand them into an embed if they're embeddable. Got a site you want us to support? Email us.

Post to Facebook Pages
Got a company, band, or group that has a Facebook Page? You can now use Posterous to post to it also. Read more Â»

Post to Posterous via Google Reader
Quickly post to Posterous directly from Google Reader by checking one check box in Google Reader Settings. Read more Â»

We're working hard to make Posterous better every day. The best way to keep track is by subscribing to our official blog. As always, feel free to email us anytime at help@posterous.com and we'll get back to you right away.

--The Posterous Team
Sachin, Garry, Brett and Vince

Posterous loves posting for you!

Post now by emailing post@posterous.com Â»

Attach photos, music, video, documents and any type of file. We take care of the rest.

Posterous is the place to post everything. Just email us.

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Posted 3 months ago

adobe acrobat 9

Protect documents and accelerate information exchange with PDF

ADOBE READER 9.1 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS

Windows

  • Intel® 1.3 GHz processor
  • Microsoft® Windows® 2000 with Service Pack 4, Windows Server® 2003 and 2008; Windows XP Professional, Home Edition, or Tablet PC Edition with Service Pack 2 or 3; Windows Vista® Home Basic, Home Premium, Business, Ultimate, or Enterprise with or without Service Pack 1
  • 128MB of RAM (256MB recommended)
  • 335MB of available hard disk space
  • Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0, 6.0 with Service Pack 1, 7.0 or 8.0; Firefox 2.0 or 3.0

Macintosh

  • PowerPC® G4, G5 or Intel processor
  • Mac OS X v10.4.11–10.5.6
  • 128MB of RAM (256MB recommended)
  • 405MB of available hard-disk space
  • Safari 2.0.4 or later

Linux

  • 32-bit Intel Pentium processor or equivalent
  • Red Hat® Linux WS 5, SUSE® Linux Enterprise Desktop (SLED) 10 SP2 or Ubuntu 7.10
  • GNOME or KDE Desktop Environment
  • 512MB of RAM (1GB recommended)
  • 150MB of available hard-disk space (additional 75MB required for all supported font packs)
  • GTK+ (GIMP Toolkit) user interface library, version 2.6 or later
  • Firefox 2.0 or later
  • OpenLDAP and CUPS libraries

Solaris

  • 32-bit Intel Pentium processor or equivalent
  • Solaris 10 u5 or OpenSolaris 2008.11
  • GNOME or KDE Desktop Environment (GNOME only for Solaris 10)
  • 512MB of RAM (1GB recommended)
  • 200MB of available hard-disk space (additional 75MB required for all supported font packs)
  • GTK+ (GIMP Toolkit) user interface library, version 2.6 or later (on Solaris 10; also works with GTK 2.4.9)
  • Firefox 2.0 or later
  • OpenLDAP and CUPS libraries

ADOBE READER 8.1.3 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS

Windows

  • Intel Pentium® III or equivalent processor
  • Microsoft Windows 2000 with Service Pack 4; Windows Server 2003; Windows XP Professional, Home Edition, or Tablet PC Edition with Service Pack 2 or 3; Windows Vista with or without Service Pack 1
  • 128MB of RAM (256MB recommended for complex forms or large documents)
  • 170MB of available hard-disk space
  • Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 or 7.0, Firefox 1.5 or 2.0, Mozilla 1.7, AOL 9

Macintosh

  • PowerPC G3, G4, G5 or Intel processor
  • Mac OS X v10.4.11–10.5.5
  • 128MB of RAM (256MB recommended for complex forms or large documents)
  • 170MB of available hard-disk space
  • Safari 2.0.2

Linux

  • 32-bit Intel Pentium processor or equivalent
  • LSB (Linux Standard Base) 3.1 compliant systems including Red Hat® Linux WS 5, SUSE® Linux Enterprise Desktop (SLED) 10, and Ubuntu 6.10
  • GNOME or KDE Desktop Environment
  • 512MB of RAM (1GB recommended)
  • 125MB of available hard-disk space (additional 75MB required for all supported font packs)
  • GTK+ (GIMP Toolkit) user interface library, version 2.6 or later
  • Firefox 1.5 or later, Mozilla 1.7.3 or later

Solaris

  • UltraSPARC® or UltraSPARC IIIi® processor
  • Solaris 9 or 10
  • GNOME or KDE Desktop Environment (GNOME only for Solaris 10)
  • 512MB of RAM (1GB recommended)
  • 175MB of available hard-disk space (additional 75MB required for all supported font packs)
  • GNU C library (glibc) version 2.3 or later
  • GTK+ (GIMP Toolkit) user interface library, version 2.6 or later (on Solaris 10; also works with GTK 2.4.9)
  • Firefox 1.5 or later, Mozilla 1.7.3 or later
  • OpenGL library
  • OpenSSL 0.9.7, OpenLDAP, and CUPS libraries
  • libstdc++ library

ADOBE READER 7.1.0 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS

Windows

  • Intel Pentium or equivalent processor
  • Microsoft Windows 2000 with Service Pack 4; Windows Server 2003; Windows XP Professional, Home Edition, or Tablet PC Edition with Service Pack 2
  • 128MB of RAM (256MB recommended for complex forms or large documents)
  • Up to 90MB of available hard-disk space
  • Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.5, 6, or 7; Firefox 1.0, 1.5, or 2; Mozilla 1.7; Netscape 7.1 or 8.0

Macintosh

  • PowerPC G3, G4, G5 or Intel processor
  • Mac OS X v10.2.8, 10.3, 10.4–10.4.10
  • 128MB of RAM (256MB recommended for complex forms or large documents)
  • 110MB of available hard-disk space
  • Safari 1.2.2 browser supported for Mac OS X v10.3 or later, Safari 2.0.2

ADOBE READER 7.0.9 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS

Windows

  • Intel Pentium or equivalent processor
  • Microsoft Windows NT with Service Pack 6 or 6a, Windows 2000 with Service Pack 2, 3, or 4; Windows Server 2003; Windows XP Home, Professional, or Tablet PC Edition with Service Pack 1 or 2
  • 128MB of RAM (256MB recommended for complex forms or large documents)
  • Up to 90MB of available hard-disk space
  • Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.5, 6, or 7; Firefox 1.0, 1.5, or 2; Mozilla 1.7; Netscape 7.1 or 8.0

Macintosh

  • PowerPC G3, G4, or G5 processor
  • Mac OS X v10.2.8, 10.3, 10.4–10.4.8
  • 128MB of RAM (256MB recommended for complex forms or large documents)
  • 110MB of available hard-disk space
  • Safari 1.2.2 browser supported for Mac OS X v10.3 or later, Safari 2.0.2

Linux

  • 32-bit Intel Pentium processor
  • Red Hat Linux AS 4.0 (2.6); Red Hat Linux ES 4.0 (2.6); Red Hat Linux WS 4.0 (2.6); Red Hat Linux Desktop 4.1, 5.0; SUSE Professional 9.2 (2.6.4), 9.3, 10.0; Novell Linux Desktop 9.x (2.6.4); Mandriva 10.1; Red Flag Linux Desktop 4.1, 5.0; Turbolinux 10s (2.6)
  • 512MB of RAM (1GB recommended)
  • Up to 125MB of available hard-disk space
  • GTK+ (GIMP Toolkit) user interface library, version 2.4 or later
  • Mozilla 1.73 or later, Firefox 1.0 or later

AIX

  • RISC, IBM P510 processor
  • AIX 5.2, 5.3; AIX 5.3 (OS Level 3 or above) users require a workaround
  • CDE or GNOME 2.x Desktop Environment
  • 512MB of RAM (1,024MB recommended)
  • Up to 325MB of available hard-disk space
  • Firefox 1.0 or later, Mozilla 1.73 or later

HP-UX

  • PA-8800 processor
  • HP-UX 11, 11i v1, 11i v2; HP-UX 11 users: GTK+ libraries 2.6.8 (required)
  • CDE Desktop Environment
  • 512MB of RAM (1,024MB recommended)
  • Up to 330MB of available hard-disk space
  • Firefox 1.0 or later, Mozilla 1.73 or later

Solaris

  • UltraSPARC or UltraSPARC IIIi processor
  • Solaris 8, 9, or 10
  • GNOME 2.x or KDE 3.3 Desktop Environment
  • 512MB of RAM (1,024MB recommended)
  • Up to 175MB of available hard-disk space
  • Firefox 1.0 or later, Mozilla 1.73 or later

ADOBE READER FOR PALM OS VERSION 3.0 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS

Windows

  • Intel Pentium processor
  • Microsoft Windows 98, Windows Millennium Edition, Windows NT 4.0, Windows 2000, or Windows XP
  • 16MB of RAM
  • 20MB of available hard-disk space
  • Palm OS 3.5, 4.0, 4.1, or 5.0; Palm Desktop 4.0 or 4.01
  • 600KB of free space on Palm OS device

Macintosh

  • PowerPC processor
  • Mac OS X v10.2
  • 16MB of RAM
  • 20MB of available hard-disk space
  • Palm OS 3.5, 4.0, 4.1, or 5.0; Palm Desktop 4.0
  • 600KB of free space on Palm OS device

ADOBE READER FOR POCKET PC VERSION 2.0 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS

Windows

  • Handheld: Pocket PC 2002 or Windows Mobile 2003 (Update 2)
  • Microsoft Windows 2000 (all versions) or Windows XP (Professional or Home Edition)
  • 64MB of RAM
  • 16MB of hard-disk space
  • Microsoft ActiveSync 3.5 or later

ADOBE READER LE VERSION 1.0 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS

Windows

  • Intel Pentium processor
  • Microsoft Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows Millennium Edition, Windows NT, or Windows XP
  • 64MB of RAM
  • Nokia 6680 Smartphone with 16MB of RAM
  • Nokia PC Suite 6.4

ADOBE READER FOR SYMBIAN OS VERSION 1.1 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS

Windows

  • Intel Pentium or equivalent processor
  • Microsoft Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows Millennium Edition, Windows NT, or Windows XP
  • 64MB of RAM
  • Version 1.1: Nokia Communicator 9500 with 80MB of RAM
  • Version 1.0: Nokia Communicator 9210 or 9290 with 16MB of RAM

Adobe Reader for Symbian OS requires 1.6MB of space on the Symbian OS device (installation requires an additional 800KB of space).

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Posted 4 months ago

@MySpace.com Email Address

Earlier this week, it was reported that MySpace was soon to launch its own email system – MySpace Mail – that would allow users to create their own @myspace.com email address and use the social network as a webmail provider.

That point is now, as MySpace has just started rolling out the beta for their MySpace Mail program. It will come in waves, with all users having access within the next few weeks. Here’s the big question, though: who’s going to switch to MySpace Mail?

Social Email Features 

MySpace is hoping that the combination of a MySpace domain and its social networking features will lure some of its millions of users to take the plunge and create a MySpace Mail account. We’ve been given the core feature list, which MySpace describes as follows:

 

1. New Mail center provides a snapshot of all your mail activities including messages, sent messages, requests, and notifications

2. Send and receive messages from inside or outside the MySpace network

3. Unlimited file storage

4. One click to embed photos directly from your profile or desktop

5. Send and receive file attachments including music and video

6. Search within Mail using our Google Gears implementation

7. Check out friends’ activities in real time via the new Mail Activity Stream module

8. Address book that automatically saves your contacts

Some of these features will interest MySpace users – one-click to embed photos, Google Gears integration, and the activity stream are all good social twists to MySpace email. Still, we ask the big question: who’s going to actually use one as opposed to their current Gmail, Yahoo Mail, Hotmail, or other email account? Let us know in the comments.

 

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Filed under  //  new   social networking   technology   web2.0  
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Posted 4 months ago

We Can Change Change, don't get exicted its not America, but hope went @Twitter

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Filed under  //  new   social networking   twitter   web2.0  
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Posted 4 months ago