Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Google Alert - mobile laptop websites

News1 new result for mobile laptop websites
 
United Concordia's Website Optimized for Mobile
Sacramento Bee
17, 2013 -- /PRNewswire/ -- United Concordia Dental's website, UnitedConcordia.com, now boasts responsive design, optimizing a visitor's viewing experience whether on a desktop computer, laptop, tablet or smart phone. "Responsive website design is ...
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Saturday, August 24, 2013

Google Alert - mobile laptop websites

News1 new result for mobile laptop websites
 
RevBuilders Marketing Launches Mobile Website for Boston-Area Pest Control ...
Consumer Electronics Net
Today, numerous techniques for creating mobile websites exist, from the simple to the sophisticated. The laptop computer is on its way to becoming obsolete, says Scot Small, President of RevBuilders Marketing. Most people who are traveling are doing ...
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Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Google Alert - mobile laptop websites

News1 new result for mobile laptop websites
 
Consumers prefer to entertain mobile devices over PCs
USA TODAY
Consumers embrace of smartphones and tablets continues and for a good reason: they like their devices more than desktop and laptop computers. Users of media and entertainment are significantly more satisfied with mobile sites and apps from outlets such ...
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Saturday, May 25, 2013

Google Alert - mobile laptop websites

News1 new result for mobile laptop websites
 
Why should a business have a mobile website?
spyghana.com
Most of the people feel comfortable while browsing the internet through their Smartphones rather than turning on their PC or laptop. A mobile website is very important for business as it is easily accessible and it is the best way if you want to stand ...
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Saturday, May 4, 2013

Google Alert - mobile laptop websites

News1 new result for mobile laptop websites
 
Mobile Technology & Responsive Websites
Consett Magazine
Since the advent and popularisation of the modern smart phone, the way we use the internet has changed dramatically. No longer must you be in front of your home computer mobile internet responsive websites or at a laptop to access the internet. The ...
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Friday, February 15, 2013

14 Most Dangerous Websites In The World siliconindia.com



14 Most Dangerous Websites In The World


By SiliconIndia  |   Thursday, 14 February 2013, 17:28 IST
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Bangalore: It was not the same way around here, a couple of years back. People were not much bothered about Malware. The only ways for computers to contract the virus was through floppy disks, sharing executable files, and then e-mail attachment. But today the malware have become very part of internet which in turn is very part of our daily life. But then today’s malware are more malice packed than they ever been, thanks to host of our personal, professional and financial information being stored in cloud and on devices.    


F-Secure, an anti-virus, cloud content and computer security company has come up with the list of top websites that are hosting malware, which shockingly contains popular sites like Google and Dropbox— read on to know about them.

So be careful when you visit these sites, since your computer may not come out in good health, after your visit.


#14 Ucoz.com


Description: Site hosting
Global rank in malware hosting: 14


uCoz is a free web hosting with a built-in content management system. The modules of the uCoz CMS can be used together to build a fully featured website, or separately, for example as an online shopping platform, blog, webforum etc. As of July 10, 2012, there are more than one million websites created in the uCoz system.  uCoz is among the top sites for Russian-speaking users according to Alexa Internet.
#13 Sapo.pt


Description: Site hosting
Global rank in malware hosting: 13


#12 Amazonaws.com


Description: General hosting, web services, various other services
Global rank in malware hosting: 12


The site provides you with direct access to Amazon.com's technology platform and product data. Web services are self-contained functions that can be published and invoked across the web using XML-based protocols. Using Amazon's Web Services, you can build dynamic, highly-effective web sites and web applications. The site is subsidiary of Amazon.com. It enable you to run virtually everything in the cloud: from enterprise applications and big data projects to social games and mobile apps, offered over the Internet by Amazon.com.
#11 Blogspot.de


Description: Blog hosting
Global rank in malware hosting: 11


It’s a German blogging site.


#10 4shared.com


Description: File hosting
Global rank in malware hosting: 10


4shared.com offers online file sharing and storage - 15 GB free web space with easy registration. The site shows File upload progressor, and it offers multiple file transfer, fast download.


#9 Sendspace.com


Description: File hosting
Global rank in malware hosting: 9


You can simply drag and drop files from your desktop straight into the upload page and click the upload button when ready.  Additionally, the upload form allows selection of multiple files in one go, instead of having to add them one at a time. File size limit is 500MB for Lite/Max and 10GB for Pro! You can Login with Facebook, Google, Twitter, Yahoo.
#8 Comcast.net


Description: Site hosting, various services
Global rank in malware hosting: 8


Comcast.net offers to watch TV online, check email, pay bill and upgrade Comcast subscription news, check scores, post-game recaps, player stats, and videos, for professional and college baseball, football, basketball, hockey motor and many more.


#7 Google.com


Description: Document hosting, file hosting, search engine, various services
Global rank in malware hosting: 7


Google.com provides Internet-related products and services, including internet search, cloud computing, software and advertising technologies. Rapid growth of Google since its incorporation has triggered a chain of products, acquisitions, and partnerships beyond the company's core web search engine. The company offers online productivity software including email, an office suite, and social networking.


#6 Fc2.com


Description: Blog hosting, file hosting, various services
Global rank in malware hosting: 6


Fc2.com hosts web service and freeRental server , domain , blog , chat , web analytics , bulletin board , diary , access counter , SNS , such as Japanese web services provide a variety of free and pay-in a variety of languages ​​to start.
#5 Hotfile.com


Description: File hosting
Global rank in malware hosting: 5


Hotfile is a one-click file hosting website that was founded by Hotfile Corp. It allows users to upload and download files with any web browser. Non-registered users are allowed to upload up to 400 MB at once. After a successful file upload, the user is given a unique URL which allows others to download the file. Non-registered users have to wait 15 seconds in the download queue and might need to enter a CAPTCHA and have to wait 30 minutes to download another file after a previous download session ends. Hotfile does not provide a search engine or browser.


#4 Dropbox.com


Description: File hosting
Global rank in malware hosting: 4


Dropbox is a file hosting service operated by Dropbox, Inc., that offers cloud storage, file synchronization, and client software. It allows users to create a special folder on each of their computers, which Dropbox then synchronizes so that it appears to be the same folder (with the same contents) regardless of which computer is used to view it. Files placed in this folder also are accessible through a website and mobile phone applications.
#3 Cloudfront.net


Description: Content hosting and delivery, various services
Global rank in malware hosting: 3


Amazon CloudFront is a content delivery network (CDN) offered by Amazon Web Services. CloudFront operates on a pay-as-you-go basis.


It integrates with other Amazon Web Services to give developers and businesses an easy way to distribute content to end users with low latency, high data transfer speeds, and no commitments.


#2 Letitbit.net


Description: File hosting
Global rank in malware hosting: 2


Letitbit.net is a Russian file hosting service that offers both free and commercial services. It has a three-month global Alexa traffic rank of 452. About 34 percent of visits to this site consist of only one pageview.


Alexa Traffic Rank: Global Rank: 452, Rank in Russia: 97, Sites Linking In 44,247.


#1 Mail. Ru


Description: Blog hosting, file hosting, various services
Global rank in malware hosting: 1


Mail.ru is the largest free e-mail service of the Runet. The Mail.ru business expanded rapidly to reach the No. 1 market position in Russia by 2000.


Runet (portmanteau of ru (Russia's top-level domain) and net (common abbreviation of internet)) is a widely used term that pertains to Internet domains and websites, and has several terminological uses.

The computer that never crashes - tech - 14 February 2013 - New Scientist


The computer that never crashes

A revolutionary new computer based on the apparent chaos of nature can reprogram itself if it finds a fault
OUT of chaos, comes order. A computer that mimics the apparent randomness found in nature can instantly recover from crashes by repairing corrupted data.
Dubbed a "systemic" computer, the self-repairing machine now operating at University College London (UCL) could keep mission-critical systems working. For instance, it could allow drones to reprogram themselves to cope with combat damage, or help create more realistic models of the human brain.
Everyday computers are ill suited to modelling natural processes such as how neurons work or how bees swarm. This is because they plod along sequentially, executing one instruction at a time. "Nature isn't like that," says UCL computer scientist Peter Bentley. "Its processes are distributed, decentralised and probabilistic. And they are fault tolerant, able to heal themselves. A computer should be able to do that."
Today's computers work steadily through a list of instructions: one is fetched from the memory and executed, then the result of the computation is stashed in memory. That is then repeated – all under the control of a sequential timer called a program counter. While the method is great for number-crunching, it doesn't lend itself to simultaneous operations. "Even when it feels like your computer is running all your software at the same time, it is just pretending to do that, flicking its attention very quickly between each program," Bentley says.
He and UCL's Christos Sakellariou have created a computer in which data is married up with instructions on what to do with it. For example, it links the temperature outside with what to do if it's too hot. It then divides the results up into pools of digital entities called "systems".
Each system has a memory containing context-sensitive data that means it can only interact with other, similar systems. Rather than using a program counter, the systems are executed at times chosen by a pseudorandom number generator, designed to mimic nature's randomness. The systems carry out their instructions simultaneously, with no one system taking precedence over the others, says Bentley. "The pool of systems interact in parallel, and randomly, and the result of a computation simply emerges from those interactions," he says.
It doesn't sound like it should work, but it does. Bentley will tell a conference on evolvable systems in Singapore in April that it works much faster than expected.
Crucially, the systemic computer contains multiple copies of its instructions distributed across its many systems, so if one system becomes corrupted the computer can access another clean copy to repair its own code. And unlike conventional operating systems that crash when they can't access a bit of memory, the systemic computer carries on regardless because each individual system carries its own memory.
The pair are now working on teaching the computer to rewrite its own code in response to changes in its environment, through machine learning.
"It's interesting work," says Steve Furber at the University of Manchester, UK, who is developing a billion-neuron, brain-like computer called Spinnaker (see "Build yourself a brain"). Indeed, he could even help out the UCL team. "Spinnaker would be a good programmable platform for modelling much larger-scale systemic computing systems," he says.