28 October, 2016

Seedr Personal Review

Seedr is a torrent downloading, and streaming website without using a torrent client. You can access Seedr from anywhere in the world. Downloading or streaming torrents directly from torrent client is slower than downloading or streaming from Seedr. Seedr provides the optimal cloud storage service for streaming and downloading of torrents.

In addition to easy to access, and high speed downloads/streams of torrents, Seedr also provides its user a method to increase their limited capacity of 2GB by sharing Seedr with its friends and other social platforms.

Here is the method to how to use Seedr:

2. Sign up with your email ID or Facebook

3. Paste/Magnet torrent URL or upload .torrent file


4. You are ready to go for streaming or downloading your torrent

The best thing about Seedr (unlike other torrent streamers) is that it is free for limited usage. Additionally, you can upgrade to the Seedr Basic, Seedr Pro and Seedr Master monthly plans.

Therefore, I would highly recommend each of you to use Seedr.

06 July, 2015

Microsoft Mico: See the first Windows 11 Mobile Concept

Windows 11 Mobile Concept (7)


Windows 10 Mobile has not even launched yet, but that does not mean futuristic concept designers can not imagineer the next version of the OS already.
Swedish designer Viktor Hammarberg has created the Microsoft Mico, the first handset set to run Windows 11 Mobile (yes, we know that Redstone will probably be called Windows 10 also).
The handset features an edge to edge curved screen HD screen, a new “Every button” that functions as an on and off switch, home button, back button and more, a 15 megapixel rear camera with flash and a Microsoft logo which can also act as a small second screen for notifications or selfies via the main camera.
The Every button, which seems like a Force Touch concept for Windows Phone and which would therefore be built into the screen, not the casing, would work as a Back button when clicked once and a Home button when clicked twice,  a Suspend or Sleep button when held for one second and a Off button when held for 5 seconds. The device would not have any physical buttons at all, with volume adjustment via a slider on the side of the curved screen.
The device also features HD speakers on the top of the handset, with a port for headphones and charging at the bottom (presumably USB-C).
In terms of the UI, the tiles have a subtle 3D element to them and is somewhat iOS influenced, including a Control Panel accessible by swiping up. Unlock would be via holding a circle for 0.8 seconds on the lock screen. The position of the circle can be customized for your hand size and usual holding position. The Home screen would include an area for 3 swippable always-on apps which are like live tiles on steroids, letting you get a lot more done right from the home screen.
Similarly the Music player would always be available via swipe from the top.
What do our readers think of this concept, which appears to include many rather interesting ideas? Let us know below.

GALLERY : WINDOWS 11 MOBILE CONCEPT BY VIKTOR HAMMARBERG

28 February, 2015

OneDrive Tip: Use Documents and Other Libraries with OneDrive

Given the liberal storage allotments and deep OS integration with OneDrive, Windows users should consider using this cloud service for all of their documents, photos, music and videos. But in doing so, you will want to configure Windows to use your OneDrive-based storage by default, and not disconnected local folders, for this data. Here’s how.
Today, Microsoft provides 15 GB of free OneDrive storage to anyone with a Microsoft account (free). But you can also purchase additional storage—100 GB is just $2 per month, for example—or get additional OneDrive storage in other ways. What’s wonderful about this storage is that it’s ubiquitous: you can access anything you store in OneDrive from any modern mobile device (Android, FireOS, iOS, Windows 8+, Windows Phone) or in even more sophisticated ways on a PC or Mac.
On Windows—which is my primary concern—the capabilities are particularly sophisticated, though they’re also changing a bit as we move to Windows 10 later this year. In short, Microsoft lets you sync all or parts of your OneDrive storage with your PC, and you can choose at a folder level (or in Windows 8.1 only, at a file level), exactly which content syncs.
What this means is that you can use OneDrive as your centralized storage solution for all forms of data, and then access that content seamlessly from your PC, even when you’re offline. So you might create and edit a Word document on your PC, and then you can read or edit that document on your phone or tablet while commuting to work, on the web from your work PC, or in any other situation you might imagine.
This capability is automatic, but you can make your workflow a bit more efficient by mapping the Documents, Music, Pictures and/or Videos libraries on your PC to the corresponding folders in OneDrive. When you do, the applications you use will automatically look for relevant content in those locations, and will automatically save new content to those locations.
You can dive right in and do this for all of the available content types noted above, or just do so on a case by case basis. That is, you may simply choose to sync your documents through OneDrive—using a Documents folder in OneDrive and the Documents library on your Windows-based PC—and skip music, photos and videos. Obviously, what you choose to use and sync is up to you.
What I have done is made sure there is a top-level folder for each content type in OneDrive—Documents, Music, Pictures and Videos, respectively—that matches the corresponding library in Windows. And when one didn’t exist, I created it. You can do this on the web or in File Explorer in Windows, but given the differences in the OneDrive sync client across Windows 7, 8, 8.1 and 10, the web is the best way.
Then, unless you’re using Windows 8.1—which lets you “see” all of your OneDrive content, and not just the bits you are syncing—you will need to access OneDrive Settings using the OneDrive icon in the system tray and ensure that you are syncing the relevant OneDrive folders with your PC.
With that done, you can map each library to the appropriate OneDrive folder. Depending on which version of Windows you’re using, you may not actually see a Libraries entry in the File Explorer navigation pane. If this is the case, you can always find the Libraries interface by tapping the little drop-down next to the left-most icon in the File Explorer address bar and choosing Libraries from the menu that appears.
go-to-libraries
When you do so, Libraries appears.
libraries
From here, you can configure each library in turn. As an example, let’s look at the Documents library. By default, the Documents library points to two physical locations on your PC’s hard drive: your personal Documents folder (C:\Users\your user name\Documents) and some other folder (Public Documents, perhaps, or perhaps even the Document folder in your OneDrive depending on what you’ve previously installed). To change this, right-click Documents and choose Properties from the pop-up menu.
doc-props
What you change here will depend on your needs. At the very least, I recommend adding the OneDrive-based Documents folder to the list of library locations (via the Add button) if it’s not there already and then setting the default Save and Public Save locations to that folder (in OneDrive, and not in your user profile). You may also want to remove your personal Documents folder (and/or the Public Documents folder, if it’s there) from the list.
doc-props2
Now, when you open or save from most document-based apps—like Notepad—this is the location that will come up by default in the File Open/Save/Save As dialog. (The one weird exception might be Microsoft Office, depending on which version you’re using. I’ll look at that one separately soon.)
notepad
Here’s how the Documents library looks in File Explorer now.
after
And you can and should do this for the Music, Pictures and Videos libraries as you wish. I do so, though on my desktop PC I leave a local location (D:\Videos) as a location for the Videos library too.
Source: Thurrot

04 February, 2015

Microsoft Releases “Universal” Touch-Friendly Office Apps For Windows 10


Microsoft today released early builds of its Office suite designed for Windows 10, software that is designed to accept touch input and work across tablets and phones. Office 2016, the desktop edition of Office, will also ship this year.
Windows 10, of course, is Microsoft’s new operating system that is designed to work across every device category and screen size. The move to harmonize its operating system platform will allow it to offer a larger user base to developers, which might make creating apps for its software more enticing.
You can snag the new apps in the Store, or herehere, and here.
The introduction of a touch-friendly build for Windows comes after the company announced versions of Office for Android and iOS. Users of its own platform were not entirely enthused. The cross-platform, touch-friendly build of Office for Windows that is now partially released wouldn't have made sense before Windows 10 existed — it will function on both phones and tablets, something that Windows 10’s predecessor, Windows 8, did not handle.

31 January, 2015

Microsoft Brings OneDrive for Business to Mac and iOS

One of the major gaps in Microsoft’s cross-platform strategy has been closed: Today, Microsoft made its OneDrive for Business cloud storage service available to users of Apple’s computing platforms. But the implementations are different: Mac users can now download a public preview of the OneDrive for Business sync client, while iOS users can now access the service via an update to the OneDrive mobile app.
This is perhaps not surprising, though I do still expect Microsoft to create sync clients for Windows and Mac that let you access both OneDrive (for consumers) and OneDrive for Business, instead of requiring separate sync clients for each. For now, at least, Mac-based access to OneDrive for Business works as it does in Windows 7 and 8 (and Windows 10): Via a standalone client that can run alongside a separate sync client for OneDrive (for consumers).
mac
On iOS, we’re seeing the same sort of mobile client that Microsoft has provided on Windows Phone, Android and Fire Phone: A single mobile app that can connect to both OneDrive and OneDrive for Business. As Microsoft puts it, this release for iOS “rounds out the first phase of its mobile investments that deliver a single OneDrive experience across work and life.”
ipad
Also, if you read OneDrive is Delivering Major Photo Experience Improvements yesterday, you know that OneDrive for iOS will be among the first clients to see the new OneDrive photos experiences. And sure enough, today’s update delivers those new features too. So you can access and create albums and tags in this release too. I’ll be checking that out later today.
Source: Thurrot

22 January, 2015

Microsoft's Windows Pushes Into Future With Holographic Glasses


Microsoft's Joe Belfiore, from left, Alex Kipman, and Terry Myerson playfully pose for a photo while wearing "Hololens" devices following an event demonstrating new features of Windows 10 on Wednesday at the company's headquarters in Redmond, Wash.
© AP Photo/Elaine Thompson   |Microsoft's Joe Belfiore, from left, Alex Kipman, and Terry Myerson playfully pose for a photo while wearing "Hololens" devices following an event demonstrating new features of Windows 10 on Wednesday

Microsoft Corp. Chief Executive Officer Satya Nadella needed to show the world the role of Windows in the future. He sure took the future part seriously.

At a preview of its Windows 10 operating system Wednesday, the software maker unveiled a version called Windows Holographic, along with a headset with glasses called HoloLens that will let users see holograms while tracking a user’s voice, motion and surroundings. The company also showed HoloStudio, software for creating holograms, then 3-D printing and sharing them.

Microsoft said it’s working with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology on the holographic technology, and the lab will use it for Mars exploration starting in July.

“It’s a huge surprise and certainly a risk trying to bring this sort of technology down to consumers,” said Michael Silver, an analyst at Gartner Inc., who attended today’s demonstration. “But this is Microsoft finally showing some vision, which has been lacking for a long, long time.”

The world’s largest software maker is the latest company to join the push into augmented and virtual reality. Qualcomm Inc. and Intel Corp. are among companies that in the past year have demonstrated technology aimed at enabling computers, tablets and phones to show users a picture of the world overlaid with digital images and information. Facebook Inc. made a $2 billion bet on virtual reality last year with its purchase of Oculus VR Inc.

Architects, Surgeons

Using Microsoft’s new holographic tools, architects could walk around their designs while clients are viewing it remotely, said Alex Kipman, a technical fellow in Microsoft’s operating system group. A surgeon could learn a procedure without ever picking up a scalpel.

“In software, nothing is impossible,” Kipman said. “Holographic computing enabled by Windows 10 is here.”

Kipman said Microsoft has been building the holographic technology for years, hidden in plain sight in the same building as the company’s own visitor center in Redmond, Washington. The HoloLens glasses will be available “in the Windows 10 time frame,” he said.

Microsoft showed a demo today in which an employee wore the headset and created a quad-copter design while clicking and tapping in the air. A screen showed what she could see in front of her. A concept video also showed how holographs can be used for building work project models and for playing video-game Minecraft.

Real World

Augmented reality differs from virtual reality in that AR projects virtual images onto pictures or video of the real world. Virtual reality is completely computer-generated.

Examples of the kind of things technology companies expect to become commonplace through augmented reality in the future include customers taking a picture of a sofa in a store, then seeing how it looks overlaid on an image of their living room, and getting driving directions in the form of arrows and signs that appear to be on the road.

On the virtual reality side, social network Facebook acquired startup Oculus for its headset that immerses people in the virtual experience. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has said virtual reality can be the next major method for communicating and interacting with the world, after mobile devices.

Google Inc., which has run into challenges promoting its Glass connected eyewear to consumers, has also made some other efforts toward letting devices interact with their surroundings. Last year, Google introduced an effort dubbed Project Tango to advance 3-D technology, using mobile gear to show off its potential. The devices are loaded with cameras and other equipment to help capture 3-D images of their surroundings, be that at home or in a business, opening up potential uses for game players, shoppers or the disabled.

Source: MSN

19 January, 2015

Visual Studio Community 2013 is now available as part of Github Student Developer Pack

In November 2014, Microsoft announced that it would release its Visual Studio Community Edition 2013 for free, in order to provide students and hobbyist programmers with the tools that are used every day by many developers.
This was preceded by GitHub's release of a kit named Student Developer Pack, which is also a collection of handy tools to help those held back by prohibitive costs. The project was made possible by a number of partners, including the Unreal Engine development team, and now - Microsoft.
The Redmond giant wants to add more value to the already impressive toolkit by offering their Visual Studio software to complement the other resources in the GitHub pack. As part of the offering, Microsoft is also providing free access to their Azure and Visual Studio Online services.
Visual Studio offers a variety of tools that include designers and debuggers to develop apps for mobile, web, desktop, and cloud, using languages such as C#, Node.js, Python, F#, VB and more.
Through Visual Studio Online, you can access tools for planning, backlogs and bug tracking, and the Azure subscription allows you to use Microsoft's cloud infrastructure to host up to ten websites and ten free mobile services, regardless of the language or platform used.
Students who want to get access to more tools and resources from Microsoft can do so by signing up for the company's DreamSpark program, which includes SQL Server, training courses and Windows Store developer accounts.
Source: MSDN Blogs