Sunday 8 June 2014

All News Updates: Review about Film The World Before Her

All News Updates: Review about Film The World Before Her:

A poster for the film The World Before Her. Image from Facebook.

Durga Vahini is the female counterpart of the Bajrang Dal, a subsidiary of the Hindu nationalist organisationVishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP)....

Residents in a US Town have Gold Pouring from their Taps

Residents in a US town have gold on tap, literally.

Gold in drinking water

The local community of Whitehall, in the US state of Montana, have discovered gold flakes pouring out of their household water taps.

Mark Brown said his wife Sharon found specks of gold flakes in the soap suds as she was washing up.

"She pulled the plug to let the water out and it was glistening, gleaming little flecks. I can't explain it... It's bizarre," he told NBC.

The Browns' neighbour Paul Harper revealed he has also found gold in his drinking water.

While the residents initially had their doubts as to what the flecks were, chemical tests have proved that it is pure gold.

Montana does have a gold mine located five miles northeast of Whitehall, however an official with the State Department of Environmental Quality said there's no reason to suspect the gold came from the mine.

It is thought that the flakes could have come from pipes or pumps connected to the water supply.

Whitehall receives its drinking water from two wells in the middle of the town.

While you'd think the discovery of gold in the water might have prompted a gold rush, in fact the residents are more concerned about what else might be in their drinking water.

"If we're getting heavy metals that you can see with the naked eye, what else might be in there?" said Brown.

A sample of the gold drinking water has been sent to a lab for testing.
-nbc

Wednesday 4 June 2014

Apple Echoes Dropbox WhatsApp and With New Software Features

“Picasso had a saying — ‘good artists copy; great artists steal’ — and we have always been shameless about stealing great ideas.” ~ Steve Jobs

Apple announced a flood of new features for its software platforms for Macs and iPhones, many of which might feel familiar to users of apps like Dropbox, Voxer and WhatsApp as Apple moves to keep up with developments in cloud and mobile communications technology.

1) Tying Apple devices together with features like calling and emails that can work simultaneously across iPhones and Macs.

2) Bringing other apps services directly into Apple’s native apps, allowing a user to for instance use a photo editing app within the company’s native photo service or add their data to Apple’s notifications stream.

At an unusually lighthearted keynote, Chief Executive Tim Cook said that the updated iPhone platform iOS 8 was “a giant release” for both consumers and developers.

The reveals included some neat developer features that make programing an app for Apple’s devices a lot easier with features like Swift — but also put mature services like DropBox and Skype under pressure by essentially aping them as native Apple features. Jan Koum, the founder of Facebook-owned WhatsApp messenger tweeted his own veiled criticism at the event which seemed heavy on familiar features.

But some developers felt that Apple was still leaving a level playing field for other developers to compete with its own apps. “Everyone’s iterating and moving forward,” said Nick D’Aloisio, who just won an Apple design award for his Yahoos News Digest app. “It’s part of the industry. Now whoever has the best product wins.”

Among the big reveals:

- iCloud Drive seeks to redeem Apple’s struggles with cloud sharing with a service eerily similar to Dropbox. It stores documents and data from apps in the Mac’s Finder window, syncing the data across devices and even across Microsoft Windows.  (Ironically, Steve Jobs tried to buy Dropbox back in 2009, and then when he was rebuffed vowed to destroy the company with iCloud.)

- A featured on the theme of bringing devices together, called Handoff, lets users swipe an email from their iPhone to their Mac (if they’re close enough) to continue writing the email on that device, or pick up where they were browsing on Safari on a separate device.

- A calling feature very similar to Skype and Viber allows users to take phone calls on their Macs and not just their phones

- Mark-Up, an extension to Mail and Safari that lets users edit attachments by drawing on them.

- Mail Drive allows Mac users to send attachments up to 5 GB in size.

There were also a raft of features specifically for iOS 8 and messaging that appeared to draw on the popularity of third-party apps:

- A new native feature on the iOS keyboard called QuickType uses “language models” to predict words before they are typed, with an interface very similar to that of SwiftKey, a predictive keyboard app that has not been able to sell on Apple’s App Store because of the closed ecosystem for iOS. Ironically enough, now that Apple has the QuickType feature, it would allow iOS users to buy and install third-party keyboard apps.

- Within iMessage Apple revealed a push-to-talk, and push-to-video feature very similar to push-to-talk features announced by messaging service WhatsApp several months ago, and popularized by the messaging app Voxer.

The founders of keyboard app maker SwiftKey said they were “delighted Apple has decided to embrace the importance of opening its platform to third party keyboards.” Without mentioning Apple’s QuickType feature, Jon Reynolds and Ben Medlock added: “Are we going to build SwiftKey Keyboard for iOS 8? Of course we are. We’ve already started.”

-forbes