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Biyernes, Disyembre 9, 2011

PCs with pirated software infected after installation, Microsoft study says!


By: J. M. Tuazon, InterAksyon.com ·


MANILA, Philippines – In a bid to curb software piracy around the world, software giant Microsoft recently released a study indicating that 24 percent of PCs that run pirated software get infected immediately after installation, among other similar effects.

In a research done by Harrison Group and compiled by Microsoft, it was discovered that one in five of counterfeit Microsoft PCs tested by the company were unable to download Windows updates.
Software updates from Windows are critical since they patch recently known vulnerabilities that are being exploited by people behind the creation of malware.
Since these PCs with counterfeit Windows copies are unable to download updates, they are left vulnerable against the effects of viruses and other malware.
The study found that the effects are observable across the board. “The inability to download automatic updates was found both in software that had been downloaded for free and in software that had been purchased from a street market or hardware retailer,” it pointed out.
Performance-wise, the study noted that machines with genuine OSes boot faster 60 percent of the time, load files and documents faster 75 percent of the time, and generally demonstrate superior performance rates 67 percent of the time.
Moreover, battery life is 60 percent longer for machines with genuine copies of Windows installed on them, it added.
The results of the study come on the heels of Microsoft’s efforts to eliminate pirated copies of its software — arguably its bread and butter — from the market, in an initiative it has dubbed as “Play Fair Day.”
In a separate study, Microsoft revealed that manufacturing companies in Brazil, Russia, India and China — more commonly known as the BRIC region — that use pirated software are essentially stealing $1.5 billion from their competitors.
“Unfairness from piracy creates a staggering $3 billion of competitive disadvantage per year across manufacturers in Latin America, Central and Eastern Europe and Asia-Pacific regions,” it added.
On a closer note, the Business Software Alliance — an international advocacy group which seeks to halt the spread of illegal software worldwide — recently reported that the local software industry lost as much as P12 billion to piracy in 2010.
“Although we have seen increased efforts by the Philippine government and the Information Technology (IT) industry in protecting software copyright, we continue to face huge challenges in trying to drive piracy rates down,” said BSA Philippine Consultant Atty. Bien Marquez.
For the past four years, the piracy rate had remained unmoved at 69 percent. The group had also earlier noted that Microsoft’s products — particularly its operating system Windows — is one of the most pirated pieces of software in the Philippines.

Lunes, Disyembre 5, 2011

Off to Mars Field trip on Red Planet


By: Viral Videos
The US space agency is getting ready to launch later this month the biggest, most expensive robotic vehicle ever built to explore Mars for signs that life may once have existed. The rover named Curiosity is set to be launched on November 25.
Video from Agence-France Presse.



Samsung Galaxy Note now available in Southeast Asia


By: teki


Equipped with the market’s largest HD Super AMOLED display – 5.3 inches – the Galaxy Note also features a fast 1.4GHz dual-core processor. At meron din itong advanced pen-input technology na kung tawagin ng Samsung ay S pen na pwedeng gamitin para sa accurate sketching, artwork and not to mention superior handwriting recognition. Isama nyo na rin ang fast network connection speed dahilHSPA+ enabled na ito. Hataw talaga!
Pwedeng-pwede na ba ito sa Pasko?
_____
Samsung Galaxy Note product specifications:
Network: HSPA+ 21Mbps 850/900/1900/2100; EDGE/GPRS 850/900/1800/1900
Processor: 1.4GHz Dual Core Processor
Display: 5.3” WXGA(1280×800) HD Super AMOLED
OS: Android 2.3(Gingerbread)
Camera: Main (Rear): 8MP with LED Flash; Front: 2MP; Single shot, Smile shot, Share shot, Action shot, Beauty, Cartoon, Panorama
Video: MPEG4, H.264, H.263, WMV, DivX, Xvid, VC-1; Recording 1080p@24~30fps, Playing 1080p@30fps
Audio: Codec MP3, AAC, AMR, WMA, WAV, FLAC, OGG; Music Player with SoundAlive; 3.5mm Ear Jack, Stereo FM Radio with RDS
Value-added features: Samsung Apps; Samsung Kies 2.0/ Samsung Kies air; Samsung ChatON mobile communication service (Downloadable via Samsung Apps); Samsung TouchWiz/Samsung L!ve Panel UX; S Pen Experience (S Memo, S Planner, S Choice)
Social Hub: Integrated Messaging(Email, SNS), Contacts/ Calendar Sync; Basic: POP3/IMAP Email; Social Hub, Readers Hub, Music Hub; Google Mobile Services; Android Market, Gmail, Google Earth, YouTube, Google Maps’ Syncing with Google Calendar
A-GPS: Enterprise Solutions- ODE, EAS, CCX, MDM, VPN, WebEx
Connectivity: Bluetooth technology v 3.0 + HS
USB: v2.0 HOST
Wi-Fi: 802.11 a/b/g/n, Wi-Fi Direct
Sensor: Accelerometer, Light, Digital compass, Proximity, Barometer
Memory: 16/32GB Internal Memory + microSD (up to 32GB)
Size: 146.85 x 82.95 x 9.65 mm
Battery: Standard battery, Li-ion 2,500 mAh

Globe banks on long-standing Apple relationship in iPhone 4S push


By: J. M. Tuazon, InterAksyon.com


MANILA, Philippines – Second-ranked Globe Telecom Inc. is capitalizing on its long-standing relationship with Apple as it announced the availability of the iPhone 4S on their network on December 16, the company said in a statement Monday.
Globe President and Chief Executive Officer Ernest Cu stressed that their six-year partnership with Apple has allowed the company to offer the “complete iPhone and iPad product suites” to its subscribers.
“Backed by several years [of] experience in handling Apple mobile devices, Globe is better-equipped to deal with the specific needs that face iPhone users, particularly in mobile data,” Cu pointed out.
Cu is reacting on recent reports that chief rival Smart Communications will also be offering Apple’s new iPhone beginning December 16, signalling the end of Globe’s exclusive distribution deal with Apple that dates back to 2007.
The telco executive said its long experience of offering the iPhone to Filipinos has given his company the chance to tailor mobile data offerings specifically to smartphone users.
“We have developed offers and services that cater to the mobile browsing habits of a wide variety of consumers,” Cu stressed.
The Ayala-owned wireless provider also emphasized its strong performance on the mobile data space, which now accounts for half of its total mobile service revenues, “on the back of new, affordable services that promote the use of mobile internet for social networking, search engine and email services.”
For its part, Smart has said that the iPhone 4S offering will only bring in more postpaid subscribers to the network, which now stands at about half a million.
PLDT Board Member and TV5 President Ray C. Espinosa earlier said: “When this happens, this will make us the undisputed leader in postpaid subscriptions.”
InterAksyon.com is the online news portal of TV5.
Smart said its recently acquired telco, Sun Cellular, will also be offering postpaid plans for the iPhone 4S. Sun currently has a postpaid subscriber base of 1.5 million.
Globe, on the other hand, has reached 1.37 million postpaid users as of end-September, “up 39 percent year-on-year.”
All eyes will be on the two fiercely competitive telcos as they simultaneously launch the iPhone 4S 11 days from now. Both have also already started taking pre-orders for Apple’s new smartphone, but none of them have revealed official pricing plans for the sought-after smartphone.

24 year old Half Filipino is one of the NASA' s youngest engineers


By: Cynthia de Castro, Asian Journal
LOS ANGELES - On November 26, Saturday, NASA launched the biggest and best-equipped robot ever sent to explore another planet from the Kennedy Space Centre. Dubbed Mars Curiosity but more formally called the Mars Science Laboratory, it is expected to reach Mars by August 2012.

If all goes according to plan, the rover will be abseiling down from a hovering “sky crane” to set off across the surface of Mars equipped with equipment to analyze Martian soil and rocks for evidence that Earth’s neighbor might once have been supported life.
Among the inspiring people at NASA, who worked on the Mars Curiosity project, is Filipino-American Gregory Galgana Villar III. He is one of the youngest verification and validation engineers for the Mars Science Laboratory mission.
Gregory Galgana Villar III, 24, is a relatively new hire at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The fact that he took part in one of the most ambitious NASA missions and was in JPL’s mission control center last Saturday inspires wonder.
Villar was with a team of outstanding scientists and engineers stationed at computer monitors of all kinds and anxiously who awaited the launch of a mission eight years in the making.Villar comes from Long Beach and has always been interested in physics and astronomy.
Over the years, he’s gone from observing stars and planets to majoring in physics while interning at JPL with some of the most renowned scientists in the world to now working in an engineering discipline on one of NASA’s flagship missions.
Asked how he got into NASA, Villar said, “I spent two years interning with three different education programs at JPL.”
Villar participated in the Laboratory’s Minority Initiatives Internship, Space Grant and Undergraduate Student Research Program as an undergrad student at Cal-Poly, Pomona.
“As with any job, it’s not really your background, it’s how smart you are and how well you adapt or how fast you can learn on the job,” said Villar. “So long as they see that you’re very motivated and smart, they’ll take you on for the job.”
Villar was a Physics major who graduated from Cal Poly Pomona in 2009 and is currently working at JPL and applying to Astronomy graduate school to pursue a Ph.D.
He has done a number of Astronomy research projects as an undergraduate. He first participated in a research project with Dr. Joe Carson of JPL and Dr. Alex Rudolph of CPP searching for Brown Dwarfs around nearby stars using the Palomar 200” telescope near San Diego, California.
He subsequently worked with Dr. Raghvendra Sahai at JPL and Dr. Mark Morris of UCLA, developing a morphological classification scheme on young planetary nebulae, one possible end state of a star.
“I’m on the Verification and Validation team until we get to Mars,” said Villar, who was also recently accepted into the astronautical engineering master’s program at the University of Southern California, but is deferring until the rover has landed.
“I’m working on extending my future with the mission team, but wherever JPL takes me, wherever my future takes me, is where I’ll go.”
When and how did Villar decide to pursue a career in astronomy?
“It was a clear night in December of 2006, and I remember standing inside the extremely large structure. I was waiting cold and anxiously in the dark. After a few minutes, I heard the gears start to turn and quickly looked up. I watched in awe as the slit of the dome opened and revealed the beautiful night sky. The moonlight gradually illuminated the inside of the dome, and my admiration progressed as I watched the massive 200-inch Hale Telescope at Palomar Observatory be positioned. This breathtaking moment confirmed my aspirations of becoming an astronomer.”
“Research in astronomy began sophomore year of my undergraduate career. Dr. Rudolph announced a research opportunity to work with Dr. Joseph Carson, a former student of his that was doing postdoctoral research at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. In 2006, I was selected to be a part of this project. Our task was to search for brown dwarfs, sub-stellar objects that did not have enough mass to sustain nuclear fusion. During the course of our research, we had the amazing opportunity to visit the Palomar Observatory and use their 200-inch Hale Telescope and take data. A majority of the work done on the project was done from Cal Poly where we reduced the images taken at Palomar. In 2009, a paper was published in the Astronomical Journal regarding our research and I was included as a co-author.”
Villar goes on to explain how he got into NASA: “With the brown dwarf research under my belt, I was able to acquire a NASA scholarship in 2007. I was awarded NASA’s Motivating Undergraduate in Science and Technology (MUST) scholarship that included a summer internship at one of their centers. This led me to my next research project in astronomy. I worked at JPL with Dr. Raghvendra Sahai, collaborating with Dr. Mark Morris of UCLA, developing a morphological classification scheme on young planetary nebulae, one possible end state of a star. About 100 young planetary nebulae were studied using high-resolution images taken with the Hubble Space Telescope and were classified according to their sizes and shapes. In addition, I calculated the ages of these objects. I presented my work at the 213th American Astronomical Society Meeting and it was very exciting being able to participate in a professional conference in my field.”
“In the fall of 2009, I was in NASA’s Undergraduate Student Research Program. Here, I worked under the supervision of Dr. Glenn Orton studying the 2009 Jupiter impact. Fortunately, I was able to remotely use NASA’s InfraRed Telescope Facility. My assignment was to develop atmospheric models that matched our observations in order to study the effect of the impact on Jupiter’s atmosphere. A paper has just been submitted to Science reporting our preliminary results.”
When not working in NASA, Villar likes to write very interesting blogs on the Internet. He has the ongoing 100 Words of Physics blog, wherein he talks about his hard-to-understand world in understandable layman’s terms.
Explaining his series, he invites. “Time Travel. Black Holes. Quantum Mechanics. Follow me as I explain cool physics that ANYONE can understand in 100 words.”
Here’s a sample of a blog entitled Shrinking Objects: “If Superman flew by you near the speed-of-light, he would look much shorter than if he flew by at the speed of an airplane. This is because length contraction (a concept in ETOSR) says when an object moves at high speeds, the object will look like it shrinks in length. Similar to time dilation, length contraction is only obvious at speeds close to the speed-of-light. If a limo could not fit into a garage when it is parked, do you think it would fit for a second if it traveled really fast (before it crashes through the wall of course)?”
What’s next for Villar? “After obtaining my PhD in astronomy, I would like to continue conducting research. I am definitely open to doing post-doctoral work anywhere, even abroad, in order to experience a new environment. One day, after contributing a great deal to the astronomical community, I would love to continue my research and also teach by obtaining a professorship at a University. Through teaching, I can continue to share my love and knowledge of Physics and Astronomy to younger generations,” said the young Fil-Am astronomer.
After Curiosity successfully blasted last Saturday on the way to Mars, Congressman Chaka Fattah (D-PA) senior Democrat on the House Appropriations Commerce, Justice, Science subcommittee which is in charge of NASA funding said, “I applaud the efforts of NASA and the President’s commitment to set Mars as a goal for future manned space exploration. The men and women who work at NASA inspire us that we should not limit our imaginations to what is or what was but what can be.”
Yes, Gregory Villar III has certainly inspired us to keep reaching for greater heights and dream of what can be.

Linggo, Disyembre 4, 2011

SCANDAL OF MO TWISTER On RHIAN RAMOS

MANILA, Philippines – Radio DJ Mo Twister (Mohan Gumatay in real life) will be facing charges after a video talking about sensitive issues between him and his then girlfriend Rhian Ramos allegedly leaked online.

Gumatay said he had already deleted the controversial video but it was “repaired” by someone who bought his computer.A report from “E-Live” on Saturday said that GMA Network (Ramos’ home network) will file appropriate charges against the DJ for the “malicious and false imputations against the network in his video posted this (Friday) afternoon on YouTube.”
On his official Twitter account, he explained, “I know i sold many of my things including computers that i had erased. apparently, someone ‘repaired’ the erased files/hard drive and uploaded some personal files of mine.”
Gumatay is scheduled to leave for New York this weekend but decided to postpone his trip to find out who restored the deleted file and posted it on the internet.
“i was supposed to leave for new york tomorrow but i'll stay until Monday, or later, in order to help clear or answer some of the questions, as well as investigate how someone may have retrieved my erased files,” he tweeted.
Gumatay also extended a request to the person who is allegedly in possession of his personal files.
“I appeal to whoever is in possession of my personal files to refrain from uploading anything further,” he said via Twitter.
“E-Live” tried to get a statement from Ramos’ camp but did not get a response.
Meanwhile, Push.com.ph reported that the controversial video entitled “RepairedMovie.mov” was posted on YouTube by an anonymous user last November 28.
From a total of 353 page views on Friday night, it has been reported that the video has over 127,000 views as of posting.


Little people seek their own community "unano" Inspiring Story

Alejandro Doron says he came from the provinces to find work in Manila.


A boxer at Ringside bar in Manila's Makati district takes off his gloves after a bout.

By Peter Shadbolt for CNN

Manila (CNN) -- Crowded, gritty, and poor, Metro Manila can be a tough place to live for just about anyone; but when you stand three feet 10 inches the odds are seriously stacked against you.
"I come from the provinces so there was no work," says 35-year-old Alejandro Doron, looking at his hands. "Farm work, using the heavy equipment, was just too hard for me."
Arriving in Manila as a 21-year-old, Alejandro - a dwarf or unano as they are called in the Philippines - tried his hand at several jobs, among them working as a show wrestler in a Manila bar.

"That was okay but it could be quite hard," he says. "It was just a show, and just on Thursdays, but sometimes you could still get hurt and you were always slipping over in the oil."

Now safely ensconced in Manila's "Hobbit House" - a dwarf-themed blues bar in Manila's scruffy Ermita district - he is part of a group of dwarves who plan to build their own community for about 30 of the city's "little people" - the preferred term for people with dwarfism.

Often isolated in the provinces, where they can be the only person in the town with dwarfism, in Manila they are less visible. Working and living together, however, makes the condition all but a normal state of affairs.


The founder of the Hobbit House, 71-year-old Jim Turner, says dwarves in the Philippines suffer the same amount of prejudice as little people anywhere else in the world.

"I think anywhere ... anywhere in the world they'd have the same problems," says Turner sitting in his usual corner of the bar, a cigarette burning in his ashtray. "People look and stare at them," he says, screwing up his face in imitation of someone who's just seen something weird.

Far from exploiting the dwarves, Turner maintains the bar gives hope and employment to people who sometimes hail from the worst slums in Manila.

"It gives them a real sense of community," he says, taking a draw on his cigarette.A former Peace Corp volunteer who came to Manila in the 60s, Turner later worked in Filipino television in the 1970s when dwarves and transvestites were a staple fare of the film industry.

The exploitation genre - a period during the 60s, 70s and 80s when sexism, racism and so-called "carnival freaks" were regarded as a surefire recipe for a box office smash - was recently documented in an Australian film released last year called Machete Maidens Unleashed!

The B-movie genre was designed as drive-in fodder and involved risqué scenes featuring gun-toting nuns, topless female revolutionaries or martial arts-performing dwarves. The low-budget films launched the career of Filipino actor and martial artist Ernesto de la Cruz - better known as Weng Weng - who stood just 2 feet, 9 inches tall.

Starring in roles as diverse as the baby Moses in a Filipino biblical epic to a spoof on James Bond where he appeared as agent '00', Weng Weng was wildly popular in the Philippines in a genre that became know as 'dwarf TV'.

Turner became friends with several people with dwarfism and, combined with his love of J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, the idea for the Hobbit House was born.

It has since become so popular that he opened up a second Hobbit House in the beach resort of Boracay and the venues now attract a steady stream of little people looking for work.

"At first we were just taking anyone we could get, but now we're pretty much turning people away," he said. The bar general manager Pidoy Fetalino, who started at the Hobbit House as a cashier but now operates the bar, says they are now looking for dwarves who have good English and even college degrees.

"A few of the people we've hired haven't worked out," adds Turner.

The Hobbit House is still the first stop for casting agents looking for little people to star as extras and most of the staff at the bar describe themselves as freelancers or businesspeople.

Not only does the bar provide regular employment between gigs, it also gives the staff a chance to hone their skills - the Hobbit House has spawned a slew of diminutive Elvis impersonators, jugglers and fire eaters. One bar staff member even patrolled the premises dressed as a security guard with a Great Dane three times his size.

"I just landed a role as Santa Nino," says Alejandro, chuckling as he makes the shape of the headdress and cape of the saint. "In all my life, I never thought I would be doing something like that."

While the dream of starting a live-in community for Manila's little people is still to attract any financial backers, Alejandro is hopeful the scheme will one day come together.

"So far we don't have the money to go much further," Doron says. The group has already sourced a 40-acre site outside Manila, but the cost of developing the site and building housing is daunting.

"What can I say except that dreams do come true," he says, laughing infectiously. "There's always Santa Claus.

Huwebes, Disyembre 1, 2011

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Martes, Nobyembre 29, 2011

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