Sunday, December 22, 2013

Download iOS 7 Untethered Jailbreak released for iPhone, iPad, and iPod devices by showing the iNfinity of H@CK


If you love iPhone you are surely going to love this news. iOS 7 was released in 3 months before and today finally the evad3rs team has released untethered jailbreak for iPhone, iPad, and iPod devices running iOS 7.0 through iOS 7.0.4. source by hacker news;

The evasi0n installer is compatible with Windows, Mac OS X and Linux so no matter what operating system you’re on, you should be able to jailbreak your device.

Jailbreaking is the procedure of modifying the iOS of your iPhone to remove the limitations imposed by Apple. This allows a user to access and install a lot of new applications, software and other similar content which otherwise are not made available to iPhone users through the Apple Store.

The process is very simple, and within five minutes you can jailbreak your device. According to the instructions, iTunes must be installed if you’re running Windows and the only prerequisite is that the device should be running iOS 7.0.4. Team advice user to backup device data before using evasi0n tool. If something breaks, you'll always be able to recover 
your data



Download for Windows :-








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            Download for Mac :-



 FAQ :- "Jailbreak is legal or not ?", - Yes is legal, at least in the US, a rule was passed in July 2010 by the US government made it legal so whatever you are doing with your iPhone is completely legal. Download Evasi0n for Windows Download Evasi0n for Mac

Once the installation will complete, the Cydia will appear on the home screen

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Saturday, December 14, 2013

Intel prepares to launch in 2014 from Haswell-E with 8 physical cores and 16 threads of native processing of 3 GHz



First sign of engineering of the

Intel prepares to launch in 2014 from Haswell-E, the first processors of the firm for the consumer sector with 8 physical cores and 16 threads of native processing.

Intel already has the consumer market more powerful processors in the LGA 2011 but still intends to raise with the new Haswell-E, which has been leaked the first sign of engineering.

Development for the enthusiast market compatible with the current socket LGA 2011 although if you want to take advantage of its full potential, you will have to change the motherboard in the same way, since it will come with new chipset X 99 (codename Wellsburg), offering six port USB 3.0 and ten ports SATA-III (6 Gbps) and major news: support for quad channel memory of new generation DDR4 and motherboards with three sockets.

The assigned TPD will be located at 140 Watts and the cache will increase up to 20 Mbytes in the models 'Extreme' most advanced with 8 cores and 16 threads of native processing.

With variants 'X' and 'K' bound to market enthusiast, to big gamers on PC, lovers of overclocking or semi-professional use of creative music, audio or video content. Intel Haswell-E would be available next year. Price we don't know but think the $1,000 barrier
Intel Haswell-E, 8 physical cores 3 GHz

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Digital Storm's first Steam Machine will be a $1,469 gaming PC


Digital Storm has a Steam Machine too. The boutique gaming PC manufacturer has just announced its own take on Valve's formula for a Linux-based game console, and it just goes to show how diverse these computers will be when they hit the market next year. Instead of trying to compete with the Xbox One and PlayStation 4 like iBuyPower's $499 rig, the new Digital Storm computer will start at a comparatively pricy $1,469.
"Rather than try to compete with console pricing, our system takes aim at the high end of the market and capitalizes on PC gaming's biggest advantage, raw performance," the company's statement reads.
While details are scarce, it will come with liquid cooling for the CPU, an advanced thermal-management system of some sort, and can optionally dual-boot both Windows and SteamOS so gamers can play http://technoworld007.blogspot.in/search/label/Games%20%20detailsgames for both operating systems. Options include a GeForce GTX Titan graphics card and a 700W power supply. At 4.4 inches wide, 14.1 inches deep, and 16.4 inches tall, it's a good bit bigger than an Xbox One, but it should hopefully still be able to fit into a home entertainment system lying down. We should get more when Valve announces the full lineup of Steam Machines at CES 2014 next month.

Google opens first data centres in Asia; no plans for India, China

Google opened its first two data centres in Asia on Wednesday to cater to the world's fastest growing consumer technology markets, but the company has no plans to open one in China or India.

Choosing Taiwan and Singapore instead illustrates the problem that tech companies face in trying to feed data demand in the world's two most populous countries: With regulations in flux in India and cyberspace censorship in China, Google had to look next door.
Mobile data traffic in emerging Asia-Pacific countries will likely rise 68 per cent in 2014, well ahead of the global growth rate of 48 per cent and the fastest growing region in the world, according to Analysys Mason, a research consultancy. Tech companies normally try to keep data centres as close to the customer base as possible because distance hurts speed.
"While we've been busy building, the growth in Asia's Internet has been amazing. The number of Internet users in India doubled, from 100 million to 200 million. It took six years to achieve that milestone in the US," Google's vice president of data centres, Joe Kava, said in a statement.

"And this growth probably won't slow for some time, since the majority of people that have yet to come online also happen to live in Asia," he said.
Kava said the cost of building the centres was one consideration for locating in Taiwan, but things like data privacy policies, a highly trained workforce and network infrastructure were equally important.
"It's no secret that the Taiwanese ecosystem for technology companies is outstanding," he told reporters. "Being close to the technology companies will give us opportunity to further some of our partnerships" in Taiwan.
The importance of a country's data policies was highlighted by the way Google opened its centres in Taiwan and Singapore and its decision to double spending in Taiwan to $600 million compared to $120 million in Singapore.
While Google brought out executives and media to celebrate its Taiwan opening on Wednesday, the Singapore launch received no such fanfare.
The company has expressed concern over a Singapore regulation announced in May that requires certain websites that regularly report on Singapore to be licensed, put up a S$50,000 ($40,000) performance bond and take down within 24 hours any content that authorities deemed objectionable.
Singaporean opinion news site Breakfast Network effectively shut down this week as a result, saying the "demand to register has created a wrinkle in our barely formed plans to become a sustainable and professional outfit".
Google also announced it abandoned plans to build a third data centre in Hong Kong, citing primarily a lack of land.

Serving 2.5 billion
Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore are all popular with global tech companies because they boast well-established privacy laws, reliable power and fibre broadband infrastructure, and skilled workforces, all essential to operating data centres.

Apple Inc, Amazon.com Inc and Microsoft Corp are also building data centres in Asia in Singapore, Hong Kong and Tokyo. But the real appeal is the giant number of Internet users in China and India.
Google left mainland China in 2010 after a cyber attack and Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt told the Wall Street Journal last month that the company is in no hurry to return.
"China's censorship regime has gotten significantly worse since we left so something would have to change before we come back," he said.
That left an opening for China's Baidu Inc to further dominate the search engine market with a 66 per cent share this year, according to web analytical tool StatCounter, and another local rival, 360 Search, to emerge, grabbing 21 percent. Google's share dropped to 9 per cent from 41 per cent in 2009 before its exit China.
"The regulatory environment in China is designed in a way to nurture local service providers such as Alibaba, so it makes it harder for foreign companies to enter the market," tech researcher IDC analyst Leon Kao, who is based in Taipei, said.
"But adding service support in Asia such as Hong Kong still increases a company's flexibility. For example, Amazon is able to deliver goods in a much shorter time now if there's a sudden surge in orders."
In India, Google dominates 97 per cent share of the search engine market, data from StatCounter showed.
"In India, the challenge is mostly the cost of infrastructure and the ability of building infrastructure", said RadhaKrishna Hiremane, Intel Corp's Asia-Pacific regional product marketing manager of data centre business, based in Singapore.
He said putting an India-focused data centre in Singapore may not cost more, but it could affect speed.
"What matters is latency. At the end of the day, if a service provider is able to provide acceptable latency for the end customers by serving from outside the region and there's no conflicting regulation such as data sovereignty, then there's not anything in the APEC countries we know would be an issue right now."


Monday, December 9, 2013

Facebook considers Coming up for ‘sad’ status updates : 'sympathise' button for sad status updates



Facebook is considering giving its users a less cheery alternative to the 'like' option: a 'sympathise' button. Many people come across a sad status update from a friend while browsing the popular social networking site - that they have been fired; they have had a death in the family; some unfortunate event or may be just a bad day. They want to show the person they care, but do not know him or her well enough to say anything that does not sound trite.

Then they see that someone has - perhaps accidentally -  hit the 'like' button. Now, may be there is a deeper Freudian slip there, but ask these likers and they will say: "I was trying to show sympathy, but 'like' was my only option." There are many situations where 'like' is the antithesis of the response people may be trying to convey when they are forced to respond with such limited options. A Facebook engineer has come up with a solution for such a situation: a 'sympathise' button, The Huffington Post reported. This initiative was revealed at Facebook's annual Compassion Research Day when the social network devotes a whole day to sharing various ways it is trying to "build empathy and foster trust" with users. Engineer Dan Muriello said one of his colleagues had designed the 'sympathise' button during a recent hackathon. Here's how it could work: if a Facebook user were to tag his or her status with a negative emotion (from the social networking site's lists of feelings), the 'sympathise' button would automatically replace the 'like' button. And as much as users might want one, it seems Facebook is never going to add a 'dislike' button. The 'sympathise' feature is not making its way to the site "yet", said a Facebook spokesperson. Until then, its users will have to carry on with awkward silences.



Facebook is considering giving its users a less cheery alternative to the 'like' option: a 'sympathise' button.
Many people come across a sad status update from a friend while browsing the popular social networking site - that they have been fired; they have had a death in the family; some unfortunate event or may be just a bad day.
They want to show the person they care, but do not know him or her well enough to say anything that does not sound trite.
Then they see that someone has perhaps accidentally hit the 'like' button.
Now, may be there is a deeper Freudian slip there, but ask these likers and they will say: "I was trying to show sympathy, but 'like' was my only option."
There are many situations where 'like' is the antithesis of the response people may be trying to convey when they are forced to respond with such limited options.
Facebook engineer has come up with a solution for such a situation: a 'sympathise' button, The Huffington Post reported.
It was learned this Thursday from Facebook's annual Compassion Research Day when the social network devotes a whole day to sharing various ways it is trying to "build empathy and foster trust" with users.
Engineer Dan Muriello said one of his colleagues had designed the 'sympathise' button during a recent hackathon.
Here's how it could work: if a Facebook user were to tag his or her status with a negative emotion (from the social networking site's lists of feelings), the 'sympathise' button would automatically replace the 'like' button.
And as much as users might want one, it seems Facebook is never?going to add a 'dislike' button.
The 'sympathise' feature is not making its way to the site "yet", said a Facebook spokesperson.
Until then, its users will have to carry on with awkward silences.



BitTorrent's Sync seven times faster than Dropbox, hits 2 million user mark

With BitTorrent's Sync, users can sync folders with huge files across as many device as they can including PCs, tablets, and phones.

Announced quite sometime back, BitTorrent's file synchronisation app Sync is claimed to be seven times faster than the popular cloud-storage app Dropbox. Also, the company claims that doubling its user base in a month, the Sync tool has hit the 2 million user mark.
With BitTorrent's Sync, users can sync folders with huge files across as many device as they can including PCs, tablets, and phones. According to the company, Sync never stores files on servers, so they stay safe from data breaches and prying eyes. BitTorrent Sync skips the cloud to deliver files at a faster speed. In other words, Synch shares files cross devices without any cloud caching. source by IBN news
"Today, Sync is moving over 20 gigabytes per person. And that's a pretty powerful thing. Dropbox's cloud-based platform stores less than 0.42 gigabytes per user," said the company in a blog.

BitTorrent, for the first time, had announced the service (in a pre-Alpha stage) back in January this year. It was only last month when the BitTorrent Sync Beta API was released. The company in November had over 1 million monthly active users.
You can download BitTorrent's Sync form here