Archive for September 7th, 2006

Mozilla Gets A Security Booster

Former MS Security Strategist Joins Mozilla

Former Microsoft security strategist Window Snyder is joining Mozilla to lead the company’s effort to protect its range of desktop applications from malicious hacker attacks. eweek.com reports that Snyder, who was responsible for security sign-off for Microsoft’s Windows XP Service Pack 2 and Windows Server 2003, will spearhead Mozilla’s security strategy and improve its communications with external hackers and bug finders.


Stephen Hawking Looking for Assistant

Wanted: Bright graduate student to assist world-famous scientist. International travel, developing computer systems and dealing with the press required. Renowned astrophysicist and best-selling author Stephen Hawking has announced he is looking for a graduate student to work for him for one to two years.

This From Slashdot


New Domain Searcher

WhoIS Domjax?

DomJax is a very handy new Web 2.0 domain name search engine written using Ajax by Third Eye Solutions. Domjax is basically WhoIS on steroids. It enables you to streamline your domain name search process across all of your TLD’s i.e .com, .net, .co.uk.

It also serves as a tool for search engine optimization enabling you to check your web traffic, review content and archived web pages, determine route packets, check HTML validity as well as determine search engine rank.

From Techcrunck UK


Wink Again

Wink 2.0 goes live

Social search company Wink just went live with their relaunched site, making better use of collaboratively built collections, offering a Firefox toolbar and other changes we detailed in an early preview. Wink is a smart, well funded company with a useful service in a space that’s got a lot of potential. This relaunch isn’t terribly exciting but it does make one of the major players in social search significantly more usable than they had been. This one’s a company to watch for the long haul.

From Techcrunch

Viva New Calender

Vivapop launches boutique web calendar

Greenwich, CT based Vivapop has launched a web based calendar and events management service that offers a very nice interface, cross platform bidirectional syncing and voice recognition for mobile access. Whether this or any web calendar stands a chance in the face of Google’s integration of GCal and GMail is always a question, but Vivapop’s niche audience and premium feature set makes it an interesting play.

Founded by Elizabeth Souther Tarbell, a former corporate financier, Vivapop has been in development for two years. By hand approving for publication calendars from participating organizations, offering premium functionality and highlighting ads from “high end” retailers, Vivapop is aimed to serve upper class New Englanders first and rich people everywhere in time.

The functionality is universally interesting though. Much like Google Calendar, multiple calendars can be managed with lots of Ajax and automatic updates pushed from publishers to subscribers. At launch the service is loaded with more than 100 public and private events calendars from organizations mostly in Greenwich, CT. Arts organizations, children’s activity centers and private schools dominate the list so far, but anyone anywhere can offer their organization’s calendar for publication.

What’s different about Vivapop besides the gated community? There are a number of little things like retail store listings and hours for participating metro areas and automatic time zone adjustments depending on your geographic location. The most interesting features here though are the automatic syncing and IVR.

VIvapop users can sync both ways between Vivapop and Outlook on the desktop, Blackberry and Treo. The next step will be to sync with all mobile phone calendars and subsequently iCal. That’s exciting. The company uses synchronization technology from Redwood City, California’s Funambol.

The second unique feature is the ability to write to your calendar by voice commands. Users can call a Vivapop number, enter their access code and then add calendar items by either touch tone or voice in response to prompts. Item date, title and type can be recognized by the IVR system, while event descriptions are recorded as a .wav file and placed on your calendar.

Accounts with Vivapop start at $1 for the first 30 days, followed by $9.99 per month for the basic service with Outlook syncing and $14.99 to include voice access.

From Techcrunch

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Disclaimer

Most of the posts on this blog are sourced entirely from sites such as Techcrunch/Slashdot/Engadget etc. The ownership of the articles lie entirely with these websites and the originators (creators/writers). I have absolutely no copyright or left over them articles. In case any original creator feels that a particular piece must be taken off because of ownership issues please let me know, I will gladly comply with the demand. The only endevour this version of Ray-Deo is to spread the technology word as far and to as many as possible. Mithun Kidambi

Here Is How You Get In Touch

mithunk(at)gmail(dot)com mithunkidambi(at)hotmail(dot)com

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