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Posts Tagged ‘file’

Free Online Larger File Sharing Posted By : cisinprachi

Online work group collaboration has proved itself to be very important & beneficial for online larger file sharing in case the people located at different places are not able to share their work, because of which they face lot of problem in completion of their projects. Free Online Work Group Collaboration is a time & money saving strategy for sharing larger files online with the utmost & undoubted security.

Binaries Versus Torrents Posted By : Leighton Goddard

Binaries and torrents refer to files that are uploaded by computer users for other users to download. They can be any kind of file, but torrents are downloaded through file sharing networks, whereas binaries are downloaded from a server. This article examines how each of these technologies work.

File Sharing, File Hosting and Storage Posted By : roycelars

File sharing is the practice of distributing or providing access to digitally stored information, such as computer programs, multi-media (audio, video), documents, or electronic books.

Reasons Why Including File Attachments Should Be Avoided Posted By : Luie De Von

Email marketing is one of the most effective way of communicating with your market. It is used to give information, announce a sale or new product etc. In order for it to generate positive results from your consumers, there are certain rules you have to follow. One of these rules is avoiding attachments. This article will talk about why it is not advisable to include file attachments to your e-mails.

File Fragmentation – Why It Is a Problem and How to Repair It Posted By : Allin Taylor

If your system has been running not so fast lately there are several things that could be the reason for the trouble. One suspected candidate for being the culprit of your system slowdown is file fragmentation. File fragmentation can set in on any computer, it is not a warning of faulty hardware or faulty programming or any human errors. This file fragmentation crops up as a result of simple physics. It is something that should be looked at every so often as it takes a while to build up

IBM Lotus Connections 2.5 Supports Microblogging, File Sharing

Lotus Connections 2.5 borrows the Twitter-like microblogging tool from IBM’s Beehive social network research project and allows users to post status updates to share what they are doing or working on with colleagues and contacts in their professional network. Lotus Connections 2.5 also provides a new Web-based file sharing library, where users can upload presentations, YouTube videos and documents to share with colleagues, partners and customers. Users can tag, rate, recommend and comment on uploaded files to provide feedback for fellow collaborators.
– IBM released Lotus
Connections 2.5 Sept. 22, bringing the promised microblogging capability
into the application’s profiles tool, file sharing and a customizable widgets
for the communities pages.
Lotus Connections is IBM’s foray into
social software for the enterprise and features profile, blo…


Advancement of Information Technology through File Sharing Posted By : roycelars

According to the technology knowledge you would have, the phrase “File Sharing” may be understood as Transferring Piles of folders, Floppy diskettes, CD’s or USB’s. It has been always known to be the only way to exchange files from one computer to another though we’ve exposure to an Electronic Mail transfer.

3 Easy Ways To Eliminate Dangerous Malware From Your Computer

Malware is essentially a portmanteau from the words malicious and software. It is a highly dangerous form of virus because it is designed to do significant damage on a computer system without informed consent. This means a computer may crash unknowingly, without any warning whatsoever. Further, malware comes in many different forms such as the [...]

Advancement of Information Technology through File Sharing Posted By : roycelars

According to the technology knowledge you would have, the phrase “File Sharing” may be understood as Transferring Piles of folders, Floppy diskettes, CD’s or USB’s. It has been always known to be the only way to exchange files from one computer to another though we’ve exposure to an Electronic Mail transfer.

(500) Days of Summer: (15) Questions

“I prefer Final Cut,” explains Alan Bell, who edited the new film, (500) Days of Summer, “because it offers me an open and easy way to move media and elements in and out of the system, while handling multiple file types and sizes in the same timeline. So it just works better and faster than any other editing solution out there.” Read the full interview with Bell and the film’s director, Marc Webb, on the new Final Cut Studio site.

Likewise Offers Cross-Platform File Sharing

Software company Likewise announces open source software to share files among Linux, Mac, and Windows computers.

Integration and identity
management solutions provider Likewise announced it would offer open source
software to share files among Linux, Mac, and Windows computers by using Server
Message Block, the networking protocol for file and print services known as SMB
and CIFS. The file …


Virginia killer’s records found

Cho Seung-Hui

The mental health records of Cho Seung-hui have been found, two years after he massacred 32 people at Virginia Tech in the United States.

The file was discovered, in the possession of a former employee of the Tech’s counselling centre, by legal teams of some of the victims’ families.

The medical treatment of 23-year-old Cho, who committed suicide, has become a major issue in the investigation.

The file’s contents have not yet been released.

The news of the discovery emerged in an e-mail sent to the families of the victims by the Virginia Governor Tim Kaine.

He said the file, reportedly removed from the university’s Cook Counseling Center a year before the shootings, had been handed over to the state police.

He pledged to support efforts to get the contents released to family members and the public.

Concerns over treatment

An investigation was underway, he said, to find out how the file was removed from the centre in the first place.

Cho, a South Korean student, targeted students and staff during his rampage at the college in Blacksburg, Virginia, on 16 April 2007. As police moved in, he committed suicide.

Much of the investigation has centred on the events of the day, and how the police, and the staff at Virginia Tech, reacted to the unfolding events.

But some survivors, and families of the victims, say they are more concerned about the treatment Cho received at the Cook Counseling Center.

While most of the survivors and relatives of the victims accepted an $11m (£6.6m) settlement from the state in April 2008, two families earlier this year took out a civil suit against the state, the school and its counselling centre.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Virginia killer’s records found

Cho Seung-Hui

The mental health records of Cho Seung-hui have been found, two years after he massacred 32 people at Virginia Tech in the United States.

The file was discovered, in the possession of a former employee of the Tech’s counselling centre, by legal teams of some of the victims’ families.

The medical treatment of 23-year-old Cho, who committed suicide, has become a major issue in the investigation.

The file’s contents have not yet been released.

The news of the discovery emerged in an e-mail sent to the families of the victims by the Virginia Governor Tim Kaine.

He said the file, reportedly removed from the university’s Cook Counseling Center a year before the shootings, had been handed over to the state police.

He pledged to support efforts to get the contents released to family members and the public.

Concerns over treatment

An investigation was underway, he said, to find out how the file was removed from the centre in the first place.

Cho, a South Korean student, targeted students and staff during his rampage at the college in Blacksburg, Virginia, on 16 April 2007. As police moved in, he committed suicide.

Much of the investigation has centred on the events of the day, and how the police, and the staff at Virginia Tech, reacted to the unfolding events.

But some survivors, and families of the victims, say they are more concerned about the treatment Cho received at the Cook Counseling Center.

While most of the survivors and relatives of the victims accepted an $11m (£6.6m) settlement from the state in April 2008, two families earlier this year took out a civil suit against the state, the school and its counselling centre.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Finding Versatile MP3 Converter Software Posted By : Frank Jefferson

Digital audio comes in dozens of file formats which makes playing music a challenge sometimes for audio lovers. With a powerful and versatile MP3 converter at their fingertips, this will no longer be a problem.

Pak govt. may file fresh petition against Saeed to ‘showcase its commitment’

It seems that the threat of adverse international reaction over the failure of the Pakistani government to detain the Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD) chief Hafiz Saeed, the prime accused in the November 2008 Mumbai terror strikes may see the federal government file a fresh petition against him, even if the Punjab government decides to withdraw its case.
The [...]

I needed music ‘cos I had none

Record stacks at the I&A

Young people don’t want to break the law, says Bill Thompson

"The latest report on young people’s online music-finding habits from consumer research company The Leading Question has attracted a fair amount of coverage for its headline finding that UK teenagers use of file sharing services has dropped by a third.

The Speakerbox survey polled 1000 young people, so it’s a reasonable survey – although of course there’s a margin of error in any survey and a significant likelihood that the interpretation of the results will be driven by the predispositions of those reading them, demonstrating yet again what the philosopher of science Thomas Kuhn calls "theory-dependent observation".

Music industry pollsters will inevitably look for a silver lining in the cloud of consumer behaviour, and a focus on the growth of legal services is to be expected.

But even with that caveat in mind, there has clearly been a shift in behaviour as more young people find licensed ways to listen to the music they want, watching YouTube videos, streaming songs through MySpace and Spotify, and generally using legal avenues to find and enjoy the music of new bands like Florence and the Machine.

Rigorous statistics

Not having access to the full Speakerbox report, as I’m writing this while on holiday in Norfolk, I carried out my own unrepresentative survey of three 16-year-old boys who happened to be sitting on a nearby sofa playing Soulcalibur IV.

I can exclusively reveal that 67% of teenagers use Spotify but that a whopping 100% still download material illegally if that’s the only way they can get it, and that ripping the soundtrack from YouTube videos to put onto your phone or MP3 player is growing in popularity, with 67% of 16-year-olds having taken up the practice in the last six months.

"I turned to the file sharing networks because the music I wanted to listen to was either completely unavailable or so locked up with restrictive terms as to be effectively inaccessible"

Bill Thompson

Bill Thompson

These findings fit rather well with more statistically reliable surveys in that they show a continuing desire for music among young people, despite the obvious interests and attractions of gaming and other activities. They also show that teenagers are aware of and able to take advantage of legal services when they are available.

This should not surprise us, since the only reason that we all started to use file sharing and other unlicensed ways of getting music was because the services that the record companies provided were unwieldy, expensive, limited and intrusive. They were riddled with absurd and inconvenient copy protection measures like the software that Sony-BMG put on music CDs in 2005, which secretly installed itself on users’ computers and could not be uninstalled automatically.

In common with millions of others, I turned to the file sharing networks because the music I wanted to listen to was either completely unavailable or so locked up with restrictive terms as to be effectively inaccessible. And I indulged heavily in other behaviour the record industry body BPI wishes to remain illegal by buying CDs and ripping them onto my computer so I could load them onto my iPod.

Of course I’ve also spent thousands of pounds on vinyl, CDs and downloads over the years, and will probably continue to do so as my love of music is undiminished with age. I really enjoyed hearing Vampire Weekend at the recent Blur concert at Hyde Park, and can’t wait to see The Editors play at the Latitude Festival next week.

Role of tape

The network revolution poses the most significant challenge the record industry has faced since the phonograph was invented, and it has been shown wanting in almost every respect.

Last month Geoff Taylor, chief executive of BPI, wrote a column for the BBC News website in which he admitted that the industry had made a mistake ten years ago when they sued the Napster file-sharing service out of existence, but that was just one error among many.

I remember speaking at a record industry conference in 1994 and telling the assembled executives that the day of the CD was over and that they should prepare for digital distribution. They didn’t take me seriously, perhaps believing that there was no way the internet of the time could ever be used to deliver music.

Dot Cotton and an mp3 player

Five years later Napster showed them how it could be done and they shut it down. Two years after that, in 2001, Apple opened the iTunes Music Store and showed them how to do it legally and profitably, but they still failed to see the real potential and insisted on copy controls and other restrictions.

And only now, 15 years after the web began to transform the world, are the senior executives for the big record labels acting as if they really appreciate just how deep the change in consumer behaviour, brought about by the affordances of these new technologies, is going to be.

Unfortunately it might be too late. Behind the shift to licensed music services there is another change that should give the music industry pause: young people seem happy to stream their music, relying on access to the network to ensure they can get the songs they want, when they want it. While my generation was stuck on owning music on vinyl or CD, today’s young listeners seem not even to feel the pressure to have a local copy of the file.

It took the record companies fifteen years to realise that their business wasn’t shifting physical units of singles or albums to retailers. They won’t have nearly that long to adapt to the new world in which the money comes not from selling files but from simply making music available for anyone to listen to, anywhere and on any device.

I certainly don’t rate their chances of getting it right in time.

"

Bill Thompson is an independent journalist and regular commentator on the BBC World Service programme Digital Planet.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

GTD Refresh, Part 4: Getting Sorted

File Folder

Last week, I talked about finally getting my projects in order. Of course, that’s not a one-time thing, but I’m not quite ready to talk about the process of bringing new projects into my lists just yet, whether “on-the-fly” or as part of my weekly review.

But getting a grip on my projects, both big (there’s a book proposal I want to write) and small (I need to find a decent dentist) is a two-step process. The first is what I described last week: identifying all my active projects and getting some next actions assigned to each of them. The other part of the process is setting myself up to actually do them.

In some cases, of course, I can just figure out what needs doing and go ahead and do it. But for the bigger projects, I need materials, and that means files.

Maintaining files is a weak area for me, not because I, like any other full-blooded productivity geek, don’t have a healthy lustful appreciation of file folders and my standard-issue GTD label-maker, but because it’s the least interesting and fussiest part of doing anything. But I’m 1800 miles from home – if I am going to get anything done in this 5-week sojourn, I don’t have any room to forget anything crucial, or for being disorganized.

I can’t think of anything less interesting than talking about putting paper in folders (except maybe actually putting paper in folders) and I’ve posted about filing before, so I won’t get into the mechanics of it all here, except to say that every project gets a folder (or sometimes a hard-bound notebook, if it will be unfolding over a long period of time) and every folder is neatly labeled. While a project is active, I’m careful to keep every scrap of paper related to it – I would rather have a little extra cleaning to do at a project’s close than find myself without something I didn’t know would be important down the line.

What I do want to talk about here is that perennial chestnut of personal productivity literature: paper vs. technology.

Now, I’m a big old geek, no getting around that. I’m the kind of guy whose as likely to have his nose stuck in his Blackberry as not, who fantasizes about new home network configurations (I’ve got two old PCs under my kitchen table waiting to be repurposed…), and who travels with not one but two laptops. I love well-designed software that does a job beautifully, and love the searchability and security of keeping important information in electronic form, preferable backed up in multiple places.

That said, I am as far from paperless as possible. My productivity system, indeed my office as a whole, is “paper-full”. For all the arguments against it – and believe me, the environmental impact alone pains me, though I try to use recycled paper whenever I can get it – I find paper is important. No paper, no productivity.

For one thing, I’m a writer. And while I am pretty comfortable letting words flow from my fingers through the keyboard to the screen, I can’t edit that way. I’m just not comfortable enough with the screen to read for any length of time at it, and especially not to do the kind of finicky re-thinking involved with a revision for publication.

But that’s just for writing. My preference for paper goes way beyond just editing and revising. And here is where, I hope, it gets interesting for GTD’ers everywhere.

There’s something very physical about GTD, or perhaps about working in general. Something about writing things down with pen or pencil on actual paper, about holding things in your hands, that acts as a trigger for action. Email, Evernote notes, tasks on online Todo lists – I find it all too easy to scroll through them, to glance at them and think “yes, that’s something that has to be done” and not actually do it.

But paper, something I hold in my hands, something I  physically manipulate… It’s as if physically interacting with my work in a material way triggers that animal part of me that feels the sun moving across the sky and knows that work must be done, and if not now, it will be too late.

So while I use all manner of virtual technological tools to get things done, in the end most things funnel to a paper file – a nice, heavy file folder stuffed with papers. I buy decorative file folders for two reasons: a) they tend to be made of sturdier stock than plain folders, thus holding up to use better, and b) they are easily differentiated one from the other, making my work just that little bit easier to get to.

When I’m ready to go to work, the folder comes out, the contents get scanned, and somehow, almost as if by magic, I get down to working. And things get done.


Dustin M. Wax is the project manager at Stepcase Lifehack. He is also the creator of The Writer’s Technology Companion, a site devoted to the tools of the writing trade. When he’s not writing, he teaches anthropology and gender studies in Las Vegas, NV. He is the author of Don’t Be Stupid: A Guide to Learning, Studying, and Succeeding at College.

Follow him on Twitter: @dwax.