Archive for March 27th, 2008

Google today updated the menu structure of the word processor in Google Docs. Gone are the menus that change the toolbars underneath. Gone are the useful but uncommon “revision” and “tag” items. What we have now is familiar to anyone who’s used Microsoft Word 2003. In fact, the five menu items have the same names as items on the menu bar of Word 2003.

Meet the new Docs.

Google is saying that Microsoft got it right in 2003. Ironically, with the 2007 Office suite, Microsoft itself has moved on to a prettier, but not universally loved menu structure that is reminiscent of Google Docs’ first versions: you choose a general function category and the toolbar buttons on the “ribbon” underneath the menu change.

Word 2003: The last version of Word before it dropped the old menu standard entirely.

Hopefully, Google will stick with this scheme for a while. The frequent changeups in the user interface for Google Docs are distracting.

Updates to the other Google Docs apps–the spreadsheet and presentation app–will come later.

Via: Google Blogoscoped, which has historical screenshots of the Google word processor menus.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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Amazon Web Services on Thursday is scheduled to release features meant to give its hosted computing service a better safety net.

Amazon’s Elastic Calculate Cloud (EC2) service now has an application programming interface (API) that lets developers choose where its application physically runs.

This Availability Zones feature is important because people can now add redundancy to their application. Choosing multiple zones, people can have server instances with separate power, cooling, network access, and physical servers.

“Up until now, if you boot up more than one EC2 instance, you had no control where it resided–it could hypothetically be sitting on the same machine because there is no notion of location or proximity,” said Adam Selipsky, vice president of product management and developer relations at Amazon Web Services.

“Now we’re exposing that as a feature and you can choose to instantiate your ‘nth’ server in a different availability zone,” he said.

Amazon Web Services last month suffered a multi-hour outage to its Simple Storage Service (S3), which affected several Web 2.0 sites.

Selipsky said the new feature will let developers add redundancy in the “vast majority” of cases.

Amazon currently gives developers the option of deploying their S3 data either in Europe or the United Says.

Selipsky stated Amazon will add more “granularity” on the choice of location for data over time.

Also on Thursday, Amazon Web Services introduced a IP service, called Elastic IP, that lets developers have an IP address associated to an account, rather than a physical machine.

The change makes EC2 superior suited for Web application hosting, Selipsky said.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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Just how much does Ask.com own the word “Ask?” Enough to have a problem with a question-and-answer site called “Askpedia,” apparently. Representatives from the start-up Askpedia.com told CNET News.com that the search engine’s parent company, InterActiveCorp, sent a cease-and-desist letter earlier this month, citing intellectual property …

Source [The social]

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“When the well’s dry, we know the worth of water.”

-Benjamin Franklin

If you live in an area where water shortages are not an issue, think about yourself lucky. Almost 450 million people in 29 countries face severe water shortages. Predictions indicate that within 5 years, at least 36 U.S. says will face water shortages due to a combination of rising temperatures, drought, population growth, and waste. 

But there’s hope — research has shown that residential water use could be reduced by as much as 50 percent through efficiency. Here are a few simple, low-cost suggestions for reducing your family’s water consumption. 

Reduce water use from showers and faucets
Even though it’s often the smallest room in the home, the lavatory is where 75 percent of indoor household water consumption occurs. Seem impossible? Think about this: The average 6-minute shower uses about 20 gallons of water! Reduce this amount with the following tips: 

  • No cost: Limit shower time to 5 minutes or less.
  • Less than $10: Install an on/off valve between the shower arm and showerhead. This temporarily shuts off the flow while maintaining the temperature, and can be a useful water-saver while soaping up or shaving.
  • $10-$50: Install a low-flow (less than 2 gallons per minute) showerhead. Previous low-flow showerheads sacrificed water pressure for efficiency, but now there are many options (GAIAM and Delta make two of my favorites) that don’t simulate a dripping faucet.
  • $20-$50: Insulate all accessible hot-water pipes, especially those within 3 feet of the water heater. You’ll get hot water faster, avoid wasting H2O while it heats up, and save energy in the process.

Finally, fit all household faucets with low-flow aerators (less than two gallons per minute). This is the best in-home water conservation method, and it’s also the cheapest. 

Toilets are the enemy
Everyday, the U.S. uses 5.8 billion gallons of fresh water to flush waste. If you’re in the market for a new porcelain throne, check out options with either a very low (less than 1.6) gallon per flush (gpf) rating, or dual flush controls.

This new technology provides 2 buttons for flushing: one at 1.6 gpf for solid waste, and another at only 0.8 gpf for liquids. These double-duty flushers can reduce water usage by up to 67 percent compared with traditional toilets. 

Feeling even earthier? Go for a waterless composting toilet and be the envy of all your neighbors! 

And if you haven’t budgeted for a new toilet, try these swift fixes: 

  • Check for leaks: Put a little food coloring in your toilet tank. If the color begins to appear in the bowl within 30 minutes, you’ve a leak that should be repaired. Most replacement parts are affordable and simple to install.
  • Displace water: Most older toilets don’t require nearly as much water as they use (3.5-5 gallons) to flush properly. To “trick” your toilet into using less water, place a half-gallon plastic bottle inside your toilet tank to displace water volume. (Be sure at least 2.5 gallons of water remain in the tank so it will flush properly.) Ideally, weigh down the bottle with sand or pebbles so it doesn’t interfere with the tank mechanisms. This simple retrofit could save a three-person family 225 gallons of water per month! Not a do-it-yourselfer? For only a few dollars, you can buy a prepared toilet bag designed to displace 0.8 gallons of water with each flush.

Minimize appliance water consumption
Outside the restroom, most water is used to wash clothes and dishes. Rather than wearing dirty clothes and using paper plates, keep these tips in mind while tackling daily chores: 

  • Fully loaded: Dishwashers and clothes washers should be operated when full for optimum water conservation. If you must wash partial loads, adjust the water levels as appropriate.
  • The dishwasher is your friend: Even old-school dishwashers don’t use as much water per dish as hand-washing. Newer, more efficient dishwashers use only 1/6 of the water used during hand-washing, and save 230 hours of yourtime each year.
  • Scrape, don’t rinse: Pre-rinsing dishes before loading the dishwasher is unnecessary. Scrape off food and then trust that bad boy to do its job.
  • Pass on permanent press: Avoid the permanent press cycle when washing clothes, which uses an additional 5 gallons for the extra rinse.
  • Upgrade your equipment: Think about buying a water-saving front-loading clothes washer, or a top-loading one with no central agitator. Check ENERGY STAR for ideas and ratings.

Kendra Tupper is a consultant with the Energy & Resources Team at Rocky Mountain Institute. 

 

 

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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Beijing’s great global juggling act Corporate China unbalanced by turmoil, extends M&A reach more gingerly By V. Phani Kumar, MarketWatch Last Update: 11:15 PM ET Mar 25, 2008 HONG KONG (MarketWatch) — Corporate China might well be looking to the famed acrobats in the Say Circus, renowned for delicately balancing vast numbers of spinning plates, with a new sense of awe […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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TAP Project logo

New York City’s famed Algonquin Hotel, Zagat-rated l’Absinthe Restaurant, and flashy Ruby Foo’s on Times Square all are serving up tap water. The posh A.O.C. restaurant and wine bar in Los Angeles is adding tap water to its list of potables. And San Francisco’s influential Slanted Door restaurant is going with plain ol’ H2O too.

Why are more than 2,000 restaurants around the U.S. selling glasses of ordinary tap water for a buck this week?

It’s called the TAP Project, and this is a nationwide effort supporting UNICEF and World Water Day.

Between March 16 and March 22, participating restaurants will serve tap water at $1 a glass. For each dollar raised, a child in a developing country will have clean drinking water for 40 days.

Search on the project’s website to find restaurants near you. More are still being added.

If there isn’t one in your town, you can also donate directly to the TAP project.

UNICEF’s water sanitation work reaches out to the 425 million children around the world who don’t have access to clean water. The TAP Project makes it simple to help right now at your local restaurant.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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Whoever predicted that social gaming was the next niche of the Web to get completely saturated was very, very right.

On Monday, a new casual-gaming social network called Mytopia entered its public-beta phase. Taking a conscious cue from massively multiplayer on the internet role-playing games (MMORPGs), Mytopia players create custom avatars and …

Source [The social]

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