Thursday, January 10, 2013

Future Paper

If you are worried about using too much paper, well fear not because we might soon be using flexible sheets of digital ink instead. At the Consumer Electronics Show, U.K.-based Plastic Logic demonstrated an E-Ink “tablet” dubbed the PaperTab, which was little more than a thick, floppy sheet of plastic, connected to a high-end Core processor from Intel. Each of these sheets can accept touch input, and can share data when in contact with one another. There are some pretty cool things that you can do with this paper if it can be connected to a processor. Throw in VoIP services and you will be able to get pictures and videos on the thin piece of plastic. As far as prototypes go, these were in a very early stage. The processors and power supplies for the sheets were actually stashed under a table and connected by wire. To communicate, the sheets used a centralized computer, which mapped each of their physical coordinates over Wi-Fi. It’ll take a lot of work to embed all the necessary components into the actual sheets.

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Your Smartphone Knows You

Did you ever wonder just how much your smartphone knows about you? Thanks to the mobile application development and many other sensors, it knows more about you than your think. Although it might make some people that are concerned about privacy slightly nervous, the data that the phone collects could be put to good use. Take the tri-axial accelerometer, which senses how the phone is positioned in space and could be used to track the type of movement which can then be used in any number of health apps. Another way that sensors can be used is through the accelerometer to determine a person's gait, such a distinguishing feature that it can be used for identification purposes. Taking the gait idea further, it can be used to identify gait problems which are related to other health issues and the app can alert the user of potential hidden issues. The sensors offer a whole new field of mobile application development.

Friday, January 4, 2013

What is a Good CMS?

There are several things that go into great CMS development. First of all the user part has to be very easy to use and intuitive. In other words, things that the typical users expects to happen when something is clicked and another actions is done, should happen. It should also be functional and flexible, meaning it can change without too much hassles at a moments notice. Markets are changing all the time and the CMS needs to be able to keep up. It should not be overbearing, confusing, or inundated with functions and buttons that may not be used. AB Soft has perfected the CMS development when it comes to be the most flexible and customizable software development company. The customer has the ability to have the AB Soft team create the type of web site they want so that it fits their needs perfectly.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Outlook to 2013 in CMS

Today technology is improving at an exponential rate and that means that consumer expectations are changing as well. Business are looking at certain issues and asking, "How can technology help me solve it?" One of the trends that business need to realize is the idea that information is like water. What it does is more important than what it actually is. Information can offer insight into who the consumer is as well as the probability of what they are going to like. You can use that information to be able to better reach them. This is where web development and CMS development comes in. It is important to keep the web design simple and user friendly. The idea of simplicity can also be applied to other parts of the business, such as the model and communication systems. When you have a clear goal in mind, you will be able to tackle it with more efficiency.

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Uses of VoIP

During Hurricane Sandy and in its aftermath, many areas were without traditional phone line service. A San Jose Company, 8x8 Inc., was able to bring service back using redundant data centers on both coasts that provided VoIP Virtual Office cloud communications. The Department of Defense even recognizes the security the VoIP Mobile Communications Infrastructure offers. Apriva, an Arizona-based VoIP provider, recently announced a DOD contract they were awarded to enhance their mobility gateway enabling “the Department of Defense to deliver classified voice and data communications to commercially available smartphones.” This system can be quickly deployed, using off-the-shelf devices like Android phones, combined with the latest encryption software to provide gateway communications between national leaders and war fighters, and just like in the private sector, a VoIP solution also saves the military money.

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Infinities

Interesting concept, isn't it? The popular idea of infinity is of one totality that pretty much crushes everything in its path, no matter the dimension. Yet in the ever-evolving view of scientists, philosophers and other scholars, there really is no single, implacable entity called infinity. Instead, there are infinities, multiplicities of the limit-free that come in a vast variety of shapes, sizes, purposes and and of course, charms. Be warned though, worthy friends can come in prickly packages, and mathematicians have learned to handle infinity with care. “Mathematicians find the concept of infinity so useful, but it can be quite subtle and quite dangerous,” said Ian Stewart, a mathematics researcher at the University of Warwick in England and the author of “Visions of Infinity,” the latest of many books. “If you treat infinity like a normal number, you can come up with all sorts of nonsense, like saying, infinity plus one is equal to infinity, and now we subtract infinity from each side and suddenly naught equals one. You can’t be freewheeling in your use of infinity.” The cloud services are nearing it in the amount of data that traverses the plains of those clouds. With developing technology, the surface area of clouds is becoming monolithic.