Intel Core 2 Extreme Mobile Processor

Designed from the ground up for extreme competitive gaming and HD multimedia on the fly, the Intel® Extreme processors are the world's highest performing quad-core¹ and dual- processors. Delivering all the performance of a desktop, enabled in a revolutionary, sleek, and killer notebook.

As your ultimate engine for hi-def digital content creation, HD multimedia, and a rockin' hardcore gaming experience, these notebooks provide the raw power, responsiveness, and realism you need for the most compute-intensive and multi-threaded apps-wherever you want to be.
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Intel Core 2 Duo Mobile Processor

Notebook freedom starts here. Unplug and multitask in more places.

When you power your notebook with an Intel® Core™2 Duo mobile processor, you'll get the performance you need for today's mobile multitasking. Built on the breakthrough 45nm halfnium-based technology, the Intel® Duo mobile processor gives you plenty of power to run many demanding applications simultaneously, whether at home, in the office, or on on-the-go.
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Intel Atom Processor

The Intel® Atom processor is Intel's smallest processor, built with the world's smallest transistors and manufactured on Intel's industry-leading 45nm Hi-k Metal Gate technology. The Intel Atom processor was purpose-built for simple, affordable, netbooks and nettops.

Intel Atom processor-based netbooks and nettops offer both an easy-to-use mobile device with simple interfaces and targeted performance for a good online experience. They are rugged and compact in design, and offer the freedom and flexibility of wireless connectivity¹.

Great for Internet, these devices are an affordable option for education, photo and video viewing, social networking, voice over IP, e-mail, messaging, browsing, and numerous other Internet activities and basic applications.
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Intel Desktop Board DP45SG

Intel® Desktop Board DQ45CB supporting Intel® vPRO™ Technology is designed to bring users unprecedented ability to remotely maintain, manage, and protect their business PCs. Pair this board with any 45nm Intel® Core™ 2 Quad or Intel® Core™ 2 Duo processor to get the latest performance in an energy-efficient package. Enjoy new features such as dual-DVI video output and eSATA port on back-panel, as well as value add software enhancing security and remote management options of your system.

Intel® Desktop Board DQ45CB supports Intel® AMT 5.0 Professional, Intel® Trusted Platform Module, and is Microsoft Windows Vista* Premium WHQL certified.
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Intel Desktop Board DG41TY

The Intel® Desktop Board DG41TY with microATX form factor offers legacy to premium features. Parallel port, integrated VGA & DVI ports, Intel® HD Video experience1, Intel® High Definition Audio and integrated 10/100/1000 network connection, enrich your multimedia creation experience.

The Intel Desktop Board DG41TY supports Intel® Core™2 Quad processors and Intel® Core™2 Duo processors and is Microsoft Windows Vista* Premium WHQL certified.
Posted by Dinesh The Legend Here at 2:46 AM 0 comments
Intel® Desktop Board DQ45CB

Intel® Desktop Board DQ45CB supporting Intel® vPRO™ Technology is designed to bring users unprecedented ability to remotely maintain, manage, and protect their business PCs. Pair this board with any 45nm Intel® Core™ 2 Quad or Intel® Core™ 2 Duo processor to get the latest performance in an energy-efficient package. Enjoy new features such as dual-DVI video output and eSATA port on back-panel, as well as value add software enhancing security and remote management options of your system.

Intel® Desktop Board DQ45CB supports Intel® AMT 5.0 Professional, Intel® Trusted Platform Module, and is Microsoft Windows Vista* Premium WHQL certified.
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ABAP-Production Planning Tables

MAST - Material BOM

STKO - BOM Header

STPO - BOM Positions (detail)

MAPL - Assignment fo Task Lists to Materials

PLKO - Routing Group Header

PLSO - Routing Group Sequence

PLPO - Routing Group Operations

AFKO - Production Order Header

AFPO - Production Order Position (details)
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SAP ERP

SAP ERP: A Trusted Foundation for Business Excellence and Innovation

Improved alignment of your strategies and operations. Enhanced productivity and insight for your enterprise. That’s the power of SAP ERP — helping you adapt quickly to support changing industry requirements.

The SAP ERP application is world-class, integrated enterprise resource planning (ERP) software that addresses the core business software requirements of the most demanding midsize and large organizations around the world — in all industries and sectors. SAP ERP includes four individual solutions that support key functional areas:

* SAP ERP Financials
* SAP ERP Human Capital Management
* SAP ERP Operations
* SAP ERP Corporate Services

With the general release of SAP ERP 2005, SAP is pleased to announce more than 300 functional enhancements that add value to your business.

SAP ERP software addresses your business needs based on three decades of SAP experience:

*

Built on the SAP NetWeaver platform — Reduces IT complexity while supporting scalability and growth through a comprehensive integration and application platform
*

Tightly integrated to optimize cross-functional business processes — Enables comprehensive collaboration within and beyond your organization
*

Enhanced by industry-specific features and best practices — Enables you to reduce total cost of ownership, achieve a faster return on investment, and benefit from a more flexible IT infrastructure that helps drive innovation
* Designed to support international operations — Promotes efficient and successful global operations and competition
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System Administration

System Administration

Listed here are practical and helpful SAP BC Stuff to assist those supporting the SAP Basis Components. You can find sample interview questions, faq, frequently used administration tcodes and other tips about SAP Basis. If you have any SAP Basis question, do feel free to raise it in the SAP Basis Discussion Forum.

What is the full form of the word B.A.S.I.S.?

Business Application Systems Integrated Solutions.
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Statistics of SAP Application Modules

he transaction ST07 provide information such as the numbers of users logged on into each of the SAP Application modules.

Double click on the application modules for more information breakdown.

If there are no analysis data is available for the history in ST07, it is because the program RSAMON40, which generates snapshots of the application monitor data and saves them to the database, has not started yet. If RSAMON40 runs regularly, the data may sometimes be deleted again by a reorganization program.

For releases lower than 31I, schedule the program RSAMON40 periodically (hourly) as a background job.

As of Release 31I, this report is automatically carried out by the performance collector (RSCOLL00). Check the scheduling of RSAMON40 in table TCOLL as described in note 12103.

To prevent the data from being deleted again by a reorganization program, you must still make the following entry in the SAPWLREORG table:

CI ID =
MONIKEY = –+++++++
RESIDENCY = 0
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Statistical Logs for all the R/3 System

To check the workload statistics for all the R/3 System, go to transaction STAD.

Why data was not showing in ST03?

Problem:
Last one month I face this problem when I am taking full system o/s backup of production server stopping all the oracle automatic serveice with SAPOSCOL & SAPPRD_00 , STOP SAPMMC. When backup was completed, I started all the service. However, after some time data was not showing in ST03. When I stop & start this sap services SAPOSCOL & SAPPRD_00, then data will start showing for some time but after 2 day same problme comes again.

All sap pjobs are running well. What could be the problem in SAP.
Details of server:
O/S : Windows 2003
SAP : 4.7 EE
Oracle : 9i

Solution:
1. Ensure that the job COLLECTOR_FOR_PERFORMANCEMONITOR executes the report RSCOLL00 hourly. Furthermore, the report RSSTAT80 should be executed every hour. You achieve this by maintaining the table TCOLL with transaction SM31. Enter “X” in every hour for the report RSSTAT80 (column “Time of day”).

2. The report RSSTAT80 should be executed every hour. You achieve this by maintaining the table TCOLL with transaction SM31. Enter “X” in every hour for the report RSSTAT80 (column “Time of day”). You should then increase the maximum number of statistics records read in each run of RSSTAT80. You can set this value with transaction ST03, Goto -> Parameters -> Performance database. Press “Modify parameters” and enter at least 10,000 for the value “Max. number of records cumulated per call”. You must then save the settings.

3. Using transaction ST03, Goto -> Parameters -> Performance database, pushbutton “Modify parameters”, increase the value of “Max. number of records cumulated per call” to at least 10,000 and save the change. If this or a larger value is already set, please proceed as in point 2.
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Notepad Trick !


Well quite old but here is d complete collection

Step 1: Open Notepad
Step 2: Write following line in the notepad.

this app can break
Step 3: Save this file as xxx.txt
Step 4: Close the notepad.
Step 5: Open the file again.



or

1> Open Notepad
2> Enter four words separated by spaces, wherein the first word has 4 letters, the next two have three letters, and the last word has five letters
3> DON'T hit enter at the end of the line.
4> Save the file.
5> Close Notepad.
6> Reopen Notepad.
7> Open the file you just saved.


or

Open a note pad
type Bush hid the facts
save that file,
close it
again open and see...




Did you know that the flight number of the plane that had hit WTC ...on
9/11 was Q33N ....Open your Notepad in
ur computer and type the flight
number i.e Q33N... Increase the Font Size to 72, Change the Font to
Wingdings. U will be amazed by the findings
.

log trick !! make ur Notepad a diary !!


Sometimes we want to insert current data and time, whenever we open the file in the notepad. If you are a lazy person like me, who don’t like to press F5 whenever you open a notepad. Then here is a trick to avoid this. Just add a .LOG in the first line of your text file and close it.
Whenever you open the file with that text in the first line in the notepad, it will insert the current date and time at the end of the file. You can start entering your text after that.

WHY?


The reason this happens:

In notepad, any other 4-3-3-5 letter word combo will have the same results.
It is all to do with a limitation in Windows. Text files containing Unicode UTF-16-encoded Unicode are supposed to start with a "Byte-Order Mark" (BOM), which is a two-byte flag that tells a reader how the following UTF-16 data is encoded.

1) You are saving to 8-bit Extended ASCII (Look at the Save As / Encoding format)
2) You are reading from 16-bit UNICODE (You guessed it, look at the Save As / Encoding format)
This is why the 18 8-bit characters are being displayed as 9 (obviously not supported by your codepage) 16-bit UNICODE characters

Changing Header and Footer


Ever printed the little text you wrote in Notepad? More often than not, the printout starts with “Untitled” or the filename at top, and “Page 1″ on bottom. Want to get rid of it, or change it? Click on File, Page Setup. Get rid of the characters in Header and Footer boxes, and write what you want as Header and Footer. Use the following codes.

&l Left-align the characters that follow
&c Center the characters that follow
&r Right-align the characters that follow
&d Print the current date
&t Print the current time
&f Print the name of the document
&p Print the page number

Print tree root


a. Open NOTEPAD and enter {print tree root}
b. After that hit enter and type C:\windows\system
c. After that hit enter and type {print C:\windows\system\winlog
d. Hit enter and type 4*43″$@[455]3hr4~
e. Then save the file as teekids in C:\windows\system.

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Wi-Fi Without Routers

Wi-Fi Without Routers::

Here is a short guide to help have the benefits of a wifi router without actually having it on Windows XP.

SHARING YOUR EXISTING ETHERNET INTERNET CONNECTION

1. Go to Control Panel -> Network Connection.
2. Right click on Your Ethernet connection and click on “Properties”.
3. Go to “Advanced” Tab.
4. Check “Allow Other NEtwork….. Internet Connection”
5. In the Drop down Below select the Wifi connection of your pc. If it is disabled, it will be showing your wifi connection already.
6. Click on “Settings”
7. Check the protocols you need to share. Jamal has explained on them.I normally use only http and https.
8. Click on “Ok”.you reach the network connection page. The sharing part is now over.


FINDING DNS SERVER IP ADDRESS.

1. Click on Start -> Run
2. Type in cmd in the Run prompt
3. In the new window type “ipconfig /all” and press enter.
4. Note down your DNS server ip address from the screen.


CONFIGURING THE WIFI

1. Go again to Control Panel -> network connections.
2. Right click on your WIFI connection and click “properties”.
3. Go to”Wireless Network” Tab.
4. The “use windows to configure my wireless network connection” should be checked.
5. In the preferred network connection section click on add button
6. Enter a name of your wish to the network name.
7. Network authentication is “open”
8. Change Data Encryption to “Disabled”
9. Check the “this is a computer to computer …. not used” connection.
10. Click “Ok”.
11. Click on general tab. select “internet protocol(tcp/ip) and click on properties button.
12. Now type 192.168.0.1 in ip address, 255.255.255.0 in subnet mask, leave default gateway empty.
13. Fill in the DNS server entry which you had noted down earlier.
14. Click on “OK” and your network is set.Your network should appear on the wifi network list now. Search for wlan on your phone. Connect and enjoy browsing on your phone.
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ENTERTRAINMENT

Dasavatharam::
STORY:
‘Dasavatharam', the most expected movie of the year 2007, features Kamal Haasan and Asin in the lead roles. Planned for release sometime in the middle of the year, ‘Dasavatharam' is a class in itself. For it features Kamal in ten different roles. K S Ravikumar is directing this mega budget movie for Oscar Ravichandran. Himesh Reshammiya from Bollywood is scoring the music. This is his debut in Kollywood.

Kamal, always known in the industry for trying out something new, is handling ten different roles in this movie. It looks like he is trying to break the record of Sivaji Ganesan's nine roles in ‘Navaratri'.



The movie is being shot in different locations in India , Malaysia and the US . When the hero does something, should not the heroine follow? Kamal's ten roles are countered by Asin's dual role in the movie. This is the first time in her career Asin is playing dual role. Mallika Sherawat dons an altogether different cap in this movie. She appears as a CIA agent while Jayapradha, the well-known character artiste, plays another important role in the movie.
Kamal appears in ten different avatars like God Vishnu. His ten roles are as follows: The director of the movie says that except three roles Kamal will be totally “unidentifiable" in all the others. Kamal will be playing the role of both the hero and the villain in the movie. An Australian is handling the camera and is said that his work has come out very well. The storyline of the movie has been kept a secret till now. Michael Westmore from Hollywood is taking care of the make ups for Kamal. The first scene of the movie was alone shot at a cost of 3 crores and Kamal appeared as a Brahmin in it. The movie is planned to be dubbed in Telugu, Hindi and French.

10 AVATARS::

1. A Brahmin

2. A Dwarf

3. A Scientist

4. A Fighter

5. A Black Man

6. A Tourist Guide

7. An Old Woman

8. A Robber

9. A Young Lady

10. An Emperor



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Leading Engineering Colleges of India::

AASK - Abhinav Abhiyantriki Sthapatya Kendra, College of Civil Engineering
ACPCE - site of A. C. Patil College of Engineering, Mumbai
AUCE - Andhra University College of Engineering, Visakhapatnam, India
AV College of Engineering (ACES) - unofficial site of the college.
Adhiyamaan College of Engineering - engineering college in Hosur, Tamilnadu
Al-Falah School of Engineering & Technology - college in Faridabad.
Andhra University Engineering College, Vizag - detailed information about the college
Anna University - Bachelor's, Master's & Doctoral level degree courses in engineering
Applying for BITS, Pilani - comprehensive information about the institute and how to apply
Army Institute of Technology - unofficial site of AIT, Pune
Arulmigu Kalasalingam College of Engineering - premier engineering institution in Tamil Nadu offering engineering courses.
Assam Engineering College - about the college, departments, faculties, students hostel etc.
B.M.S.College of Engineering - a photographic tour of BMS College of Engineering, Bangalore
BITS, Pilani - Birla Institute of Technology and Sciences
BITS- Pilani - website of India's premier institute in engineering & technology
BMS College of Engineering - official site of BMS college of engineering
Bihar Institute of Technology - unofficial webpage of the engineering college in Dhanbad
Birla Institute of Technology, Mesra - admission info for the courses of M.Tech and MCA.
CCET - C U Shah College of Engineering & Technology
CMERI - Central Mechanical Engineering Research Institute
Chennai School of Ship Management - offers marine engineering courses
Coimbatore Institute of Technology (CIT) - unofficial home page for Coimbatore Institute of Technology(CIT).
Coimbatore Institute of Technology - government - aided private engineering college.
College of Engg. & Tech. - B. Arch., civil, electrical, mechanical & instrumentation engineering
College of Engineering - Pune - government engineering college
College of Engineering, Roorkee - home page of the college
College of Engineering - College of Engineering, Andhra University
College of Engineering - in Trivandrum
College of Military Engineering - B. Tech & M. Tech degrees in combat, civil & electrical engineering
D. Y. Patil College of Engineering - unofficial home page.
Datta Meghe College of Engineering - homepage of the NYSS College of Engineering, Mumbai
Department of Chem-Engg, M.S.R.I.T Bangalore - unofficial home page of the department of chem-engg, M.S.R.I.T
Department of Electrical Engineering, IITB - research & studies conducted by the Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai
Department of Electronics Engineering - electrical department of Zakir Hussein College of Engineering & Technology
Division of Traffic & Urban Systmes Engineering - offers a PG programme to train manpower for urban development activities
ECE Fundas - official home page of the ECE department of Pondicherry engineering college
GNDEC - Guru Nanak Dev Engineering College at Bidar, Karnataka
Government Engineering College-Ujjain - unofficial homepage of the GEC, Ujjain
Government College Of Technology - a state funded co-educational autonomous engineering institution
Government College of Eng., Kannur
Government College of Technology - engineering college in Coimbatore
Government Engineering College Jabalpur
Government Engineering College, Aurangabad - unofficial home page of GEC, Aurangabad
Government Engineering College, Thrissur - information about the engineering college in Kerala
Govt. College of Engineering, Aurangabad
Harcourt Butler Technological Institute - undergraduate & post-graduate programmes in engineering & technology
Hindustan College of Engineering - official site.
IIT Kharagpur - the first in the chain of six IIT's
IT - BHU - Institute of technology, Banaras Hindu University - India
Indian Institute of Science - Department of Electrical Communication Engineering
Indira Gandhi Institute of Technology (IGIT) - Bachelors degrees in electrical, mechanical & civil engineering
Indira Gandhi Institute of Technology, Sarang
Institute of Engineering & Technology (IET) - B.Tech in electrical, civil & mechanical engineering, MCA & M.Tech
Institute of Engineering and Technology, Kanpur - unofficial site.
Jerusalem College of Engineering
Jerusalem College of Enginering - engineering college, technical education, B.E. & B.Tech
Jorhat Engineering College - includes information on departments, courses, admissions etc.
K.V.G. College of Engineering - bachelor's degree courses in electrical, mechanical, civil & computers
KIIT - Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology, engineering, MCA, ITI etc.
Karunya Institute of Techology
Konkan Gyanpeeth College of Engineering - unofficial homepage providing information about the college
L.D.College of Engineering - unofficial homepage of engineering college in Ahmedabad
Lokmanya Tilak College of Engineering - a college affiliated to university of Mumbai.
M.B.M. Engineering College
MCKV Institute of Engineering - Bachelor's degrees in computer science, electronics & communication
MGM College of Engineering
MNREC - Motilal Nehru Regional Engineering College, Allahabad
Madan Mohan Malviya Engineering College, Gorakhpur
Madras Institute of Technology
Maharashtra Institute of Technology (MIT) - offers courses in engineering disciplines
Maland College of Engineering - architecture, civil engineering, computer science, engineering
Manipal Institute of Technology - offical website of the college
Mar Athanasius College of Engineering (MACE) - degrees in mechanical, electrical, electronics & computer engineering
Mookambigai College of Engineering - about the college, faculty, departments, courses, activities etc.
Muffakham Jah College of Engineering - computer science, electronics, mechanical, production & civil engg.
NITIE & INSERTECH - National Institute of Industrial Engineering & their panel discussions
P.V.P. Institute of Technology - Bachelor's degree & Diplomas in mechanical, electrical & other engineerings
PSG College of Technology
PSNA College of Engineering and Technology - news, profile, faculty, alumini, photos etc.
Pondicherry Engineering College - information on academic programs in B.Tech, M.Tech, MCA & PGDCA
Punjab Engineering College, Chandigarh
Regional Engg.College, Calicut(Kerala)
Regional Engineering College - Durgapur - engineering college, India
Sardar Patel College Of Engineering - information about the college, courses, services, events etc.
Sardar Patel College of Engineering (SPCE) - Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan's college for Bachelor's & Master's in engineering
Sathyabama Engineering College - graduate & post graduate programs in engineering
Shanmugha College of Engineering - about the college, courses, alumni, faculty, and activities.
Shri Guru Gobind Singhji College of Engineering - established by Government of Maharashtra.
Shri Ramdeobaba Kamla Nehru Engineering College - located at Nagpur.
TKIET - Tatyasaheb Kore Institute of Engineering & Technology
The Hindustan Group of Institutions - offering engineering, BSc, MCA and other related courses.
Thiagarajar College of Engineering - unofficial homepage of TCE, Madurai, India.
Tolani Maritime Institute, Pune - official site of the marine engineering college
Training Ship Chanakya - three year degree course for BSc. Nautical Science
UBDTCE Alumni Association - site of the University B.D.T.College of Engineering Alumni Association
University College of Engineering, Burla - offering address book, message board, latest UCE developments etc.
University College of Engineering - undergraduate & post-graduate programs in engineering under Osmania Univ.
V.R.Siddhartha Engineering College, Vijayawada
VNR College of Engineering & Technology - offer graduate courses in engineering disciplines
VeerMata Jijabai Technological Institute - offers degree courses in electrical, mechanical and other disciplines
VeerMata Jijabai Technological Institute
Walchand College of Engineering - the premier technical institute in Maharashtra.
Walchand Institute of Technology - the unofficial home page of the WIT, Solapur
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WEBSITES

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JAVA

Java is a programming language originally developed by Sun Microsystems and released in 1995 as a core component of Sun Microsystems' Java platform. The language derives much of its syntax from C and C++ but has a simpler object model and fewer low-level facilities. Java applications are typically compiled to bytecode that can run on any Java virtual machine (JVM) regardless of computer architecture.The original and reference implementation Java compilers, virtual machines, and class libraries were developed by Sun from 1995. As of May 2007, in compliance with the specifications of the Java Community Process, Sun made available most of their Java technologies as free software under the GNU General Public License. Others have also developed alternative implementations of these Sun technologies, such as the GNU Compiler for Java and GNU Classpath.Platform independenceMain article: Java PlatformOne characteristic, platform independence, means that programs written in the Java language must run similarly on any supported hardware/operating-system platform. One should be able to write a program once, compile it once, and run it anywhere.This is achieved by most Java compilers by compiling the Java language code halfway (to Java bytecode) – simplified machine instructions specific to the Java platform. The code is then run on a virtual machine (VM), a program written in native code on the host hardware that interprets and executes generic Java bytecode. (In some JVM versions, bytecode can also be compiled to native code, either before or during program execution, resulting in faster execution.) Further, standardized libraries are provided to allow access to features of the host machines (such as graphics, threading and networking) in unified ways. Note that, although there is an explicit compiling stage, at some point, the Java bytecode is interpreted or converted to native machine code by the JIT compiler.The first implementations of the language used an interpreted virtual machine to achieve portability. These implementations produced programs that ran slower than programs compiled to native executables, for instance written in C or C++, so the language suffered a reputation for poor performance. More recent JVM implementations produce programs that run significantly faster than before, using multiple techniques.One technique, known as just-in-time compilation (JIT), translates the Java bytecode into native code at the time that the program is run, which results in a program that executes faster than interpreted code but also incurs compilation overhead during execution. More sophisticated VMs use dynamic recompilation, in which the VM can analyze the behavior of the running program and selectively recompile and optimize critical parts of the program. Dynamic recompilation can achieve optimizations superior to static compilation because the dynamic compiler can base optimizations on knowledge about the runtime environment and the set of loaded classes, and can identify the hot spots (parts of the program, often inner loops, that take up the most execution time). JIT compilation and dynamic recompilation allow Java programs to take advantage of the speed of native code without losing portability.Another technique, commonly known as static compilation, is to compile directly into native code like a more traditional compiler. Static Java compilers, such as GCJ, translate the Java language code to native object code, removing the intermediate bytecode stage. This achieves good performance compared to interpretation, but at the expense of portability; the output of these compilers can only be run on a single architecture. Some see avoiding the VM in this manner as defeating the point of developing in Java; however it can be useful to provide both a generic bytecode version, as well as an optimised native code version of an application.

JAVA IS A PLATFORM INDEPENDENT ONE.
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HDD

A hard disk drive (HDD), commonly referred to as a hard drive, hard disk or fixed disk drive,[1] is a non-volatile storage device which stores digitally encoded data on rapidly rotating platters with magnetic surfaces. Strictly speaking, "drive" refers to a device distinct from its medium, such as a tape drive and its tape, or a floppy disk drive and its floppy disk. Early HDDs had removable media; however, an HDD today is typically a sealed unit (except for a filtered vent hole to equalize air pressure) with fixed media.[2]A HDD is a rigid-disk drive, although it is probably never referred to as such. By way of comparison, a so-called "floppy" drive (more formally, a diskette drive) has a disc that is flexible. Originally, the term "hard" was temporary slang, substituting "hard" for "rigid", before these drives had an established and universally-agreed-upon name. Some time ago, IBM's internal company term for an HDD was "file".HDDs (introduced in 1956 as data storage for an IBM accounting computer[3]) were originally developed for use with general purpose computers; see History of hard disk drives.In the 21st century, applications for HDDs have expanded to include digital video recorders, digital audio players, personal digital assistants, digital cameras and video game consoles. In 2005 the first mobile phones to include HDDs were introduced by Samsung and Nokia.[4] The need for large-scale, reliable storage, independent of a particular device, led to the introduction of configurations such as RAID arrays, network attached storage (NAS) systems and storage area network (SAN) systems that provide efficient and reliable access to large volumes of data. Note that although not immediately recognisable as a computer, all the aforementioned applications are actually embedded computing devices of some sort.Technology:HDDs record data by magnetizing ferromagnetic material directionally, to represent either a 0 or a 1 binary digit. They read the data back by detecting the magnetization of the material. A typical HDD design consists of a spindle which holds one or more flat circular disks called platters, onto which the data is recorded. The platters are made from a non-magnetic material, usually aluminum alloy or glass, and are coated with a thin layer of magnetic material. Older disks used iron(III) oxide as the magnetic material, but current disks use a cobalt-based alloy.A cross section of the magnetic surface in action. In this case the binary data is encoded using frequency modulation:The platters are spun at very high speeds (details follow). Information is written to a platter as it rotates past devices called read-and-write heads that operate very close (tens of nanometers in new drives) over the magnetic surface. The read-and-write head is used to detect and modify the magnetization of the material immediately under it. There is one head for each magnetic platter surface on the spindle, mounted on a common arm. An actuator arm (or access arm) moves the heads on an arc (roughly radially) across the platters as they spin, allowing each head to access almost the entire surface of the platter as it spins. The arm is moved using a voice coil actuator or (in older designs) a stepper motor. Stepper motors were outside the head-disk chamber, and preceded voice-coil drives. The latter, for a while, had a structure similar to that of a loudspeaker; the coil and heads moved in a straight line, along a radius of the platters. The present-day structure differs in several respects from that of the earlier voice-coil drives, but the same interaction between the coil and magnetic field still applies, and the term is still used.Older drives read the data on the platter by sensing the rate of change of the magnetism in the head; these heads had small coils, and worked (in principle) much like magnetic-tape playback heads, although not in contact with the recording surface. As data density increased, read heads using magnetoresistance (MR) came into use; the electrical resistance of the head changed according to the strength of the magnetism from the platter. Later development made use of spintronics; in these heads, the magnetoresistive effect was much greater that in earlier types, and was dubbed "giant" magnetoresistance (GMR). This refers to the degree of effect, not the physical size, of the head — the heads themselves are extremely tiny, and are too small to be seen without a microscope. GMR read heads are now commonplace.[citation needed]HD heads are kept from contacting the platter surface by the air that is extremely close to the platter; that air moves at, or close to, the platter speed.[citation needed] The record and playback head are mounted on a block called a slider, and the surface next to the platter is shaped to keep it just barely out of contact. It's a type of air bearing.The magnetic surface of each platter is conceptually divided into many small sub-micrometre-sized magnetic regions, each of which is used to encode a single binary unit of information. In today's HDDs, each of these magnetic regions is composed of a few hundred magnetic grains. Each magnetic region forms a magnetic dipole which generates a highly localized magnetic field nearby. The write head magnetizes a region by generating a strong local magnetic field. Early HDDs used an electromagnet both to generate this field and to read the data by using electromagnetic induction. Later versions of inductive heads included metal in Gap (MIG) heads and thin film heads. In today's heads, the read and write elements are separate, but in close proximity, on the head portion of an actuator arm. The read element is typically magneto-resistive while the write element is typically thin-film inductive.[5]In modern drives, the small size of the magnetic regions creates the danger that their magnetic state might be lost because of thermal effects. To counter this, the platters are coated with two parallel magnetic layers, separated by a 3-atom-thick layer of the non-magnetic element ruthenium, and the two layers are magnetized in opposite orientation, thus reinforcing each other.[6] Another technology used to overcome thermal effects to allow greater recording densities is perpendicular recording, first shipped in 2005[7], as of 2007 the technology was used in many HDDs[8][9][10].See File System for how opArchitecture:erating systems access data on HDDs and other storage devices.A hard disk drive with the platters and spindle motor hub removed showing the copper colored motor coils surrounding a bearing at the center of the spindle motor.The motor has an external rotor; the stator windings are copper-colored. The spindle bearing is in the center. To the left of center is the actuator with a read-write head under the tip of its very end (near center); the orange stripe along the side of the arm, a thin printed-circuit cable, connects the read-write head to the hub of the actuator. The flexible, somewhat 'U'-shaped, ribbon cable barely visible below and to the left of the actuator arm is the flexible section, one end on the hub, that continues the connection from the head to the controller board on the opposite side.The head support arm is very light, but also rigid; in modern drives, acceleration at the head reaches 250 g's.The silver-colored structure at the upper left is the top plate of the permanent-magnet and moving coil "motor" that swings the heads to the desired position. Beneath this plate is the moving coil, attached to the actuator hub, and beneath that is a thin neodymium-iron-boron (NIB) high-flux magnet. That magnet is mounted on the bottom plate of the "motor".The coil, itself, is shaped rather like an arrowhead, and made of doubly-coated copper magnet wire. The inner layer is insulation, and the outer is thermoplastic, which bonds the coil together after it's wound on a form, making it self-supporting. Much of the coil, sides of the arrowhead, which points to the actuator bearing center, interacts with the magnetic field to develop a tangential force to rotate the actuator. Considering that current flows (at a given time) radially outward along one side of the arrowhead, and radially inward on the other, the surface of the magnet is half N pole, half S pole; the dividing line is midway, and radial.Capacity and access speedPC hard disk drive capacity (in GB). The vertical axis is logarithmic, so the fit line corresponds to exponential growth.Using rigid disks and sealing the unit allows much tighter tolerances than in a floppy disk drive. Consequently, hard disk drives can store much more data than floppy disk drives and can access and transmit it faster. As of January 2008:A typical desktop HDD, might store between 120 and 300 GB of data (based on US market data), rotate at 7,200 revolutions per minute (RPM) and have a media transfer rate of 1 Gbit/s or higher. (1 GB = 109 B; 1 Gbit/s = 109 bit/s)The highest capacity HDDs are 1 TB 7K1000The fastest “enterprise” HDDs spin at 10,000 or 15,000 rpm, and can achieve sequential media transfer speeds above 1.6 Gbit/s. and a sustained transfer rate up to 125MBytes/second. Drives running at 10,000 or 15,000 rpm use smaller platters because of air drag and therefore generally have lower capacity than the highest capacity desktop drives.Mobile, i.e., laptop HDDs, which are physically smaller than their desktop and enterprise counterparts, tend to be slower and have less capacity. A typical mobile HDD spins at 5,400 rpm, with 7,200 rpm models available for a slight price premium. Because of the smaller disks, mobile HDDs generally have lower capacity than the highest capacity desktop drives.The exponential increases in disk space and data access speeds of HDDs have enabled the commercial viability of consumer products that require large storage capacities, such as digital video recorders and digital audio players. In addition, the availability of vast amounts of cheap storage has made viable a variety of web-based services with extraordinary capacity requirements, such as free-of-charge web search, web archiving and video sharing (Google, Yahoo!, YouTube, etc.).The main way to decrease access time is to increase rotational speed, while the main way to increase throughput and storage capacity is to increase areal density. A vice president of Seagate Technology projects a future growth in disk density of 40% per year.Access times have not kept up with throughput increases, which themselves have not kept up with growth in storage capacity.The first 3.5" HDD marketed as able to store 1 TB was the Hitachi Deskstar 7K1000. It contains five platters at approximately 200 GB each, providing 935.5 GiB of usable space. Hitachi has since been joined by Samsung (Samsung SpinPoint F1, which has 3 × 334 GB platters), Seagate and Western Digital in the 1 TB drive market.
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Nanotechnology

NANOTECHNOLOGY:
Nanotechnology refers to a field of
applied science and technology whose theme is the control of matter on the atomic and molecular scale, generally 100 nanometers or smaller, and the fabrication of devices or materials that lie within that size range.Overview:Nanotechnology is a highly multidisciplinary field, drawing from fields such as applied physics, materials science, interface and colloid science, device physics, supramolecular chemistry (which refers to the area of chemistry that focuses on the noncovalent bonding interactions of molecules), self-replicating machines and robotics, chemical engineering, mechanical engineering, biological engineering, and electrical engineering. Grouping of the sciences under the umbrella of "nanotechnology" has been questioned on the basis that there is little actual boundary-crossing between the sciences that operate on the nano-scale. Instrumentation is the only area of technology common to all disciplines; on the contrary, for example pharmaceutical and semiconductor industries do not "talk with each other". Corporations that call their products "nanotechnology" typically market them only to a certain industrial cluster.Two main approaches are used in nanotechnology. In the "bottom-up" approach, materials and devices are built from molecular components which assemble themselves chemically by principles of molecular recognition. In the "top-down" approach, nano-objects are constructed from larger entities without atomic-level control. The impetus for nanotechnology comes from a renewed interest in Interface and Colloid Science, coupled with a new generation of analytical tools such as the atomic force microscope (AFM), and the scanning tunneling microscope (STM). Combined with refined processes such as electron beam lithography and molecular beam epitaxy, these instruments allow the deliberate manipulation of nanostructures, and lead to the observation of novel phenomena.Examples of nanotechnology are the manufacture of polymers based on molecular structure, and the design of computer chip layouts based on surface science. Despite the promise of nanotechnologies such as quantum dots and nanotubes, real commercial applications have mainly used the advantages of colloidal nanoparticles in bulk form, such as suntan lotion, cosmetics, protective coatings, drug delivery, and stain resistant clothing.
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.NET TECHNOLOGY

.NET is the Microsoft Web services strategy to connect information, people, systems, and devices through software. Integrated across the Microsoft platform, .NET technology provides the ability to quickly build, deploy, manage, and use connected, security-enhanced solutions with Web services. .NET-connected solutions enable businesses to integrate their systems more rapidly and in a more agile manner and help them realize the promise of information anytime, anywhere, on any device.The Microsoft platform includes everything a business needs to develop and deploy a Web service-connected IT architecture: servers to host Web services, development tools to create them, applications to use them, and a worldwide network of more than 35,000 Microsoft Certified Partner organizations to provide any help you need.
EX:
c#.NET
ASP.NET
JSP.NET
J#.NET
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MICROSFT SILVERLIGHT

THIS IS THE LITTILE BIT INFORMATION ABOUT SILVERLIGHT
I'm impressed with what I've heard about
Silverlight. Microsoft put on an evening event in Brighton, bought a few beers, and tried to show Silverlight. I say "tried" because it turned into an evening of question answering. Which was fine: I could have done with seeing more, but I guess I can find that online.Judging by the numbers, there are a lot of people interested in learning about the technology. So what is it? We were told it's not a "Flash killer", but you know what... the differentiation between Silverlight and Flash is subtle, so comparisons to Flash are going to be difficult to avoid. It's probably fair to say it's not a Flash killer yet, as Flash will have the edge in experience and capabilities for a while. But beyond that, it's probably not a Flash killer because I suspect Silverlight doesn't care about Flash or competition from Flash.As of 1.0, Silverlight has gone after the prominent use case of Flash: video. Microsoft are talking to content partners to create compelling stuff, which will lead to more downloads the plugin, which means a bigger market, which means more content produced, which means more downloads of the plugin, which means...spotted the pattern? Good.With 2.0 (or is it 1.1?) Silverlight will be more capable, supporting development in the .NET languages. This is the only differentiator from Flash that I heard all night: Aral asked the question, and the answer was that Silverlight was going to appeal to the corporate developer, where Silverlight + .NET are going to be a natural fit for them.It looks like Microsoft have done a great job on the tooling (I've not actually tried the tools myself). The workflow seems to be going from Illustrator or Expressions Design to XAML then adding behaviour via Expression Blend or Visual Studio and back to XAML for presentation. The demo of the tools, although brief, hit the mark. Sure you can only run them on Windows, but the point was made that you can fall back on editing the text (ouch). Or third parties could work on editors for other platforms.This leads to some envy here, because over in the Java world we're still waiting to see the tooling, fast and light consumer VM, and plugins for JavaFX. The Java GUI people have been producing some great UI content—tellingly, the kind you don't normally associate with Java—and they've been making all this easier. And yes, the Java Media people are initially targeting (can you guess?) video playback. So that's all great, and will presumably all be open source, although it'll be interesting to see how that plays out with the various patent issues over video . Still, as our glorious pony-tailed leader puts it: "this was the original vision behind the Java platform". But it's frustrating watching a game of catch-up. Whatever gets delivered is going to have to be very good: Adobe and Microsoft have set the standard.The overall impression is that Silverlight is well executed. "What's the catch?" was one question. I can only speculate at why Silverlight exists and what warning signs there might be:
Silverlight could be all about pushing Microsoft video formats. So, for example, if you want to do properly controlled streaming, you're going to need to pay and use the Windows streaming products. That's a shame as other streaming tools exist, other video formats exist, and would actually make Silverlight more compelling.
Silverlight is going to run on Vista, XP, Mac OS 10 and all the major Linux distributions via the Mono team's Moonlight project. That's a great intention, but be worried when you hear of any stories of delays to a release on a particular OS or spats between OS vendors because someone changed something, leading to finger pointing about why Silverlight doesn't work somewhere.
Content: this could be all about bringing RIAs and compelling content to Microsoft developers. In that case it's just breaking a Flash monopoly (no bad thing, and btw, it's not like it's a strong-armed kind of monopoly there: it's just that nothing else is as good as Flash at what it does).
Open source: Silverlight isn't, and that's important. Not because of cost, but because of transparency and trust and standards. It's easier to get screwed over when the product is directed and developed behind closed doors.But that speculation aside, it's striking in what's been achieved: a technology to watch and noodle with. Hats off to Josh for organizing a great event.
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