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November 29 un traitement de texte simple et complet et surtout GRATUIT: correction orthographique en 27 langues : Africaans, catalan, croate, nederlands,english (UK) , english( US), esperanto, faroese, français , gaëlique, allemand, grec, gujarati,hebreu, indonésien, italien, kiswahili, latvian, lithuanien, macédonien, norvegien, occitan , polonais , roumain, espagnol, ukrainien, russe traductions de textes en 26 langues à partir de 11 langues : german, english ,espagnol,français, italien, grec,nederlands, norvegien, polonais, roumain , russe (via google ) calcul de formules simples support d'aquisition d'images de vos appareil reconnu par windows format d'ouverture : RTF , TXT formats de sauvegarde : RTF ,TXT, HTML, PDF possibilité d'insertion de fichiers , d'images , de tableau ,de texte possibilité de sauvegarder une partie d'un document et bien d'autres choses que je vous laisse découvrir lisez le fichier Readme.txt télécharger maintenant
traitement de texte , correction orthographique , traduction November 28 Britney Spears receiving her Bambi award for Best International Pop Star November 27 Bizness ? Question the rules => Change the game. New technology is for the Masses (the more clients ,the more money ) Don’t neglect your customers=> most important need: a better price Create win-win partner situations to grow fast Make it easy for partners to customize your product- everyone is different Business isn’t a sprint; it’s a marathon => Be persistent. Good luck baby :) November 26 "first celebrated in Plymouth colony : Massachusetts in the year 1621. The second American President, Abraham Lincoln, declared the final Thursday in November as a national day of thanksgiving. The American Congress finally made Thanksgiving Day an official national holiday in 1941." .... http://www.history.com how to make a pumpkin pie http://www.joyofbaking.com/pumpkinpie.html I wish you a good Thanksgiving :) November 24 Le ver Boface.G s’attaque aux utilisateurs de Facebook et MySpace by Emilien Ercolani Selon Panda Security, le ver Boface.G utilise les deux réseaux sociaux les plus célèbres pour se propager efficacement. (Publicité) De plus en plus malins, les éditeurs de malwares ! Ce dernier ver, baptisé Boface.G, utilise encore une fois l’innocence des utilisateurs des réseaux sociaux. Une fois un utilisateur infecté par le ver, celui-ci poste une vidéo YouTube sur le profil (MySpace) ou le mur (Facebook) des utilisateurs infectés. Il envoie également le lien de la vidéo aux contacts de l’utilisateur, comme si ce dernier leur conseillait la vidéo en question. En cliquant sur le lien, un utilisateur qui ne se méfie pas de la menace arrive sur une fausse page YouTube. En cliquant sur la vidéo, il est indiqué qu’il doit mettre à jour son lecteur Flash. Une jolie bêtise, qui installe en fait une copie du ver sur l’ordinateur, qui infectera ainsi ses propres contacts. « Comme ils attirent des millions d'utilisateurs, les réseaux sociaux sont devenus un des moyens favoris des cybercriminels pour propager leurs codes malveillants », explique Luis Corrons, le directeur technique de PandaLabs, qui en profite pour conseiller aux utilisateurs des réseaux sociaux « de s'assurer de la provenance de ces messages avant de cliquer sur des liens ou de télécharger des fichiers sur leur ordinateur ». Le ver Boface.G s’attaque aux utilisateurs de Facebook et MySpace - Sécurité sur L'Informaticien free membership no advertising http://imtranslator.com/  Online Translator performs real-time translation for Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hindi, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Spanish and Swedish languages and their combinations.
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http://imtranslator.com/ Translation Portal - Im Translator November 23 Introducing Delphi Prism™ At Microsoft PDC2008 in Los Angeles, California, RemObjects Software and Embarcadero Technologies have announced that they will join forces to develop and release Delphi Prism, a next generation development suite for .NET and Mono, based on RemObjects Software's award-winning Oxygene compiler technology. . RemObjects Software: Home November 22 Six decades of six-string greats gathered for the American Music Masters Tribute Concert honoring Les Paul at Cleveland’s State Theater on Saturday. The sold-out show was the climax of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum’s week-long tribute to one of the top guitar performers and innovators. Even Guitar Hero poster-boy Slash was wide-eyed and humble like a freshman glad to be at a seniors’ party. (Click above to watch Slash open up about his four Les Pauls — including the one he used on “Sweet Child O’ Mine” — plus interviews with Billy Gibbons and Richie Sambora.) Backstage before the show, Patti Smith Group guitarist Lenny Kaye neatly summarized Paul’s contributions: “Before Les, guitars were only amplified. Les made them truly electric.” Born in 1915, Paul had a string of hit singles from the 1940s through the ’60s. As an engineer, player and technician, he pioneered solid-body guitar construction, the lead guitar position, multitrack recording and effects from delay to phasing. He designed a family of heavy guitars for Gibson, the most famous of which might be the 1988 Les Paul standard from Guns n’ Roses’ “Sweet Child” video. Said Paul during his acceptance speech, “Everybody thought I was a guitar until I played here tonight.” The concert was chummy gathering of peers, many with a similar story about seeing the Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show, buying a fake Les Paul replica, getting a real one, achieving fame, meeting Paul, and finding him to be a funny, likeable guy who’s still hard to keep up with onstage. Paul capped the three-and-a-half hour tribute by accepting an American Music Masters award statue and playing a set with the Les Paul Trio, which backed him for a tear-jerking rendition of “Somewhere Over the Rainbow.” The marathon concert kicked off with renditions of Paul’s material, including a lighter-than-air “Lover (When You’re Near Me)” by Jennifer Batten (Michael Jackson, Jeff Beck) and a deft take on “Vaya Con Dios” by Alannah Myles and Kaye. The show transitioned with songs from the new Les Paul and Friends: Tribute to a Legend album, with highlights like Slash’s airy “Vocalise” and Richie Sambora’s “Great Hall of Fame,” a tribute to bar-band lifers. The diamond-selling artists kept the crowd happy with tunes they said Paul made possible. Sambora sang Bon Jovi’s “Wanted Dead or Alive,” and the night ended with an all-star jam. Backstage before the show, Slash said, “Les Paul guitars have a certain tonal characteristic that is really meaningful to me. It’s a big rock & roll sound.” ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons said Paul didn’t so much hotwire the guitar as weaponize it. “He had the rather unusual idea to bring out this war club and electrify it — something [that seemed] unnecessary or frivolous, but turned out to be a cornerstone of popular culture.” [Video: Palestra.net] D.X. Ferris Slash, Billy Gibbons Jam for Les Paul at Rock Hall’s American Music Masters Concert : Rolling Stone : Rock and Roll Daily A list of assumptions we make when we hit the send button or download a video MINNEAPOLIS – Thirty years have passed since the Internet Protocol was first described in a series of technical documents written by early experimenters. Since then, countless engineers have created systems and applications that rely on IP as the communications link between people and their computers. Here's the rub: IP has continued to evolve, but no one has been carefully documenting all of the changes. "The IP model is not this static thing," explains Dave Thaler, a member of the Internet Architecture Board and a software architect for Microsoft. "It's something that has changed over the years, and it continues to change." Thaler gave the plenary address Wednesday at a meeting of the Internet Engineering Task Force, the Internet's premier standards body. Thaler's talk was adapted from a document the IAB has drafted entitled "Evolution of the IP Model.'' - Related Content
"Since 1978, many applications and upper layer protocols have evolved around various assumptions that are not listed in one place, not necessarily well known, not thought about when making changes, and increasingly not even true," Thaler said. "The goal of the IAB's work is to collect the assumptions – or increasingly myths – in one place, to document to what extent they are true, and to provide some guidance to the community." The following list of myths about how the Internet works is adapted from Thaler's talk: 1. If I can reach you, you can reach me. Thaler dubs this myth, "reachability is symmetric," and says many Internet applications assume that if Host A can contact Host B, then the opposite must be true. Applications use this assumption when they have request-response or callback functions. This assumption isn't always true because middleboxes such as network address translators (NAT) and firewalls get in the way of IP communications, and it doesn't always work with 802.11 wireless LANs or satellite links. 2. If I can reach you, and you can reach her, then I can reach her. Thaler calls this theory "reachability is transitive," and says it is applied when applications do referrals. Like the first myth, this assumption isn't always true today because of middleboxes such as NATs and firewalls as well as with 802.11 wireless and satellite transmissions. 3. Multicast always works. Multicast allows you to send communications out to many systems simultaneously as long as the receivers indicate they can accept the communication. Many applications assume that multicast works within all types of links. But that isn't always true with 802.11 wireless LANs or across tunneling mechanisms such as Teredo or 6to4. 4. The time it takes to initiate communications between two systems is what you'll see throughout the communication. Thaler says many applications assume that the end-to-end delay of the first packet sent to a destination is typical of what will be experienced afterwards. For example, many applications ping servers and select the one that responds first. However, the first packet may have additional latency because of the look-ups it does. So applications may choose longer paths and have slower response times using this assumption. Increasingly, applications such as Mobile IPv6 and Protocol Independent Multicast send packets on one path and then switch to a shorter, faster path. 5. IP addresses rarely change. Many applications assume that IP addresses are stable over long periods of time. These applications resolve names to addresses and then cache them without any notion of the lifetime of the name/address connection, Thaler says. This assumption isn't always true today because of the popularity of the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol as well as roaming mechanisms and wireless communications. - Related Content
6. A computer has only one IP address and one interface to the network. This is an example of an assumption that was never true to begin with, Thaler says. From the onset of the Internet, hosts could have several physical interfaces to the network and each of those could have several logical Internet addresses. Today, computers are dealing with wired and wireless access, dual IPv4/IPv6 nodes and multiple IPv6 addresses on the same interface making this assumption truly a myth. 7. If you and I have addresses in a subnet, we must be near each other. Some applications assume that the IP address used by an application is the same as the address used for routing. This means an application might assume two systems on the same subnet are nearby and would be better to talk to each other than a system far away. This assumption doesn't hold up because of tunneling and mobility. Increasingly, new applications are adopting a scheme known as an identifier/locator split that uses separate IP addresses to identify a system from the IP addresses used to locate a system. 8. New transport-layer protocols will work across the Internet. IP was designed to support new transport protocols underneath it, but increasingly this isn't true, Thaler says. Most NATs and firewalls only allow Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and User Datagram Protocol (UDP) for transporting packets. Newer Web-based applications only operate over Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP). 9. If one stream between you and me can get through, so can another one. Some applications open multiple connections – one for data and another for control – between two systems for communications. The problem is that middleboxes such as NATs and firewalls block certain ports and may not allow more than one connection. That's why applications such as File Transfer Protocol (FTP) and the Real-time Transfer Protocol (RTP) don't always work, Thaler says. 10. Internet communications are not changed in transit. Thaler cites several assumptions about Internet security that are no longer true. One of them is that packets are unmodified in transit. While it may have been true at the dawn of the Internet, this assumption is no longer true because of NATs, firewalls, intrusion-detection systems and many other middleboxes. IPsec solves this problem by encrypting IP packets, but this security scheme isn't widely used across the Internet. 11. Internet communications are private. Another security-related assumption Internet developers and users often make is that packets are private. Thaler says this was never true. The only way for Internet users to be sure that their communications are private is to deploy IPsec, which is a suite of protocols for securing IP communications by authenticating and encrypting IP packets. 12. Source addresses are not forged. Many Internet applications assume that a packet is coming from the IP source address that it uses. However, IP address spoofing has become common as a way of concealing the identity of the sender in denial of service and other attacks. Applications built on this assumption are vulnerable to attack, Thaler says. All contents copyright 1995-2008 Network World, Inc. http://www.networkworld.com http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/112008-ietf-internet-myt Only two and a half months after announcing Picasa 3 beta, Google has done the uncharacteristic and on Thursday has issued Picasa 3.
Here's the clincher:Picasa 3 is the exact same desktop organizer and editor it has been under the beta flag. (This is a good wagon for the Gmail team to climb aboard--Google's e-mail service has been in beta since 2004 and its latest releases have been earthshaking themes and emoticons.) Although Version 3 beta users won't see changes in this release, those switching from Version 2.7 will enjoy the substantial boost in features. Version 3 stacks on over a dozen more tricks to refine the editing, creative, and sharing options in what has for years been a solid consumer app. Highlights below.
With a little creativity, you can make gorgeous collages like this in Picasa 3. (Credit: Tara Morrison/Google) Syncing and sharing Instead of manually uploading new photos to Picasa Web Albums from Picasa 3, you'll be able to click "Sync to Web" to keep the folder automatically updated. You can exclude photos by right-clicking and choosing "block from uploading" from the context menu. Sharing has also gotten much easier. In previous versions, you would upload the photos from Picasa and then click within the Web album to e-mail the link to friends. The 'Share' button next to Picasa's syncing button helpfully auto-uploads the album and sends the Web link without compelling you to go online.
No more leaving Picasa for the Web to update or share photos. (Credit: CNET) Movie Maker A terrific but light addition, Picasa 3's new movie maker can take videos from your digital camera and other clips and intersperse them with any other file Picasa supports. You can then upload your video to YouTube or to Picasa Web, or share via e-mail. Bare-bones editing tools will trim the clips and add a song for background. However, they don't do fading and there's no template to carry your caption style from frame to frame. Video output is currently only the WMV format, and encoding takes a little time--be patient while it renders. Drop Box Drop Box is the new default storage locker for newly uploaded photos, for pictures you don't want to assign to an album, and for multitaskers who tell Picasa to take it easy on the bandwidth so they can simultaneously surf and upload. The Drop Box also holds photos uploaded via Orkut, ShoZu, and other third-party photo uploading services that integrate with Picasa Web Albums. This is one of those features that some users will love and many will ignore. Screenshots Picasa 3 hooks into your keyboard's PrintScreen key to index captures of your screen, Webcam input, or a video. For casual users, this feature may replace independent screen-capturing software like Gadwin PrintScreen, Capture.NET, and SnagIt. Those who continue to use those apps may find the cataloging amusing or mildly annoying.
You can upload photos to the drop box and start making a movie from Picasa 3's toolbar. (Credit: CNET) Other notables Picasa 3's red-eye reduction tool detects and auto-corrects all the red-eyes in a photo. This substantially cuts out the hassle of clicking and dragging over individual eyes to wipe out the redness, and it works well most of the time. For blotchy faces and other minor blemishes, the retouch tool will awkwardly but fairly effectively let you blot out problem areas. Finally, the collage tool has gotten more customizable. Before Picasa 3, you couldn't delete, drag, angle, or print in full resolution. Now you can. These substantial additions make the tool an easy way to get really creative (see photo). There's always room for improvement, especially with the movie maker and red-eye tool, which could use some more precision controls, but this Version 3 release is an excellent effort that will give people much greater control over their photos and Web albums without sacrificing simplicity. All without clinging to beta. >>Want more detail? See the full list of additions and changes in Picasa 3 Download it now Google drops Picasa's 'beta' (and pigs fly) | The Download Blog - Download.com In an attempt to offer a more customized search experience—and to stay ahead of competitors—Google will soon be rolling out its SearchWiki feature to everyone using its services while logged into a Google account. The feature, which has been in testing with select users over the last few months, will allow people to shift around, annotate, add, and delete search results to their liking. "Have you ever wanted to mark up Google search results?" asked a post on The Official Google Blog. "Maybe you're an avid hiker and the trail map site you always go to is in the 4th or 5th position and you want to move it to the top. Or perhaps it's not there at all and you'd like to add it. Or maybe you'd like to add some notes about what you found on that site and why you thought it was useful. Starting today you can do all this and tailor Google search results to best meet your needs." SearchWiki will actually live up to its name and act as a wiki so that users can see notes made by other users, and view what pages others have added or deleted. As to what the point of the SearchWiki is, well, Google isn't saying just yet. Google is known for its secretive, magical PageRank system that promotes important search results while demoting others, and PageRank already has some degree of human input on the Google end. We're not sure whether Google plans to incorporate user feedback from SearchWiki into its normal search results, or whether the company simply planned to consider the extra data when determining the relevance of its own rankings. Microsoft, on the other hand, makes no attempt to hide the fact that it plans to use its own user input to improve its offerings. The company launched U Rank last month, a feature that allows users to edit, organize, and annotate search results—very similar to Google SearchWiki. The company described U Rank as a search engine "research prototype, to help us learn more about how people use such technologies so we can continue to innovate."
It's no surprise then that Google is introducing SearchWiki to more people. At the very least, the company will have data from Internet users (and presumably many, many more of them than Microsoft) that it will be able to analyze for preferences and usage patterns. And theoretically, if the sample size is big enough, people will use SearchWiki in the same way they would use U Rank, ensuring that Microsoft doesn't gain even the slightest edge over Google. For those (like me) dying to try out SearchWiki, you'll just have to be patient. Google is introducing the feature slowly to more users, and it's not showing up yet for everyone just yet. Roll your own search results with Google's new SearchWiki
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