Saturday, March 19, 2011

Potential Energy in a Gravitational Field 1.0

Study potential energy with the help of this simulation.

Potential Energy in a Gravitational Field is a simple, very simple to use application specially designed to help you simulate lifting a block of adjustable mass in different gravitational fields simulating the gravity of the Earth, the Moon, Mars and Jupiter.

This will help you can compare the relationship between the potential energy and the height on these planetary bodies.

Potential energy is stored energy showing various forms of appearance, i.e. gravitational potential energy, elastic, chemical, or electrical potential energy. The energy is stored by doing work against a force such as gravity or the spring in a clockwork motor.

TIPP10 Portable 2.1.0

Touch typing has never been so easy to learn


TIPP10 is a touch styping tutor that features a clear user interface. Beginners will find their way around right away so they can start practicing without a hitch.


You will be able to learn touch typing quickly and efficiently with the program's intelligent training lessons, useful support functions and an extensive progress tracker.


Users will have the possibility to play a dedicated typing game or to improve the functionality of the application with custom lessons.
Here are some key features of "TIPP10 Portable":


Intelligent text selection:
· The lesson texts react instantly to your typing mistakes by repeating mistyped letters more frequently. The system helps you eliminate typing mistakes and learn touch typing efficiently. A wide range of dictations ensures you'll never get bored.
· You will become acquainted with all the keys on the keyboard in 20 sequential training lessons. Commonly used characters are practiced earlier and more frequently than those that appear less frequently.


Ticker and virtual assistance keyboard:
· You can change the font, speed and color of the text in the ticker to ensure a steady typing flow. Keys and motion paths appearing in color on a virtual keyboard help you to use the right fingers and keep the right starting position. A status bar displays the fingers that should be used, your typing errors and characters per minute.


Detailed results:
· After each typing lesson you will receive a printable comprehensive report that evaluates the lesson. A list of all completed lessons including details about duration, number of errors, characters per minute and an evaluation provide you with an overview of the work you have done. A lesson trend diagram shows your progress and allows you to easily compare your results. TIPP10 also shows you your error rate for all the characters and fingers used in the typing lessons. This way you can see right away which keys and which fingers you still need to work on.


Open lessons and using your own texts:
· You can use open lessons or create your own once you've got the hang of touch typing and seek to improve your error rate or speed. There are open lessons with dictations for specialized topics so that you can familiarize yourself with particular styles such as programming or legal texts. You can also load your own texts into TIPP10 and have them dictated to you.


Extensive customization:
· You can choose how the lesson will run. You can set the duration of the lesson, how the typing tutor reacts to typing errors and which visual aids will support you during the lesson. In general settings you can also personalize the software even more. Here, for example, you can select a different speed for the ticker or a larger typeface.


Requirements:


· at least 64 MB RAM
· at least 800 MHz processor
· the graphic card and monitor should support at least 16 million colors (16 bit)
· screen resolution of at least 800x600 pixels


What's New in This Release: [ read full changelog ]


· User interface, lessons and manual in English language
· German training lessons for the NEO 2.0 keyboard layout
· ABC game
· Metronome
· New statistic: Error rates of the fingers
· Color settings for the ticker
· New open lessons
· Revised lessons and improved intelligence
Web Hosting

Portable NM Collector JE 2.2.0

A collection managing software

Portable NM Collector JE is an easy-to-use application that was designed in order to provide you with all the necessary tools for managing a database with your collectible items. It comes with a set of built in templates that are ready to use right out of the box.

This is truly portable software designed to be run on any computer with any operating system from a USB Flash drive. Although it can be installed on the computer hard drive it is also designed to run entirely off of a USB flash drive that can be plugged into any computer making it a truly portable application.
Here are some key features of "Portable NM Collector JE":

· Look and Feel - pick and choose your own Fonts including style and size as well as foreground and background colors.
· Field Headings - standard headings available which you can modify and/or make your own.
· Drop Down Values - many provided for each type of collection but you can add and modify your own.
· Collection Type Templates - many are provided and you can create your own.

Limitations:

· 30 days trial
· After 30 days the following features are disabled: Receipt, Disposition, Maintenance, Events, Statistics.

Portable MathProcessor 1.0.2 Alpha

Useful for numerical and mathematical calculations

MathProcessor helps you solve different types of mathematical and statistical problems. It also has some graphing capabilities.

Math Processor uses a simple XML format for testing its operations. The application includes some example files in xml format that can be analyzed.Please have a look at these files, and consider preparing some more test suites for testing the application.

Here are some key features of "Portable MathProcessor":

· Arithmetic
· Statistics
· Plotting

Requirements:

· .NET Framework 3.5 or later

What's New in This Release: [ read full changelog ]

· An edit menu containing very important cut, copy and paste menus. You can now input command data from clipboard. Also you can copy results to clipboard for using inside other applications.

· sort() and sortd() functions for sorting
· pnr() function for calculating permutations
· cnr() function for calculating combinations
· Updated help file
· A couple of bug-fixes
download now 

Virtual Folder 3.1.0.0

his is a simple file management utility

Virtual folder is a tool software to manage you files by virtual folders.The virtual folder is called node in this software. It is a container loading image of a file or folder.

Virtual folder is unlike real folders that contain real files, it contains the file's image like shortcut. In the software you can load your files or folders into a node like a real folder, open a node later, copy and export the inside files or folders into a flash disk or any certain path.

Give Virtual Folder a try to see how useful it can actually be for you!

Saturday, March 12, 2011

kalkulator portable " Portable Kalkules 1.6.0.8"


Portable Kalkules is the portable version of Kalkules developed to be able to run from a USB flash drive or any other portable device.

This tool is a very useful scientific calculator designed with an amount of nontraditional functions. It also offers a wide range of tools, which make your calculations easier and faster. download now

peta elektrinik "Portable Marble 0.10.1"

A tool to help you with geography lessons.

Portable Marble is the portable version of Marble designed to be able to run from a USB flash drive or any other portable device.

Portable Marble is a very useful geographical atlas and a virtual desktop globe designed to enable you to explore other places on our home planet with the utmost ease.

Users can use this tool to look up places, to easily create maps, measure distances and to retrieve detail information about locations that you have just heard about in the news or on the Internet. The user interface is clean, simple and easy to use.

Of course it's also possible to measure distances between locations or watch the current cloud cover. Marble offers different thematic maps: A classroom-style topographic map, a satellite view, street map, earth at night and temperature and precipitation maps.

All maps include a custom map key, so it can also be used as an educational tool for use in class-rooms. For educational purposes you can also change date and time and watch how the starry sky and the twilight zone on the map change.download now

wow microsoft berhasildi crack !!! Hackers Crack Algorithm to Get Free Microsoft Points

ackers have found a weakness in Microsoft's prepaid code generating algorithm and exploited it to give free Microsoft Points to hundreds of people.

Microsoft Points (MSP) are the virtual currency used on many Microsoft online services, like Xbox Live Marketplace, Games of Windows - Live Marketplace, Windows Live Gallery or Zune Marketplace.

They can be used to buy content without providing credit card information and can be acquired online or as prepaid cards from retail shops.

According to gaming news outlet Save And Quit, earlier this week a website started offering free Microsoft Points to users.

There are many scams targeting gamers that use free Microsoft Points as lure, but this particular site was actually delivering on that promise.

It allowed people to input any 4-digit numbers and it would generate codes that could be used to obtain Microsoft Points for free.

The method was not 100% accurate as not every code worked, but apparently a majority of them did. As the word spread, the website got so much traffic that it became unresponsive.

At the same time there was also a program being circulated around that could generate codes for 160 MSP, a Halo Reach Banshee avatar prop, or a 48 hour Xbox Live trial.

A version of this program was hosted at Megaupload and a link to it was being distributed on Xbox pirating websites.

As one would expect, it wasn't long until Microsoft learned of what was going on and patched the hole, but it's unclear how much fake currency was introduced on the market.

A suggested figure of $1.2 million was dismissed by a Microsoft spokesperson who said the damage was "nowhere near that amount." However, no official figure has been released.

A user who took advantage of the flaw said he was able to obtain $150-worth of MSP in around 20 minutes. The conversion rate is 800 MSP for $10, so at 160 MSP per code, it means he performed an estimated 75 fraudulent recharges.

"Our Policy and Enforcement team is evaluating whether or not certain individuals have violated the Terms of Use for Xbox LIVE and will take the appropriate enforcement on an individual basis. Codes obtained legitimately by users will not be impacted," the Microsoft spokesperson added.

source : http://news.softpedia.com/news/Hackers-Crack-Algorithm-to-Get-Free-Microsoft-Points-189182.shtml

Microsoft Office 2010 14.0.4760.1000 / 2007 12.0.6425.1000

Powerful new tools to express your ideas, solve problems, and connect with people

Microsoft Office 2010 gives you powerful new tools to express your ideas, solve problems, and connect with people. Office 2010 lets you work how, when, and where you want, letting you get things from a PC, the Web, and even a smartphone.

To obtain a free license for Microsoft Office, just register here the suite you would like to try.

Use Office 2010 virtually anywhere: PC, phone, browser
With Microsoft Office 2010, you can review and do minor editing on Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote 2010 documents, virtually anywhere, by using Office Web Apps from more locations on more devices.

Keep your people productive on the go. Office 2010 lets you access and edit documents stored on a server while you’re offline with SharePoint Workspace 2010, and then automatically syncs these changes when you’re back online. So you stay productive while on the go.

Support your employees, regardless of location or device. Office 2010 saves you time and money by helping you deploy and manage Office on the PC, the smartphone, and the Web, all from within familiar Microsoft System Center tools.

Bring ideas to life
Create and deliver presentations that help you stand apart from the competition. Office 2010 puts you in the director’s chair, enabling you to create dazzling digital content in PowerPoint 2010 without the need for expensive third-party tools. And you can broadcast your presentation to anyone with a browser, even if they don’t have PowerPoint.

Stay organized and on top of your work. OneNote 2010 pulls together everything from daily sales figures to digital images, so all the information you need is easily accessible. You can also create side notes that stay on your screen as you move between different programs, so you can keep your thoughts organized as you multi-task. This helps you stay organized while saving you time.

Turn intuition into insights to make quicker and more informed business decisions. Excel 2010 provides tools for improved data visualization, which can give you key insights into business processes and tailor messaging and products to best meet customer needs. Whole trends can be conveyed in a single cell with Sparklines. And there are more options in styles and icons in conditional formatting, as well as the ability to highlight specific items like such as “max/min” in a single click.

Work better together
Collaboration means better work and beating deadlines. Co-authoring allows multiple people to work on the same document at the same time, such as an RFP, to respond faster and meet deadlines. With Office 2010, several team members can work on Word 2010 and PowerPoint 2010 documents simultaneously and see who else is working on which sections, regardless of location.

Reduce travel costs and spend less on third-party conferencing tools. Office 2010 helps your people save time and money by providing one-click communication through unified communications technology, and real-time document sharing from within Word, PowerPoint, and Excel 2010 without the need to switch applications. This makes virtual meetings more effective so team members can get more done without being in the same room.

Instantly share a presentation. Hold spontaneous meetings with customers and partners with PowerPoint 2010. Broadcast Slideshow allows you to present a slideshow entirely through a Web browser—no matter where your audience is at. No need for your customers to have a third-party conferencing tool, or even PowerPoint. All they have to do is click on a link and a browser window opens with your slides.

Top 10 benefits of Office Professional Plus 2010

Save travel costs by enabling your people with better communication tools.
Office 2010 helps save time and money by providing one-click communication through unified communications technology, and document sharing from within Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, and Excel, without the need to switch applications. This makes virtual meetings more effective so team members can get more done without being in the same room.

Beat deadlines by working more effectively as a team.
Co-authoring allows multiple people to work on the same document at the same time, such as an RFP, to respond faster and meet deadlines. With Office 2010, multiple team members can work on Word 2010 and PowerPoint 2010 documents and be able to see who else is working on what sections.

Use Office virtually anywhere and on virtually any device.
With Office Web Apps, you can review and make minor edits to documents in Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote 2010 from any supported Internet Explorer, Firefox, or Safari browser. All of the changes are saved and appear exactly as you intended, so you can seamlessly move from a desktop to the Web, and vice versa.

Gain control over your e-mail and calendar.
Outlook 2010 can help you take control of your day with conversation management tools, mail tips, calendar preview, and more. Stay better organized and up-do-date with less effort and find information you need fast.

Make informed business decisions the second you need to
Excel 2010 provides tools for improved data visualization, so you can gain key insights quickly and easily turn the numbers into a story to share with others. You can convey whole trends in a single cell with Sparklines, choose from more styles and icons in conditional formatting, and highlight specific items such as “max/min” in a single click.

Create sophisticated marketing in-house to get your business noticed.
Office 2010 puts you in the director’s chair, enabling you to create dazzling digital content in PowerPoint 2010 that comes to life with cutting-edge audio/video capabilities and animation enhancements. Your business can cut costs by reducing the need for third-party multimedia tools and design agencies.

Enable employees to work offline and keep your business moving forward.SharePoint Workspace 2010 allows everyone to take content from SharePoint sites offline and work with that content from their desktop, without reliance on an Internet connection. This makes it easier for IT to drive a strategy with more consistent use of collaboration tools based on SharePoint technology throughout the organization.

Be more productive by finding what you need faster.
Office 2010 extends the toolbar throughout all applications, making it easier to find the commands you need. And the new Microsoft Office Backstage view (available in all applications except Communicator) gives your people quick access to important operations such as viewing document information, saving, printing, and sharing.

Protect inboxes from malicious attacks, so everyone in the business can rest easier.
Office 2010 provides a Protected View feature to help you guard against malware in your e-mail attachments and Internet files, as well as in Word, PowerPoint, and Excel documents.

Stay organized by keeping the right details in the right place.
OneNote is your essential “catch-all.” From daily sales figures to news articles clipped from the Web, you can make everything accessible and at the ready. You can even create side notes that stay on your screen as you move between different programs, so you can keep your thoughts organized as you multi-task.

Microsoft Word 2010 offers the best of all worlds: enhanced features to create professional-quality documents, easier ways to work together with people, and almost-anywhere access to your files.

Designed to give you the finest document-formatting tools, Word 2010 helps you organize and write your documents more efficiently. In addition, you can save documents online and access, edit, and share them from almost any Web browser.1 Your documents stay within reach so you can capture your best ideas whenever and wherever they occur.

Microsoft Access 2010 is all about simplicity. Access 2010 empowers you to make the most of your information—even if you’re not a database expert. And, through newly added Web databases, it amplifies the power of your data, making it easier to track, report, and share with others. Your data will never be further away than your closest Web browser.

Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 gives you more ways to create and share dynamic presentations with your audience than ever before.

Exciting new audio and visual capabilities help you tell a crisp, cinematic story that’s as easy to create as it is powerful to watch. With new and improved tools for video and photo editing, dramatic new transitions, and realistic animation, you can add polish to presentations that will captivate your audience.

In addition, PowerPoint 2010 enables you to work simultaneously with other people or post your presentation online and access it from virtually anywhere using the Web or your smartphone

Microsoft Publisher 2010 helps you create, personalize, and share a wide range of professional-quality publications and marketing materials. With Publisher 2010, you can easily communicate your message in a variety of publication types, saving you time and money.

Whether you’re creating brochures, newsletters, postcards, greeting cards, or e-mail newsletters, you can deliver quality results without needing graphic design experience. Get the job done right the first time with Publisher 2010.

Microsoft Outlook offers premium business and personal e-mail management tools to more than 500 million users worldwide. With the release of Outlook 2010, you get a richer set of experiences to meet your communication needs at work, ome, and school.

From a redesigned look to advanced e-mail organization, search, communication, and social networking features, Outlook 2010 provides you with a world-class experience to stay productive and in touch with your personal and business networks. Want information on Outlook 2010 with customer and contact management features? Please see Top 10 benefits of Outlook 2010 with Business Contact Manager.

Welcome to Microsoft InfoPath 2010, a forms-creation and data-gathering tool that helps organizations streamline business processes. InfoPath 2010 is designed for both advanced business users and developers, depending on the type of forms-based solution an organization needs.

Without writing code, advanced business users can use InfoPath 2010 to design sophisticated electronic forms to quickly and cost-effectively gather information. Developers can create advanced forms for departmental and enterprise business processes, including composite applications and workflow sequences, with InfoPath 2010, Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010, and SharePoint Designer 2010—using little or no code.

Microsoft Excel 2010 makes it possible to analyze, manage, and share information in more ways than ever before, helping you make better, smarter decisions. New data analysis and visualization tools help you track and highlight important data trends.

Easily upload your files to the Web and work simultaneously with others online. Access your important data on the go from almost any Web browser. Whether you’re producing financial reports or managing personal expenses, Excel 2010 gives you more efficiency and flexibility to accomplish your goals.

SharePoint Workspace 2010, expands the boundaries of collaboration by allowing fast, anytime, anywhere access to your SharePoint team sites. Synchronize SharePoint content with SharePoint Workspace so you can access, view, and edit files anytime and anywhere from your computer.

Working across teams is also much easier when you can coauthor documents simultaneously with other people in SharePoint Workspace and automatically synchronize changes to Microsoft SharePoint Server without additional steps.

Microsoft OneNote 2010 gives you the ultimate place to store and share your information in a single, easy-to-access location.

Capture text, images, video and audio notes with OneNote 2010 to keep your thoughts, ideas, and important information readily available. By sharing your notebooks, you can simultaneously take and edit notes with other people on your network, or just keep everyone easily in sync and up-to-date.

You can also take OneNote 2010 on the road with you by posting your notebooks online and accessing them from virtually anywhere using the Web or a smartphone.1

Instant messaging at work will be a snap for you with Microsoft Office 2010, and so will all the related functions of your Microsoft Office Communicator 2007 R2 application.

That’s because Office Communicator 2007 R2 is tightly integrated into Outlook 2010, and works seamlessly with the familiar Office applications that users employ daily.
By using Office Communicator 2007 R2, you can simultaneously experience multiple modes of communication, including instant messaging, video conferencing, telephony, application sharing, and file transfer.        download trial version now 
  

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Lingoes 2.6.3 universal dictonary over 60 language

On the whole, Lingoes is an interesting application which combines a comprehensive dictionary with a translator service (while looking and feeling mysteriously similar to its competitor, Babylon). There are also some useful tools like the periodic table, an abbreviation chart and an irregular verbs one, plus an international time zone converter, a dialing codes directory, a weights & measures converter and to end a currency converter.
Theoretically the most useful tool is that by pressing CTRL+ right click on whatever word you have on your screen, a pop-up window should appear with the definition of that word, a search tool for a deeper definition and also an audio file with the correct pronunciation. The disappointing aspect of this feature is that it doesn't work with a lot of words (unfortunately, I have to say, the majority), even if they appear in the list of definitions that Lingoes has in its database. I think this is a major bug as it invalidates massively the application's main utility which would be to have an always-available dictionary without having to change window.
The program leans on Google for the translation function which I find to be weak as many words are not translated correctly or not even found.
Because of strange performance issues, Lingoes is not worth using if you're just looking for an on-the-fly dictionary or translator. Some of its other features are really useful, though.

source and download at : http://lingoes.en.softonic.com/

KB Piano 2.2.4 Learn how to play the piano

f you fancy yourself as the next Elton John but don't want to shell out for a grand piano just yet then you might want to hone your skills with KB Piano. The program transforms your PC into a piano, with the keys on your keyboard replacing those you'd find on the instrument. The app makes getting started as simple as possible, and after following the clear instructions and comprehensive tutorial you will soon be playing, recording and replaying beautiful music.
You can configure the program to play chords by pressing a certain key, applied automatically when you create a new file, and there are a wide range of different tracks and effects you can apply to your compositions. With support for 15 channels and real-time mixing, this really is a pretty powerful program. You will need DirectX 8 to experience the full capabilities and be warned, we did experience a few bugs and crashes when we tested it.
source and download at : http://kb-piano.en.softonic.com/

Guitar Rig 4.0.8 Turn your computer into an all-in-one guitar amp”

Guitar Rig is ideal for musicians working on a budget that need a solid all-in-one guitar management application.
Guitar Rig allows you to connect your guitar to your computer so that you can amplify and manage your guitar sound as if you were in a professional studio . The soundcard routes the signal to your speakers and Guitar Rig simulates a series of classic amps, cabinets, mics and effects via a drag and drop interface.
Of course, the effect is not as good as using a professional studio but most users report that reproduction is very good for a simple computer application. The interface of Guitar Rig is extremely well laid out and even for those new to amps and guitar effects, it doesn't take long to navigate your way around. If you intend to use Guitar Rig for live performances, a convenient Live View displays the most essential readouts and level monitors to keep your eye on.
It's not exactly a professional music studio but Guitar Rig is an impressive effort.

source and download : http://guitar-rig.en.softonic.com/

Synthesia 0.8.0 play piano using computer keyboard

Synthesia is the new title of a game previously known as Piano Hero… until Activision told its developer it was not a good idea.
Naming anecdotes aside, the game is described as a fun method to learn to play the piano but honestly, I have to disagree on that. Synthesia is by no means an easy method to learn the piano: I have some very basic piano notions myself and I found it extremely difficult. It could be because I was using a standard computer keyboard to test the game, and not a real music keyboard as recommended by the developer.
On the upside, I especially liked the default song selection the program includes to get you started (they're all popular theme songs from very well-known videogames). Also, note that you can use just about any MID file with Synthesia, which turns it into pretty much a never-ending musical entertainment.
With Synthesia you can practice your piano skills on the computer, but forget about learning how to play it: you'll need some prior basic knowledge.
source : http://synthesia.en.softonic.com/

new release Homer - live conferencing and more

About

"Homer" is a software for  Linux and Windows. It can be used to talk to other people in live video and voice chats. No server infrastructure is needed. The software supports low quality voice and picture transmission, as well as bandwidth consuming high quality transmissions. Calls to other SIP-based phones are possible. Homer can also be used as simple Video or Audio player, as plattform for Video/Audio streaming or for Desktop presentation on remote computers.


Screenshots

Play your favorite movie or share it with friends

Play your favorite movie or share it with friends


Talk to two friends while you show them a movie

Talk to two friends while you show them a movie


Configure video resolution via context menu

Configure video resolution via context menu


Configure audio streaming via context menu

Configure audio streaming via context menu


Broadcast the entire desktop or parts of it

Broadcast desktop content and get help via remote view


The main configuration dialogue

The main configuration dialogue

Technical features 

Usability

  • Runs under Linux/32Bit, Linux/64Bit, Windows/32Bit and Windows/64Bit (as 32 bit application)
  • Free Qt-based GUI with user-friendly dialogues
  • Provides free voice/video/text chat with other users
  • Compatible to SIP-based phones/stations/software
  • Works without the need for a central SIP server (download and use out-of-the-box)
  • Locally stored contact database in XML format
  • Supports drag+drop of files to transfer them
  • Supports drag+drop of text blocks to send them as instant message

Network

  • Support for IPv4 and IPv6
  • Configurable stream relay via UDP, TCP or UDPlite transport
  • Flexible port assignment for NAT environment
  • NAT traversal via compatible extensions of SIP protocol
  • Decentralized session management and stream transmission
  • Support for multiple simultaneously activated network (up)links

Audio

  • Codecs: MP3, G.711 a-law, G.711 ยต-law, PCM16 and AMR
  • Capture local audio via ALSA, OSS or Windows multimedia system
  • Output via SDL
  • Adjustable quality settings
  • Broadcast of local audio files: supported formats are AVI, MKA, MKV, MP3, WAV

Video

  • Codecs: H.261, H.263, H.263+, H.264, MJPEG (without RTP) and MPEG4
  • Capture local video via V4L2 (including tv/capture cards with multiple input signals) or Microsoft VFW
  • Support up to 10 capture devices per host
  • Output via Qt with seamless zooming and full-screen support
  • Adjustable quality and resolution settings
  • Broadcast of screenshots from a screen segment
  • Broadcast of local video files: supported formats are AVI, ASF, DV, MKV, MOV, MPEG, MP4, MP4A, SWF and WMV
  • Resolution: configurable from 128*96 pixels to 1408*1152 pixels, depending on type of the video source
  • Record video stream to disc in file formats like AVI, ASF, DV, MOV, SWF and WMV
  • Snapshots in formats like BMP, JPG, PGM, PNG, PPM, XBM and XPM


Upcoming features

Started extensions

  • Add presence notifications
  • Add SDL independent audio output
  • Add file transfer
  • Add support for QoS management library

Ideas for the future

source : http://voip-info.norg

Saturday, March 5, 2011

hewan dalam bahasa sambas

nyamok = nyamuk 
sapi = sapi 
kelawar  = kelelawar
munsang = musang
pelandok = kancil
intigi' = kaki seribu/luing
intamar = sejenis cacing
kandang = murai 
sanakan = anak ikan gabus
ruan = ikan gabus
kalle' = ikan lele
caccak = cicak
cakkaller = laron 
incibbi' = capung
tengkuyong babi = bekicot
lippan = kelabang


thank kepada temanku yang udah membantu ku 
jangan lupa komentarnya
dan tunggu kata selanjutnya ya

buah-buahan dalam bahasa sambas

ulap = rambai 
ruko' = duku 
gelembeng = belimbing
limau = jeruk 
limau calong = jeruk sambal
sikup = buah sejenis manggis
bate' = pepaya
semangke = semangka 
jambu batu = jambu biji
temaddak = cempedak 
nangka' = nangka




hm,,,jangan lupa komentarnya yaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

kata kerja dalam bahasa melayu sambas

majoh         = makan 
meradak     =makan 
mande'     = mandi 
ngael  = memancing
nangkal = menyadap karet
berambun = bergadang
nyerungkong = jongkok


tunggu bagian lain yaaaaaaaaa
jangan lupa komentar nyaaaaaaaaaaa

KATA BENDA DALAM BAHASA MELAYU SAMBAS

korsi               = kursi
penyapu          = penyapu 
peningkapan   = jendela
pencallap        = pel 
telage              = telaga
selepar            = sendal 
seluar              = celana
sudo'               = sendok
cawan             =gelas
pangkeng         = kasur
gattah              = karet 
kaing               = kain 
tambol             = kue
bakol              = bakul
entudong        = tudong saji


jangan lupa kontar nya yaaaaaa



BAHASA SAMBAS KE BAHASA INDONESIA PART 1

bahari = sore                               tullah = kualat
ape    = apa                                 iye  = iya
mungin = banyak                         intah = entah
dabbu = debu                             raban = kandang unggas
callap = lap                                daan = tidak
ngingau = memelihara (hewan )   inyan = benar
lanyum = mulus                          taem = berhenti


lagi mencoba menyebarkan kayanay budaya bangsa,,,,,,,maaf ya kalo ada tulisan yang salah 
bahasa melayu sambas merupakan bentuk kekayaan budaya bangsa
jangan lupa komntarnya ya...
dan tunggu kata selanjutnyaaaaa



Thursday, March 3, 2011

brief history of internet

The Internet was the result of some visionary thinking by people in the early 1960s who saw great potential value in allowing computers to share information on research and development in scientific and military fields. J.C.R. Licklider of MIT, first proposed a global network of computers in 1962, and moved over to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in late 1962 to head the work to develop it. Leonard Kleinrock of MIT and later UCLA developed the theory of packet switching, which was to form the basis of Internet connections. Lawrence Roberts of MIT connected a Massachusetts computer with a California computer in 1965 over dial-up telephone lines. It showed the feasibility of wide area networking, but also showed that the telephone line's circuit switching was inadequate. Kleinrock's packet switching theory was confirmed. Roberts moved over to DARPA in 1966 and developed his plan for ARPANET. These visionaries and many more left unnamed here are the real founders of the Internet.

When the late Senator Ted Kennedy heard in 1968 that the pioneering Massachusetts company BBN had won the ARPA contract for an "interface message processor (IMP)," he sent a congratulatory telegram to BBN for their ecumenical spirit in winning the "interfaith message processor" contract.
The Internet, then known as ARPANET, was brought online in 1969 under a contract let by the renamed Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) which initially connected four major computers at universities in the southwestern US (UCLA, Stanford Research Institute, UCSB, and the University of Utah). The contract was carried out by BBN of Cambridge, MA under Bob Kahn and went online in December 1969. By June 1970, MIT, Harvard, BBN, and Systems Development Corp (SDC) in Santa Monica, Cal. were added. By January 1971, Stanford, MIT's Lincoln Labs, Carnegie-Mellon, and Case-Western Reserve U were added. In months to come, NASA/Ames, Mitre, Burroughs, RAND, and the U of Illinois plugged in. After that, there were far too many to keep listing here.

Who was the first to use the Internet?

Charley Kline at UCLA sent the first packets on ARPANet as he tried to connect to Stanford Research Institute on Oct 29, 1969. The system crashed as he reached the G in LOGIN!
The Internet was designed in part to provide a communications network that would work even if some of the sites were destroyed by nuclear attack. If the most direct route was not available, routers would direct traffic around the network via alternate routes.
The early Internet was used by computer experts, engineers, scientists, and librarians. There was nothing friendly about it. There were no home or office personal computers in those days, and anyone who used it, whether a computer professional or an engineer or scientist or librarian, had to learn to use a very complex system.

Did Al Gore invent the Internet?

According to a CNN transcript of an interview with Wolf Blitzer, Al Gore said,"During my service in the United States Congress, I took the initiative in creating the Internet." Al Gore was not yet in Congress in 1969 when ARPANET started or in 1974 when the term Internet first came into use. Gore was elected to Congress in 1976. In fairness, Bob Kahn and Vint Cerf acknowledge in a paper titled Al Gore and the Internet that Gore has probably done more than any other elected official to support the growth and development of the Internet from the 1970's to the present .
E-mail was adapted for ARPANET by Ray Tomlinson of BBN in 1972. He picked the @ symbol from the available symbols on his teletype to link the username and address. The telnet protocol, enabling logging on to a remote computer, was published as a Request for Comments (RFC) in 1972. RFC's are a means of sharing developmental work throughout community. The ftp protocol, enabling file transfers between Internet sites, was published as an RFC in 1973, and from then on RFC's were available electronically to anyone who had use of the ftp protocol.
Libraries began automating and networking their catalogs in the late 1960s independent from ARPA. The visionary Frederick G. Kilgour of the Ohio College Library Center (now OCLC, Inc.) led networking of Ohio libraries during the '60s and '70s. In the mid 1970s more regional consortia from New England, the Southwest states, and the Middle Atlantic states, etc., joined with Ohio to form a national, later international, network. Automated catalogs, not very user-friendly at first, became available to the world, first through telnet or the awkward IBM variant TN3270 and only many years later, through the web. See The History of OCLC

Ethernet, a protocol for many local networks, appeared in 1974, an outgrowth of Harvard student Bob Metcalfe's dissertation on "Packet Networks." The dissertation was initially rejected by the University for not being analytical enough. It later won acceptance when he added some more equations to it.
The Internet matured in the 70's as a result of the TCP/IP architecture first proposed by Bob Kahn at BBN and further developed by Kahn and Vint Cerf at Stanford and others throughout the 70's. It was adopted by the Defense Department in 1980 replacing the earlier Network Control Protocol (NCP) and universally adopted by 1983.
The Unix to Unix Copy Protocol (UUCP) was invented in 1978 at Bell Labs. Usenet was started in 1979 based on UUCP. Newsgroups, which are discussion groups focusing on a topic, followed, providing a means of exchanging information throughout the world . While Usenet is not considered as part of the Internet, since it does not share the use of TCP/IP, it linked unix systems around the world, and many Internet sites took advantage of the availability of newsgroups. It was a significant part of the community building that took place on the networks.
Similarly, BITNET (Because It's Time Network) connected IBM mainframes around the educational community and the world to provide mail services beginning in 1981. Listserv software was developed for this network and later others. Gateways were developed to connect BITNET with the Internet and allowed exchange of e-mail, particularly for e-mail discussion lists. These listservs and other forms of e-mail discussion lists formed another major element in the community building that was taking place.
In 1986, the National Science Foundation funded NSFNet as a cross country 56 Kbps backbone for the Internet. They maintained their sponsorship for nearly a decade, setting rules for its non-commercial government and research uses.
As the commands for e-mail, FTP, and telnet were standardized, it became a lot easier for non-technical people to learn to use the nets. It was not easy by today's standards by any means, but it did open up use of the Internet to many more people in universities in particular. Other departments besides the libraries, computer, physics, and engineering departments found ways to make good use of the nets--to communicate with colleagues around the world and to share files and resources.
While the number of sites on the Internet was small, it was fairly easy to keep track of the resources of interest that were available. But as more and more universities and organizations--and their libraries-- connected, the Internet became harder and harder to track. There was more and more need for tools to index the resources that were available.
The first effort, other than library catalogs, to index the Internet was created in 1989, as Peter Deutsch and his crew at McGill University in Montreal, created an archiver for ftp sites, which they named Archie. This software would periodically reach out to all known openly available ftp sites, list their files, and build a searchable index of the software. The commands to search Archie were unix commands, and it took some knowledge of unix to use it to its full capability.

McGill University, which hosted the first Archie, found out one day that half the Internet traffic going into Canada from the United States was accessing Archie. Administrators were concerned that the University was subsidizing such a volume of traffic, and closed down Archie to outside access. Fortunately, by that time, there were many more Archies available.
At about the same time, Brewster Kahle, then at Thinking Machines, Corp. developed his Wide Area Information Server (WAIS), which would index the full text of files in a database and allow searches of the files. There were several versions with varying degrees of complexity and capability developed, but the simplest of these were made available to everyone on the nets. At its peak, Thinking Machines maintained pointers to over 600 databases around the world which had been indexed by WAIS. They included such things as the full set of Usenet Frequently Asked Questions files, the full documentation of working papers such as RFC's by those developing the Internet's standards, and much more. Like Archie, its interface was far from intuitive, and it took some effort to learn to use it well.
Peter Scott of the University of Saskatchewan, recognizing the need to bring together information about all the telnet-accessible library catalogs on the web, as well as other telnet resources, brought out his Hytelnet catalog in 1990. It gave a single place to get information about library catalogs and other telnet resources and how to use them. He maintained it for years, and added HyWebCat in 1997 to provide information on web-based catalogs.
In 1991, the first really friendly interface to the Internet was developed at the University of Minnesota. The University wanted to develop a simple menu system to access files and information on campus through their local network. A debate followed between mainframe adherents and those who believed in smaller systems with client-server architecture. The mainframe adherents "won" the debate initially, but since the client-server advocates said they could put up a prototype very quickly, they were given the go-ahead to do a demonstration system. The demonstration system was called a gopher after the U of Minnesota mascot--the golden gopher. The gopher proved to be very prolific, and within a few years there were over 10,000 gophers around the world. It takes no knowledge of unix or computer architecture to use. In a gopher system, you type or click on a number to select the menu selection you want.
Gopher's usability was enhanced much more when the University of Nevada at Reno developed the VERONICA searchable index of gopher menus. It was purported to be an acronym for Very Easy Rodent-Oriented Netwide Index to Computerized Archives. A spider crawled gopher menus around the world, collecting links and retrieving them for the index. It was so popular that it was very hard to connect to, even though a number of other VERONICA sites were developed to ease the load. Similar indexing software was developed for single sites, called JUGHEAD (Jonzy's Universal Gopher Hierarchy Excavation And Display).

Peter Deutsch, who developed Archie, always insisted that Archie was short for Archiver, and had nothing to do with the comic strip. He was disgusted when VERONICA and JUGHEAD appeared.
In 1989 another significant event took place in making the nets easier to use. Tim Berners-Lee and others at the European Laboratory for Particle Physics, more popularly known as CERN, proposed a new protocol for information distribution. This protocol, which became the World Wide Web in 1991, was based on hypertext--a system of embedding links in text to link to other text, which you have been using every time you selected a text link while reading these pages. Although started before gopher, it was slower to develop.
Marc AndreessenThe development in 1993 of the graphical browser Mosaic by Marc Andreessen and his team at the National Center For Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) gave the protocol its big boost. Later, Andreessen moved to become the brains behind Netscape Corp., which produced the most successful graphical type of browser and server until Microsoft declared war and developed its MicroSoft Internet Explorer.

MICHAEL DERTOUZOS
1936-2001

The early days of the web was a confused period as many developers tried to put their personal stamp on ways the web should develop. The web was threatened with becoming a mass of unrelated protocols that would require different software for different applications. The visionary Michael Dertouzos of MIT's Laboratory for Computer Sciences persuaded Tim Berners-Lee and others to form the World Wide Web Consortium in 1994 to promote and develop standards for the Web. Proprietary plug-ins still abound for the web, but the Consortium has ensured that there are common standards present in every browser.
Read Tim Berners-Lee's tribute to Michael Dertouzos.
Since the Internet was initially funded by the government, it was originally limited to research, education, and government uses. Commercial uses were prohibited unless they directly served the goals of research and education. This policy continued until the early 90's, when independent commercial networks began to grow. It then became possible to route traffic across the country from one commercial site to another without passing through the government funded NSFNet Internet backbone.
Delphi was the first national commercial online service to offer Internet access to its subscribers. It opened up an email connection in July 1992 and full Internet service in November 1992. All pretenses of limitations on commercial use disappeared in May 1995 when the National Science Foundation ended its sponsorship of the Internet backbone, and all traffic relied on commercial networks. AOL, Prodigy, and CompuServe came online. Since commercial usage was so widespread by this time and educational institutions had been paying their own way for some time, the loss of NSF funding had no appreciable effect on costs.
Today, NSF funding has moved beyond supporting the backbone and higher educational institutions to building the K-12 and local public library accesses on the one hand, and the research on the massive high volume connections on the other.
Bill GatesMicrosoft's full scale entry into the browser, server, and Internet Service Provider market completed the major shift over to a commercially based Internet. The release of Windows 98 in June 1998 with the Microsoft browser well integrated into the desktop shows Bill Gates' determination to capitalize on the enormous growth of the Internet. Microsoft's success over the past few years has brought court challenges to their dominance. We'll leave it up to you whether you think these battles should be played out in the courts or the marketplace.
During this period of enormous growth, businesses entering the Internet arena scrambled to find economic models that work. Free services supported by advertising shifted some of the direct costs away from the consumer--temporarily. Services such as Delphi offered free web pages, chat rooms, and message boards for community building. Online sales have grown rapidly for such products as books and music CDs and computers, but the profit margins are slim when price comparisons are so easy, and public trust in online security is still shaky. Business models that have worked well are portal sites, that try to provide everything for everybody, and live auctions. AOL's acquisition of Time-Warner was the largest merger in history when it took place and shows the enormous growth of Internet business! The stock market has had a rocky ride, swooping up and down as the new technology companies, the dot.com's encountered good news and bad. The decline in advertising income spelled doom for many dot.coms, and a major shakeout and search for better business models took place by the survivors.
A current trend with major implications for the future is the growth of high speed connections. 56K modems and the providers who supported them spread widely for a while, but this is the low end now. 56K is not fast enough to carry multimedia, such as sound and video except in low quality. But new technologies many times faster, such as cablemodems and digital subscriber lines (DSL) are predominant now.
Wireless has grown rapidly in the past few years, and travellers search for the wi-fi "hot spots" where they can connect while they are away from the home or office. Many airports, coffee bars, hotels and motels now routinely provide these services, some for a fee and some for free.
A next big growth area is the surge towards universal wireless access, where almost everywhere is a "hot spot". Municipal wi-fi or city-wide access, wiMAX offering broader ranges than wi-fi, EV-DO, 4g, and other formats will joust for dominance in the USA in the years ahead. The battle is both economic and political.
Another trend that is rapidly affecting web designers is the growth of smaller devices to connect to the Internet. Small tablets, pocket PCs, smart phones, ebooks, game machines, and even GPS devices are now capable of tapping into the web on the go, and many web pages are not designed to work on that scale.
As the Internet has become ubiquitous, faster, and increasingly accessible to non-technical communities, social networking and collaborative services have grown rapidly, enabling people to communicate and share interests in many more ways. Sites like Facebook, Twitter, Linked-In, YouTube, Flickr, Second Life, delicious, blogs, wikis, and many more let people of all ages rapidly share their interests of the moment with others everywhere.
As Heraclitus said in the 4th century BC, "Nothing is permanent, but change!"
May you live in interesting times! (ostensibly an ancient Chinese curse) For more information on Internet history, visit these sites:

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