Showing posts with label with. Show all posts
Showing posts with label with. Show all posts

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Windows Live SkyDrive Doubles Storage to 1GB, Still Can’t Keep Up With Gmail

Microsoft doubled the online storage consumers can get for free in Windows Live SkyDrive. It’s hard to get excited about that when Gmail is already giving me 2.9 GB of storage, with more on the way—4GB by the end of the month, and 6GB by early January, according to one estimate.

Keep that free storage coming. We’ll use it.

Saturday, September 8, 2007

TechCrunch UK Relaunches With One Hell Of A Party

I just returned from our party in central London to celebrate Seedcamp Week and the relaunch of TechCrunch UK & Ireland.

Robert Loch, who’s famous for his London parties, generously agreed to have the event at his penthouse London flat in Soho. His parties are so notorious (and I use that word intentionally) that we had to keep the location secret and only email it out to attendees who’d registered. Even so, 50 or so people showed up “off list” and were able to get in.

Total attendance was about 250 people, including most of the venture capitalists in London who invest in the Internet, most of the Seedcamp attendees and a ton of other entrepreneurs. Skype founders Niklas Zennström and Janus Friis also dropped by for an hour or so.

One thing I need to remember for our next party - Londoners drink a lot more and stay out far later than their Silicon Valley geek counterparts. We actually ran out of alcohol completely at around 10:30 but Heather soon had another shipment brought in. I left at 1:30 am to get back to my day job. As far as I know the party is still going strong.

TechCrunch UK & Ireland Relaunches

The primary reason for the party was to celebrate the relaunch of TechCrunch UK & Ireland, after a nearly year-long hiatus. I am very pleased to announce the return of Mike Butcher as the editor of the site. Mike knows everyone in London - seriously - and he has deep experience writing about startups at The Financial Times, The Industry Standard and The Guardian, among other publications. We are very lucky to have him rejoin the TechCrunch team. Look for his coverage of Seedcamp on Friday morning London time.

See more coverage of the relaunch at The Guardian.

Thank You To Sponsors

Heather put the party together in a week after we nearly canceled due to a lack of an appropriate venue. Still, a number of sponsors stepped up to cover costs of the event and supplied excellent food and drink. Thank you to all. And special thanks to the Seedcamp team for working with us to organize and promote the party.

Event Sponsors:

Olswang is a leading law firm renowned for its work in media, communications, technology, real estate and more recently, biosciences. Founded in 1981, the firm has grown to a staff of more than 500 and has offices in London, the Thames Valley and Brussels. Olswang is organised with both a sector and service line focus, enabling it to deliver specialist legal advice backed by a strong business perspective.

WorldTV is an exciting, second generation video site offering a slick and user-friendly interface for online aggregation, personal archiving, search and viewing of multi-definition video content in Flash, including access to more than 25 million video clips from a range of popular, well known sites. The service lets users create their own full-screen online TV channel, complete with MTV style logo and all at a cool and easy-to-remember URL. Based in London and Limerick, Ireland, WorldTV will launch out of private beta in November, and is an idea from Smashing Concepts! - the UK ideas and incubation company.

Food & Drink Sponsors:

Thanks to Mucho Mas Burrittos (seven days old, founded by former Skype guys, better than Chipotle) and Hummus Brothers for feeding us, and Stormhoek for supplying the excellent wine for the event. The food and wine was awesome and you kept everyone appropriately fed and watered.

Friday, May 25, 2007

How to Calculate Your Age by Chocolate


How to Calculate Your Age by Chocolate



Yes, it's true: If you are old enough to do mathematics and you like chocolate, you might be able to figure out your age. By crunching these numbers (including the weekly frequency of your preference for chocolate), your age is mathematically revealed. It's a nifty trick for kids learning basic mathematics, who can practice it on adults and elicit reactions of surprise and amusement. Try it out to see for yourself, and then read on to find out how it works.

Steps

  1. Determine how many times a week you eat or want chocolate. It must be a number between 1 and 10, including 1 or 10.

  2. Multiply that number by 2.

    • 8 x 2 = 16
  3. Add 5 to the previous result.

    • 16 + 5 = 21
  4. Multiply that by 50.

    • 21 x 50 = 1050
  5. Add the current year (Gregorian).

    • 1050 + 2007 = 3057
  6. Subtract 250 if you've had a birthday this year. If you haven't had a birthday this year, subtract 251.

    • Let's say your birthday hasn't passed yet.
    • 3057 - 251 = 2806
  7. Subtract your birth year.

    • Assuming you were born in 1975...
    • 2806 - 1975 = 831
  8. You'll end up with a 3 or 4 digit number. The last two digits are your age (if you're under 10 years old there will be a zero before your age). The remaining one or two digits will be the number of times per week you eat or want chocolate (the number you specified in the first step).


Why it works

  • This really does work for anybody from 1 to 99 years old, although the chocolate part is just for fun (an added distraction). Here's how the mathematics work.
  • Select a number between 1 and 10. Multiply by 2, add 5, multiply by 50. These steps are just a fancy way to push your (or your assistant's) random number out into the hundreds place. Here is what you'll get for all possible selections:
1 350
2 450
3 550
4 650
5 750
6 850
7 950
8 1050
9 1150
10 1250
  • Add the current Gregorian year (2007):
1 2357
2 2457
3 2557
4 2657
5 2757
6 2857
7 2957
8 3057
9 3157
10 3257
  • Subtract 250 (or 251 if your birthday hasn't happened yet this year). This yields the year of your last birthday (2006 or 2007) plus 100 times your chosen number:
1 2106
2 2206
3 2306
4 2406
5 2506
6 2606
7 2706
8 2806
9 2906
10 3006
  • Subtract the year of your birth and get your age plus 100 times your chosen number. Put another way:

    (Year of your last birthday + (100 x your chosen number)) - Year of your birth = Your age + (100 x your chosen number)


Warnings

  • This will not work consistently for people who are 100 years old or older.
  • Your friends may think you are strange for playing this game as it requires inputting information from their date of birth into the equation.


Wednesday, March 14, 2007

SAMSUNG - GX-1S This 6.1 mega pixel digital SLR camera comes with a CCD sensor.

SAMSUNG - GX-1S
This 6.1 mega pixel digital SLR camera comes with a CCD sensor. It has a 2.5-inch large LCD screen, optical viewfinder and a self-timer. The optical zoom viewfinder saves battery life and helps to focus bettter in dark conditions and bright light. It is one of the lightest and compact digital SLR cameras. The memory of this camera is upgraded with a Secured Digital card. It comes with USB and audio-video interface connectivity. The camera is available in black colour.


Price Rs. :- 27,000