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Hash Mp3 Cutter : Now cut and Edit Your Favorite Mp3 Files

Computer Science, IT NEWS, Recent News, Rishav's Personal, Software Review, Uncategorized

Hash Mp3 Cutter TM is a software to cut or trim your Mp3 Files.

Hash MP3 Cutter allows you to split a large MP3 file into a number of smaller ones.This can be useful in separating logical parts of a continuous recording and organizing them for easy access, or in case you need only a part of the recording (for example, to use later as a tune for your cellular phone). 

Hash Mp3 Cutter is small and handy, it doesn’t require its user to be experienced in audio editing. You can automatically cut your MP3 file into equal parts by specifying duration for resulting file. Built-in audio player helps to recognize and to verify the exact point of splitting.

Hash MP3 Cutter doesn’t recompress your files, so no quality losses occur during splitting. Moreover, no recompression means better performance.It saves your time by doing complex tasks simple.

A MP3 clip made by this software has same sound quality as of original MP3 so you can enjoy it at its best in your favorite MP3 player. It can really be very helpful for making MP3 ringtone from your MP3 download.

Using Hash Mp3 Cutter you can also edit the tags of the newly trimmed Mp3 file. You can edit the Title, Album, Artist, year, Comments, title Number and genre id of the Mp3 Files.

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Windows 7 will be released in Many Flavours

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Despite criticism that Windows Vista came in too many versions, Microsoft is moving ahead with plans to offer just as many editions of Windows 7.

Although the software maker will offer at least six distinct versions of the new operating system, Microsoft said to expect almost all PCs sold in the U.S. to come with either the Home Premium or Professional editions of the operating system.

“We’re going to focus on two versions,” Microsoft Senior Vice President Bill Veghte said in an interview, noting that those two versions will likely account for 80 percent of Windows 7 sales.

Still, versions of Windows 7 will include: Starter, Home Basic, Home Premium, Professional, and Ultimate. Unlike with Vista, however, the Home Basic version will be sold only in emerging markets.

So, if Microsoft is going to focus on two, why bother with all of the other versions? Veghte says it comes down to the fact that there are just so many places in which Windows is sold.

For emerging markets, for example, Microsoft needs to have lower-priced versions. As a result, Microsoft plans the severely limited Windows 7 Starter as well as the bare bones, but relatively full-featured home basic version. Volume license customers will be able to get an enterprise version that includes BitLocker encryption and a couple of other enterprise-only features. For consumers who really want access to those features, there will again be an Ultimate version of the operating system.

That’s not to say Microsoft is doing everything the same with Windows 7. Veghte said that Microsoft learned some important lessons from Vista.

One specific criticism with the Vista packages was the fact that there were features in Home Premium that weren’t in the pricier Vista Business edition. With Windows 7, each higher-priced version will be a superset of the other versions. For example, the Professional version of Windows 7 includes Windows Media Center.

Also, Microsoft will make it easier to move from one version to another. With Vista, Microsoft introduced the notion of being able to easily upgrade from one version to another, though a special upgrade disk was needed. Windows 7, despite its many versions, will actually come as a single piece of code, or image. That means all the features will come loaded onto a Windows 7 PC, ready to be unlocked with an upgrade product key.

As for the specific versions, Windows 7 Starter has some of the key features of WIndows 7, such as the new taskbar, but not the live thumbnail previews. It is also limited to three applications running at a time and will have limitations on the kinds of screen resolutions and processors it will support.

Home Basic, which will be sold only in emerging markets, removes the screen size, processor, and open application limits and adds support for Internet connection sharing and the new sensor and location-based features. However, Home Basic lacks such things as multitouch support or the Aero interface. DVD playback and Windows Media Center are also found in the Home Premium and Professional editions, but not in Basic or Starter.

The ability to use presentation mode or join a domain are two examples of features that are found in Windows 7 Professional, but not in any of the home versions. Finally, you’ll need either Ultimate or Enterprise for a few features, such as DirectAccess, BitLocker, or booting from a virtual hard drive.

Regardless of the rationale, having so many versions of Windows 7–not to mention any additional versions mandated by antitrust regulators around the world–will certainly open Microsoft up to additional criticism and probably some mocking from the folks in Cupertino.

To some degree, the customization is necessary. After all, while Apple may boast of only having one version–it essentially targets only the high end of the consumer market–the segment served by Home Premium.

However, the need for an Ultimate version, particularly now that the Professional version will have Media Center and other consumer features, seems somewhat dubious.

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The Most vulnerable Virus affects 6.5mn Computers Worldwide

IT NEWS, Recent News, Rishav's Personal, Uncategorized

 A computer virus attack that has infected more than 6.5 million Windows PCs this week is one of the worst in years, internet security firm F-Secure said Friday.

In total the worm, which is known as Downadup or Conficker, has infected nearly nine million PCs since its first version was unleashed two years ago.

“The number of Downadup infections (is) skyrocketing,” Toni Koivunen, an F-Secure researcher, said in an entry to the company’s security lab blog. “From an estimated 2.4 million infected machines to over 8.9 million during the last four days. That’s just amazing.”

Computer users have little to fear if they keep their computers patched with the latest Microsoft security fixes, but Microsoft says that at least one third of PCs have not yet been updated.

“We haven’t seen outbreaks of this scale in many years,” the company’s lead researcher Mikko Hypponen told ComputerWorld.com.

Microsoft says the worm exploits a bug in the Windows Server service used by Windows 2000, XP, Vista, Server 2003 and Server 2008.

The worm works by searching for a Windows executable file called “services.exe” and then becomes part of that code. Once it’s embedded in a PC, Downadup generates a list of possible domains, selects one, then uses that domain to reach a malicious server from which it downloads additional malware to install on the hijacked computer.

The latest version of the virus is particularly nasty since it uses a complicated algorithm to create hundreds of new domains, making it much harder for security experts to shut it down.

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Some facts about Christmas

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* Pope Julius I declared Christ’s birthday as December 25th sometime during the 4th century.

* Christmas trees received their first written acknowledgement in Germany in 1531.

* The tradition of hanging stockings over the fireplace derived from Dutch children placing their shoes next to the fireplace on Christmas Eve. Stockings later replaced the shoes.

* Until the turkey, a goose was the most popular fare served at a Christmas meal.

* The popular Christmas carol Silent Night was written by an Austrian priest named Joseph Mohr in 1818 as a result of a broken church organ.

* Santa has a calculated 31 hours to thanks to the different time zones and the rotation of the earth, assuming he travels east to west.

* Christmas trees such a Douglas fir and Evergreen are grown in all 50 states of America.

* The abbreviation of Christmas to Xmas partially comes from the Greek letter ‘chi’, the first letter of the word ‘Christos’, meaning ‘Christ’.

* Australian priests suggest saying “Happy Christmas” instead of Merry Christmas since “merry” often referred to drinking alcohol.

* Bing Crosby’s Christmas classic “White Christmas” is the best-selling Christmas song of all time.

* Alabama was the first state in America to proclaim Christmas day as a legal holiday in 1836.

* Oklahoma was the last state to proclaim Christmas day as a legal holiday in 1907.

* Poet Clark Moore is credited with naming Santa’s reindeer; Blitzen, Comet, Cupid, Dancer, Dasher, Doneder, Prancer, and the most famous reindeer, Rudolph.

* The colours in Santa Claus’ suit, red and white, were the creation of artist Haddon Sundblom. Sundblom was commissioned by the Coca-Cola Company to redesign Santa Claus, although, Thomas Nast was the first artist to illustrate Santa Claus.

* Austria issued the first Christmas stamp in 1937.

* The first United States President, Franklin Pierce, was the first in 1856 to decorate a Christmas tree in the White House.

* While working for inventor Thomas Edison, Edward Johnson had lights crafted especially for his Christmas tree leading to the popularization of Christmas tree light.

* The red stripe in the candy cane was intended by the inventor as the blood of Christ.

* Mistletoe myth states should a woman appearing under the mistletoe not receive a kiss, she will not marry the following year.

* The first Christmas card was designed by John Horsley in 1840 but was not sold until 1843.

* Christmas wreaths of holly and berries are believed to represent Christ’s thorns and blood.

* In Mexico, the poinsettia plant is called “Flower of the Holy Night”.

* Tinsel became a popular Christmas tree adornment after a mythical spider created sprawling webs from branch to branch. It is believe the Christ Child changed the webs to a silver colour.

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