Saturday, February 1, 2014

Satya Nadella Reportedly Microsoft’s Next CEO

Microsoft may have found its next CEO. Bloomberg on Thursday reports the executive board at Microsoft Corp. is prepared to make Satya Nadella, the company’s enterprise and cloud chief, the successor to departing CEO Steve Ballmer.

The Bloomberg report also said Microsoft’s board is also considering replacing Bill Gates as chairman of Microsoft, according to “people briefed on the process.”

The people familiar with the plan, who asked not to be named as the private process is still ongoing, also added Nadella emerged as one of the stronger candidates to replace Ballmer a few weeks ago, and that the plans aren't officially finished.

The replacement for Gates as chairman of Microsoft, meanwhile, could be the company's lead independent director John Thompson, according to the alleged sources. Thompson is currently heading the search for Microsoft's CEO.

The search for a new CEO began on August 23, when Microsoft announced Steve Ballmer would retire within the next 12 months. A special commitee, created by Microsoft's Board of Directors, was designed to direct the succession process. Chaired by John Thompson, the board includes Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Audit Committee chairman Chuck Noski and compensation committee chairman Steve Luczo. The commitee worked with Chicago-based recruiting firm Heidrick & Struggles to help consider the best internal and external CEO candidates.

Ballmer, who became the second CEO of Microsoft after Gates relinquished the position he held since 1975, was the first business manager hired by Gates in 1980. After heading up several company divisions following Microsoft's incorporation in 1981, Ballmer became Microsoft's president from July 1998 to February 2001.

As CEO, Ballmer helped boost company revenue by expanding the existing Windows and Office franchises, introducing divisions for data centers, devices and entertainment—particularly the lucrative Xbox brand. But in recent years, critics both in and out of Microsoft named Ballmer as a big factor behind a number of recent failures, including the company's botched launch of Windows 8 and its inability to innovate faster than its rivals at Apple Inc., even though tablets were reportedly on Microsoft's agenda more than a decade ago.

Former Microsoft VPs also blamed Ballmer for a few notable departures within the company, including Kevin Johnson, who ran Microsoft's online division but went to manage Juniper Networks; Nokia CEO Stephen Elop, who's now back with his former company after Microsoft acquired Nokia last year; and Ray Ozzie, who, although Bill Gates had personally christened him as Microsoft's next "big-picture" guy, decided to leave to start his own project—a mobile communications startup called Talko.

Intex Aqua Curve with 5-Inch 'Curved Display' Launched At Rs. 12490

The Indian manufacturer Intex one has added another device in its Aqua range. This new smartphone has been dubbed Intex Aqua Curve and it comes with a black cobblestone back panel with Baby Skin painting in 3 vibrant colors - Red, blue and black.

Intex Aqua Curve is a dual-SIM smartphone that packs a 5-inch One Glass Solution based curved display featuring qHD (960 x 540 pixels). It is powered by a 1.3 GHz quad-core processor along with 1GB of RAM and 4GB ROM. Intex Aqua Curve can support microSD card of up to 32GB.

The smartphone runs on Android 4.2.2 (Jelly Bean). Connectivity options for Intex Aqua Curve include Wi-Fi, EDGE and 3G. For camera, it has a 2MP front-facing camera and an 8MP rear camera.
The Intex Aqua Curve comes with a 2000 mAh battery, which as per the company's claims will deliver talktime of 4.5 hours along with a standby time of 180 hours.

The best buy price of Intex Aqua Curve is Rs. 12,490.

This smartphone comes pre-loaded with "Shake Screenshot" app, which allows users to capture screenshots by just shaking the smartphone, and these can be directly shared with friends via social messaging platforms.

Google brings Chrome apps to Android and iOS, lets developers submit to Google Play and Apple’s App Store

Google today launched Chrome apps for Android and iOS. The company is offering an early developer preview of a toolchain based on Apache Cordova, an open-source mobile development framework for building native mobile apps using HTML, CSS and JavaScript. Developers can use the tool to wrap their Chrome app with a native application shell that enables them to distribute it via Google Play and Apple’s App Store.

Today’s announcement builds on the company’s launch of Chrome apps in September that work offline by default and act like native applications on the host operating system. Those Chrome apps work on Windows, Mac, and Chrome OS, but now the company wants to bring them to the mobile world.

Last month, we broke the news that the company was working on bringing Chrome packaged apps from the desktop to the mobile world. At the time, Google developer advocate Joe Marini said the beta toolkit for porting and building such apps would be ready in January. In the last week of the month, Google has delivered as promised.

Google offers two developer workflows for the aforementioned native app packaging process. You can run your Chrome app on a device or emulator using the command-line or an IDE, and you can also use the Chrome Apps Developer Tool to run your app on an Android device without the need to install the mobile platform’s SDK or an IDE.

This hacker turned his mouse into a webcam, and you can too

Did you know that your optical mouse contains a tiny, low-resolution camera? Web developer and gadget hacker Franci Kapel does, and he decided to rip apart his Logitech RX 250, take the ADNS-5020 optical sensor, and use the 15×15 pixel grayscale image as the source for a very rudimentary webcam.

This project requires some soldering, an Arduino and Ethernet shield, as well as some basic code. Kapel has done most of the work though, so you just have to follow his tutorial to go from mouse to a webpage with a live view of whatever is directly under it.

Airbnb: We bring the UK more than £500m in economic activity

Airbnb, the service that lets anyone rent out their home for short-term lets, brings the UK economy more than half a billion pounds each year and provides thousands of jobs, according to a study commissioned by the company.

While it’s normal for any company to want to shout about its progress around the world, it’s a particularly important point for Airbnb, which has seen resistance to its service operating in some cities and ultimately led us to ponder whether the clock is ticking for the wider sharing economy.

According to the study, which looked at Airbnb data between November 2012 and October 2013 and included an additional survey of 3,956 responses, the company generated £502 million of economic activity – £357 million of which was in London alone. Additionally, the company found that Airbnb visitors to the UK’s capital seemed to be bigger spenders, with £1,231 splashed out during the average stay, compared to £474 for “normal visitors”, the company said.

In total, the UK had 14,424 hosts, who earned an average of £2,822 from renting their properties out for around 33 nights per year.

Overall, there were 513,006 outbound guests, and 373,685 inbound guests during the period, and perhaps contrary to some people’s belief, 80 percent of UK Airbnb hosts are offering up their primary residence, while only 20 percent are using it as a way to temporarily fill a second home for some extra cash, according to the data. According to the surveyed hosts, some 44 percent said that money from Airbnb’s short-term rentals allowed them to stay in their homes in the long-term, while 63 percent said it allowed them to pay bills they would otherwise have not been able to pay.

It’s good to see Airbnb sharing detailed figures about its operations in specific countries and cities, but with a wildly varying regulatory landscape governing short-term lets around the world – and even between individual cities – the data can’t necessarily be taken as a sign of future performance or as replicable in other locations.

BBC Sport’s smartphone and tablet-friendly Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics portal is now live

BBC Sport’s website dedicated to the coverage of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia is now live ahead of the start of the event on February 7.

As revealed at the beginning of January, the BBC is going all out to provide multi-platform, multi-device support for users, and will offer up 650 hours of live HD coverage via its digital services. This is in addition to the 200 or so hours that will be broadcast on television.

The move to embrace mobile and responsive Web design reflects a general trend that the BBC (and beyond) is seeing with ever increasing numbers of visitors accessing its sites and services via smartphones and tablets, and BBC Sport is no exception. As such, the 2014 Sochi coverage will be made available via BBC Sport’s apps for iOS, Android and Kindle Fire devices, which will also include medal tables, schedules and event results, alongside live coverage.

The UK government moves to unblock websites inadvertently affected by ISP porn filters

The porn opt-in debate divided opinions and generally caused a stink when UK ISPs revealed plans to ‘protect’ children from adult content on the Web. And many of the initial concerns, vis-à-vis perfectly legitimate sites being inadvertently blocked by filters, have proven to be valid.

Yes, it seems a slew of sites run by charities, designed to educate children and others on the matter of sexual health, have been automatically blocked. And now, the UK government is producing a safe-list of such sites for ISPs to ‘unblock’.

As the BBC reports, moves are also being made to set up a standard system that lets any website that has been ‘wrongly’ blocked inform ISPs, so they can be added to an approved list.