Send Files Up to 710 MB

If zoso mentioned before about romanian versions of youtube and similar websites, here is a romanian web utility to send files up to 710MB.

Well, I wonder how they decided to set up this maximum upload limit. Does it have anything to do with a CD size? Share your movies guys.

Worth mentioning that the speed is (at least when I tested it) considerably faster than similar services abroad (eg. rapidshare).

Link: www.u1.ro

My Favorites Symbian Applications

There are some Symbian applications I couldn’t live without, and some that I really enjoy using it on my (old by now) Nokia 6680.

Symbian OGGPlay – the audio player that helps me better manage my 1 GB memory card and turn my phone in a real portable player. It plays MP3, OGG, AAC and MP4 files, it recognizes Winamp playlists and has a skinnable interface.

FExplorer – is another utility that has better functions, a better interface and is much fastr than the phone’s file manager. Plus it lets you explore all the files, including the temp and OS’s folders.

TaskSpy – is a task manager for Symbian OS devices. It allows you to get more control and information over running tasks on your mobile phone. You can quickly switch tasks, kill processes and threads or free unused memory, as well as display detailed information about system resources. Other features, such as tracking cpu load and free memory, though aimed to developers, may result of interest to advanced users. You will be surprised to see how many applications are remaining resident in phone memory after (you think) you close them.

AutoLock – is an automatic key lock application for S60. It starts automatically when the phone is turned on, it has a Setup tool to change inactivity time and it’s running completely at the background. The fact that Nokia didn’t include this as a default feature it still amazes me.

ShoZu – is the easiest way to upload photos and videos to your sharing Web site. With just one click your photo or video is on the Web. It supports a wide range of webservices (from flickr to youtube) and weblogging systems (Blogger, Typepad, WordPress). You never have to worry about syncronizing the pictures you take, the movies you shoot or the agenda with your computer. They will be online by the time you get home.

YahooGo! – brings the internet to your mobile, starting with a push email (for your yahoo account), calendar and agenda sync, news, yahoo messenger, yahoo local or yahoo search.

Opera Mobile – is the fastest, most secure browser available for S60 and Windows mobile handsets.

GMail Mobile Java Client – if you really need all your Gmail features right on your cell then download the java client google developed.

2007 Index of Economic Freedom

The 2007 Index of Economic Freedom measures and ranks 161 countries across 10 specific freedoms, things like tax rates and property rights.

The 2007 methodology has been revised to provide an even clearer picture of economic freedom by using data-driven equations rather than performance brackets which allows countries to be graded using a percent score rather than a 1.5 rating. In addition, labor freedom has been added as a variable. We continue the tradition of blending “Ten Freedoms” equally to produce a simple, unbiased overall score for each country.

The new methodology (probably) helped US to climb back in the Top 10 after 2 years of absence.

The 10th criteria the top is based on are:

  • Business Freedom
  • Trade Freedom
  • FiscalFreedom
  • Freedom from Gov’t
  • Monetary Freedom
  • Investment Freedom
  • Financial Freedom
  • Property Rights
  • Freedom from Corruption
  • Labour Freedom

Romania managed to get to the 67th place in the Heritage Foundation’s Index of Economic Freedom, climbing from 125th position in 2005 and 92nd in 2006.

Out of these Romania scored below world average on Monetary Freedom, Property Rights and Freedom from Corruption.

Here is the top 10:

  1. Hong Kong
  2. Singapore
  3. Australia
  4. USA
  5. New Zealand
  6. UK
  7. Ireland
  8. Luxembourg
  9. Switzerland
  10. Canada

Read more about it here.

Related posts

2006 Index of Economic Freedom
2005 Index of Economic Freedom

2006 Corruption Perception Index

cpi2006 mapAs the 2006 Corruption Perception Index is out, Romania is just one place up from the last year survey and still behind countries like Bulgaria and Moldova.

The 2006 Corruption Perceptions Index is a composite index that draws on multiple expert opinion surveys that poll perceptions of public sector corruption in 163 countries around the world, the greatest scope of any CPI to date. It scores countries on a scale from zero to ten, with zero indicating high levels of perceived corruption and ten indicating low levels of perceived corruption.

Also, the top 10 remains virtually unchanged from last year:

1 Finland 9,6
1 Iceland 9,6
1 New Zealand 9,6
4 Denmark 9,5
5 Singapore 9,4
6 Sweden 9,2
7 Switzerland 9,1
8 Norway 8,8
9 Australia 8,7
9 Netherlands 8,7

Noteworthy examples of countries whose scores suffered biggest deteriorations from CPI 2005 to CPI 2006 are Brazil, Cuba, Israel, Jordan, Laos, Seychelles, Trinidad & Tobago, Tunisia and the United States. In these cases, actual changes in perceptions occurred during the last two years. On the other hand improvements can be observed from 2005 to 2006 for Algeria, Czech Republic, India, Japan, Latvia, Lebanon, Mauritius, Paraguay, Slovenia, Turkey, Turkmenistan and Uruguay.

Google Just Can’t Stop And Aquires JotSpot

After one of the most discussed acquisitions in the web 2.0 era, Google makes another step in acquiring the web and buys JotSpot.

For those who don’t know JotSpot is:

a privately held company headquartered in Palo Alto, California, is the first application wiki company. Founded in 2004 by Excite.com co-founders Joe Kraus and Graham Spencer, the company is pioneering do-it-yourself application publishing to enable anyone to create, publish, and share collaborative and personalized wiki applications.

JotSpot’s wiki allows you to create rich web-based spreadsheets, calendars, documents and photo galleries. It’s as easy as using a word processor: you don’t need to know HTML. After the most likely integration with the Google Docs&Spreadsheets and with the Picasa Web Albums, Google is just getting one step away from the old discussed Google Office Online.

Two things to know is that paying customers will no longer be billed on JotSpot and that the new registrations are closed for the moment.

More info in the Frequently asked questions about the deal and on Google Blogpscoped.

Four (+8) Reasons Why I Read Blogs

I had an (let’s call it) argument with a friend the other day about why blogs exists, why read them, why write them and so on.

A lot of sites (especially blogs, duh!) around the web are giving us tips to set-up or to improve our blogs, in terms of readership, or in terms of readability, monetizing it, getting good search engine rankings and so on.

Meanwhile, there are only a few, explaining why blogging is good, to begin with. And there are even fewer that are explaining the advantages for the reader. Most of them are trying to convince me and you, that we should start blogging. Now. Because is hype. Trendy. Cool. Whatever. Extremely few are telling what’s in it for me as a reader. Why should I trust them. Why should I go for them. And how? And where? And so on…

Out of all these sites, we can find out that blogging is good: for our career, for marketing, for letting out our frustrations, for promoting our products and say bad things about competition, to promote ideas and so on.

But still? What’s in it for me, as a reader? Well here are some of my reasons.

Blogs are not meant to replace the classic websites, nor the forums and the like, as my friend kinda felt it. They are not even supposed to replace the mainstream media channels (online or offline) either. They are just an addition to a growing online world.

There is a lot of spam in the blogosphere. Well it is true. Isn’t it a lot of spam in the rest of the online world as well? The forums or forum posts that are placed high in search engines results are not necessarily the most informative, the best or simply are not necessarily always the exact information you’re looking for, are they? Would you say�I don�t read books, because most books are boring, inaccurate, and generally not worth reading�?

So what were my own reasons for which I started (and keep on) reading weblogs?

First of all, most of the time, on blogs the tone of the text is friendlier and more familiar. Bloggers don’t have to obey the politically correctness of the mainstream media or I don’t-know-what obsessions of some forum administrator. If you like how someone writes, you can definitely enjoy it at its best on his/her blog. Usually. Of course there is a research in advance. Of course you won’t like each and every one of them bloggers out there. But don’t tell me you loved every forum posts you read, or you are satisfied with the search-engine-given-results. You have to refine your search until you find the one that interest you.

Second of all, blogs (that I mostly read, at least) are focused on a niche. On a specific topic, subject, domain of interest. And even if sometimes you’ll meet an out-of-order post, you can always skip it.

Basically, reading blogs means you can give up finding the most comprehensive news source around and look for sources that you simply enjoy reading. Nothing bad happens when you stop frequenting the one-stop shop and instead connect with individuals writing on topics that interest you. In most cases, even if this means you read the news a day or two late, who really cares?

Even if now, it’s not anymore a competitive advantage of the blogging world, the ease of RSS reading made me start reading certain blogs in the very beginning. With the lack of online news aggregators from the mainstream media, discovering RSS readers was a relief (here is a nice step by step introduction on the subject). Nowadays, most of the mainstream media websites realized the importance of RSS and added support for it to their websites.

The fourth reason I started reading blogs is that I had some personal friends away, and reading their blogs was the easiest way to track their experience and stay in touch. I used to be in this case, and sending mails to all my friends with updates on what I have you done in the last week was pretty time consuming. Blogging is an easy platform for both (the reader and the author) to manage this kind of timely information. Multimedia included. (And did I mention free?)

Those were my reasons. Now I’ll just add some 2 more sources on the subject.

First, a list of 8 reasons why readers like to read blogs:
1. Expertise: Some bloggers know more about the subjects they cover than do most journalists.

2. Personal flavor: Blogs tend to reflect the blogger’s interests and voice, and readers often tend to feel a more personal connection with the writer than they do with journalists.

3. Original sources: Blogs tend to link to original sources for instance, articles they criticize, court opinions they report on, and transcripts they quote.

4. Ideological compatibility: Just as some readers prefer The Nation, some The New Republic, and some the National Review, so readers would prefer news coverage from sources that they find ideologically congenial and trustworthy. For many libertarians and conservatives, few news media (especially few text news media) provide this. Blogging fills that gap.

5. Selection judgment: Some blogs, like InstaPundit.com, primarily link to others work, rather than posting a lot of original text of their own. In this respect, they’re like newspaper or magazine editors, choosing which stories their readers would find interesting. Sometimes, you might find that a blogger’s selection judg-ment matches your own more than your local newspaper editor’s does.

6. Coverage of topics that other media don’t cover, or don’t cover in depth: Specialty topics (e.g., developments on the right to bear arms) and genres that newspapers find to be not worthy enough (e.g., detailed criticism of articles in other media).

7. Thorough coverage of a particular issue: A blogger who’s interested in an issue may cover it in more detail than a typical newspaper would

The second, is a study that blogads made among a blog readers in the last three years. Here are the first 5 results from last study with the answers for the question “you read blogs for?”:

83.86% – News I can’t find elsewhere
79.56% – Better perspective
67.52% – More honesty
65.54% – Faster news
54.28% – Humor

Having these said, why do you read blogs?

Stu.dicio.us – Web 2.0 for Students

Now if I would still be a student (with a laptop and a wireless internet connection) I would definetly love the new social notetaking for students application – stu.dicio.us

stu.dicio.us

Claimed to be a social notetaking service, Stu.dicio.us allows students to publicly save organized notes, manage a class schedule, and keep up to date with tasks using a time sensitive to do list.

As of now, students can organize themselves using a class schedule tool, note manager, and a to do list in an Ajax based interface with barely any clutter to be found. Students can also search other member notes, making Stu.dicio.us a social notetaking service. But what has me excited for the service are the features to come September 1st. Stu.dicio.us says to expect a grade manager to record test and quiz grades, a 1gb file manager to save documents and school related material, and Wikipedia integration for class notes. It is also said that they will be making the service more social with the adding of ‘friends’ and a voting system for public notes.

Via SolutionWatch

10 Definitions of Web 2.0

  1. The wisdom of crowds
  2. Shared web applications
  3. Web as platform
  4. User participation
  5. Rich user experience
  6. Marketing buzzword
  7. Data is the next Intel Inside
  8. Permanent beta
  9. Using the web as it was meant to be used
  10. Nothing

Full article here.