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

Saturday, December 10, 2016

How to understand that others have access to your Google Account .


one million accounts one google have been attacked by a new virus called Gooligan, which continues to hit new 13 thousand accounts every day. But here's how to find out if your account has fallen prey to hackers and how to change your Google password.
The virus infects your Android device and steal data from your Google Play, Gmail, Google Photos, Google Docs, Google Drive and more. Also uses your account information to install applications that would not want your device

Google says it has no evidence that Gooligan has used stolen user data. It also clarifies that specific groups are targeted Android users. Forbes writes that attack the virus thought to be 'thief biggest single "Google Account.
However, it is very easy to see if you are affected by the attack Gooligan. Checkpoint security firm also provides a list of applications that may be affected by the virus. Click twice on the apps installed on your Android device using extinguished Setting> Apps and list in alphabetical order.

Microsoft’s Quest , Quantum Computer .


The race is on build a ‘universal’ quantum computer. Such a device could be programmed to speedily solve problems that classical computers cannot crack, potentially revolutionizing fields from pharmaceuticals to cryptography. Many of the world's major technology firms are taking on the challenge, but Microsoft has opted for a more tortuous route than its rivals.
IBM, Google and a number of academic labs have chosen relatively mature hardware, such as loops of superconducting wire, to make quantum bits (qubits). These are the building blocks of a quantum computer: they power its speedy calculations thanks to their ability to be in a mixture (or superposition) of ‘on’ and ‘off’ states at the same time.

Microsoft, however, is hoping to encode its qubits in a kind of quasiparticle: a particle-like object that emerges from the interactions inside matter. Some physicists are not even sure that the particular quasiparticles Microsoft are working with—called non-abelian anyons—actually exist. But the firm hopes to exploit their topological properties, which make quantum states extremely robust to outside interference, to build what are called topological quantum computers. Early theoretical work on topological states of matter won three physicists the Nobel Prize in Physics on 4 October.

Saturday, December 3, 2016

Google application to digitize boxes of old photo prints




Google wants to make digitizing your old photo prints as easy as opening an app.

The PhotoScan app for iPhones and Android phones will use the phone's camera to capture an old photo in four sections and stitch them together, much like a panorama shot. Google says this approach helps eliminate glare that can mar attempts to digitize a print by simply photographing the whole photo.

Thursday, December 1, 2016

The Internet is changing the way we use our brains!


Easy access to the information highway via the Internet is changing our ability to learn, remember, and solve problems through the use of our brain, say researchers at UC Santa Cruz and the University of Illinois. The more you rely on the Internet to a kind of information, they add, the more likely to continue to use technology to collect new information in the future. With so much free information available, it is difficult for those who are studying this phenomenon, find out how much information comes from our brains these days, and how much is taken online.

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Google launches Featured Photos screensaver for Apple Mac

Google has launched a new feature for its rival Apple's Mac systems. Dubbed 'Featured Photos,' the screensaver shows different images shared by people on Google+.
"With our new Featured Photos screensaver for Mac, you can display stunning, high-resolution photography from our Google+ members whenever your computer is inactive," said Google product manager Neil Inala in a post made on Google+.
Apple Mac users would need to visit the dedicated webpage and download the installer file, in order to use it. It works on Mac OS 10.9 and later versions.

Google as a model for recording memories in the brain!




How born a memory?
 Explains to us the US internet giant Google. In fact doing Google searches not only serves to network, but also is good for human brain.
Some British researchers from the University of Leicester and the University of California, used search engines on a neural model for discovering how memories arise. This study was published in the scientific journal "Nature Communications".

Combinations of concepts are a key mechanism in human memory because it helps us to recall the distant moments in time. For example, when we recall personal experiences, or when leaving a meeting with someone in a particular place, create combinations between several concepts.
Starting from this principle, researchers have used the operation of Internet search engines, like Google and Bing, in a neural model to determine the level of combinations between the concepts and how these combinations are codified in human memory.
Using this techniquen we understand how neurons present in memory reach the concentrate less concepts , most important, but closely related to each other.