Tuesday, August 23, 2011

drag2share: The Thinnnnest Camera With a 12x Zoom [Cameras]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5833449/the-thinnnnest-camera-with-a-12x-zoom

The Thinnnnest Camera With a 12x Zoom Canon is rolling out three new point and shoot cameras that'll take great pictures, fit in your pocket and won't break your budget.

The first of the trio is the 14-megapixel SX150 IS which has a 12x optical zoom, 720P HD recording and manual settings that you can tweak to your heart's content. It also has a 3-inch LCD and is available in conservative black or red. The SX150 IS will go on sale in early September for a reasonable $250.

Next in line is the 12.1-megapixel PowerShot ELPH 310 HS which has an 8x optical zoom, a 3-inch LCD, 1080P HD recording and a colorful coating of paint (your choice of purple, blue, pink, green and silver). The 310 HS will set you back $260 when it arrives in October, just in time for the holidays.

Finally, we have the 12.1-megapixel PowerShot ELPH 510 HS (shown above). This is the thinnest Canon camera on the market. It has a 12x optical zoom, 1080P HD recording, and a roomy 3.2-inch touchscreen display that makes it easy to navigate the menu system. It'll also let you touch to focus on a part of your image. You'll have to drop $350 if you want to grab the ELPH 510 HS when it arrives in October.

The three new PowerShots also have the DIGIC 4 image processing engine, the image stabilization (SX150 IS) and low-light capabilities (310/510 HS) that characterize Canon's compact camera models. In other words, they're great cameras that'll outdo your smartphone, but won't put a dent in your wallet like a DSLR. [Canon]

The Thinnnnest Camera With a 12x Zoom
The Thinnnnest Camera With a 12x Zoom
The Thinnnnest Camera With a 12x Zoom

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drag2share: Reuters Says Cheap-O 8 GB iPhone 4 Arriving "Within Weeks" [Rumor]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5833494/reuters-says-cheap+o-8-gb-iphone-4-arriving-within-weeks

Reuters Says Cheap-O 8 GB iPhone 4 Arriving "Within Weeks"The mythological "cheap iPhone" is coming, according to equally mythological "people with knowledge of the matter," reports Reuters. And it's coming soon, they say: a less expensive 8 GB version within weeks. Run, rumor, run!

Does an 8 GB version make sense? Sure—Apple already sells a budget 8 GB 3GS for a mere $50, so when the new hotness arrives, they'll probably want to phase out that old bag and replace it with a new econo-phone. And an 8 GB iPhone 4 would sit nicely beside a shiny, expensive new iPhone 5. But we'll wait and see! Only those "with knowledge of the matter" know for sure. [Reuters via 9to5Mac]

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drag2share: YC-Funded Proxino: Automated Error Reporting For Your Client-Side JavaScript

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/08/22/yc-funded-proxino-automated-error-reporting-for-your-client-side-javascript/

proxinologo

Here’s a new Y Combinator-backed startup that’s sure to catch they eye of plenty of web developers: Proxino, a new service that promises to let developers detect errors on all of their client-side JavaScript, without having to manually wrap their code with repetitive error handling commands.

First, a little high-level background. Unlike languages like Python, which are executed on the servers of the websites you access, JavaScript code is typically executed locally in your web browser. This allows for speedy response times and nifty effects, but there’s a downside: developers have a much harder time figuring out if their sites are raising issues for some users. Each browser executes code differently — and if something goes wrong, developers won’t automatically receive a bug report.

There are some ways to deal with this. Developers can build their own test suites, which automatically check numerous test-cases for various browsers. And they can also wrap each of the functions in their code with exception handlers. But Proxino’s founders say that test suites aren’t perfect (the worst bugs are the ones that slip through these tests), and that many developers don’t want to manually add error handling.

That’s where Proxino comes in. Developers pass their JavaScript application’s through Proxino’s proxy server, which automatically wraps each part of the application with code that generates exception reports, so they get pinged any time a user’s browser has an issue. The proxy can also minify the code to reduce the download time, and caches JavaScript apps to further speed things up. And they’ll automatically convert other languages, like CoffeeScript, into instrumented, exception-catching, JavaScript.

Of course, proxy servers have a potential downside: if the server goes down, your app could go down, and you’re not in direct control of getting it working again. To remedy this, Proxino uses a fallback technique — if Proxino goes down, you’ll simply start serving your JavaScript app from your own server as your normally would.

Proxino acknowledges that there are already some tools out there that help optimize JavaScript, like Google’s closure compiler. But they say that there aren’t many tools that do a good job letting developers detect errors in browsers — and they say their competitors behave inconsistently across different browsers like Webkit and Opera.

Proxino charges based on the amount of traffic your website draws. There’s a free version for low-traffic sites with less than 1,000 page views per month; the first paid tier is $30/month for up to 10,000 page views (you can see their full price list here).

In the longer term, Proxino has some pretty ambitious goals: they say they want to “serve the world’s Javascript”.



Company:
PROXINO
Launch Date:
2011

Proxino is a proxy service that helps developers get alerted when their client-side JavaScript raises exceptions in users’ browsers.

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drag2share: Codecademy Surges To 200,000 Users, 2.1 Million Lessons Completed In 72 Hours

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/08/22/codecademy-surges-to-200000-users-2-1-million-lessons-completed-in-72-hours/

code

Three days ago I wrote about Codecademy — a slick, fun way to teach yourself how to program. The app has done an excellent job minimizing the frustration often associated with writing your first lines of code, and it sports a good-looking and intuitive interface. Another plus: the initial signup flow doesn’t show up til you’ve completed your first few lessons, so you’re writing code within a few seconds of landing at Codecademy.com.

I’m not the only one who liked it: cofounder Zach Sims tells us that in the three days since the application launched, it has drawn 200,000 unique users. That’s users who have actually interacted with the app — and not people who hit the webpage and bounced away a second later. Perhaps even more impressive: users have completed a total number of 2.1 million exercises.

Sims also says that the company is actually a part of the latest Y Combinator batch (something they hadn’t previously disclosed). Given that the team only started working on the project around two weeks ago, it sounds like they changed their idea late in the program (they’re not the first to see success with a last-minute switch — Greplin founder Daniel Gross came up with that company a day before Demo Day, and later landed $4 million from Sequoia).

Sims says that growth has remained strong, largely driven not by press, but by the badges users are sharing to Twitter and Facebook (you are awarded badges as you complete lessons).

For more about the site, see our initial launch coverage right here.




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drag2share: Desktop Virtualization Company Wanova Raises $10M From Greylock And Others

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/08/22/desktop-virtualization-company-wanova-raises-10m-from-greylock-and-others/

wanova

Wanova, a turnkey desktop management cloud provider, has raised $10 million in series B funding from Greylock Partners, Carmel Ventures and Opus Capital. This brings the company’s total funding to $23 million.

Wanova provides Distributed Desktop Virtualization solutions that centralize control of the desktop infrastructure while optimizing the user experience and providing full support for offline use. Wanova’s flagship product Mirage, combines centralized PC image management with the ability to run images natively on a PC, allowing enterprise to reduce desktop Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) and improve IT operations.

With Mirage, PC images including personalization settings run locally on a PC allowing users to take advantage of PC native performance, including the ability to run multimedia applications and work while disconnected from the network.

Wanova actually just scored a big win in the IP world, announcing its first U.S. patent for its centralization technology that provides layered, single image management of PCs in the network, local execution of the image on the PC, and optimized synchronization between local and centralized images.

The new funding will be used towards building global sales and support teams and product development.



Company:
WANOVA
Funding:
$13M

Wanova provides Distributed Desktop Virtualization solutions that transform how companies manage, support and protect their desktops and laptops. Wanova's Distributed Desktop Virtualization centralizes control of the desktop infrastructure while...

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