Les nouveautés et Tutoriels de Votre Codeur | SEO | Création de site web | Création de logiciel

Seo Master present to you:

We've heard from a number of site owners who want to make sure their public source code is searchable via Google Code Search. To help with that, we extended the Sitemap Protocol to support code files. This makes it possible to specify all the code files on your site, as well as the programming language and software license for each file.

To get started, check out the new Code Search tags for Sitemaps. For complete software packages that are archives (.tar, .tar.gz, .tar.bz2, or .zip), you can create a packagemap file to describe all the individual code files in each package. For example:

  <urlset xmlns="http://www.sitemaps.org/schemas/sitemap/0.9"
xmlns:codesearch="http://www.google.com/codesearch/schemas/sitemap/1.0">
<url>
<loc>http://example.com/download/myfile.c</loc>
<codesearch:codesearch>
<codesearch:filetype>C</codesearch:filetype>
<codesearch:license>LGPL</codesearch:license>
</codesearch:codesearch>
</url>

<url>
<loc>http://example.com/download/myproject.tgz</loc>
<codesearch:codesearch>
<codesearch:filetype>archive</codesearch:filetype>
<codesearch:license>Apache</codesearch:license>
<codesearch:packagemap>packagemap.xml</codesearch:packagemap>
</codesearch:codesearch>
</url>
</urlset>

Once you've created your Sitemap, post it to a public URL on your site and then be sure to submit it through Google Webmaster Tools.

We hope this effort will help make even more code accessible and useful for developers. Let us know what you think. There's still a lot more code out there, so we'll keep working on improving Google Code Search as a tool for finding it.

2013, By: Seo Master
Seo Master present to you:
By Aaron Koblin, Data Arts Team and Bill Schilit, Research

Cross-posted from the Official Google Blog

As digital designers, we often think about how to translate traditional media into a virtual space. Recently, we thought about the bookcase. What would it look like if it was designed to hold digital books?

A digital interface needs to be familiar enough to be intuitive, while simultaneously taking advantage of the lack of constraints in a virtual space. In this case, we imagined something that looks like the shelves in your living room, but is also capable of showcasing the huge number of titles available online—many more than fit on a traditional shelf. With this in mind, we designed a digital bookcase that’s an infinite 3D helix. You can spin it side-to-side and up and down with your mouse. It holds 3D models of more than 10,000 titles from Google Books.

The books are organized into 28 subjects. To choose a subject, click the subject button near the top of your screen when viewing the bookcase. The camera then flies to that subject. Clicking on a book pulls it off the shelf and brings it to the front and center of the screen. Click on the high-resolution cover and the book will open to a page with title and author information as well as a short synopsis, provided by the Google Books API. All of the visuals are rendered with WebGL, a technology in Google Chrome and other modern browsers that enables fast, hardware-accelerated 3D graphics right in the browser, without the need for a plug-in.

If you’ve finished your browsing and find a book you want to read, you can click the “Get this book” button on the bottom right of the page, which will send you to that book’s page on books.google.com. Or, you can open the title on your phone or tablet via the QR code that’s in the bottom left corner of the page, using a QR code app like Google Goggles. You can also browse just free books by selecting the “Free Books” subject in the subject viewer.



Bookworms using a modern browser can try the WebGL Bookcase today. We recommend using Google Chrome and a fast computer with a powerful graphics card. Even with new hardware, this interface is experimental and may not work on some machines. For more creative browser experiments, check out Chrome Experiments, a gallery of more than 300 creative projects made by developers and artists from around the world, many utilizing WebGL.


Posted by Scott Knaster, Editor
2013, By: Seo Master
Seo Master present to you:

Motorola Droid 2 Review - Introduction and Design


Introduction


he Droid 2 is the newest addition to the Droid family. It stands out from its brethren as the first Droid to include a slider, QWERTY keypad. It also has a 3.7-inch touch screen, a 1-gigahertz processor, and SwyPublish Postpe, which is a system that allows users to "swipe" their index finger across the keypad for faster typing.




The phone also has pre-loaded applications like NFL Mobile, Need for Speed Shift, Skype Mobile, Blockbuster On Demand, a Kindle feature and a handful of integrated Google services.

The Droid 2 has a little bit of the Droid X in its storage capacity, which can grow to a massive 40-gigabytes, and its ability to act as a 3G mobile hotspot for up to five other devices. It has a bit of the first Droid in it, too, in that it still has a 5.0-megapixel camera, something a few newer Droids have moved past.

The device has room for a lot of features and already comes with some nifty tricks up its sleeve. But consumers will have to decide if those features are worth taking on the phone's bulky design or worth shunning the better camera on the Droid X and Droid Incredible.


Design


Those afraid of typing important texts or emails one finger poke at a time on a touch screen will be relieved to see the Droid 2 is a slider model with a full keyboard. Because the QWERTY keyboard slides out of the left side of the phone, there's more room for keys than is available on keypad/touch screen combination phones like the Palm Pre and new BlackBerry Torch.

The keys aren't raised much, though, and the top row of keys is close to the side of the phone, which means thumbs bump against the side of the phone often when using the top row of keys.

Motorola Droid 2 ClosedThe Droid 2 also has touch screen options, including a virtual keypad, and the same Swype predictive-text technology available on the Droid X. Users can also tap the screen to make selections, zoom in or out, and flip between seven screen panels. A thin bar of menu, home, back and search keys is located below the 3.7-inch screen, which is trimmed with black and framed in silver.

The back of the phone has the flash and lens for the 5.0-megapixel camera, and a 3.5 mm headset jack and power button are located atop the phone. The left side has a micro-USB port and the right side has volume keys and a camera key.

The Droid 2 is just as bulky as the Droid X without the advantage of the Droid X's 4.3-inch screen. It's also thicker and heavier than the Droid X, as well as the iPhone 4, which is to be expected because of the keypad.

It's a big phone -- there's no way around it. It's going to take up a lot of room in your pocket. There are lighter and thinner phone with bigger screens. But if the physical keypad is important to a person that really wants the power of a Droid, the weight may be worth it.

Out of the box, the Motorola Droid 2 comes with a battery, a pre-installed 8-gigabyte microSD memory card, a wall/USB charger, quick reference guide, and product safety and warrant brochure.



Camera


Most smartphones had 3.0-megapixel cameras when the original Droid came out and impressed shoppers with a 5.0-megapixel camera. Since then, other phones have kept up and more and more have a 5.0-megapixel or stronger camera. The Droid line has continued to keep up and ahead of the pack with 8.0-megapixel cameras on the Droid X and the Droid Incredible.

Motorola Droid 2

Motorola Droid 2




So it seems odd the Droid 2 still has a 5.0-megapixel camera instead of keeping up with an 8.0-megapixel. The Droid 2's pictures aren't bad -- they're sharp and better quality than images taken on most phones -- but they're not quite as impressive as those taken with an 8.0-megapixel camera and can be slightly grainy.

Before taking a photo, users have a list of settings to pick from, including resolution choices of widescreen, large, medium, small and very small. Rotate, crop and tag options are available after an image is taken, and advanced editing options include resizing, adjusting color and saturation, changing brightness, adding effects (black and white, blue, green, red, lomo, oil painting, solarize, negative, and sepia), adding text, flipping the image, and adding a stamp or frame to the image. These are all pretty standard options for a smartphone -- there's nothing unusual or groundbreaking here.

Motorola Droid 2 Camera Lens

The phone's camcorder has resolution choices available in 720 by 480 pixels, 640 by 480 pixels, 352 by 288 pixels, 320 by 240 pixels and 176 by 144 pixels. Users can tag the video and, once it's shot, cut it into a shorter clip, remove audio, or add a title to the clip. These options are rare and always appreciated on a smartphone, especially when some phones don't have any video editing options and very few allow someone to extract part of a clip or shorten a video.

The Droid 2 has a good, but not exceptional, camera. The camera is weaker on this model than on other recent Droid models, and its power is comparable to many other smartphones these days. The phone's real strength is in the camcorder, which takes quality footage and has editing options not available on most phones.


Basic Features


The Droid 2, like the Droid X before it, has Google integration. That means there's a Google browser. The phone can integrate a Gmail account, along with other email accounts, into the phone. The same goes for Google and Exchange calendars, which are integrated into the phone so any items added to the calendar at another location, like on a laptop, will appear on the phone, and vice-versa.

The phone also has access to Google maps and a navigation system that offers turn-by-turn directions.

Motorola Droid 2 BackThe Android 2.2 platform allows for all this integration and also allows for social networking information to appear and update instantly, and pools all contact information from social networking and email accounts into the phones contact system without the phone owner doing anything.

The 1-gigahertz processor and combined 16-gigabytes of memory available through the phone and memory card make for a speedy experience and offers lots of space for extra downloads.

The Droid 2 has some unique features, like the Kindle book reader application and a physical QWERTY keypad, which is new for the Droid line. Plus, it has VCAST Media Manager, which is a Verizon service that allows people to organize their media files from their phone or on a computer, and the phone has live video chat via Skype Mobile.

It also has what are becoming increasingly common smartphone features like a 5.0-megapixel camera and the ability to see webpages as they look on a computer. The phone's Flash capabilities ensure this is the case.

The Droid 2 has lots of memory, one of the fastest processors out there, Google integration and something new for Droids -- a keyboard. Features like Skype Mobile and Kindle may appeal to some buyers, but they'll have to be important enough to someone to offset the bulky shape of the phone, the mid-range camera, and the mid-range size of the screen.


Screen


The HTC HD2 and the Droid X are screen-driven phones. They justify their size, 4.3 inches, by offering some of the biggest screens on the market and saying they'll offer a better typing and video-streaming experience.





The Droid 2 is just about as big as these two phones, but its screen is smaller, measuring 3.7 inches. It's still bigger than most screens, but the fact that the Droid 2 doesn't offer the biggest will make its bulky design a harder sell.

The screen isn't monstrous, but it is high quality. It offers 480 by 854 pixel resolution and supports up to 16 million colors, which is amazing, considering not too long ago 262,000 colors was considered mid-range.

The screen's seven main panels help organize all the services available on the phone, and navigating through screens is pretty simple. The touch screen system is also easy to figure out, but the phone isn't ultra-responsive, and sometimes it takes a few tries to get the phone to accomplish the intended task.

The Droid 2 has a visually appealing screen, but it's size, which would be appealing a year ago, is no longer a big draw. The touch screen technology is simple to figure out, but could stand to be more sensitive.


Audio


The Droid X had a slight flaw in its volume control. The phone never got too loud. But the Droid 2, some could argue, gets too loud. There are several volume options, ranging from quiet to very loud, and sound is distributed evenly thanks to a back panel speaker that is arranged in a horizontal strip across the back.

Given its placement, it's hard to cover up if the phone is held vertically, but anyone using the keypad or who has placed the phone on its back may experience some muffling.

The phone doesn't pick up audio well when recording video, unless the sound is made close to the phone. That's a common flaw in phone camcorders, but it's still annoying.

The Droid 2 is plenty loud, but can also be quiet, providing for a range of listening options. Anyone wanting to keep sound to themselves can use the 3.5 mm headset jack, but they'll have to buy the headset, because it doesn't come with the phone. Don't expect much from recorded audio, unless subjects are close to the microphone.


Messaging


The Droid 2 has plenty of integrated messaging features. Users can have emails delivered instantly to the phone from Gmail, Microsoft Exchange, Yahoo, Hotmail, AOL, and other POP3 and IMAP4 email accounts. The phone also has QuickOffice, so users can access Microsoft Office services with ease.

Social networking is also integrated into the phone, with the power to have Twitter, Facebook and MySpace updates delivered instantly to the phone in a panel designed for social networking. The panel can get a bit crowded, so people will have to check this panel often. Users can also type updates for these sites through the same panel.

Motorola Droid 2 Open

Contact information will be gleaned from social networking sites and email accounts and built into the phone's contact list.

The phone also integrates corporate and Google calendar items. The phone doesn't have instant messaging, which is becoming more and more passé anyway, so it's becoming a less prominent feature on non-BlackBerry smartphones.

The phone supports text and multimedia messaging. It's best to use the physical keypad, because novices may have a difficult time figuring out how to make the touch screen keypad appear.

None of the above features are rare for smartphones, but the Droid 2 and the Droid X are set apart by having Skype Mobile, which allows users to video chat with other Skype users. It's a handier system than the Apple-made video chat system on the iPhone4, which requires people to have an iPhone FaceTime account to use the system, while Skype users can just have a computer. Plus, users that already have a Skype account for their computer won't have to learn a new system and come up with a new account name.

The Droid 2 has all the common features plus a bonus -- Skype. It helps give the phone an edge over the iPhone 4, although video-shy Blackberry Messenger fans may not want to switch to a Droid if they're attached to instant messaging.



Entertainment


As with most phones, the Droid 2 is what people make of it when it comes to entertainment. The Android Market offers thousands of applications for sale, and the phone's sizable memory stores allow people to stack up plenty of entertaining diversions on the phone.






The market is getting better, but isn't as big as Apple's store, and the market offerings don't go through the approval process required of iPhone applications, so quality is somewhat unchecked. Still, there are plenty of good offerings, and there are a variety of applications available, from games to stock tickers.

The phone comes stocked with a demo version of Need for Speed Shift, a racing game, news and weather feeds, and places to store, sort, upload (from a computer) and download music from the Amazon MP3 store. It also has Blockbuster On Demand and a Kindle application.

The Kindle feature is unique and an interesting touch because it allows people to read books on the phone without investing in a Kindle device. The Blockbuster application is less impressive. It brings movies onto the phone, but users have to wait for them to download.

Netflix provides a similar movie service for iPhone 4, and the Netflix system allows people to stream videos so they can see them sooner. People may pick the newest iPhone for this service, whereas the Blockbuster service is available on several phones, even out of the Droid line, so it's not unique.

The Droid 2 has options for bringing more entertainment to the phone and for getting movies, but the iPhone 4 has the Droid 2 beat on delivery of both these services. Its advantage in the "unique" department is the Kindle service, which allows people to curl up with a digital novel.


Internet


Motorola Droid 2 AngleThe Droid 2, like the Droid X, can act as a 3G hot spot for up to five other Wi-Fi enabled devices, including laptops. The Droid 2 can connect to the Web through a Wi-Fi connection or a 3G connection, and the 1-gigahertz processor makes for a speedy Web-surfing experience every time.

The Droid X also has a 1-gigahertz processor, same as the iPhone 4 and HTC Evo, which are all at the top end of the range of processor speeds on smartphones today.

Because of its integrated Google features, including integrated Google calendar, email, contacts and maps, it doesn't take a far leap to deduce the phone has a Google browser. This makes for a familiar browsing experience, and each Web page appears as it would on a computer, thanks to HTML and Flash support from Adobe Flash Player 10.1, which is a newer model than what most peers can boast.

Few problems have been reported about the Droid 2's internet experience. It's easy to see why. The phone has a speedy processor that sits atop the processor range, along with some other smartphones, and the Google system is easy to understand.


Storage


The Droid 2 has 8-gigabytes of internal storage and 8-gigabytes available through the built-in microSD memory card. That's a decent chunk of space, but the microSD card built into the Droid 2 has half the capacity of the one built into the Droid X and the iPhone 4 can have 16- to 32-gigabytes of memory. To be fair, the Droid 2 can expand to 40-gigabytes of memory with a 32-gigabyte memory card, but that requires buying another card.

The Droid 2, like most heavy-duty smartphones with lots of storage space, doesn't have the best battery life. Verizon's website hasn't pinpointed battery life estimates yet, but expect to charge this phone on a daily basis, depending on use.

There's lots of room for storage on the Droid 2. But it can be too much of a good thing, and will take a toll on battery life.


Connectivity


Motorola Droid 2 Star Wars R2-D2 VersionThe Droid 2 connects to computers via a microUSB cable, has a 3.5mm headset jack for private music sessions, and connects to Bluetooth devices that can push emails, control audio and video, push calendar items, access messages and a phone book, connect to internet and use devices like joysticks and keyboards remotely.

The phone is also integrated with a variety of messaging and Google services and supports GPS, integrated email, and integrated calendar sync. It also has integrated contact and calendar services that put Google and corporate calendar items on the phone and compile contact information based on what information users put in the phone as well as information from email and social network accounts.

There was quite a stink made when the iPhone 4 was found to have signal problems. Media attention may return to the topic with the Droid 2, which some users have found signal problems with the phone. Unlike the iPhone 4, which had issues when people held the phone a certain way, Droid 2 users are sometimes having signal issues without even touching the phone.

The Droid 2 helps users stay connected to the Web, other devices and other people. It offers all the essentials for Bluetooth users, and the basics expected of a smartphone for connecting to a computer. Signal problems could be an issues, but integrated calendar and contact services are appreciated.


Conclusion


The Droid 2 has a number of strengths. It's unique in the Droid line for its physical keypad and the Kindle digital book-reader feature. It's in a small group of smartphones that has Skype Mobile, the ability to act as a 3G hotspot, Swype predictive text technology, room for up to 40-gigabytes of storage, and the power and speed of a 1-gigahertz processor.

It's not as rare, but the Droid 2 can also be commended for integrating a variety of email accounts, social networking sites and corporate and Google calendars, plus Google services and navigation help from Google Maps Navigation and VZ Navigator.

Where the Droid 2 could improve is its camera. It's colleagues the Droid X and Droid Incredible moved forward to an 8.0-megapixel camera, so why didn't the Droid 2? The phone takes quality video, but doesn't pick up audio well when recording, and the images are sharp but could look better with 8.0-megapixel strength.

Skype Mobile is a more accessible video chat system than Apple's FaceTime, but the iPhone 4 has the Droid 2 beat when it comes to delivering movies. The Netflix system and its streaming technology is better than the sit and wait for a download system offered to Droid 2 users by Blockbuster.

Motorola Droid 2

Motorola Droid 2




Storage is a plus for the Droid 2, but all those downloads the phone can handle will take a toll on the battery, so be prepared to plug the phone in frequently for a charge as the phone fills up. The phone is well-connected with Bluetooth support, it's internet is fast, and there are plenty of messaging options, but the screen might as well be bigger given the bulky design, and, although there are lot of entertainment options, the Android Market is still catching up to the Apple store of numerous and creative iPhone applications.

Those looking for the greatest camera, the most applications for sale, or streaming video may prefer another Droid model or the iPhone 4. But those seeking a powerful phone with speedy internet, lots of storage space, a great video chat system and a keypad to complement the phone's touch screen technology may want to take a look at the Droid 2.


Product Specifications


Technical

Network:CDMA 800 / 1900
Form Factor:Slide / Google Android OS v2.2
Dimensions:116 x 61 x 14 mm
Weight:169 g
Antenna:Internal
Navigation:Touch Screen (Haptic Feedback) / QWERTY Keypad
Battery Type:1390 mAh Li-Ion
Talk Time:9.6 hours
Standby Time:13.1 days
Memory:8.0 GB
Expandable Memory:microSD / TransFlash

Safety

Radiation (SAR):High Radiation
(1.49 W/kg)

Imaging

Main Screen:TFT (Accelerometer / Proximity Sensor / Ambient Light Sensor)
16,700,000 colors (480 x 854 px)
External Screen:No
Camera:5.0 MP / Dual LED Flash / Zoom / Auto-Focus / Image Stabilization / Face Detection / Panorama Mode / Geotagging / Video Recorder

Audio

MP3 Player:VCAST Music / Rhapsody (MP3 / AAC / AAC+ / eAAC+ / WAV)
FM Radio:No
Speakerphone:Dual Microphone (Noise Cancellation)
Push-To-Talk:No

Multimedia

Wallpapers:480 x 854 px
Screen Savers:480 x 854 px
Ring Tones:MP3
Themes:Yes
Games:Android Market
Streaming Multimedia:VCAST Video / Blockbuster Movies (MPEG-4 / H.263 / H.264 / WMV9 / YouTube)

Messaging

SMS:Yes
EMS:Yes
MMS:Yes
Email:POP3 / IMAP4 / SMTP / Gmail
Chat:AOL / Google / Windows Live / Yahoo
Predictive Text:Swype / Handwriting Recognition





2013, By: Seo Master
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