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Friday, 14 February 2014

Best Technology Terms That You Should Never Say Again

Tune In / Stay Tuned
Today, most of the youngs are not even seen a
rabbit ear. So please, I'm begging you. Don’t
post or tell the users to Tune in or use live
streaming. And for Jobs' seekers don’t misguide
them to stay tune.We’ll contact you soon.
Webcam
When you think that people are going to transfer
to google talk for video chating, but for the most
part, people have always conducted video chats
through standalone applications such as Skype,
ooVoo and FaceTime.
A camera that is only design for video chatting
and it is only used for that purpose.when you
goes offline.it didn’t work for yoy like a camera.
Desktop Computer
Recently when I was in school.people didn’t
even think of desktop computer.and put it any
where they want.but after half the 19th century
when desktop computer came.it’s pretty easy for
all of us to put any where and you it as a stand
as well to put a cup of coffee on it.:D
Smartphone
You wouldn't call your car a mobile air
conditioner. You'd never refer to your microwave
oven as a digital clock with heating ability or
your PC as a Skype box. So why on earth do
you still call your pocket computer a
"smartphone?"
According to a recent study by UK Carrier O2,
typical smartphone users spend 128 minutes a
day actively interacting with their devices, but
only 12 of those minutes involve voice calls, with
the rest of the time split between emailing, text
messaging, social networking and consuming
on-device content apps. So you need to call that
item in your hand a "pocket computer," "a
communicator" or something else that reflects
its primary purpose.
Desktop Publishing
In the days of yore, magazines and newspapers
were laid out on giant lightboxes with glue and
exacto knives used to move stories around on
the page. Then, in the 1990s, better computers
with programs like QuarkXpress and Adobe
PageMaker allowed anyone to design printed
works with the click of a mouse. This new,
computerized form of production was named
"desktop publishing" because you could do all
the work, right from your desk, without whipping
out the wax.
In 2013, however, all layout occurs on
computers. There's no more "non-desktop
pufblishing" so it's time to call this process
simply "publishing."

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