Thursday, April 7, 2011

ANTI Corruption race


In the race against corruption, its really hard to say who wins because there could be many opposite forces who always comes in the way. But what can be done by the COMMON MAN is that atleast support the nobel cause. You need not to do the hunger strike or poss with the banners, but you can say no to corruption by just refusing to give "mamuless" to those who always extend their hand in front of you for the job you are interested. We are know that its their duty to help you and what they can also do becuase they got that job by giving that extra "money" to BADA BABUs sitting in the AC rooms. He has to return the amount to LALA. Its our system which needs a cleanup.


Raise your voice against Corruption. I do believe that every single person in his life time had come across such situations where he cannot say NO to corruption.

Join ANNA HAZARE and he will guide you to better INDIA....


I need the account details for my money which i paid in terms of TAX!!!


Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Setti Balija community

Here is the Setti Balija community site in which you can meet other setti balija community people around the world. This is a great thing which unite the people from different parts of the people.
Great Idea...
Visit http://settibalija.com/ Today..................

Thursday, February 28, 2008

How to create an invisible folder to hide your things...

1-First make a new folder as normal…
-2-Now click on ‘Rename’ but do not actually rename it.
-3-Now hold Alt and type 0160 (Note: Do not type these numbers from above the letters but use the numbers to the right side of the keyboard).
-4-Then press enter
The folder name should show nothing…
Now all you have to do is change the folder’s icon…
-5-Right Click>Properties>Customize>Change Icon
-6-Now scroll right a little bit until you find a column where there are gaps between them, click on those gaps and voila…your own invisible folder!…

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Use the table to below find out mobile email of our friend

How To Make Your Own Web Mashup

So you want to make a mashup but aren't entirely sure where to begin? This page can help you get there.

1. Pick a subject
Answer the question: a mashup of what? Hint: Plotting markers on maps is probably the easiest place to start. It might just be the best delis in your neighborhood. While you could go for something more complex with muliple data sources: maps + photos + bookmarks + more, you may want to keep it simple to start.

This helps define what APIs and tools you'll be looking at: maps, news, auctions, products, etc. Browse this site's API Database and sort by Category to get a sense of API types. You can also browse the Mashup Listing to see which interesting applications have been built using which APIs.


2. Decide where your data is coming from
What is the source of your data? This can drive the APIs you'll use. For example, if you want to do something with your photos on Flickr or sale items on eBay, then those vendors APIs are the likely candidates. Or, you may be inputting the data yourself such as with simple map markers. In which case your options are more open.

(For the purposes of this Guide, I won't spend time distinguishing between a true 'mashup', thus 2 or more data sources, and just using an API, which may mean only 1 external source. The exact definition of mashup is vague so no need to fight semantics at the moment.)


3. Weigh your coding skills
Mashups, as of today, are mostly a programmer's affair although there are some tools such as MapBuilder and Wayfaring that can help you create basic maps without coding.

How much of a coder are you?
Maps APIs are simplest but more sophisticated APIs, such as those for conducting financially-sensitive operations like auctions, are more complex.

How much time do you have?
Again, development speed is inversely proportional to complexity.
Do you have a server to run this on?
Simpler APIs can be used from JavaScript in a web page or take specially formated XML file as input (as shown here at Engadget). While this is indeed simple, security issues limit JavaScript's suitability for true client-only mashups. Odds are that you will need to run your application from a web server which you manage or have access to.

What language will you use?
This is primarily driven by what programming languages you know. While your decision may also be influenced by vendor-provided toolkits, most web APIs aim to be language-agnostic so this is less of a vendor-dictacted issue than your own choice. You can use the API reference to see if an API has a language-specific toolkit (such as Flickr which has many).

Note that this whole step may arguably be Step 1, depending on your perspective.


4. Sign-up for an API
Most, but not all, API providers require you to have a developer/application ID, a user account with their service, or both. Some services give you one ID for as many applications as you write while others require you to get an ID for each application that you create. While this signup may sound complicated, and for a few services it is, most of the time this takes only a minute or two to complete. As an example, take a look at the Google Sign-up Page.


5. Start coding
For this step, the big one, rather than describe the many variations in detail, I'll refer you to a variety of well-written and useful API-specific tutorials and introductions. You can also check the profile for any of the APIs and refer to resources from the reference section as needed.

Note that this list is dynamic and will change over time so check back later for updates.

Reference taken from
http://www.programmableweb.com/howto

How To Make Your Own Web Mashup

So you want to make a mashup but aren't entirely sure where to begin? This page can help you get there.

1. Pick a subject
Answer the question: a mashup of what? Hint: Plotting markers on maps is probably the easiest place to start. It might just be the best delis in your neighborhood. While you could go for something more complex with muliple data sources: maps + photos + bookmarks + more, you may want to keep it simple to start.

This helps define what APIs and tools you'll be looking at: maps, news, auctions, products, etc. Browse this site's API Database and sort by Category to get a sense of API types. You can also browse the Mashup Listing to see which interesting applications have been built using which APIs.


2. Decide where your data is coming from
What is the source of your data? This can drive the APIs you'll use. For example, if you want to do something with your photos on Flickr or sale items on eBay, then those vendors APIs are the likely candidates. Or, you may be inputting the data yourself such as with simple map markers. In which case your options are more open.

(For the purposes of this Guide, I won't spend time distinguishing between a true 'mashup', thus 2 or more data sources, and just using an API, which may mean only 1 external source. The exact definition of mashup is vague so no need to fight semantics at the moment.)


3. Weigh your coding skills
Mashups, as of today, are mostly a programmer's affair although there are some tools such as MapBuilder and Wayfaring that can help you create basic maps without coding.

How much of a coder are you?
Maps APIs are simplest but more sophisticated APIs, such as those for conducting financially-sensitive operations like auctions, are more complex.

How much time do you have?
Again, development speed is inversely proportional to complexity.
Do you have a server to run this on?
Simpler APIs can be used from JavaScript in a web page or take specially formated XML file as input (as shown here at Engadget). While this is indeed simple, security issues limit JavaScript's suitability for true client-only mashups. Odds are that you will need to run your application from a web server which you manage or have access to.

What language will you use?
This is primarily driven by what programming languages you know. While your decision may also be influenced by vendor-provided toolkits, most web APIs aim to be language-agnostic so this is less of a vendor-dictacted issue than your own choice. You can use the API reference to see if an API has a language-specific toolkit (such as Flickr which has many).

Note that this whole step may arguably be Step 1, depending on your perspective.


4. Sign-up for an API
Most, but not all, API providers require you to have a developer/application ID, a user account with their service, or both. Some services give you one ID for as many applications as you write while others require you to get an ID for each application that you create. While this signup may sound complicated, and for a few services it is, most of the time this takes only a minute or two to complete. As an example, take a look at the Google Sign-up Page.


5. Start coding
For this step, the big one, rather than describe the many variations in detail, I'll refer you to a variety of well-written and useful API-specific tutorials and introductions. You can also check the profile for any of the APIs and refer to resources from the reference section as needed.

Note that this list is dynamic and will change over time so check back later for updates.

Srisailam

Srisailam