All you web designers out there make sure your sites are Firefox friendly.
The battle of the desktop is hotting up.
That said Microsoft is also paying for the download of MSN Messenger.
Highlights issues concerning using databases and computers in the small business environment of the UK and Ireland. Strategy tips and hints for a better computing outcome.
Major Features
Connect to Your Data
Create unlimited projects and organize your data by object groups.
You can connect to:
MS Access
MS SQL server
MySQL
Oracle
DB2
Paradox
DBF
FoxPro
Pervasive
Excel
Text files
Almost any other database through ODBC
Connect to databases located on a web server.
Assign friendly, meaningful names to objects and fields and only those friendly names will be shown to users.
Maintain database objects easily from the DBxtra data explorer.
Explore Your Data
Create business intelligence from your data with the DBxtra Data Explorer.
Group your database objects any way that makes sense to find the data you need quickly.
Filter and sort your data any way you want.
Assign aggregate functions.
Send your data by E-mail.
Send HTML mail.
Export your data to a MS Excel sheet, pivot table chart and linked data sheet.
Export your DBxtra reports without losing formatting to PDF, Excel or HTML.
Upload your data to a web server.
Store filters for quick and easy future access.
Create Powerful Queries
Create sophisticated Queries with no SQL or programming knowledge.
Users who know SQL can add unlimited expressions directly to queries.
Queries can combine results from different databases, including any of the database types DBxtra supports.
Create Powerful Reports
Create DBxtra Reports in just seconds.
Select report data sources from the data explorer.
Apply DBxtra filters, sort orders and groups to display only the records you need.
Create a clean, professional format with the DBxtra visual report designer.
Design and Deploy Active Server Pages in juts a few Minutes
Create and deploy Live connected ASP pages - without ASP, HTML or programming knowledge - All that in Just a Few Minutes.
Easy Object Maintenance
Maintain your objects directly from the data explorer.
Right click objects to rename, reassign to another group, delete and perform other management tasks.
Schedule Your Reports
Schedule your reports to send automatically to end users, customers, suppliers or any other interested parties at any frequency.
Merge e-mails and reports to customers and suppliers.
User Security
Define groups of users with similar job functions or data needs.
Ease administration by assigning privileges to entire groups of users at once.
Assign privileges to specific users as necessary.
The first mobile phone to double-up as an iPod music player went on sale in the US on Wednesday. It was unveiled by Apple at a last-minute, invitation-only press conference in San Francisco.
The ROKR, pronounced “rocker”, looks like a normal silver mobile phone, weighs just over 1 gram and stores 100 songs and audio-files on a minuscule, removable flash memory card. Files stored using the iTunes music software can be downloaded from a PC by plugging the phone into its USB port.
The idea, a joint venture between phone maker Motorola, Apple and US phone service provider Cingular Wireless, is to merge two popular portable devices – the cellphone and the iPod – into one, while adding the capability to listen to music while texting, instant messaging, playing games or web surfing.
“Fusing iTunes with your always-with-you mobile phone, the ROKR represents the ultimate convergence of mobile communications and music,” says Ed Zander, chairman and CEO of Motorola.
Apple has also released the ultra-slender, flash-memory-based iPod Nano, an MP3 player slimmer than a pencil and capable of storing up to 1000 songs or 25,000 photos. With 2 gigabyte or 4 GB memory options, it is touted as a replacement for the iPod Mini, which comes with either a 4 GB or 6 GB memory, but has a hard drive rather than flash memory.
Although phones that play music already exist, experts say ROKR is different because it is the first to offer the easy-to-use iPod interface and the ability to play songs bought on Apple’s iTunes, which currently accounts for the lion’s share of UK and US online music sales. “It has what no other music cellphone has,” says Michael Gartenberg, of Jupiter Research in New York City, US.
iTunes enjoys a whopping 80% of the UK market for paid online music downloads, according to the Official UK Charts Company, and a similar share in the US. But phones available until now, such as the brand new Sony-Ericsson W800 and some Microsoft-based smart phones, are only able to play songs bought at other online stores.
“Those other phones were the best kept secret in wireless,” says analyst Roger Entner of telecoms consultancy Ovum in Boston, Massachusetts, US. “iTunes gives the technology a ready-made audience.”
Many users prefer the iTunes interface for downloading and listening to songs because it is fast, easy and requires no technical knowledge, says New York City-based Peter Rojas of the gadget weblog Engadget.com. “All these aspects positively reinforce each other” while punishing the competition, he says.
The device is equipped with a special, and removable, flash memory card known as Transflash. Tim Bajarin, a consumer electronics analyst at Creative Strategies in Campbell, California, US, says this gives Apple the ability to ramp up the memory when the flash technology improves. Transflash is currently used on mobile phones to add extra memory for games, ring tones and pictures.
ROKR was available on Wednesday online to US customers for $249.99 and Cingular started selling the phone at retail outlets on Thursday. It will be available in the UK, Europe, Australia and Asia from mid-September, with South America following before the end of 2005Complete List of All Browsers Available for Screen Capture | |