Breaking News

Bluetooth 5 Will Be

Late last year we got an early look at  improvements  coming to the next version of Bluetooth, and now the Bluetooth Special Interest ...

Thursday, June 30, 2016

SKYBOOK Learning Studio Now available for just 1.5 USD. Try It Now!

by Venusha - Founder, ICT Guru  |  at  10:05:00 PM


SKYBOOK Learning Studio is a educational software (web based) that helps to learn about anything. 
This is good platform for students for their studies.We recommend SKYBOOK to use students specially. 
We develop this software user friendly and easy to use.Actually, our aim is to make a software that can learn about anything in one palce. 
When you browsing facts for your studies using a web browser. You must go to site manually. But 
SKYBOOK that makes easy.
http://venusha.com/skybook-learning-studio/

Sunday, June 12, 2016

SKYBOOK Learning Studio

by Venusha - Founder, ICT Guru  |  in Software at  4:37:00 AM

SKYBOOK Learning Studio is a educational software (web based) that helps to learn about anything. This is good platform for students for their studies.
We recommend SKYBOOK to use students specially. We develop this software user friendly and easy to use.
Actually, our aim is to make a software that can learn about anything in one palce. When you browsing facts for your studies using a web browser.
You must go to site manually. But SKYBOOK make it easy. 

Friday, June 10, 2016

Bluetooth 5 Will Be

by Venusha - Founder, ICT Guru  |  in News at  5:38:00 PM

Late last year we got an early look at improvements coming to the next version of Bluetooth, and now the Bluetooth Special Interest Group has revealed the name of the upcoming version plus more specifics about the new standard. Bluetooth 5 will be the successor to Bluetooth 4.2, which was released at the end of 2014, suggesting a notable release this year. The new standard will be announced next week, and this is what we know so far.
Specifically, Bluetooth 5 will increase the range of the wireless connection standard by 4x and greatly increase transfer rates for low energy connects with a 2x boost in speed. The Bluetooth SIG also shared (not their link inverses numbers by mistake) that Bluetooth 5 will open up some new possibilities (that could boost iBeacon usage):
 But there’s more. Bluetooth 5 will also provide significant new functionality for connectionless services like location-relevant information and navigation. By adding significantly more capacity to advertising transmissions, Bluetooth 5 will further propel the adoption and deployment of beacons and location-based services to users around the world.
With Bluetooth becoming increasingly important in our computer hardware these days, general improvements to the wireless standard directly impact products like the iPhone, Apple Watch, and more than ever wireless headphones. The Bluetooth SIG will officially announce Bluetooth 5 next Thursday at a London press event.

Thursday, June 9, 2016

How to Extract the Content of Android APK Packege Using Ubuntu

by Unknown  |  in How to at  5:15:00 AM




Facebook is testing social commerce payments in Southeast Asia

by Unknown  |  in News at  5:13:00 AM
Facebook is expanding its focus on payments with a new trial in Southeast Asia that allows users to pay for products listed on Facebook Pages with just a few clicks.
The social network is running a trial in Thailand which allows users to make a payment to a Page owner without leaving the social network. Qwik, a product that is powered by Southeast Asia-based fintech company 2C2P, which raised a $7 million Series C last year, allows users to make payment via a credit card, debit card or bank transfer online, according to numerous sources with knowledge of the trial.
Facebook and 2C2P both declined to comment.
The test might sound a little bizarre to anyone in the West, where the dominance of Facebook is under question thanks to the emergence of companies like Snapchat, but in Asia — China aside — the social network is a staple part of the internet for most people. Indeed, Asia Pacific is its largest region with 566 million monthly users, according to Facebook’s latest data.
That social dominance in Asia also extends to commerce, with many small and independent retailers using Facebook Pages to build and engage their audience and, of course, sell products. It’s difficult to track transactions on social, but Page365, a Bangkok-based startup that helps small retailers sell products via social media, previously estimated the industry to be worth over $500 million per year in Thailand alone.
That figure came from 2014, and the social network no longer enables its pages to be crawled to make such estimates, but PWC reports that Thailand is the world’s largest c2c — consumer-to-consumer — commerce market with more than half of the people polled buying items from social networks.
Typically, the process of buying from social — which is mentioned in Mary Meeker’s latest report: slide 106 — goes something like this:
  • Buyer browses Facebook Page and finds an item they like
  • Buyer clicks the ‘Message’ button next to the product to express an interest in it via Facebook chat/Messenger
  • Seller/Page admin chats with buyer to check on stock and confirm order
  • Seller provides bank account details so that buyer can make a bank transfer for payment
  • Buyer leaves their house/office to go to the nearest ATM and wire the funds to the seller’s account, buyer adds a note to the transaction with order details, address for delivery and perhaps a reference number provided by the seller
  • The goods are then prepared for delivery once the buyer’s bank transfer is confirmed by the seller
It’s a hugely cumbersome process that most people in emerging markets are forced to undertake. That’s because few have internet banking, the small number who do own a credit card can’t use it in this scenario, and cash-on-delivery isn’t preferred by small merchants.
Details aside, the key point is that people are so keen to buy online that they’ll jump through all manner of hoops to do.
The big problem for Facebook, however, is that many of these hoops don’t belong to the social network.
Page365 co-founder Prathan ‘Pop’ Thananart told us that, among his company’s base of 25,000-plus retail partners, nearly all transactions start on one social network and finish on another.
“One finding that is consistent across all our merchants, aside from customers engaging in chat-and-haggle buying behavior, is where those conversions happen. Merchants report that 80 percent of transactions are carried out across two or more platforms — most notable Facebook and Line,” he said.
That could mean buyers and sellers connect on Facebook but agree the final steps and payment via Line, Thailand’s top chat app with 30 million users in the country. Or, as is increasingly happening, Instagram is the key ‘store front’ for social commerce sellers to find their customers, with deals completed at non-Facebook properties like Shopee, the social commerce app from Singapore-based unicorn Garena.
This trial, which is more like alpha stage than even beta right now, is an early indicator of Facebook’s intent to keep all the processes of the social commerce transaction on its platform.
“While chat or ‘conversational commerce’ is the up-and-coming trend in the West, it’s already a reality in emerging Southeast Asia. In Thailand, for example, 33 percent of the total e-commerce spend is already going through Facebook and Instagram and ending on Line,” Sheji Ho, Group CMO of aCommerce, a startup that provides e-commerce marketing and logistics services for retailers, told TechCrunch.
TechCrunch understands that Facebook is trialling Qwik with an unspecified number of top Facebook Pages in Thailand, some of which have multiple millions of fans. Once a user taps the link, it redirects them to a new site where they can enter their credit/debit card details or provide their bank account which, with authorization, triggers a bank transfer like an ATM.
We’ve been in contact with a number of Facebook users who have successfully used the product this week, but we were unable to replicate the process ourselves.
We have seen screenshots of the transaction process but are not publishing them with this story since Page owners in the trial have signed NDAs and media coverage could impact their relationship with Facebook, which owns the platform that they are reliant on for a large portion of their online sales.
Multiple sources in Thailand’s e-commerce space told us that Facebook is planning to widen the trials to other countries in Southeast Asia over time, but it picked Thailand first because of the large market for social media commerce.
Either way, this trial is the loudest signal to date of Facebook’s interest in Southeast Asia and potentially other parts of Asia and emerging markets. The company has dabbled with commerce with a feature to let users find local services which is being tested in India and Indonesia, and, while the technology behind Qwik is hardly revolutionary, entering the payment space is a major move.
It isn’t clear when the trial was started, the users we talked with began to notice it this week, but it plays into Facebook’s other payments initiatives elsewhere in the world. The company has enabled peer-to-peer money transfers in the U.S., and most recently UK. Those plays were almost certainly about raising user engagement rather than making money, and this social commerce trial is not dissimilar in that respect, but with an Asian twist.
Facebook might not be the only social network company stepping into this space in Southeast Asia, however. Line, which operates its own payment service and a shopping appin some parts of the region, is also talking to small retailers with a view to launching its own new service, one source with knowledge of discussions told TechCrunch.
Southeast Asia is one of Line’s most important geographies since Indonesia and Thailand are among its top four countries based on active user numbers. The Japanese company claims 218 million active users worldwide is reported to be planning for an IPO this year.

Google co-founder Larry Page is secretly building flying cars

by Unknown  |  in News at  5:11:00 AM
(Kimberly White/Getty Images)
Google co-founder Larry Page has been personally funding a pair of startups devoted creating flying cars, according to Bloomberg Businessweek. Page has reportedly funded one startup, named Zee.Aero, with more than $100 million since its creation in 2010, and putting money into another, named Kitty Hawk, since last year. His interest in the companies is a personal ambition, says Bloomberg, and he even retained an office at once of the company's headquarters, where he was referred to pseudonymously as GUS — the guy upstairs.
Zee.Aero and Kitty Hawk have been developing designs for flying cars completely separately, says Bloomberg, with Zee.Aero conducting test flights of its prototypes at an airport about an hour's drive away from Google's Mountain View headquarters.Bloomberg reports that Zee.Aero has hired aerospace designers and engineers from organizations including NASA, Boeing, and SpaceX, and has been testing two single-seater prototype designs — one that looks like a "small conventional plane" and another with propellors dotted down its sides.
One of Zee.Aero's patents filed back in 2012. (Image credit: USPTO)
Previously known patents registered by Zee.Aero show a craft that matches this description, with a thin central fuselage and twin rows of propellors like outriggers. The patent, filed in 2012, says the aircraft is capable of vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) and is described as a "safe, quiet, easy to control, efficient and compact aircraft." Not quite a flying car, then, but certainly a vision of personal aviation.
The other startup Page has been investing in, Kitty Hawk, has reportedly been building its own craft "that resembles a giant version of a quadcopter drone," according toBloomberg's sources. The startup is smaller than Zee.Aero, and kept separate from its older rival. Some of its engineers come from AeroVelo — a firm that previously won the $250,000 Sikorsky Prize in 2013 for building a human-powered helicopter that can stay aloft for more than a minute (see the video below). And Kitty Hawk wouldn't be the first firm to design a quadcopter-inspired aircraft; similar concepts have been floated by Chinese firm Ehang and even built by lone engineers.

But as Bloomberg points out, the dream of flying cars has long been one that's dear to tech types, and so Page's involvement in these two companies is not that unusual. Numerous firms — such as Volocopter and Aeromobil — are developing aircraft built for personal use, although it should be noted that not all of these designs function as cars as well as planes. It's not clear, though, whether Page's involvement signals an increased seriousness in the personal aviation game, or whether this is just another billionaire looking for a fun new toy.

How to play Call of Duty 4 Modern Warfare using Gameranger ?

by Venusha - Founder, ICT Guru  |  in How to at  3:11:00 AM




Follow These Steps -



1. Install Call Of Duty Modern Warfare to your PC.

2.Download ‘Gameranger’ from site www.gameranger.com.

3.Create an account in Gameranger. (Tell to your friends too)

4.Then you will need two patches for the game. Patch 1.6 (282.61MB) and 1.7 (37.24MB)

5.Install the patches. (at first 1.6, then 1.7).

6. Log in to Gameranger and then join a server of Call of Duty4: Modern Warfare.

Now you are done. Enjoy. Leave a reply

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Run Android on an iPhone - with some heavy engineering and caveats

by Unknown  |  at  3:38:00 AM

Familiar with cramming one operating system into somewhere it doesn't belong, developers at Tendigi have just created a homemade iPhone case that lets you run Android on your iOS smartphone. (Well, kind of). Fortunately, because of the Android Open Source Project, it gave Nick Lee the freedom to clone the mobile OS and build his own local hardware. Before he went that far, Lee decided to test the concept -- streaming Android across to an iPhone through a cable -- with a Nexus 5. He needed tools that could communicate with iOS, as well as services that let USB cables play nice with an iPhone. Lee also crafted software that transmitted what was happening on the Android devices' screen to the iPhone, while also send touch-input back. The next challenge: cramming it all into an iPhone "case". See it working after the break.

He then made his own tiny Android development board (all the technical specifics are here), linking it to the soon-to-be franken-iPhone and its own power supply, prototyping and 3D-printing an enclosure to house it all and attach to the iPhone. It's not the prettiest case, and really you're 'streaming' Android to your iPhone screen, but it's the man-hours thought that counts, right?

Google tests a cleaner look for Search

by Unknown  |  in News at  3:34:00 AM
      Google has begun to test a new Material Design layout for its desktop search results. The company introduced Material Design in 2014 at its annual I/O conference during its Android Lollipop unveil, promising to spread the new grid-based look across Android, Chrome OS and the web. It's... taken a while to get there, and arguably the most important of Google's web properties -- YouTube and Search - still haven't made the switch. Last month, Google began testing a fresh look for its video streaming site, and now, we're beginning to see that familiar grid of floating cards show up in google.com search results.
The change isn't exactly monumental: Google Search has always returned results in a grid, so the basic layout is functionally identical to the current one. The biggest change is a visual one: the background in the test is a light gray, and individual search results are boxed in white with a small drop shadow to imply elevation.
Another major change is to the informative modules that Google shows for certain terms. Typing "Run The Jewels," for example, would bring up a list of search results accompanied by a card displaying information on the musicians and upcoming events on the right. In the new layout, this card is shown inline, before the regular search results. Given this is just a limited test, there's every chance this behavior will change if Google makes the Material Design layout the default.
Small changes elsewhere include new iconography for the magnifying glass in the search box, and switching out the settings cog for the three vertically aligned dots. Both the changes will be familiar to Android users. The google.com homepage has also been modified in line with the new aesthetic.
The test seems to have begun fairly recently, and on a small scale: There have been a few mentions of the new layout on Twitter and Reddit over the past week, and it's only showing up in one Engadget editor's search results. The company frequently trials new features and layouts on a small group of its users, seemingly at random. Many of the changes never make their way out of the testing phase. We've reached out to Google to ascertain its plans for the new design.

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Microsoft’s Planner project management app is now available to all Office 365 users

by Venusha - Founder, ICT Guru  |  in News at  4:30:00 AM

After launching a preview for select customers last September, Microsoft is now rolling out free access to Planner, its project management app, to all users of its Office 365 productivity suite. 
The tool lets you plan projects for your team, whether it’s for your business, school or non-profit organization. Once you’ve added collaborators, you can assign them tasks with due dates, share files and get a visual overview of everyone’s progress. 
The board-based interface is similar to apps like Trello and Asana, but the obvious advantage here is that it will instantly become available to the numerous companies and teams that have already adopted Microsoft’s popular Office 365 suite.
However, it’s still early days for Planner – unlike its rivals, it doesn’t have native mobile apps and you’ll instead have to log in to the service through your browser, and rely on email notifications to know when you’ve been assigned a new task.
Microsoft says it’s working on apps for Android, iOS and Windows, as well as features like reusable plan templates, an option to grant external users access to your boards and the ability to assign a task to multiple users.

IBM signs $300 million IT deal with Emirates Airline

by Venusha - Founder, ICT Guru  |  in News at  4:27:00 AM
ABU DHABI (Reuters) - IBM on Tuesday said it signed a $300 million, ten-year technology services agreement with Dubai’s Emirates Airline.
IBM will provide information technology services, allowing the airline to improve efficiency on its passenger support systems and functions, a statement from IBM said.
Under the managed services agreement, this will include assistance in encrypting the airline's data in near real-time and systems which allow different software components to communicate more effectively, the statement said.
In October 2015, IBM signed a $700 million deal with Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Airways for a range of IT services and infrastructure.
Emirates, the world’s fourth-largest carrier of international passengers reported a profit of $1.93 billion for the financial year to March 31, a jump of 56 percent over the year.

Samsung might launch smartphones with foldable screens next year

by Venusha - Founder, ICT Guru  |  in News at  4:26:00 AM

The company is said to be aiming to reveal two new devices next year, including one that folds in half a la flip-phones, as well as a 5-inch handset that unfurls into an 8-inch tablet. They might be similar to the concepts Samsung showed off in a video from 2014. 
However, those models aren’t likely to be flagships. Instead, they’ll serve to gauge the market’s interest in phones with foldable screens.
We’ve been hearing about this technology for some time now, and Samsung isn’t the only company experimenting with foldable screen tech. LG, Sony and Sharp have been at it as well.
But while the ability to bend and fold your screen sounds ultra-futuristic, I’m not sure it’s going to drastically change the mobile device market immediately.
Of course, it’ll help designers create devices that are easier to carry in your pocket or purse. But we’ve only been getting used to bigger handsets in the recent past. Barring the 4.7-inch iPhone SE, there are almost no new phones that come in at under 5 inches.
At the same time, we’ve come to expect more from our phones in terms of battery life, processing power and imaging capabilities. Since those attributes have only been improving incrementally over the past few years, it seems like reducing the overall size of a device to half may push manufacturers to compromise on specifications.
However, even if these two new devices only appeal to a small niche of the market when they launch next year, Samsung would benefit by learning firsthand about how people use bendable and foldable screens in the real world.
This technology might also aid in the development and adoption of modular phones.LG’s G5, shown off at Mobile World Congress in February, gave us a taste of what it might be like to switch out components on our phones. And Google is set to begin shipping its Project Ara modular devices to developers this fall.
Imagine being able to carry around a cube of smartphone components that plug into each other and then connecting it to a pocketable screen that unfurls to create a large mobile workspace. If modular phones take off, Samsung might be in a position to develop and deliver screens to other manufacturers.

Monday, June 6, 2016

Cortana is coming to the Xbox One this summer

by Unknown  |  at  6:25:00 AM
                                         "anniversary update" -- earlier this year. And now that the Xbox One is technically a Windows 10 machine, it'll be getting some new features as far of the fun. It's not near as radical an update as what we saw last year, but a handful of new features will make the console a bit more user-friendly.
       Microsoft announced the first big update to Windows 10 -- known as the
The most notable addition here is full Cortana integration. The Xbox One has been notorious for the voice commands Microsoft tried to push with the Kinect, but the company is promising a less strict, more fluid and conversational experience with Cortana. Now, to turn on your console, you'll say "Hey Cortana, Xbox On." All of those same Xbox commands that previously were supported will still work, but you'll need to say "hey Cortana" to get the assistant's attention first and then tell it what you want to do.
Probably more significant is how Cortana's intelligence comes into play when using voice commands. In a demo, I was able to say "hey Cortana, I wanna play Killer Instinct." The assistant was smart enough to look through my library of installed games, which contained several Killer Instinct titles, and then ask me which one I wanted. Saying "the first one" launched the first title in the list.
That's a definite improvement over the current system, which requires you to say the exact title to launch the appropriate game -- something that can get a little unwieldy. The system is also smart enough to parse conversational phrases like "I wanna." It's also smart enough to let you string multiple commands together into one phrase. You can say "hey Cortana, invite Terry to a party" and it'll both start the party and send the invite -- two distinct commands that it can parse as one.
Microsoft said that it was primarily focused on getting Cortana working with game-related functionality first and foremost, but some of its other features are included. If you have location settings turned on, you can ask it to show you nearby restaurants and get results from Bing, for example. And if you're logged in to the same Microsoft account you use for Cortana on other platforms, your history and Cortana notebook will all come along to the Xbox One.
Other improvements include a new navigation system to go through your game library. It's a lot simpler and cleaner than before, with a large scrolling grid showing everything in your library, whether it's installed on your console or not. From there, you can short by letter to quickly find a specific game. And there's also a new queue showing your most recent purchases. It's nothing revolutionary, but it's definitely a cleaner look at your library and what's installed than before.
The games store has also been cleaned up a bit -- it's easier to see what games are on sale, with a strikethrough on the old price and more bold text indicating when something has had a price drop. You'll also see more clearly what games have deals through the Xbox Live Gold and EA Access programs, as well.
Microsoft is also getting the console ready for Windows 10 universal apps. Right now, developers like Netflix need to write apps specifically for the Xbox One, but soon universal Windows apps will be supported on the console -- so you can write the app once and have it work across PC, Xbox and Windows Phone (for what that last one is worth).
Lastly, the Xbox Live app for Windows 10 computers has been updated to more closely link the PC and console together. If you're into recording gameplay footage and editing it, you can now import things you've recorded on your Xbox One to your Windows PC, edit it using whatever tools on your PC you choose, and then re-upload the new copy. The app also pulls in more of your Windows PC gaming activity into your social stream. If you're playing games on your PC from Steam or any other Windows-based gaming platform, your activity will show up for your friends. The idea was to give a more comprehensive view of you as a gamer and not keep things limited to just your Xbox activity.
Again, none of these changes on their own are revolutionary, but it's good to see Microsoft continue to polish the gaming experience for users, regardless of whether they're on a console or PC. If you want to check out the new Xbox software, a preview version rolls out this week, with a final version planned for later this summer. And Microsoft teased one more big update before the end of the year, but there's no word yet on what'll be included. 
Source - Flipboard

Google's Deepmind AI will play Go against the world number one

by Unknown  |  in News at  6:23:00 AM
After it beat Korean grandmaster Lee Sedol by four games to one earlier this year, Google's AlphaGo has become the Go player to beat. Even while the series was still being played, 18-year-old Chinese Go champion Ke Jie remarked that he could beat Google's Deepmind computer. Now he has his chance. At the 37th World Amateur Go Championship in Chinese city of Wuxi this weekend, a spokesman for the Chinese Go Association revealed that representatives have been in contact with the team behind AlphaGo and will set up a match before the end of the year.
It's an interesting turn of events, particularly after Ke once said he didn't want to play Google's Deepmind computer because it would learn his playing style. "I don't want to play against AlphaGo because I can tell from its performance that it is weaker than me," he told Chinese media. "I don't want it to copy my patterns and learn from me."
Those emotions changed when 33-year-old 9th dan professional Lee Sedol was finally defeated by AlphaGo. The win is considered a huge milestone for artificial intelligence given the complexity of the Chinese board game.
Although Ke is also a 9th dan player and currently the world's number one (beating Sedol on his way to a championship win earlier this year), the Korean is considered the Roger Federer of Go and was chosen for the Deepmind showdown based on his experience. Ke now has the chance to prove he's not all talk and cement his reputation as the game's best player.

#F8 in Iceland! - Fast and Furious Fan

by Unknown  |  at  4:23:00 AM

Make music by touching waveforms, sampling, in new Novation app

by Venusha - Founder, ICT Guru  |  in News at  4:11:00 AM
reating digital music is all about the business of mucking about with sounds. But somehow, the actual sounds themselves have been tangled up in immense grids and spreadsheets and mixers and things called piano rolls and so on.
Blocs Wave is the latest attempt to use mobile apps to get back to basics. Here, whether you’re on an iPhone in your hand or the enormous iPad Pro, the sounds are at the center. Touch your way through the waveforms to make music – whether using soundpacks or adding your own.
blocs_wave_both_green
There are two basic paths to getting your musical materials. First, there’s the soundware way. There are six Soundpacks, for a total of 300 loops, included the app. From there, you can add more across genres via a Store, updated weekly. (At launch, 12 are available, with more to come.) To keep all of this manageable, there are browser tools for finding what you need. (There’s even optimized downloads in case you’re on the go on your phone.)
If you’re not keen on using sounds someone else designed, the alternative is to add your own. Blocs Wave can both both import and export, and has Audiobus support for grabbing sounds from other apps.
That done, Blocs Wave lets you combine sounds via more touch, adjusting key and tempo. There’s a built in stretch engine so you can change tempo without re-pitching sounds, plus a keep-everything-in-key bit.
Blocs Wave is the kind of app you may see more of. It’s certainly simpler than what we’ve seen on desktop. Indeed, Blocs Wave looks like a single audio clip was grafted out of Ableton Live, was planted like a seed, and then sprouted its own app. That enormous grid of clips is gone (Novation’s own Launchpad app has treaded those waters), and now touching the waveform is really the whole app.
And adding in those Soundpacks to a simplified instrument, clearly this is another entry in the “you don’t need to know anything about music” or, alternatively, “you don’t need to be technically advanced” app category.

But here’s where the narrative changes. While those things are indeed beginner-friendly, this isn’t just an app for the unwashed punters. There’s low-latency loop recording. There’s hardware audio support, so you can record and monitor from external gear. Import and export works via Audiobus, AudioCopy, AudioShare, and Mail (so, sort of everything).
In other words, it’s not so much whether you’re advanced or beginner. Rethinking the app to make it simpler can prove useful to everyone – particularly when designing inexpensive tools that you use on the go. And that may be a necessary formula for success. Apps have to be sophisticated enough to win over enthusiasts – the people who care passionately about making music on, well, their phone, even when everyone else is satisfied with Tinder and Snapchat. But given those apps are trading for only a few bucks a pop, appsalso have to have broad appeal, or the business doesn’t work.
blocs_wave_iphone_blue
Novation seem to think that this is a formula that merits investment. They’ve even accompanied the launch with a behind-the-scenes video that looks at the Blocs team and their philosophy. As it happens, I visited this office last year, and found a passionate group of developer-musicians who really wanted to think about how music software should look from the ground up, and told me they were already seeing swaths of customers they hadn’t seen before.
You’ll see these lads also have the kind of complexion one gets when lit entirely by Apple displays and English winter weather. (Hey, I’m not doing a whole lot differently myself!)



Proudly Powered by Blogger.