computer and mobiles
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Sony introduces new VAIO Fit laptop, ultrabook updates...
SAN DIEGO – Sony today introduced the brand new VAIO® Fit laptop built with Sony’s innovative digital imaging, sound and display technologies. Alongside the new Fit laptops are enhancements to VAIO’s All-in-One Tap 20 and L Series PCs and Sony’s top-selling VAIO T Series 15 Ultrabook™ incorporating all around excellence in productivity and entertainment with rich touch experiences powered by Windows 8.
“We built the brand new VAIO Fit line from many of the same features as our amazingly thin and powerful ultra-premium models but at an entry-level price point,” said Pedro LaFargo, SVP, Sony VAIO & Networked Products Division. “Our entire new Fit lineup is optimized for Windows 8 and incorporates the best technology that only Sony can provide from our innovative digital imaging, sound and TV divisions. The new Fit family is providing students and professionals’ on-the-go with advanced performance and design.”
“We built the brand new VAIO Fit line from many of the same features as our amazingly thin and powerful ultra-premium models but at an entry-level price point,” said Pedro LaFargo, SVP, Sony VAIO & Networked Products Division. “Our entire new Fit lineup is optimized for Windows 8 and incorporates the best technology that only Sony can provide from our innovative digital imaging, sound and TV divisions. The new Fit family is providing students and professionals’ on-the-go with advanced performance and design.”
ms word tipssssss
Today i am share two little tricks that I use in Microsoft Word. The first is a great shortcut: Shift+F3.
If you would like the change the case (upper case or lower case) of a single letter, word, or group of words, you can use Shift+F3. If you place your cursor anywhere within a word and simultaneously press the Shift key and the F3 key, it will change between lower case, upper case for the first letter, and all caps. If you press Shift+F3 several times, it will toggle between these cases. If you highlight a single letter and press Shift+F3, it will toggle between lower case and upper case. If you highlight several words, it will toggle between all lower case, initial caps (upper case for the first letter of each word), and all caps. Unfortunately, the initial caps case capitalizes articles and prepositions. I wish Microsoft would change that to initial caps for all words except articles and prepositions, but I guess you can’t have it all. Another way to achieve the same thing is through the edit menu. The keyboard shortcut is Alt+O-E, which opens a dialog box. This method gives you one more option: sentence case, which capitalizes only the first word of each sentence. The Shift+F3 trick works in memoQ too. (Thank you to those great people over in Hungary!)
Shift+F3 is a good shortcut for when you’ve accidentally kept caps lock on or off unintentionally, or if you want to capitalize the first letter of each word, for example in a title. I also use it frequently when I decide to change my sentence structure and move words around. If you are editing in Track Changes mode, the new case will not be marked is a change if you use Shift+F3.
My second tip is useful for working with optical character recognition (OCR) software. I use ABBYY FineReader 11. I’m sure if I spent more time learning to use that software properly, I could get better results. One of the problems it creates for me is that it inserts optional hyphens (sometimes called soft hyphens) into words in unexpected and inexplicable (at least to me) places, which cause problems if I want to use my CAT tool or Lingvo, my favorite digital dictionary. I tried various find-and-replace techniques without success, before I finally found the solution.
In the find-and-replace dialog box (Ctrl+H) with your cursor in the “Find what:” field, click on the [More>>] button, and then on the [Special] button. In the drop-down list, select “Optional Hyphen” and leave the “Replace with:” field empty. Click the [Replace All] button, and all of those annoying hyphens will disappear. Thanks to my friend.
energy sustianavle machine
Overview: Our basic research goal is to observe and study the internal structure and composition of white dwarf stars, the remnants of a nuclear fusion furnace that once turned hydrogen into helium and energy, a process which still powers stars like the Sun. An unexpected circumstance allows us to probe their structure: some of these stars vibrate in a periodic manner that sends seismic waves deep through their interior and brings information to the surface. We see this manifested as complex periodic variations in their brightness, which we can study and analyze, much as seismologists study the inner structure of the earth using earthquakes. White dwarfs once supported steady nuclear fusion, and would again if hydrogen were injected into them. We essentially have a working fusion laboratory to study, one that we must understand in detail if we are ever to master this clean sustainable energy source and duplicate the process on this planet.
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