Tuesday, March 22, 2011

China blocking Gmail to suppress “Jasmine Revolution”: Google


According to Google, China is blocking Gmail with methods that it looks as if the problem lies with Google. For the last several weeks Chinese users have reported difficulty in visiting Gmail. According to users the service was either slow or inaccessible.
Google further added that they have no technical issue on their side and they have checked extensively. They said the government is doing this and it looks as if the problem is with Gmail.
The blocking of Gmail coincides with China's recent efforts to suppress any mention relating to the "Jasmine Revolution", which began as an online call urging the Chinese people to protest the government.
While China regularly blocks politically sensitive content, experts say government censors have further tightened their grip on the Web in the last few weeks. The word "Jasmine" and terms relating to the anti-government protests in the Middle East can no longer be searched for on the country's microblogs. China has also responded by arresting activists, harassing foreign journalists and deploying large police forces to prevent unrest.

Firefox eyes faster release, to get more features


According to a proposal posted this week, Mozilla will add more features in a series of versions and will make new versions faster of its browser like that of Google. The new pace will result in a new browser every 16 weeks that means new three browsers in a year and Firefox 5 and 6 in 2011.
An analyst of IDC, Al Hilwa said it is good to see Mozilla looking hard at streamlining their development to achieve faster release cycle.
The change Firefox users would immediately notice under the faster scheme is that new features will regularly appear in the browser, rather than waiting for months while work on the next edition is completed. "The goal of the process is to provide regular improvements to users without disrupting longer term work."
Mozilla's move would be a major departure for the open-source company. Firefox 4, for example, was in development for over a year, while Firefox 3.6 took about the same amount of time to complete
To replicate Chrome's rapid release schedule, said Sayre's planning document, Firefox will need to include a "silent update" feature that automatically delivers upgrades in the background, a practice Google uses for its browser. "This proposal also requires changes to our software update behavior to make them happen more automatically in the background and interrupt the user less often," said Sayre.
Nightingale, however, denied that silent updates was a requirement for the faster pace.
In August 2010, Mozilla had listed silent updates as one of the features that would make it into Firefox 4. But later, the company yanked the feature from the browser. In an interview Wednesday, Nightingale confirmed that silent updates didn't make it into the final of Firefox 4, and said developers are still working on the tool.
"We have a lot of patches [for silent update] under way," said Nightingale.
It's unclear how Mozilla will ship Firefox security updates if it pulls the trigger on the frequent-update plan, or how long the company will support earlier editions. Currently, Mozilla frequently delivers Firefox patches: In 2010, for instance, it shipped 13 security updates for Firefox 3.6, which launched in January of that year.
Nightingale said discussions are continuing about how best to serve up security fixes for Firefox in a faster-paced development process.

Facebook buying Snaptu: a mobile tool maker


According to IDG News Service Facebook is planning to buy a four year old startup named Snapto which develops mobile versions of web based applications for cheaper mobile phones.
According to a post on snapto blog acquisition will complete within few weeks. Facebook and Snapto together will enable more quick delivery of better mobile applications for phones with less processing capabilities than smartphones.
Earlier this year Snapto has released a mobile application for Facebook. The application called Facebook works on more than 2500 phone models.
Facebook has also developed its own mobile application for Apple's iPhone. There are also Facebook apps for T-Mobile's Sidekick and for smartphones from INQ, Palm, Nokia and High Tech Computer (HTC), which sells two Android smartphones with dedicated Facebook buttons.