Website of the week: Palbee

by Support 17. November 2009 17:54
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Palbee is a free online service which allows you to set up easy video meetings with your friends and colleagues.

You can also use Palbee to record your own presentations and store them online.

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Internet | Website of the week

Free Week Training

by Support 2. November 2009 12:07
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Skills Way Center Announce for a Free Week Training From: 09/11/2009 to 15/11/2009 in the following courses:

  • MCSE
  • ASP.NET2.0
  • Adobe Photoshop
  • CorelDraw
  • CCNA
  • VB.NET
  • End User Computer Skills

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Advertisement | Tutorials & knowledge

What is the Web 2.0 term means?

by Support 28. September 2009 23:36
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Web 2.0 is the term given to describe a second generation of the World Wide Web that is focused on the ability for people to collaborate and share information online. Web 2.0 basically refers to the transition from static HTML Web pages to a more dynamic Web that is more organized and is based on serving Web applications to users. Other improved functionality of Web 2.0 includes open communication with an emphasis on Web-based communities of users, and more open sharing of information. Over time Web 2.0 has been used more as a marketing term than a computer-science-based term. Blogs, wikis, and Web services are all seen as components of Web 2.0.

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Definition

Microsoft Maren: A New Windows Arabic Transliteration Tool

by Support 24. August 2009 13:55
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Microsoft has gone on and launched a new application called ‘Maren‘, making its entrance into the Arabic transliteration space.

Microsoft Maren was developed to be a Windows extension that allows you to type Arabic in Roman characters (Romanized Arabic, Arabizi, Arabish or Franco-Arabic) and have it converted on the fly to Arabic script. Maren integrates seamlessly with Windows and works in most Windows applications and websites.

Users around the Arab world widely use romanized Arabic in instant messaging and on social networking sites, and Microsoft’s Maren is following in the footsteps of Yamli and Google’s Ta3reeb in offering these users the possibility to have whatever text they type converted into Arabic.

Up to this point Yamli has been the user favorite in the region, with a number of portals integrating their service, a Firefox toolbar extension that many people were glad to get and even an unofficial Yamli extension called Arabzi that exists for MSN Messenger. Yamli also uses its transliteration technology as a basis to enrich and provide better Arabic search online.

What Microsoft’s Maren offers as a plus is the possibility to integrate the transliteration technology into Windows, and use it everywhere, not just online through a browser; so basically users can use Maren while typing in a Word document or on Instant Messenger or any other Windows application.

The fact that the tool is installed on the user’s machine also means that the solution is available to the user even when he’s offline, and it could even be a bit faster than other solutions that have to send requests back to a server.

It should be really interesting to see how much user adoption Maren will get, but however that works out, this is quite a good effort from Microsoft.

Microsoft Maren was developed by the Cairo Microsoft Innovation Center (CMIC), a Microsoft group representing the company interest in applied research and development initiatives in the Middle East and Africa.

 

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Software | Tips and Tricks

Adding yamli’s keyboard to Gmail

by Support 15. August 2009 13:43
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I’m pretty sure it should be possible to write a user script which yamlifies the Gmail editor. This would be a second-best in my book to the unified version, but most Arabic typing types probably could care less about Indic scripts. So the next best thing until someone does that is to have a yamli widget in Gmail itself. This, it turns out, is within reach of even the laziest among us.

There are three simple steps:

More...

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Internet | Tips and Tricks

Website of the week: OnlineOCR

by Support 3. August 2009 08:17
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OnlineOCR.net is a web-based OCR (Optical Character Recognition) service that allows you to convert scanned paper documents (including multipage files), faxes, photographs or digital camera captured images into editable and searchable electronic documents including Adobe PDF, Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel, Rtf, Html and Txt.

Converted documents look exactly like the original - tables, columns, bullets and graphics.

With OnlineOCR.net users can process documents in 28 languages including English, Danish, Dutch, French, German, Greek, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish and others.

OnlineOCR.net also allows and supports: 

  • automatic image rotation
  • full-page deskew on images
  • creation black and white images from color and grayscale image file 
  • retain non-text color regions for reinsertion into the output document

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 Welcome!   This is Skills Way Center, A computer training center located in Mina, Tripoli, Lebanon.
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The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in anyway.

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