by on September 3, 2010

I always think about that I can’t have any piece of art, but Aviary’s new Facebook app has turned my thought into wrong. The reason is now it’s possible for me to turn my Facebook photos into works of art and so quickly and easily.
The application lets you apply effects to any of your photos from Facebook albums and even get creative with photos of your friends. There are six different effects from which you can choose. Besides Oil Paint, you can also select Pop Art, Etch-a-Sketch, Warhol, Sketch and Lego. Each effect can be customized, changing the intensity via a slider, as well as altering the background colors and amount of brush strokes.
I should warn you that Aviary Effects seems a little unstable at the moment, and it may crash Firefox a few times when trying to apply an effect. Nevertheless it’s a fun way to breathe new life into all those profile pictures that have been there for years.
Allow Aviary to make effect on your photos.
by on September 3, 2010

Always we try to get some extra advantage in anything or anywhere. Using Gmail is not out of them. To provide an extra advantage to its user, Gmail has just lunched a new option that allows user to Sign In to multiple accounts.
So let’s know how it could be. If you have more than 1 Gmail account then you can use it. The steps are displayed bellow-
- Sign In to your 1st Gmail account.
- Click on “sign-in to another account”, right on top.
- Then again a sing-in page will appear.
- Now sign-in with your 2nd Gmail account.
- And it will open both of two accounts side by side.
For your kind information Google let you know that you may suffer from any trouble such as you may loose any sent mail/unread mail or something like this.
So go on and when all have done you will have fun.
by on September 1, 2010

Google has released a highly-requested Gmail feature for Linux users: video and voice chat.
Ubuntu and other Debian-based Linux distributions are supported, with RPM support coming soon. To try it out, download the required plugin at this link.
The release may be good news, but it leaves a sour taste for many Linux users, since it took Google nearly two years to release this feature for Linux. Yes, it’s nice to finally have the feature, but it won’t change the oft-heard notion that Linux is just an afterthought to Google.