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    #21

    Manau si tema skirta technologijoms Lietuvoje. Aisku, pasulio mokslo naujienos labai idomios, bet kazi ar reikia viska suplakti i viena tema

    Comment


      #22
      Parašė FM'as
      jus man paaiskinkite kuom ta Estija yra aukstu technologiju salis kazkaip nesuprantu? bent viena pavyzdi duokit aisku galit ir daugiau.
      Skype

      Comment


        #23

        Prie ko cia tas "Skype" ?

        Comment


          #24
          Parašė Rokas

          Prie ko cia tas "Skype" ?
          Skypas yra pusiau estiskas

          Comment


            #25
            Bet vistiek estams nuopelnus uz ji duoda.

            Comment


              #26
              Parašė Artas
              Skypas yra pusiau estiskas
              Tai, kad isradejas yra svedas...

              Comment


                #27
                Parašė Rokas

                Prie ko cia tas "Skype" ?
                Ready, headset, go… telephone chats are now free, says Jonathan Margolis

                It is quite probable that, at this moment, you
                have never heard of the brand Skype and nor
                have you formed any opinion one way or the
                other on the subject of VoIP. May I be the first
                to tell you that by this time next year you will
                almost certainly have views on both. VoIP
                stands for Voice Over Internet Protocol. It
                means using internet-connected PCs with a callcentre
                style headset to carry hifi quality
                telephone conversations for free – something
                that has been do-able for yonks, but practiced
                only by tech-head engineers.
                Skype is an ambitious new company
                hoping to bring VoIP to a non-expert market in
                co-operation with the headset manufacturer
                Plantronics.
                Plantronics recently insisted on subjecting a
                bunch of us technology reporters to the
                indecently luxurious reception at a five-star
                hotel in Saint Jean Cap Ferrat to introduce
                Skype to us. It is a deeply European outfit, in
                both the best and worst senses. Developed by a
                programming team in Estonia, invented by a
                Swede and a Dane, and headquartered in
                Luxembourg, with personnel in both London
                and Tallinn, Skype has quite possibly the most
                disastrous logo and website in history
                accompanied, appropriately, by a slogan so
                catastrophic that I don't believe it would even be
                allowed as an entry in the European Song
                Contest: "Skype is Free Internet Telephony that
                Just Works."
                Well, the reason we needed to go to Saint
                Jean Cap Ferrat, it appears, was to demonstrate
                that far from "just work", Skype, whose product
                is a free downloadable piece of software by the
                same name, really works rather well. That, at
                any rate, was the conclusion I drew from having
                a long and entirely uninteresting conversation –
                but gratis and of the highest audio quality –
                from France to somebody I didn't know in
                Swindon.
                At the time of writing, Skype can only be
                used to contact other Skype users, who
                apparently number over 6m people in 70
                countries, but even if that number exists, you
                can be sure that you don't know any of them.
                When you read this, however, you will be
                able to use the "SkypeOut" feature of the
                software, which will make it possible to call
                internet-connected landlines and mobile
                phones worldwide for anything between
                nothing and fractions of a penny a minute.
                Now, the prospect of effectively free
                worldwide voice communication is, I have to
                say, one that slightly gives me the heebiejeebies.
                A little 1950s bit of me thinks the
                proper place for the telephonic instrument is
                in a freezing hallway and that all
                conversations thereon should be kept to a
                strict, wartime minimum. I also have an
                ageist prejudice that the young talk far too
                much these days.
                Skype also offers a plethora of other
                potential nasties, to my mind. One is that you
                are able to conference up to five callers in one
                Skype conversation. When I translate that to
                my house, it means my teenage daughter and
                four of her friends (who range from Surbiton
                to LA to Cyprus) yakking all night when they
                really should be doing their homework.
                On the other hand, were I a company
                financial director, I would be getting very
                excited indeed about Skype. We were told in
                Cap Ferrat about one engineering firm based
                in the Midlands which used VoIP to keep a
                24-hour open line to its factory in Taiwan,
                thereby saving thousands of pounds in
                telephone costs, while increasing efficiency.
                Other corporations are, apparently, using
                VoIP routinely and saving up to 90 per cent
                on their telephone bills.
                No wonder then, perhaps, that the
                chairman of the US Federal Communications
                Commission has been quoted as saying: "I
                knew it was over when I downloaded Skype.
                When the inventors are distributing for free a
                little program you can use to talk to anybody
                else, and the quality is fantastic, and it's free –
                it's over. The world will change now,
                inevitably."
                Adapted from the Financial Times

                Comment


                  #28
                  Nieko, pas mus DJ Tiesto apartamentus nusipirko

                  Comment


                    #29
                    Parašė Rokas
                    Nieko, pas mus DJ Tiesto apartamentus nusipirko
                    "Technologijos Lietuvoje"...

                    Comment


                      #30
                      Vienas geriausių Techno muzikos DJ'u

                      Comment


                        #31
                        Parašė kaunaz
                        Ready, headset, go… telephone chats are now free, says Jonathan Margolis

                        It is quite probable that, at this moment, you
                        have never heard of the brand Skype and nor
                        have you formed any opinion one way or the
                        other on the subject of VoIP. May I be the first
                        to tell you that by this time next year you will
                        almost certainly have views on both. VoIP
                        stands for Voice Over Internet Protocol. It
                        means using internet-connected PCs with a callcentre
                        style headset to carry hifi quality
                        telephone conversations for free – something
                        that has been do-able for yonks, but practiced
                        only by tech-head engineers.
                        Skype is an ambitious new company
                        hoping to bring VoIP to a non-expert market in
                        co-operation with the headset manufacturer
                        Plantronics.
                        Plantronics recently insisted on subjecting a
                        bunch of us technology reporters to the
                        indecently luxurious reception at a five-star
                        hotel in Saint Jean Cap Ferrat to introduce
                        Skype to us. It is a deeply European outfit, in
                        both the best and worst senses. Developed by a
                        programming team in Estonia, invented by a
                        Swede and a Dane, and headquartered in
                        Luxembourg, with personnel in both London
                        and Tallinn, Skype has quite possibly the most
                        disastrous logo and website in history
                        accompanied, appropriately, by a slogan so
                        catastrophic that I don't believe it would even be
                        allowed as an entry in the European Song
                        Contest: "Skype is Free Internet Telephony that
                        Just Works."
                        Well, the reason we needed to go to Saint
                        Jean Cap Ferrat, it appears, was to demonstrate
                        that far from "just work", Skype, whose product
                        is a free downloadable piece of software by the
                        same name, really works rather well. That, at
                        any rate, was the conclusion I drew from having
                        a long and entirely uninteresting conversation –
                        but gratis and of the highest audio quality –
                        from France to somebody I didn't know in
                        Swindon.
                        At the time of writing, Skype can only be
                        used to contact other Skype users, who
                        apparently number over 6m people in 70
                        countries, but even if that number exists, you
                        can be sure that you don't know any of them.
                        When you read this, however, you will be
                        able to use the "SkypeOut" feature of the
                        software, which will make it possible to call
                        internet-connected landlines and mobile
                        phones worldwide for anything between
                        nothing and fractions of a penny a minute.
                        Now, the prospect of effectively free
                        worldwide voice communication is, I have to
                        say, one that slightly gives me the heebiejeebies.
                        A little 1950s bit of me thinks the
                        proper place for the telephonic instrument is
                        in a freezing hallway and that all
                        conversations thereon should be kept to a
                        strict, wartime minimum. I also have an
                        ageist prejudice that the young talk far too
                        much these days.
                        Skype also offers a plethora of other
                        potential nasties, to my mind. One is that you
                        are able to conference up to five callers in one
                        Skype conversation. When I translate that to
                        my house, it means my teenage daughter and
                        four of her friends (who range from Surbiton
                        to LA to Cyprus) yakking all night when they
                        really should be doing their homework.
                        On the other hand, were I a company
                        financial director, I would be getting very
                        excited indeed about Skype. We were told in
                        Cap Ferrat about one engineering firm based
                        in the Midlands which used VoIP to keep a
                        24-hour open line to its factory in Taiwan,
                        thereby saving thousands of pounds in
                        telephone costs, while increasing efficiency.
                        Other corporations are, apparently, using
                        VoIP routinely and saving up to 90 per cent
                        on their telephone bills.
                        No wonder then, perhaps, that the
                        chairman of the US Federal Communications
                        Commission has been quoted as saying: "I
                        knew it was over when I downloaded Skype.
                        When the inventors are distributing for free a
                        little program you can use to talk to anybody
                        else, and the quality is fantastic, and it's free –
                        it's over. The world will change now,
                        inevitably."
                        Adapted from the Financial Times
                        Tiek, kad Estijoje suprogramuotas Jei tie danas ir švedas būtų pasirinkęs Lietuvą, jis būtų suprogramuotas Lietuvoje ir kas čia tokio?
                        Mano galerija Flickr'yje

                        Comment


                          #32

                          Aš ir nesuprantu...

                          Comment


                            #33
                            Parašė Mantaz
                            Tiek, kad Estijoje suprogramuotas Jei tie danas ir švedas būtų pasirinkęs Lietuvą, jis būtų suprogramuotas Lietuvoje ir kas čia tokio?
                            Jiems arciau Estija ir viskas !

                            Comment


                              #34
                              Arba tiesiog - pigiau!

                              Be to, o Jūms mažai mūsų "Saulėtekio" technologijų?
                              Ar BIO.

                              Comment


                                #35
                                Reklama

                                Sveiki.Čia gal nelabai i tema,bet visgi kažkiek asocijuojasi su technologijomis.Klaipėdoje yra kuriamas naujas radijas "Kissfm Lietuva" kol kas transliacija prasidės tik internetu vėliau jei išpopulerės bus transliuojama ir per fm.Radijas įsikurs Klaipėdos Laivininkų mokykloje ir taps mokyklos radijumi,kuom lietuvoje mokyklos radijų trūksta.Jau yra gautas mokyklos pavaduotojo sutikimas dar reikia gauti direktoriaus sutikimą.Beje ta radija kuriu AŠ.

                                Comment


                                  #36
                                  Parašė FM'as
                                  Sveiki.Čia gal nelabai i tema,bet visgi kažkiek asocijuojasi su technologijomis.Klaipėdoje yra kuriamas naujas radijas "Kissfm Lietuva" kol kas transliacija prasidės tik internetu vėliau jei išpopulerės bus transliuojama ir per fm.Radijas įsikurs Klaipėdos Laivininkų mokykloje ir taps mokyklos radijumi,kuom lietuvoje mokyklos radijų trūksta.Jau yra gautas mokyklos pavaduotojo sutikimas dar reikia gauti direktoriaus sutikimą.Beje ta radija kuriu AŠ.
                                  Paskutinis sakinys taip pasakytas, lyg cia tik tarp kitko...

                                  Comment


                                    #37
                                    na aš ant prikolo norėjau parašyt taip.Aš mokausi toje mokykloje ir man mintis kilos šį radija kurti.Ji transliuos tik Šokių muzika jokio pop ir kitų stiliu nebent koki dar transliuos 80 metų dance muzika.

                                    Comment


                                      #38
                                      Parašė kaunaz
                                      Ready, headset, go… telephone chats are now free, says Jonathan Margolis
                                      ...
                                      Heh... pernykščiams abiturientams pažįstamas tekstas

                                      Comment


                                        #39
                                        Parašė Vaidas
                                        Heh... pernykščiams abiturientams pažįstamas tekstas
                                        Ir besiruošiantiems šiųmetiniams.

                                        Comment


                                          #40
                                          Parašė FM'as
                                          na aš ant prikolo norėjau parašyt taip.Aš mokausi toje mokykloje ir man mintis kilos šį radija kurti.Ji transliuos tik Šokių muzika jokio pop ir kitų stiliu nebent koki dar transliuos 80 metų dance muzika.
                                          Pas mus mokykloj buvo kelis kart tokius dalykus padare. Po savaite valytojos ir mokytojai pradejo skustis, kad skauda galva ir t.t. Labai greitai tas kontoras uzdare.

                                          Comment

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