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Reasons Why Google Allo is Better than WhatsApp; ?

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Google's most awaited messaging app Google Allo is now arrived. Here is the reason that, why it is better than previously most used messaging app WhatsApp.   Google Allo is not the first messaging app or service by Google. Before it the technical leader have also made Google Talk & Google hangout for instant messaging service. But this time it has came with the new service with the newer features, which will make you to use it. Also it may overcome the most used instant messaging or chat app WhatsApp. Google announced it in the first of  2016 for launching its new messaging & video chat app Allo & Duo from Google. Now both are released & both have better service than the other compared services. Now here is the 5 reason that why Google Allo is more better than WhatsApp; Incognito Chat Mode:   Security in instant messaging service is mandatory in current world. Both Allo & WhatsApp have end to end encryption. But Google introduced a new mode i

How o Get Job Easily In Google!

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It sounds bit  awkward , but Yes.. Google uses a secret web tool called  foo.bar  to recruit new employees based on what they search for online. If Google  sees that you're searching for specific programming terms, they may ask you to apply for a job. The company has created a mysterious page -  Google.com/Foobar  (try this link)- that you can only access if you get invited. How do you get invited? >> Apparently, by showing an interest and expertise in programming languages like Python through your Google search history. Three months ago, computer science graduate  Max Rosett  felt he wasn't ready to apply for a job at  Google  and lacked the confidence to apply for a full-time software role. But when he searched for "python lambda function list comprehension" he was automatically enrolled on  Google's secret hiring process  c alled   foo.bar , the system has been used by Google for at least a year and is triggered when a user enters certa

Comparison Between iOS 10 vs. Android Nougat: New Features & Tweaks

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While both operating systems aren’t scheduled to ship until later this year, Apple and Google now has issued betas of the next major upgrades to their smartphone OSes. It’s often been noted that as the operating systems have matured, both iOS and Android have “borrowed” key features from one another, with the end result being the two different OSes becoming more similar. But could either one become more distinct? Do the latest betas suggest one might come out on top (at least for this year)? That’s what we’re here to decide. Now let's take a look at all the major differences—if any—between iOS 10 and Android N. OS 10 vs. Android N: UI and notifications While it’s fair to say that iOS and Android have been moving towards missile ground as far as a design aesthetic goes, both iOS 10 and Android N sees them taking slightly different approaches to achieve the same design aesthetics as the other. For starts with Android N, notifications have now been redesigned. They are muc

Your Mobiles & Computers will not function good after year 2038

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Here is a huge bug found , which will occurs problem for computing devices & Smart Systems like Smart Mobile, Computer OS & Unix based 32-bit all the applications.  The  Year 2038 problem  is an issue for computing and data storage situations in which time values are stored or calculated as a  signed 32-bit integer , and this number is interpreted as the number of seconds since 00:00:00  UTC  on 1 January 1970 ("the  epoch ").  Such implementations cannot encode times after 03:14:07 UTC on 19 January 2038, a problem similar to but not entirely analogous to the " Y2K problem " (also known as the "Millennium Bug"), in which 2-digit values representing the number of years since 1900 could not encode the year 2000 or later. Most  32-bit   Unix-like  systems store and manipulate time in this " Unix time " format, so the year 2038 problem is sometimes referred to as the " Unix Millennium Bug " by association. Animation showing h

Facebook and Microsoft are building a giant technology under the sea

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Facebook and Microsoft team up to lay a massive internet cable across the Atlantic!! A 4,100-mile cable capable of 160 terabits per second.     T he companies deal with a tremendous amount of data every day, whether it's showing photos to Facebook's 1.6 billion users, or loading documents stored in Microsoft's cloud services. Instead of solely relying on telecom companies for bandwidth, they're taking matters into their own hands. Called MAREA, Spanish for "tide," the cable will offer speeds of up to 160 terabytes per second, making it the highest capacity cable running this route, according to the companies. It's not the first time consumer tech companies have branched out into infrastructure.  Google  has been busy building its Google Fiber business to bring broadband connections to U.S. cities.  Facebook    and Google are working on experimental tools like giant balloons and laser-equipped drones to bring internet to underserved locations.