2011年6月2日 星期四

Tire Rack Coupons & Free Shipping Codes

When you need a new set of tires or want to upgrade your wheels, check for Tire Rack Coupons for the best discount offers. On that page you’ll find current and up-to-date listings of Tire Rack coupon codes, free shipping specials, referral numbers, and other promotional deals.
Tire Rack Wheels
At GeekAlerts, we spend a lot more time on computer gadgets and electronics compared to automotive products. However, as a site that celebrates cool designs, there is no denying that TireRack.com has a great selection of incredible wheel designs. Upgrading to custom wheels is a great way to personalize your car, and with TireRack.com coupon codes and free shipping promotions, they are available for really low prices.
Tire Rack Wheels
Shopping for tires and wheels is easy. If you know the size, simply shop by the size of your wheels. Otherwise, just enter your make, model, and year of vehicle, and the website will take care of everything. You can also browse by wheel brands, to see all the cool styles from the best companies in custom wheels.
Tire Rack Wheels
While tires and wheels are their main focus, TireRack also sells many other products including brake, suspension, lighting, and engine tuning products. They also sell many automotive accessories such as batteries, car care products, tools, tire pressure monitoring systems, windshield wipers, and more.

Old Navy Coupons & Discount Promotion Codes

At GeekAlerts you can now browse the currently available OldNavy.com Coupons and sales promotions for discount clothing deals. Geeks love comfortable clothing, and when it is also fashionable and inexpensive, that is just icing on the cake. So check for the latest Old Navy coupon codes for savings on t-shirts, jeans, hoodies, jackets, swimsuits, polos, pants, sweatshirts, activewear, sweaters, underwear, and other clothing.
You don’t have to know a lot about fashion to look good, just shop at a place that has trendy styles. You also don’t have to know a lot about savings, just check out our listings of Old Navy coupons to see what deals are available. Free shipping, dollars off, percentage off, clearance sales, special deals, promo codes, and more are available for the taking.
Really, there is no reason to make clothes shopping complicated. Who wants that? You can just shop at OldNavy.com where they have a large selection of different jeans, shirts, shorts, outerwear, and accessories so you can be comfortable and look good while going to class, going to work, or just hanging out. With our continually updated listings of Old Navy coupon codes and promotions, you are almost assured a great deal.

Flexible Blue LED Strip

Flexible Blue LED Strips
The possibilities are endless; parties, balconies, computer room, office, bedroom, you name it.  Light them all up!  Think of all the times you had to pull out the messy old Christmas lights from that box in the garage.  Well no more, with the Flexible Blue LED Strip you can keep these lights neatly rolled up and ready for use anytime.  Plus since these are LED, they are a green technology and save energy.  Keep them up all the time.  Did I mention they are waterproof and the package contains a 7M LED strip with a bag and EU power adapter 110-240V with cable.
Flexible Blue LED Strip
At A Glance:
  • Super bright blue LED strip
  • Water, UV and dustproof
  • Low energy consuming
  • Very easy installation
  • Provided with an adhesive tape
  • 7 meters long
Flexible Blue LED Strip
Manufacturer Specifications
  • Function: blue LED strip
  • LED: Color: blue, Type: SMD 3528, Quantity: 420, Spacing: 16.6mm
  • Life: +50,000 hours
  • Power consumption: 33.6W (4.8W/m)
  • Working voltage: DC12V
  • Tube: UV protected transparent shell
  • Waterproof: IP 65 rating
  • Temperature rating: -10 to 60 degrees
  • Power adapter: EU 110-240V
  • Dimensions:Length: 7m, Width: 10mm,  Thickness: 4mm
The Flexible Blue LED can be purchased from chinavasion.com for $37.30 and they get cheaper if you purchase them in bulk.  Create you own Blue LED utopia by adding the Tokyoflash Blue LED Mesh Clock.

2011年4月2日 星期六

USB Jewel Butterfly Flash Drive

Here comes another USB gadget, from the guys over at HKColordigital, the USB Jewel Butterfly Flash Drive.
The USB Jewel Butterfly Flash Drive com,es with 8GB of storage, and measures 20 x 30 x 8mm and weighs just 8g.
http://www.hkcolordigital.com/images/detailed/1/hkcolordigital.com_bling_bling_gold_butterfly_flash_drive.jpg
http://www.hkcolordigital.com/images/detailed/1/hkcolordigital.com_bling_bling_butterfly_usb_drive.jpg
http://www.hkcolordigital.com/images/detailed/1/hkcolordigital.com_butterfly_usb.jpg



Here are the specifications.
  • USB 2.0
  • Portable and easy operation
  • Stylish and useful
  • Plug and play
  • Support Windows XP/Vista, Linux 2.4, MAC OSX or latest version
  • Dimension: 20 x 30 x 8mm (approx.)
  • Weight: 6g
The USB Jewel Butterfly Flash Drive is available for $32 from HKColordigital

The Elektra One electric airplane

The Elektra One electric airplane

by Mark R - on March 30, 2011
Considering the big move of getting all of our cars to be electric, I guess it was only a matter of time before our planes went electric too.
NASA has recently sponsored a CAFE Green Flight Challenge, and this Elektra One is the PC-Aero entry. The plane is a single-seater aircraft, and it completed its main flight of 500 meters high and then quickly landing, all on batteries. On its second flight, the Elektra One stayed in the air for about half and hour.
Yeah, that doesn’t seem long in today’s world of flying, and 3 hours of flight time for a speed of 160 kph doesn’t seem that long either. Aren’t we saying that about electric-powered vehicles a few years ago?
Continue reading » The Elektra One electric airplane

Popcornflix.com – 1000‘s of Free Movies Online

Popcornflix.com – 1000‘s of Free Movies Online

by Julie - on March 28, 2011

Popcornflix.com launched a few days ago and I already had a chance to check it out. Popcornflix is a new online digital platform that allows movie lovers to watch ton of fun movies for free online, anywhere in the U.S. The service will expand internationally in the coming months, and eventually almost everywhere movie viewing platforms are available, including web-enabled TVs, DVD players and set-top boxes.
Popcornflix.com made it easy to browse and select from hundreds of movies, including Comedy, Family, Drama, Horror, Spanish-language films, documentaries and more, all with a pretty easy user interface. Movie lovers can choose a movie by type, the name of an actor or director or simply by selecting a title from the latest in new arrivals, or you can search for all the films featuring your favorite star, but best of all, Popcornflix allows users to share films with friends and family by posting a link instantly to their Facebook or Twitter account. Cool. Continue reading » Popcornflix.com – 1000‘s of Free Movies Online

Navteq to use their maps in select Panasonic Lumix cameras

Navteq to use their maps in select Panasonic Lumix cameras

by Edwin - on March 31, 2011


Navteq is definitely a name that many of you have heard of before if you’re familiar with GPS navigation devices, as the company does offer its fair share of maps that ain’t too shabby to say the least. Well, the world of consumer electronics does seem to move towards another level of convergence with digital cameras, too, entering the GPS fray.
Of course, we already have geotagging going on for some time, but the newest Panasonic LUMIX DMC-TZ20/ZS10 and DMC-FT3/TS3 digital cameras will benefit from Navteq’s map and location content.
The cameras mentioned are the latest members of Panasonic’s acclaimed Lumix Series of digital cameras, where with the help of Navteq, you can geographically organize your photos in an effortless manner, letting you determine the exact location of where the photo was taken and when. Apart from that, there is also a timestamp feature that lets you determine the precise date and time a photo was taken.
Continue reading » Navteq to use their maps in select Panasonic Lumix cameras

Guzzini Espresso Coffee Machine

Guzzini Espresso Coffee Machine

by Edwin - on March 31, 2011


There is nothing quite like waking up early in the morning to a nice, steaming hot cup of coffee. Of course, it takes a seasoned hand to know how to make a good cuppa, but then again a good machine would also probably do its part in the process. The Guzzini Espresso Coffee Machine that will come in both red and white color choices is now available for pre-order, and it isn’t an April Fool’s joke when it ships on April 1st for £134.99 each.
Experience an eye-opening dose of a perfectly brewed cup of coffee in the morning with the Guzzini Espresso Coffee Machine, where it is not only simple to use, it is also small and extremely tasteful in design. Capable of accommodating freshly ground coffee and ESE pods, the Guzzini would be comfortable residing in just about any kitchen, regardless of whether it is an apartment or a huge landed piece of property.

Hasbro My3DNow comes to the iPhone

Hasbro My3DNow comes to the iPhone

by Mark R - on April 1st, 2011
If you grew up in the seventies, you might remember a toy known as a Viewmaster.
If you don’t remember it, it sort of looked like this My3DNow that you see here, except instead of sticking an iPhone in front of the binocular viewer, you stuck this circular reel, and you could see still images in 3D.
I guess since many people are demanding 3D for their movies and home content, it was only a matter of time before someone perfected it for the iPhone. If nothing else, this should tide you over until the iPhone does get a glasses-free 3D screen. (I’m sure that will happen eventually if these glasses-free 3D mobile phone screens make it big.)
The plan for the My3DNow is to get programs with 3D content on the iPhone, and then view it with these along with headphones. I wonder how Avatar will look on these, but it will probably not be as good as the theater.
If you want to get the My3DNow from Hasbro, then you should be able to get to Target on April 3rd for a price of about $35. If you want, you can get more information and even possibly pre-order it at My3DNow.com.

2011年3月19日 星期六

T-Mobile Releases Hands On Sidekick 4G Video

T-Mobile announced the new Sidekick 4G Android smartphone earlier this week, and now they have released a hands on video which shows us some of the features as well as the user interface on the new T-Mobile Sidekick 4G.
As a reminder of the specifications, the T-Mobile Sidekick 4G is made by Samsung and it comes with Google’s Android OS, and features a 3.5 inc Super AMOLED display plus a slide out QWERTY keyboard, have a look at the video of it in action below.
T-Mobile Sidekick 4G
Other specifications on the Sidekick 4G include a custom TouchWiz user interface, and it will come with Android 2.2 Froyo, there is also a front facing VGA camera for video calls and a three megapixel camera on the back.

New Google Chrome Logo

Following on from the new logo design for Google Chromium, Google has now released a new logo design for its Chrome browser which follows in the same flattened style of the Chromium one.
The new Chrome logo is currently only available within the Developer channel and was released in the Chrome 11.0.696.12 version released yesterday. As with the Chromium logo the new Chrome logo is expected to roll out across other stable versions in the future.

New Chrome Logo

Comparing the new with the old logos pictured below, you can see how the new designs have lost their 3D appearance and are now a more stylised, cleaner, flattened version of the original. The images above and below, show the Google Chromium logo on the left and the Chrome logo on the right.
What do you think? Is it an improvement or did you prefer the 3D look?
Old Chrome Logos
 
 
 
 
 
rated 3.13 by 8 people | comment [?]

NGP Digital & Physical Games To Be Released Day & Date

Sony’s definitely one to work harder at succeeding where they previously failed, the NGP itself is proof of that. And they’ve hardly had a more stinging or recent failure than the PSP Go. You may remember it as that digital-only console Sony made and then released UMD-only games for usb flash drive.

“One thing we learnt from PSP, is that we want to have simultaneous delivery in digital and physical for NGP,” SCEE president Andrew House explained. “Just to clarify that, all games that appear physically will be made available digitally.” That’s nice and all, but a word of advice, Sony.
My platform strategy experience is shall we say limited, but it would be neat if people who buy a physical copy of the game would get the digital copy for free. Just something to mull over while you go through George Hotz’s underwear drawer or whatever it is you do for fun these days.

Nintendo 3DS Is The Most Pre-ordered Console On Amazon UK

The Nintendo 3DS is scheduled to go on sale in the UK next week, on Friday March the 25th, and it has been available to pre-order on Amazon and a number of other retailers.
Amazon UK has released some details on the amount of pre-orders for the Nintendo 3DS, and whilst they don’t quote any specific unit sales, they have revealed that the Nintendo 3DS has now taken the title of the most pre-ordered console.
Nintendo 3DS
According to Amazon, the previous record was held by Sony’s PlayStation 3, and they have now received 20 percent more pre-orders for the Nintendo 3DS.
“It’s unusual for a handheld console to attract this amount of excitement in the run up to launch, such high levels of interest are normally reserved for the play-at-home hardware like the ground-breaking Nintendo Wii and last year’s Microsoft Kinect,” said Amazon UK’s usb director of video games, Chris Poad.
It will be interesting to see how populat the Nintendo 3DS becomes, it could end up becoming the most popular handheld games console if sales figures keep up with the pre-order figures.

2011年3月6日 星期日

completely enclose the card, offering durability and portability approaching, if not quite equal to, that of a flash drive. Although the combined cost of a mini-reader and a memory card is usually slightly higher than a USB flash drive of comparable capacity, the reader + card solution offers additional flexibility of use, and virtually "unlimited" capacity.
An additional advantage of memory cards is that many consumer devices (e.g. digital cameras, portable music players) cannot make use of USB flash drives (even if the device has a USB port) whereas the memory cards used by the devices can be read by PCs with a card reader.

[edit] External hard disk

Particularly with the advent of USB, external hard disks have become widely available and inexpensive. External hard disk drives currently cost less per gigabyte than flash drives and are available in larger capacities. Some hard drives support alternative and faster interfaces than USB 2.0 (e.g. IEEE 1394 and eSATA). For writes and consecutive sector reads (for example, from an unfragmented file) most hard drives can provide a much higher sustained data rate than current NAND flash memory.
Unlike solid-state memory, hard drives are susceptible to damage by shock, e.g., a short fall, vibration, have limitations on use at high altitude, and although they are shielded by their casings, they are vulnerable when exposed to strong magnetic fields. In terms of overall mass, hard drives are usually larger and heavier than flash drives; however, hard disks sometimes weigh less per unit of storage. Hard disks also suffer from file fragmentation which can reduce access speed.

[edit] Obsolete devices

Audio tape cassettes and high-capacity floppy disks (e.g. Imation SuperDisk), and other forms of drives with removable magnetic media such as the Iomega Zip and Jaz drives are now largely obsolete and rarely used. There are products in today's market which will emulate these legacy drives for both tape & disk (SCSI1/SCSI2, SASI, Magneto optic, Ricoh ZIP, Jaz, IBM3590/ Fujitsu 3490E and Bernoulli for example) in state of the art Compact Flash storage devices - CF2SCSI.

[edit] Encryption

As highly portable media, USB flash drives are easily lost or stolen. All USB flash drives can have their contents encrypted using third party disk encryption software or programs which can use encrypted archives such as ZIP and RAR. Some of these programs can be used without installation. The executable files can be stored on the USB drive, together with the encrypted file image. The encrypted partition can then be accessed on any computer running the correct operating system, although it may require the user to have administrative rights on the host computer to access data. Some vendors have produced USB flash drives which use hardware based encryption as part of the design, thus removing the need for third-party encryption software.
Other flash drives allow the user to configure secure and public partitions of different sizes, and offer hardware encryption.
Newer flash drives support biometric fingerprinting to confirm the user's identity. As of mid-2005[dated info], this was a costly alternative to standard password protection offered on many new USB flash storage devices. Most fingerprint scanning drives rely upon the host operating system to validate the fingerprint via a software driver, often restricting the drive to Microsoft Windows computers. However, there are USB drives with fingerprint scanners which use controllers that allow access to protected data without any authentication.[43]
Some manufacturers deploy physical authentication tokens in the form of a flash drive. These are used to control access to a sensitive system by containing encryption keys or, more commonly, communicating with security software on the target machine. The system is designed so the target machine will not operate except when the flash drive device is plugged into it. Some of these "PC lock" devices also function as normal flash drives when plugged into other machines.

[edit] Security threats

Flash drives may present a significant security challenge for some organizations. Their small size and ease of use allows unsupervised visitors or employees to store and smuggle out confidential data with little chance of detection. Both corporate and public computers are vulnerable to attackers connecting a flash drive to a free USB port and using malicious software such as keyboard loggers or packet sniffers.
For computers set up to be bootable from a USB drive it is possible to use a flash drive containing a bootable portable operating system to access the files of a computer even if the computer is password protected. The password can then be changed; or it may be possible to crack the password with a password cracking program, and gain full control over the computer. Encrypting files provides considerable protection against this type of attack.
USB flash drives may also be used deliberately or unwittingly to transfer malware and autorun worms onto a network.
Some organizations forbid the use of flash drives, and some computers are configured to disable the mounting of USB mass storage devices by users other than administrators; others use third-party software to control USB usage. The use of software allows the administrator to not only provide a USB lock but also control the use of CD-RW, SD cards and other memory devices. This enables companies with policies forbidding the use of USB flash drives in the workplace to enforce these policies. In a lower-tech security solution, some organizations disconnect USB ports inside the computer or fill the USB sockets with epoxy.

[edit] Naming

By August 2008, "USB flash drive" had emerged as a common term for these devices, and most major manufacturers [44] use similar wording on their packaging, although potentially confusing alternatives (such as Memory Stick or USB memory key or 'Pen drive') still occur.
The myriad different brand names and terminology used, in the past and currently, make USB flash drives more difficult for manufacturers to market and for consumers to research. Some commonly-used names actually represent trademarks of particular companies, such as Cruzer, DataTraveler, TravelDrive, ThumbDrive, and Disgo.

[edit] Current and future developments

Semiconductor corporations have worked to reduce the cost of the components in a flash drive by integrating various flash drive functions in a single chip, thereby reducing the part-count and overall package-cost.
Flash drive capacities on the market increase continually. As of 2010, few manufacturers cont
  • This is simple for the end-user, and more likely to be done;
  • The drive is small and convenient, and more likely to be carried off-site for safety;
  • The drives are less fragile mechanically and magnetically than tapes;
  • The capacity is often large enough for several backup images of critical data;
  • And flash drives are cheaper than many other backup systems.
It is also easy to lose these small devices, and easy for people without a right to data to take illicit backups.

[edit] Advantages and disadvantages

[edit] Advantages

Data stored on flash drives is impervious to scratches and dust, and flash drives are mechanically very robust making them suitable for transporting data from place to place and keeping it readily at hand. Most personal computers support USB as of 2010.
Flash drives also store data densely compared to many removable media. In mid-2009, 256 GB drives became available, with the ability to hold many times more data than a DVD or even a Blu-ray disc.
Compared to hard drives, flash drives use little power, have no fragile moving parts, and for most capacities are small and light.
Flash drives implement the USB mass storage device class so that most modern operating systems can read and write to them without installing device drivers. The flash drives present a simple block-structured logical unit to the host operating system, hiding the individual complex implementation details of the various underlying flash memory devices. The operating system can use any file system or block addressing scheme. Some computers can boot up from flash drives.
Specially manufactured flash drives are available that have a tough rubber or metal casing designed to be waterproof and virtually "unbreakable". These flash drives retain their memory even after being submerged in water,[33] even through a machine wash. Leaving such a flash drive out to dry completely before allowing current to run through it has been known to result in a working drive with no future problems. Channel Five's Gadget Show cooked one of these flash drives with propane, froze it with dry ice, submerged it in various acidic liquids, ran over it with a jeep and fired it against a wall with a mortar. A company specializing in recovering lost data from computer drives managed to recover all the data on the drive.[34] All data on the other removable storage devices tested, using optical or magnetic technologies, were destroyed.

[edit] Disadvantages

Like all flash memory devices, flash drives can sustain only a limited number of write and erase cycles before the drive fails.[35][36] This should be a consideration when using a flash drive to run application software or an operating system. To address this, as well as space limitations, some developers have produced special versions of operating systems (such as Linux in Live USB)[37] or commonplace applications (such as Mozilla Firefox) designed to run from flash drives. These are typically optimized for size and configured to place temporary or intermediate files in the computer's main RAM rather than store them temporarily on the flash drive.
Most USB flash drives do not include a write-protect mechanism, although some have a switch on the housing of the drive itself to keep the host computer from writing or modifying data on the drive. Write-protection makes a device suitable for repairing virus-contaminated host computers without risk of infecting the USB flash drive itself.
A drawback to the small size is that they are easily misplaced, left behind, or otherwise lost. This is a particular problem if the data they contain are sensitive (see data security). As a consequence, some manufacturers have added encryption hardware to their drives—although software encryption systems which can be used in conjunction with any mass storage medium achieve the same thing,[citation needed]. Most drives can be attached to keychains, necklaces and lanyards. The USB plug is usually fitted with a removable and easily lost protective cap, or is retractable.
USB flash drives are more expensive per unit of storage than large hard drives, but are less expensive in capacities of a few tens of gigabytes as of 2011[38][39]. Maximum available capacity is increasing with time, but is less than larger hard drives. This balance is changing, but the rate of change is slowing.

[edit] Comparison with other portable storage

[edit] Tape

The applications of current data tape cartridges hardly overlap those of flash drives: on tape, cost per gigabyte is very low for large volumes, but the individual drives and media are expensive. Media has a very high capacity and very fast transfer speeds, but store data sequentially and is very slow for random seek of data. While disk-based backup is now the primary medium of choice for most companies, tape backup is still popular for taking data off-site for worst-case scenarios and for very large volumes (more than a few hundreds of TB). See LTO tapes.

[edit] Floppy disk

Size comparison of a flash drive and a 3.5-inch floppy disk
Floppy disk drives are rarely fitted to modern computers and are obsolete for normal purposes, although internal and external drives can be fitted if required. Floppy disks may be the method o
Method for node ranking in a linked database

Abstract
A method assigns importance ranks to nodes in a linked database, such as any database of documents containing citations, the world wide web or any other hypermedia database. The rank assigned to a document is calculated from the ranks of documents citing it. In addition, the rank of a document is calculated from a constant representing the probability that a browser through the database will randomly jump to the document. The method is particularly useful in enhancing the performance of search engine results for hypermedia databases, such as the world wide web, whose documents have a large variation in quality.

Inventors: Page; Lawrence (Stanford, CA)
Assignee: The Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University (Stanford, CA)
Appl. No.: 09/004,827
Filed: January 9, 1998


Current U.S. Class: 1/1 ; 707/999.005; 707/999.007; 707/E17.097; 707/E17.108; 715/206; 715/207; 715/230; 715/256
Current International Class: G06F 17/30 (20060101); G06F 017/30 ()
Field of Search: 707/100,5,7,513,1-3,10,104,501 345/440 382/226,229,230,231

References Cited [Referenced By]

U.S. Patent Documents



4953106 August 1990 Gansner et al.
5450535 September 1995 North
5748954 May 1998 Mauldin
5752241 May 1998 Cohen
5832494 November 1998 Egger et al.
5848407 December 1998 Ishikawa et al.
6014678 January 2000 Inoue et al.

Other References

S Jeromy Carriere et al, "Web Query: Searching and Visualizing the Web through Connectivity", Computer Networks and ISDN Systems 29 (1997). pp. 1257-1267.* .
A method assigns importance ranks to nodes in a linked database, such as any database of documents containing citations, the world wide web or any other hypermedia database. The rank assigned to a document is calculated from the ranks of documents citing it. In addition, the rank of a document is...
Inventor: Lawrence Page
Assignee: The Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University
Primary Examiner: Uyen Le
U.S. Classification
707/5; 707/7; 707/501
International Classification
G06F 1730
View patent at USPTO

Citations

Patent NumberTitleIssue date
4953106Technique for drawing directed graphsAug 28, 1990
5450535Graphs employing clustersSep 12, 1995
5748954Method for searching a queued and ranked constructed catalog of files stored on a network May 5, 1998
5752241Method and apparatus for estimating transitive closure and reachabilityMay 12, 1998
5832494Method and apparatus for indexing, searching and displaying dataNov 3, 1998
5848407Hypertext document retrieving apparatus for retrieving hypertext documents relating to each other Dec 8, 1998
6014678Apparatus for preparing a hyper-text document of pieces of information having reference relationships with each otherJan 11, 2000

Referenced by

Patent NumberTitleIssue date
6487555Method and apparatus for finding mirrored hosts by analyzing connectivity and IP addressesNov 26, 2002
6539377Personalized search methodsMar 25, 2003
6560600Method and apparatus for ranking Web page search resultsMay 6, 2003
6629092Search engineSep 30, 2003
6631496System for personalizing, organizing and managing web informationOct 7, 2003
6654742Method and system for document collection final search result by arithmetical operations between search results sorted by multiple ranking metricsNov 25, 2003
6658402Web client controlled system, method, and program to get a proximate page when a bookmarked page disappearsDec 2, 2003
6671711System and method for predicting web user flow by determining association strength of hypermedia linksDec 30, 2003
6675170Method to efficiently partition large hyperlinked databases by hyperlink structureJan 6, 2004
6711568Method for estimating coverage of web search engines

PageRank

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Mathematical PageRanks (out of 100) for a simple network (PageRanks reported by Google are rescaled logarithmically). Page C has a higher PageRank than Page E, even though it has fewer links to it; the link it has is of a much higher value. A web surfer who chooses a random link on every page (but with 15% likelihood jumps to a random page on the whole web) is going to be on Page E for 8.1% of the time. (The 15% likelihood of jumping to an arbitrary page corresponds to a damping factor of 85%.) Without damping, all web surfers would eventually end up on Pages A, B, or C, and all other pages would have PageRank zero. Page A is assumed to link to all pages in the web, because it has no outgoing links.
PageRank is a link analysis algorithm, named after Larry Page[1] and used by the Google Internet search engine, that assigns a numerical weighting to each element of a hyperlinked set of documents, such as the World Wide Web, with the purpose of "measuring" its relative importance within the set. The algorithm may be applied to any collection of entities with reciprocal quotations and references. The numerical weight that it assigns to any given element E is referred to as the PageRank of E and denoted by PR(E).
The name "PageRank" is a trademark of Google, and the PageRank process has been patented (U.S. Patent 6,285,999). However, the patent is assigned to Stanford University and not to Google. Google has exclusive license rights on the patent from Stanford University. The university received 1.8 million shares of Google in exchange for use of the patent; the shares were sold in 2005 for $336 million.[2][3]

Contents

Most flash drives ship preformatted with the FAT or FAT 32 file system. The ubiquity of this file system allows the drive to be accessed on virtually any host device with USB support. Also, standard FAT maintenance utilities (e.g. ScanDisk) can be used to repair or retrieve corrupted data. However, because a flash drive appears as a USB-connected hard drive to the host system, the drive can be reformatted to any file system supported by the host operating system.
Defragmenting: Flash drives can be defragmented, but this brings little advantage as there is no mechanical head that moves from fragment to fragment. Flash drives often have a large internal sector size, so defragmenting means accessing fewer sectors. Defragmenting shortens the life of the drive by making many unnecessary writes.[18]
Even Distribution: Some file systems are designed to distribute usage over an entire memory device without concentrating usage on any part (e.g. for a directory); this even distribution prolongs the life of simple flash memory devices. Some USB flash drives have this functionality built into the software controller to prolong device life, while others do not, therefore the end user should check the specifications of his device prior to changing the file system for this reason.[19]
Hard Drive: Sectors are 512 bytes long, for compatibility with hard drives, and the first sector can contain a Master Boot Record and a partition table. Therefore USB flash units can be partitioned as hard drives.

[edit] Longevity

Barring physical destruction of the drive, the memory or USB connector of a flash drive will eventually fail. SLC based memory is good for around 100,000 writes; more commonly used MLC for around 10,000. The USB connector can withstand approximately 1,500 connect/disconnect cycles.[20]

[edit] Fake products

Fake USB flash drives are sometimes sold, claiming to have higher capacities than they actually have. These are typically low capacity USB drives which are modified so that they emulate larger capacity drives (e.g. a 2 GB drive being marketed as an 8 GB drive). When plugged into a computer, they report themselves as being the larger capacity they were sold as, but when data is written to them, either the write fails, the drive freezes up, or it overwrites existing data. Software tools exist to check and detect fake USB drives.[21][22] In some cases it is possible to repair these devices to remove the false capacity information and use them normally.[23]

[edit] Uses

USB flash drive with an Ubuntu-branded lanyard.

[edit] Personal data transport

The most common use of flash drives is to transport and store personal files such as documents, pictures and videos. Individuals also store medical alert information on MedicTag flash drives for use in emergencies and for disaster preparation.

[edit] Secure storage of data, application and software files

With wide deployment(s) of flash drives being used in various environments (secured or otherwise), the issue of data and information security remains of the utmost importance. The use of biometrics and encryption is becoming the norm with the need for increased security for data; OTFE systems are particularly useful in this regard, as they can transparently encrypt large amounts of data. In some cases a Secure USB Drive may use a hardware-based encryption mechanism that uses a hardware module instead of software for strongly encrypting data. IEEE 1667 is an attempt to create a generic authentication platform for USB drives and enjoys the support of Microsoft with support in Windows 7 and in Windows Vista Service Pack 2 with a hotfix.[24]

[edit] System administration

Flash drives are particularly popular among system and network administrators, who load them with configuration information and software used for system maintenance, troubleshooting, and recovery. They are also used as a means to transfer recovery and antivirus software to infected PCs, allowing a portion of the host machine's data to be archived. As the drives have increased in storage space, they have also replaced the need to carry a number of CD ROMs and installers which were needed when reinstalling or updating a system.

[edit] Application carriers

Flash drives are used to carry applications that run on the host computer