Genuine Activation Key for Windows 7 : WAT Remover

Microsoft Windows 7 is now become the primary Operating System for almost all Windows users after Windows XP and every single Windows XP user have already switched to the new Windows 7, but many of the Windows 7 new user are not aware of Windows 7 Activation Process and they always asked How To Activate Windows 7 and by pass the Genuine Advantage pop-up notification and make their Windows 7 fully activated for a lifetime, so today I am going to share how Windows 7 users can activate Windows 7 without having genuine serial keys and cracks.



WAT Remover Tool is the easiest way to activate Windows 7 in just 2 minutes. You don’t have to crack your Windows 7 to make it Genuine. WAT stands for (Windows Activation Technology) which Microsoft use to trace Windows Activation Status. You just have to run WAT Remover and your Windows 7 will be activated for a lifetime without doing anything. WAT Remover Tool will make your Windows 7 Genuine and will also remove the Genuine Advantage notification and you can also Download and Install latest Windows 7 Updates directly from Microsoft website. This tool will work with Windows 7 32-bit and 64-bit Operating Systems.



Download WAT Remover Tool and make your Windows 7 Genuine and completely remove Windows Activation pop-up notification and also 30 days trial period. You can also download and Install latest Windows 7 Updates directly from Microsoft without any trouble.

Installation Instruction:
  • Format your current Windows Installation Completely.
  • Install Fresh Windows 7 OS (Without Entering Serial Key).
  • Turn Off Auto Windows Update Permanently.
  • Run RemoveWAT 2.2.5 setup file and follow the instruction.
  • You’re Done! Your Windows 7 is Activated. :)
Note: This WAT Remover Tool is only for Windows 7 OS. This tool won't work with any other Windows OS.


File Download Instruction: Click on download link as given and go web pages Download Zone.
http://www.vertigosourcing.com

How Love Makes (Some) Pain Go Away

Gaze upon a lover’s picture, and pain won’t seem so sharp: It’s a poetic truth, and a scientific one too.
But is it simply because that image provokes a tiny, on-demand burst of pleasure? Or does even the mere thought of a loved one serve as a shield, a buffer against hurt? The latter appears to be the case. Love is safety.
“From our prior work, we knew that viewing a picture of a loved person leads to reductions in pain,” said psychologist Naomi Eisenberger of the University of California, Los Angeles. “The interesting question is, how does that happen?”


In a study published June 28 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Eisenberger’s team used an fMRI machine to scan the brains of 17 women as they received brief, stinging shocks while looking at photographs of long-term romantic partners, strangers or objects. The women were then asked to rate their pain’s intensity.


The average amount of discomfort reported by test subjects exposed to moderate and high levels of pain while looking at photographs of lovers, strangers or objects. (Image: PNAS)
Just as Eisenberger expected, pain didn’t feel so bad when women looked at their lovers. Earlier research has described that phenomenon. But unlike earlier research, Eisenberger could look directly at test subjects’ brains as this happened. She found that decreases in pain appeared related to activity in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, a part of the brain linked to feelings of safety and reassurance.
The observation supports Eisenberger’s hypothesis that a loved one’s presence diminishes pain by producing such feelings, rather than simply stimulating neural award systems, as is seen among euphoric couples in the early stages of relationships.



According to Eisenberger, this ameliorative effect may be the diametrical opposite of a phenomenon in which seeing a picture of spiders or snakes makes pain feel worse.
“In the literature, people talk about prepared fear stimuli — snakes, spiders, things that we’re innately prepared to be afraid of. These things have been threatening to our survival over evolutionary history. This is adaptive,” said Eisenberger. “Loved ones, attachment figures, may act as prepared safety signals, as individuals who over evolutionary history have favored our survival.”
Though the new study did not test men, Eisenberger said there’s no reason to think their reactions would be any different. “People might speculate that women would be more sensitive, but these processes are just as critical to men,” she said.

Lego : 50,000 Pieces, Two Months to Build, Pure Awesome

A group of 15 people from five countries set out to re-create Tolkien’s world with Lego bricks, and one man had the intense challenge of building Barad-dûr. This is how he did it.
'I can’t exactly tell you how many parts are in the model, but I ordered about 25,000, and the same amount of parts came from my own stock,” Kevin Walter told Ars Technica. “My final guess is more than 50,000.”
I first saw the images of his Lego model of Barad-dûr when another member of the staff posted images while we talked about stories we were working on. It’s a huge construction, and without detailed source material to build from, the creator had to go by eye as well as trial and error. Walter began work on the model in late 2010, and the actual construction took around two and a half months. Unlike other Lego builders who use computer programs to plan their creations, Walter just relied on images of a Weta collectible model of the tower.
“I tried to capture as many details of it as possible, under the conditions of parts — form and size, and I’m confident of the result,” he said. Each of the eight panels that make up the upper tower is unique, and he says he spent a lot of time working on the craggy shape of the foundation to give the structure the appearance of floating on its base.

The tower was actually part of a larger effort between 15 people from five different countries, all for a community website where people share their Lego creations. You can see the other models on the project’s page.
Walter was happy with his choice to create the Barad-dûr. “I liked the tower since I saw Lord of the Rings the first time and it was an instant point on my to-do list for the future, but our collaboration gave me the chance to build it earlier, bigger than I would have built it for my own, and set it into a greater context than just building it and share it with the community.”
He showed the model at Brickworld 2011 and won a judges award … after spending two days and nights repairing the damage done to the finished model during shipping from Germany. His plans for the model? He’s going to dismantle it. Lego bricks are expensive, and right now the majority of his stock is locked into this one design.


MySpace for Pennies on the Dollar

A day after Google went public with a tilt at Facebook, today’s dominant social network, News Corp has found a buyer for MySpace, the ruling online hangout of yesteryear. The selling price is said to be between $30 million and $40 million — at best about 7 cents on the dollar News Corp paid six years ago.
The news comes from The Wall Street Journal, like MySpace also a division of News Corp. No official word yet from either party.
When Rupert Murdoch’s media conglomerate bought MySpace for $580 million in 2005 it was the place to be online. As recently as 2008 it was still the top locale. But in April of that year Facebook surged and left MySpace in the dust. And according to the Law of the Digital Jungle — there can be only one über-dominant social network, search engine or word processor — that meant that the inexorable MySpace death spiral had begun.
For the hardy, well-heeled and focused, however, it isn’t game over in the social media space. The smartphone app-driven environment is invigorating niche networks for sharing based on limited circles (Path), media (Instagram) and proximity (Color).
It isn’t clear what Specific Media has in mind for MySpace, which remains a popular site for indie bands. It could lower its profile and exploit that strength to the exclusion of all other ambitions. Even with with a $40 million pricetag, this reformulated niche social network would be a cheaper startup than Color, which has yet to get much traction, and a much better known, albeit tarnished, brand. Heck, former Wired.com music tech writer and current Evolverfm.com editor Eliot Van Buskirk argued months ago MySpace should actually turn band pages into apps.
While MySpace may forever remain the worst digital investment ever made by News Corp, the experience didn’t deter Murdoch from making another big bet just this year with the launch of The Daily. The iPad-only publication has cost the company tens of millions of dollars and while News Corp does not break out subscribership or the financials for the division — one could argue they might if the news was good — an analysis in April by the Neiman Lab suggests a downward trajectory.
And then there is Google, which only Tuesday unveiled its own full-service social network, Google+. The search giant isn’t calling “+” a Facebook killer, but they don’t need to. The law of the digital jungle will sort it all out in due course.

SpyCloud: Intel Agencies Look to Keep Secrets in the Ether

Dropbox for files, Google for mail, iCloud for well, everything. Average citizens have all kinds of options for storing their information in the cloud. Now, spies want in. Soon, our nation’s secrets may take on a slightly more nebulous form.
In-Q-Tel, the investment arm of the CIA and U.S. intelligence community, recently sunk money into a cloud-based storage company called Cleversafe. It says the platform is “ideal for storing mission critical data by addressing the core principles of data confidentiality, integrity and availability.” (Incidentally, those principles also spell out CIA).

Similarly, using a technology called “information dispersal,” Cleversafe takes massive amounts of data, slices it up into pieces and then sends those slices off to various locations, or “storage nodes.” Although the data might be in four different data centers across the country, it can be accessed in real time from a “private cloud.” And unlike traditional storage methods, there’s no need to make several complete duplicates of the original data, which saves space and money.
There are a few other advantages to this type of storage, according to Gladwin. It’s confidential, because individual slices of data can’t be deciphered on their own — an unauthorized person would have to obtain several different data slices at once to make sense of anything at all. It’s also more reliable. Even if the disks that hold those slices are corrupted, go offline or get lost, there is enough redundancy to reconstruct the whole file from just pieces. It’s pretty unlikely that ten servers or disks would all fail at the same time.
In-Q-Tel is confident that Cleversafe “will give our customers in the U.S. Intelligence Community a robust distributed-storage solution that provides the levels of unmatched reliability they require.” Since the government’s proposed IT budget allots as much as $20 billion for cloud technology, we’ll likely to see others follow suit in the search for a cloud of their very own.

Watch "A Day Made of Glass" and take a look at Corning's vision for the future with specialty glass at the heart of it.


Corning Incorporated


Corning Incorporated is the world leader in specialty glass and ceramics. Drawing on more than 160 years of materials science and process engineering knowledge, Corning creates and makes keystone components that enable high-technology systems for consumer electronics, mobile emissions control, telecommunications and life sciences. Learn more about how Corning collaborates closely with customers across these industries to turn what were once only possibilities into breakthrough realities.

Intel Plans Even Tinier Circuits in 2011

SAN FRANCISCO — Moore’s Law coming to an end? Not if you ask Intel, which announced Tuesday that it plans to offer chips based on a 22 nanometer process technology in the second half of 2011.
The 22nm chip packs in more than 2.9 billion transistors into an area the size of a fingernail. That’s double the density of the 32nm chips that are currently the cutting edge; most of Intel’s CPUs today are still based on a 45nm process.
Generally, the smaller the circuits in a computer chip, the more complex features the chipmaker can integrate into that chip. Small circuits also have the potential to increase the computing speed, but the tradeoff is increased power consumption, heat production, and — with very small circuits — increasingly large challenges in keeping the circuits electrically isolated from one another.
At the company’s developer conference here Tuesday, Intel President and CEO Paul Otellini (above) showed a silicon wafer containing the first working chips built on the technology. The 22nm test circuits include both SRAM memory as well as logic circuits that will be used in future Intel microprocessors.
intel_22nm_sram_testchip“We are moving ahead with development of our 22nm manufacturing technology and have built working chips that will pave the way for production of still more powerful and more capable processors,” said Otellini.
Moore’s Law, first introduced by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore in 1965,  postulates that the number of transistors on a cost-effective integrated circuit will double every two years. One way to describe how well transistors are packed is the smallest geometric feature that can be produced on a chip, usuallly designated in nanometers (billionths of a meter).
lly designated in nanometers (billionths of a meter).

otellini_22nm.jpg (660×543)
In late 2007, Intel started mass production of chips based on the 45nm technology. The company has said it plans to introduce 32nm processors early next year.  By comparison, the Intel 4004 microprocessor introduced in 1971 was based on 10,000nm process. A human hair is approximately 100,000 nanometers.
The 22nm wafer is made up of individual die containing 364 million bits of SRAM memory. SRAMs are used as test vehicles to demonstrate technology performance, yield and chip reliability. Once the technology works on SRAMs, Intel will move to utilize it in CPU production.
At 0.092 square microns, the 22nm process based chips contain the smallest SRAM cell used in working circuits ever reported, said Intel.

2011 Cadillac Converj


A source inside General Motors has apparently confirmed that the production of the Cadillac Converj coupe will go ahead if the car giant can solidify its financial standing.



Motor Trend reports that GM Execs are looking at a sale date in 2011, although the source stressed that it would depend on improved finances for GM, and the US government's reaction to the next version of the automaker's viability plan due June 1


The svelte concept is built on the same platform as the upcoming Chevrolet Volt (to be sold locally as the Holden Volt).
Although the Cadillac CTS Coupe was canned before reaching our shores, we’ve got our fingers crossed that GM sorts out its money woes and that we also see this stunner on our roads in 2012.



Nao Robot Dance Together


The versatile humanoid robot  caught Gizmag’s attention at the 2009 International  Exhibition (iREX 2009). What  lacks in size, he makes up for in characteristics and capabilities.  can see (via two cameras), will react to touch, can surf the Web and can interact with other Naos. He can speak (in English or French, so far) by reading out any file stored locally in his storage space or captured from a web site RSS flow. The bot is fitted with an accelerometer and gyrometer so he won’t fall down, he’s also equipped with two pairs of ultra-sound senders/receivers on his torso that give feedback on various echoes so Nao is aware of obstacles close by and can prevent them.
Nao’s vision is provided by two CMOS 640 x 480 cameras, which can capture up to 30 images per second. A single is positioned on his forehead, aimed at Nao’s horizon, whilst the second camera is placed at mouth level to scan Nao’s immediate atmosphere. And Nao’s software even lets you recover photos and video stream of his vision.

Toshiba Qosmio X305-Q708 Gaming Laptop Released





Toshiba's Digital Products Division (DPD), a division of Toshiba America Information Systems, Inc., today released the Qosmio® X305-Q708 gaming laptop, the latest iteration from its flagship gaming line. With a stunning 17-inch diagonal widescreen TruBrite® display and the latest technology advancements from NVIDIA and Intel, the Qosmio X305-Q708 laptop is engineered to deliver unparalleled performance to gamers and multimedia enthusiasts. 



The Qosmio X305-Q708 laptop is available in the following configuration:

Qosmio X305-Q708 Unique Specifications (MRSP $4,199.99)

  • OS selection at first boot:
    • Genuine Windows Vista® Ultimate (SP1, 64-bit version) (default)
    • Genuine Windows Vista® Ultimate (SP1, 32-bit version)
  • Intel® Core™ 2 Extreme Processor QX9300
  • 4096MB PC3-8500 DDR3 SDRAM
  • 128GB Serial ATA SSD
  • 320GB (7200 RPM) Serial ATA HDD
  • DVD SuperMulti (+/- double layer) drive with Labelflash™ supporting 11 formats
  • NVIDIA® GeForce® 9400M chipset with NVIDIA Hybrid SLI® technology
  • DualNVIDIA® GeForce® 9800M GTS graphics with NVIDIA® SLI® technology 512MBx2 GDDR3 discrete graphics memory
  • Atheros® 802.11 b/g/n wireless-LAN
  • Bluetooth® version 2.1 + EDR
  • One-year warranty

SunRed Solar-Powered Motorcycle: Best Innovative Technology


This is the SunRed solar-powered motorcycle that won the Best Innovative Technology award at the Barcelona Int’l Auto Show, this does look pretty cool and anything that is good to the environment and can be classed as gadget or latest technology is good in my books.










Cyberdyne is coming with the world latest technology of robot

A Japanese Company Cyberdyne is coming whit the world latest technology of robot. It is very interested to know that really it is very interesting device because it helps to disable people, we can know it the name of this device, HAL or Hybrid Assistive limb, it is a very unimaginative robotic suit for all robotic fans who are waiting for something special in this robotic field. This unimaginative robotic suit is very helpful for all disable and elderly people because it has the quality of reading brain signal and has far reaching benefits. This technology is the latest technology for the robotic field and it based on the computerized technology which has come with sensors device. In this robotic suit, reads brain signal and directs limb movement always comes through the skin which helps to disable and elderly people for moving around. It is very easy to use for them because it is worn as a belt around the waist and operated by a22 pound battery (news)