Data Science, Machine Learning, Natural Language Processing, Text Analysis, Recommendation Engine, R, Python
Wednesday, 28 February 2018
Get Rid of the Annoying Microsoft OneDrive Sign In Popup
How To Adjust Column Size in Microsoft Word
What is the Latest Version of Windows 10?
How to Turn Off Smart Punctuation on Your iPhone and iPad
Easier Bluetooth Pairing is Finally Coming to Android and Windows
How to Install and Set Up Eufy Lumos Wi-Fi Smart Bulbs
Geek Trivia: A Substitute For Legal Tender Used For Commerce Is Called?
6 Best Alarm Clocks for Deep Sleepers

It’s tough to wake up in the mornings sometimes. Your bed is cozy and warm, and who really wants to face the working day every day?
Click Here to Continue Reading
Tuesday, 27 February 2018
How to Print or Save a Directory Listing to a File in Windows
The First-Gen Apple TV Will Lose iTunes Access Starting In May

If you were an early adopter of the Apple TV, it’s long past time for an upgrade.
Click Here to Continue Reading
Google’s Reply App Will Soon Bring Smart Replies to Other Apps
What’s Different in Bluetooth 5.0?
KitSound Voice One Speaker Review: It’s An Open Ended Amazon Echo Alternative

If you’re looking for a whole house audio solution that offers a higher degree of flexibility than you’ll find by sticking strictly…
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Move Multiple Apps at Once on iOS
How to Disable Your iPhone’s CPU Throttling in iOS 11.3
Rise of blockchain: an unintended consequence of cryptocurrency?
How VR tech is changing reality thick and fast
Goldman Sachs-backed startup Circle buys major crypto exchange Poloniex
Samsung Galaxy S8 vs Galaxy S9: Is It Worth Upgrading?
Should You Buy Apple’s HomePod?
Geek Trivia: In 1983, Which One Of These Product Categories Was Gutted By A Market Crash?
7 Touch Screen Friendly Gloves For Every Occasion

Winter is hanging on for many of us and by now, you’re probably wishing you’d invested in a nice pair of gloves.
Click Here to Continue Reading
Samsung’s Next Flagships, the Galaxy S9 and 9+, Are All About That Camera

Over the weekend, Samsung announced the next in its line of flagship Android phones, the Galaxy S9 and 9+.
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Edit Your Pictures Using macOS’ Photos
Monday, 26 February 2018
How to Use a Chromecast as a Quick Information Dashboard
Google Assistant’s Routines Will Soon Automate Multiple Commands
What is a Color Profile?
How to Check if Your Password Has Been Stolen
Isro's new communication satellites to usher in high-speed internet era
Bitcoin bitterness starts to make messy divorces even worse
Indian brothers look to harness Artificial Intelligence for greater good
Artificial intelligence will create more jobs, says Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak
Samsung Galaxy S9 and S9+ Announced: Here’s Everything You Need to Know
Geek Trivia: The Filming Location Of Which Of These 1990s TV Shows Was A Closely Guarded Secret?
Sunday, 25 February 2018
How to See What Packages and Mail You Have Coming Before It Arrives
Geek Trivia: Which Of These Things Did Sailors Throw Overboard To Calm Stormy Seas?
Saturday, 24 February 2018
PNB sees data breach: 10,000 credit, debit card details put on sale online for as little as Rs 300
How to Set Up and Optimize the Steam Link for In-Home Game Streaming
How to Use Both Outlet Receptacles with a Bulky Smart Plug
Geek Trivia: In 2012 Canadian Thieves Stole Millions Of Dollars Worth Of Product From?
Women in Tech: Part 5 – Customer Success Manager
I’m Raksha Jayaraj, an Engineer from Bangalore. I joined Hortonworks in early 2017 from another technology company called National Instruments. Being a technophile, I have always been keen on working with the impact that technology makes on everyday life. From selling cutting edge technology in Emerging Markets to working on retaining customers in a Developed […]
The post Women in Tech: Part 5 – Customer Success Manager appeared first on Hortonworks.
Friday, 23 February 2018
How To Use Excel-Style Spreadsheets in Microsoft Word
Light Dims Are the Perfect Solution to Blindingly Bright Gadget LEDs

Whether you have a few or a few dozen gadgets in your house there’s one thing that’s a practical guarantee: at least one or more o…
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Monitor Your Android Device’s Battery Health
Why Your Facebook Photos Look So Bad (And What You Can Do About It)
Why Does NVIDIA Store Gigabytes of Installer Files On Your Hard Drive?
SpaceX launches first of its broadband internet satellites
How to Send GIFs in iMessage
Geek Trivia: The Longest Song To Make It Into The Top 10 Billboard Hits Is?
Thursday, 22 February 2018
Facebook Now Lets You Join Voice and Video Calls Already In Progress

Facebook has quickly become one of the de facto ways to keep up with your family, simply because everyone’s on it.
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Sum Numbers Across Different Tables in LibreOffice Writer
Project Cheetah - Faster, Leaner Pipeline That Can Keep Up With Demand
|
This is a guest post by Sam Van Oort, Software Engineer at CloudBees, and contributor to the Jenkins project, and maintainer of the Pipeline Plugins. |
Since it launched, Pipeline has had a bit of a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde performance problem. In certain circumstances, Pipeline can turn from a mild-mannered CI/CD assistant into a monster. It will happily eat storage read/write capacity like popcorn without caring about the other concerns of our friendly butler. When combined with other additional factors, this can result in real-world stability problems. For example, combining slow storage with a spike in running Pipelines has brought down production Jenkins at more than one organization. Similarly, users see issues if a busy master gets hit with an extra source of stress; past culprits have been heavy automated (ab)use of Jenkins APIs, now-solved user lookup bugs, backup jobs, and plugins run crazy that load excessive numbers of builds. Symptoms ranged from visible slowdowns in the UI to unresponsive jobs and "hung" masters.
Now I’m not saying this to scare people or to criticize the technology we’ve built. Implementing Pipeline scalability best practices coupled with SSD storage keeps Jenkins in a happy place. We just need context on the weaknesses to see why it’s important to address them.
Introducing "Project Cheetah"
Today we’re announcing the first major results of "Project Cheetah", our long-running effort to address these challenges and improve Pipeline scalability. More broadly, Cheetah aims to help in 3 places:
-
Small-scale containers: Pipeline needs to run leanly in resource-constrained containers, to enable easy scale-out without consuming excessive resources on shared container hosts.
-
Enterprise systems: Pipeline needs to effectively serve high-scale Jenkins instances that are central to many large companies.
-
General case: run Pipelines a bit more quickly on average, and allow users to get much-stronger performance in worst-case scenarios.
These changes are implemented across many of the Pipeline plugins.
Yes, but what does it DO?
Project Cheetah offers several things, but the most important is Durability Settings for all Pipelines, and especially the Performance-Optimized setting. This setting avoids several potentially unexpected performance "surprises" that may strike users. In the general case, it greatly reduces the disk IO needs for Pipeline. How much? Below is a graph of storage utilization with legacy Pipeline versions (think early 2017) and with the latest version using the Performance-Optimized mode. These are tested on an AWS instance backed by an EBS volume provisioned with 300 IOPs.
Before and After:

As you can see, storage utilization goes down by a lot. While the exact number will vary, across the benchmark testcases this results in Pipeline throughput of 2x to 6x the previous before becoming IO-bound. This also increases stability of Jenkins masters because they will tolerate unexpected load.
This comes with a major drop in CPU IOWait as well:

And of course the rate at which data is written to disk and number of writes/s is also reduced:

For enterprise users, timing stats often show 10-20% of normal builds is serializing the Program and writing the record of steps run ("FlowNodes") - the performance optimized durability setting will cut this to almost nothing (for standard pipelines, 1/100 or less) - so builds will complete faster, especially complex ones.
Please see the Pipeline Scalability documentation for deeper information on the new Durability Settings, how to use them, and which plugin versions are required to gain these features.
Also, users may see a reduction in hung Pipelines because new test utilities made it possible to identify and correct a variety of bugs.
How Do I Set Speed/Durability Settings?
There are 3 ways to configure the durability setting:
1. Globally, you can choose a global default durability setting:
Under "Manage Jenkins" > "Configure System", labelled "Pipeline Speed/Durability Settings". You can override these with the more specific settings below.

2. Each Pipeline can get a custom Durability Setting:
This is one of the job properties located at the top of the job configuration, labelled "Custom Pipeline Speed/Durability Level." This overrides the global setting. Or, use a "properties" step - the setting will apply to the NEXT run after the step is executed (same result).

pipeline {
agent any
stages {
stage('Example') {
steps {
echo 'Hello World'
}
}
}
options {
durabilityHint('PERFORMANCE_OPTIMIZED')
}
}
properties([durabilityHint('PERFORMANCE_OPTIMIZED')])
3. Multibranch Projects can use a new BranchProperty to customize the Durability Setting.
Under the SCM you can configure a custom Branch Property Strategy and add a property for Custom Pipeline Speed/Durability Level. This overrides the global Durability Setting and will apply to each branch at the next run. You can also use a "properties" step to override the setting, but remember that you may have to run the step again to undo this.

Durability settings will take effect with the next applicable Pipeline run, not immediately. The setting will be displayed in the log.

There is a slight durability trade-off for using the Performance-Optimized mode — the appropriate section of the Pipeline Scalability documentation has the specifics. For most uses we do not expect this to be important, but there are a few specific cases where users may wish to use a slower/higher-durability setting. The Best Practices are documented.
We recommend using Performance-Optimized by default, but because it does represent a slight behavioral change the initial "Cheetah" plugin releases defaults to maintain previous behavior. We expect to switch this default in the future with appropriate notice once people have a chance to get used to the new settings.
Will Performance-Optimized Mode Help Me?
-
Yes, if your Jenkins instance uses NFS, magnetic storage, runs many Pipelines at once, or shows high iowait (above 5%)
-
Yes, if you are running Pipelines with many steps (more than several hundred).
-
Yes, if your Pipeline stores large files or complex data to variables in the script, keeps that variable in scope for future use, and then runs steps. This sounds oddly specific but happens more than you’d expect.
-
For example:
readFilestep with a large XML/JSON file, or using configuration information from parsing such a file with One of the Utility Steps. -
Another common pattern is a "summary" object containing data from many branches (logs, results, or statistics). Often this is visible because you’ll be adding to it often via an add/append or
Map.put()operations. -
Large arrays of data or Maps of configuration information are another common example of this situation.
-
-
No, if your Pipelines spend almost all their time waiting for a few shell/batch steps to finish. This ISN’T a magic "go fast" button for everything!
-
No, if Pipelines are writing massive amounts of data to logs (logging is unchanged).
-
No, if you are not using Pipelines, or your system is loaded down by other factors.
-
No, if you don’t enable higher-performance modes for pipelines. See above for how!
Other Goodies
-
Users can now set an optional job property so that individual Pipelines fail cleanly rather than resuming upon restarting the master. This is useful for niche cases where some Pipelines are considered disposable and users would value a clean restart over Pipeline durability.
-
We’ve reduced classloading and reflection quite significantly, which improves scaling and reduces CPU use:

-
Script Security (as of version 1.41) has gotten optimizations to reduce the performance overhead of Sandbox mode and eliminate lock contention so Pipeline multithreads better.
-
Pipeline Step data uses up less space on disk (regardless of the durability setting) - this should be 30% smaller. Assume it’s a few MB per 1000 steps - but for every build after the change.
-
Even in the low-performance/high-durability modes, some redundant writes have been removed, which decreases the number of writes by 10-20%.
How Did You Do It?
That’s probably material for another blog post or Jenkins World talk.
The short answer is: first we built a tool to simulate a full production environment and provide detailed metrics collection at scale. Then we profiled Jenkins to identify bottlenecks and attacked them. Rinse and repeat.
What Next?
The next big change, which I’m calling Cheetah Part 2 is to address Pipeline’s logging. For every Step run, Pipeline writes one or more small log files. These log files are then copied into the build log content, but are retained to make it possible to easily fetch logs for each step.
This copying process means every log line is written twice, greatly reducing perforance, and writing to many small files is orders of magnitude slower than appending to one big log file.
We’re going to remove this duplication and data fragmentation and use a more efficient mechanism to find per-step logs. This should further improve the ability to run Pipelines on NFS mounts and hard-drive-backed storage, and should significantly improve performance at scale.
Besides this, there’s a variety of different tactical improvements to improve scaling behavior and reduce resource needs.
The Project Cheetah work doesn’t free users to completely ignore Pipeline scaling best practices and previous suggestions. Nor does it eliminate the need for efficient GC settings. But this and other enhancements from the last year can significantly improve the storage situation for most users and reduce the penalties for worst-case behaviors. When you add all the pieces together, the result is a faster, leaner, more reliable Pipeline experience.
How to Get Free Movie Rentals and Other Rewards from Your Chromecast or Google Home
8 Fun Games You Can Play Directly In iMessage

The iMessage overhaul in iOS 10 revolutionized how many iOS owners communicated with each other.
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Configure Bitmoji and Snapchat
To give AI the gift of gab, Silicon Valley needs to offend you
How can blockchain help Aadhaar ensure privacy and transparency?
Why You Shouldn’t Use Firefox Clones Like Waterfox, Pale Moon, or Basilisk
Nasscom signs a pact with blockchain research institute to evangelize blockchain ecosystem in India
Why India must embrace the new era of artificial intelligence, blockchain and robots
Orbit Card Review: The World’s Thinnest Bluetooth Tracker Is Ridiculously Thin

There’s no shortage of Bluetooth trackers on the market, but the vast majority of them are chunky key fob like affairs.
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Install and Set Up the Lutron Caseta Dimmer Switch Starter Kit
Geek Trivia: The First CCTV System Was Installed To Observe?
Wednesday, 21 February 2018
AT&T Announces Plan to Bring 5G to Dallas, Waco, and Atlanta

It’s that time of decade again. Time for another network upgrade from your cell provider.
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Quickly Create a Text File Using the Command Line in Linux
How to Use Custom Styles in LibreOffice Writer
How to Run Linux Apps on a Chromebook Without Opening a Full Linux Window
Insurance and Machine Learning: A Partnership That Offers a Competitive Advantage
Disruption is affecting insurance, and machine learning is both the cause of and the cure for that disruption.
The post Insurance and Machine Learning: A Partnership That Offers a Competitive Advantage appeared first on Hortonworks.
How to Personalize Facebook Messenger’s Chats
Intent Based Network- a game changer in the world of virtualized networks
What Are All Those NVIDIA Processes Running in the Background?
How to Set Alarms and Timers on the HomePod
Geek Trivia: The Oldest Company Logo In Continuous Use Belongs To?
Tuesday, 20 February 2018
Those Ugly Racing-Style Gaming Chairs Are So Dang Comfortable

If you’ve ever watched a Twitch stream, walked into a computer store, or have a really die-hard PC gamer friend, you’ve probably se…
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Clear or Disable the Recent Documents List in Microsoft Word 2016
How to Add an AirDrop Icon to Your macOS Dock
Hortonworks DataFlow (HDF) 3.1 blog series part 5: Introducing Apache NiFi-Atlas integration
Two weeks ago, we announced the GA of HDF 3.1, and to share more details about this milestone release we started the HDF 3.1 Blog Series. In this installment of the series, we’ll talk about a net new integration point between Apache NiFi and Apache Atlas. As the latest Data-in-Motion Platform offering from Hortonworks, HDF […]
The post Hortonworks DataFlow (HDF) 3.1 blog series part 5: Introducing Apache NiFi-Atlas integration appeared first on Hortonworks.
How to Control Your Roku with Google Home’s Voice Assistant
How Does the Internet Work?
Robots will have full consciousness in five years, says Humanoid Sophia creator
With AI taking away many jobs, reskilling has become critical: Coursera founder Andrew NG
Google Android App Adds New Screenshot Editing Tools

When you take a screenshot on your phone, you’re probably doing it to share some information with someone else.
Click Here to Continue Reading
Geek Trivia: The First Color Screen Handheld Game Console Was The?
Monday, 19 February 2018
Jenkins is accepted to Google Summer Of Code 2018, join us!

We are happy to announce that Jenkins project has been accepted to Google Summer of Code 2018. This year we invite students and mentors to join the Jenkins community and work together on various initiatives: core, plugins, development tools and infrastructure.
Our mentors have already created some project ideas. For example, you are welcome to work on the new Configuration-as-Code initiative or to help creating standard API for Code Coverage plugins. If you like test automation, there is a proposal to Jenkins Acceptance Test Harness. Over the next weeks we plan to extend this list by new even more project ideas.
All information about the Jenkins GSoC is available on its subproject page.
I am a student. How do I apply?
See Information for students for application guidelines.
First step is to join discussions in the mailing lists in order to introduce yourself, establish connections with the community and potential mentors. The application period starts on March 12 and ends on March 27, but don’t let it misguide you! Use time before application to discuss project ideas/proposals with mentors and to process their feedback. To create a better proposal, we also recommend to study Jenkins and to do some contributions in the area of your project proposal.
Not satisfied by the current project ideas? You can propose your own idea in the developer mailing list.
I want to be a mentor. Is it too late?
It’s not! If you are passionate about open-source and Jenkins, we invite you to join the mentors team. You can either propose a new project idea or join an existing one. See Call for Mentors and Information for mentors for details.
This year mentorship does NOT require strong expertise in Jenkins development. The objective is to guide students and to get involved into the Jenkins community. GSoC org admins will help to find advisers if special expertise is required.
Important dates
-
Mar 05 - deadline for new GSoC project idea proposals
-
Mar 12 - student application period starts
-
Mar 27 - deadline for student applications
-
Apr 23 - accepted projects announced, community bonding starts
-
May 14 - coding period starts
-
Aug 06 - end of the coding period
See the GSoC Timeline for more info. In the Jenkins project we will also organize special events during and after GSoC (e.g. at Jenkins world).
P.S: I am going to create a special GSoC 2018 edition of swags for mentors and students. Do not miss them ;)
6 Mobile Apps for Creating GIFs On the Go

Keen to use plenty of GIFs in your text conversations, social media interactions, or even your work?
Click Here to Continue Reading
Mining Bill Gates’ Tweets Using R
How to Disable and Customize Facebook’s Notifications, Texts, and Emails
Electric car goal in India seen creating cyber-security risks
How to Choose the Best (and Fastest) Alternative DNS Server
Virgin Hyperloop One enters into framework agreement with Maharashtra government
Geek Trivia: Which Of These Technology Terms Is Made Up And Not A Cultural Reference Or Portmanteau?
Sunday, 18 February 2018
How to Get the Most Out of Your Chromebook
Geek Trivia: In The Medieval Era, All Beers Had A Strong Taste Of?
Saturday, 17 February 2018
It’s Time to Banish Your Screens From the Bedroom
Niti aayog plans paper on blockchain tech for land, health records
How to Set Your PC Games’ Graphics Settings with No Effort
How to Customize or Disable Siri on the HomePod
Friday, 16 February 2018
How to Bring Back the “View Image” Button In Google Image Search
How to Use and Customize the Windows 10 Action Center
Women in Tech: Part 4 – Engineering Manager
I am a Software Engineer/Architect with over 20 years of experience providing end-to-end application and system solutions. I have a huge passion for data management and analytics, which is why I came to Hortonworks – to be directly involved in current technologies that support the overall Data Lifecycle. Before Hortonworks, I worked in various industries […]
The post Women in Tech: Part 4 – Engineering Manager appeared first on Hortonworks.
8 Unique Sticker Packs to Customize Your iMessage Experience

Every since the iMessage overhaul in iOS 10 the entire iMessage platform is significantly more fun and flexible.
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Move to a Dedicated Camera After Using a Smartphone Camera
What’s the Difference Between the “System32” and “SysWOW64” Folders in Windows?
Geek Trivia: Before “Ghosting” Was Slang For Ignoring A Dating Partner, It Was Slang For?
Geek Trivia: The Original Loopholes Weren’t Grey Areas In Laws Or Regulations But?
Thursday, 15 February 2018
How to Set Up Whole-House Parental Controls with OpenDNS
How to Disable Chrome’s New Ad Blocker (On Certain Sites or All Sites)
Aukey 10W Wireless Fast Charger Review: A Speedy and Stylish Qi Charger for Your Nightstand or Office

If you’re shopping for a wireless charger for your smartphone you’ve likely discovered that your options are almost entirely black…
Click Here to Continue Reading
Big Data vs Small Data – An Analysis Of Its Latest News
Why the Impact of Big Data Extends Further Than You Think
The impact of big data extends far beyond IT, touching many areas of business. The problem is that executives are not always aware of these projects.
The post Why the Impact of Big Data Extends Further Than You Think appeared first on Hortonworks.
How to Build a $35 Media Center with Kodi and the Raspberry Pi
Google Will Block Annoying Ads In Chrome Starting Today

Google makes its living off of ads, so it makes sense the company doesn’t like what people think of ads on the internet (which is to say…
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Match Colors on Your Multiple Monitors
How to Prevent Your HomePod from Creating White Rings on Your Wooden Furniture
Hortonworks DataFlow (HDF) 3.1 Blog Series Part 4: Unit Testing and Continuous Integration & Delivery of Streaming Analytics Apps
Last week, as part of the HDF 3.1 Blog Series, we talked about support for Apache Kafka 1.0 and the powerful HDF integrations including Apache NiFi’s Kafka processors, Apache Ambari for provisioning/management/monitoring and Ranger for access control policies and audit for Apache Kafka. Today, in this fourth part of the series, we discuss the innovations added […]
The post Hortonworks DataFlow (HDF) 3.1 Blog Series Part 4: Unit Testing and Continuous Integration & Delivery of Streaming Analytics Apps appeared first on Hortonworks.
Logitech Pop Review: A Smart Switch for Your Smart Home Gadgets

Your smartphone can control a lot of things these days—your smart home lighting system, your thermostat, even your TV.
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Stop Facebook from Uploading Low-Quality Photos and Videos from Your Phone
Hey Microsoft, Stop Installing Apps On My PC Without Asking
Bitgram gets top honors at Karnataka govt's Blockchain hackathon
Amazon Echo adds voice calling & messaging in India, drops invite-only tag
How to Stop the HomePod from Reading Your Text Messages to Other People
What Is a Phone “Port-Out” Scam, and How Can I Protect Myself?
Geek Trivia: In The Mid-1960s, There Was A Brief But Intense Fashion Fad Focused On Wearing?
Wednesday, 14 February 2018
The Best Tools to Score Awesome Deals on Steam

There’s almost never a good reason to buy a Steam game for full price unless you have to have it the day it comes out.
Click Here to Continue Reading
Why Ad Companies Love Google’s Ad Blocker, But Hate Apple’s Privacy Features
Skype Is Vulnerable to a Nasty Exploit: Switch to the Windows Store Version
Security updates for Jenkins core
We just released security updates to Jenkins, versions 2.107 and 2.89.4, that fix multiple security vulnerabilities.
For an overview of what was fixed, see the security advisory. For an overview on the possible impact of these changes on upgrading Jenkins LTS, see our LTS upgrade guide.
| While the severity score works out as medium for all the vulnerabilities, we strongly recommend that anyone operating publicly accessible Jenkins instances update as soon as possible, as their secrets on disk might be at risk by SECURITY-705. |
Subscribe to the jenkinsci-advisories mailing list to receive important notifications related to Jenkins security.
How to Change the Speed of (or Disable) Windows’ Taskbar Thumbnail Previews
YouTube TV Is Getting More Channels, More Markets, More Expensive

YouTube TV is Google’s attempt to bring live television into your home, through the YouTube brand you already know and trust…
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Keep Track of Cosmetic and Event Items in Overwatch
The Best Bargain Switch Games for Under $5

The Nintendo Switch is a great console with a bunch of fantastic games.
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Add Live TV to the NVIDIA SHIELD with an HD Antenna
Hortonworks Second Annual Data Heroes Awards – Nominations Now Open!
Submit your nominations now for DataWorks Summit Berlin and San Jose Is your organization hero material? Well, we certainly think so! We won’t ask anyone to fly through the air, protect your city or wear a cape & mask, but we will ask you to showcase your organization’s AWESOMENESS! Hortonworks supports more than 1,300 organizations […]
The post Hortonworks Second Annual Data Heroes Awards – Nominations Now Open! appeared first on Hortonworks.
If You Live In the EU, You Probably Have a Better Gadget Warranty
Perfect Computer Security Is a Myth. But It’s Still Important
Geek Trivia: The Slang Term “Ameritrash” Is Commonly Used In Which Of These Hobbies?
Tuesday, 13 February 2018
How to Get TurboTax or H&R Block for Free with IRS Free File
How to Pair Multiple Android Wear Watches to a Single Phone
How to Autofill From a Password Manager on an iPhone or iPad
Quiet Your PC’s Fans with Cheap In-Line Adapters
Check the Play Store’s Settings for Freebies You May Have Forgotten About
The Best Stargazing Apps For Your Smartphone

Space, as a certain iconic TV franchise sagely observed, is the final frontier—but alas it’s a frontier not many of us will get a c…
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Tell If a Facebook Competition Is a Scam
Why Is My Internet So Slow?
Maharashtra govt plans pilots to try out blockchain tech
Don’t Use Facebook’s Onavo VPN: It’s Designed to Spy On You
Geek Trivia: Which One Of These Common Idioms Was Originally An Advertising Slogan?
Monday, 12 February 2018
Is AppleCare+ Worth It?
How to Connect to a VPN on a Chromebook
How to Easily View Recently Modified Files in Windows
Why Do Old Game Consoles Look So Bad on Modern TVs?
Recapping the Fourth Quarter 2017 Earnings Call
Last Thursday, Hortonworks announced financial results for the fourth quarter and full year of 2017. These are exciting times at the company, as our CEO Rob Bearden announced another quarter of record breaking growth! Q4 revenue was up 44 percent compared to the prior year, and yearly growth clocked in at 42 percent. Hortonworks has […]
The post Recapping the Fourth Quarter 2017 Earnings Call appeared first on Hortonworks.
How to Sync Your Contacts Between All Your Devices: iPhone, Android, and the Web
How Do IP Addresses Work?
Indian govt looks to EVs, hyperloop & personal rapid transit to move freight, cut costs
Geek Trivia: Learning To Play Which Of These Instruments Helps With Sleep Apnea?
Sunday, 11 February 2018
What Are Progressive Web Apps?
Geek Trivia: A Denier Is A Unit Of Measurement Used In?
Saturday, 10 February 2018
What Is HEVC H.265 Video, and Why Is It So Important for 4K Movies?
How to Fix a Blank White Screen When Setting Up the HomePod
How to Set Up the Apple HomePod
How to Remove a Smarthome Device from Alexa
Geek Trivia: Mixed Idioms With A Resulting Nonsenical Meaning Are Known As?
Friday, 9 February 2018
Women in Tech: Part 3 – Technical Support Engineer
I am Vani Subramanian, born and brought up in Kerala, India. I have an engineering degree in Computer Science from College of Engineering, Trivandrum and have completed my Executive General Management Program from IIM, Bangalore. I believe the future is all about how we extract information from data, how we understand it, and how companies […]
The post Women in Tech: Part 3 – Technical Support Engineer appeared first on Hortonworks.
Facebook Is Testing a Downvote Button, But Please Don’t Call It Dislike

For the longest time, Facebook has refused to create a Dislike button to counter its trademark Likes. And for good reason!
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Shrink Your PC Game Files With CompactGUI and Save Drive Space
HDF 3.1 Blog Series Part 3: Kafka 1.0 Support with Powerful HDF Integrations
Last week, we announced the HDF 3.1 Release and commenced the HDF 3.1 Blog series. Earlier this week, in part 2 of the blog series, we introduced the new HDF component called Apache Nifi Registry which allows developers to version control flow artifacts to meet their SDLC enterprise requirements. Today, in this third part of […]
The post HDF 3.1 Blog Series Part 3: Kafka 1.0 Support with Powerful HDF Integrations appeared first on Hortonworks.
How Does Android Know a Wi-Fi Network Is Fast or Slow Before I Connect?
iRing Review: A Handy Grip Assistant For Uncomfortably Large Phones

The overwhelming majority of smartphone screens are anywhere from 5″…
Click Here to Continue Reading
Who Is “Scam Likely,” and Why Are They Calling Your Phone?
Phones Are Better Without Removable Batteries
You Can Enjoy the Best Egg Cooker Around for Under $25

When it comes to kitchen gadgets, the entire genre gets a lot of flack for being a waste of space and money.
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Set Up the Eufy Smart Plug
Geek Trivia: Modern Cattle Are Descended From Which Of These Extinct Creatures?
Thursday, 8 February 2018
Amazon Prime Now Will Deliver Whole Foods Groceries To Your House Soon

If you subscribe to Amazon Prime, you can get certain food and items delivered to your home in under two hours.
Click Here to Continue Reading
Is It Safe to Buy Used GPUs From Cryptocurrency Miners?
How to Pair AirPods With a PC, Mac, Android Phone, or Other Device
8 Must Have Apps For Your Apple Watch

The Apple Watch has some really solid stock apps—so much so that it would be easy to stick with them and not spread your wings.
Click Here to Continue Reading
How to Use Old and Differently-Branded Lenses with Your Mirrorless Camera
What Is Google Play Services, and Why Is It Draining My Battery?
6 technology trends to transform digitally
5 technologies that will define 2018
The Best Way to Cast Movies from Android or iPhone to Your TV
Geek Trivia: Which Of These Medieval Cities Had A Modern Looking Skyline With Towering Buildings?
Wednesday, 7 February 2018
What Is “parentalcontrolsd”, and Why Is It Running on My Mac?
We Want These Privacy Sliders In Any Gadget With a Webcam

If you have a laptop, you have a camera pointed at your face every time you use it. This can understandably make you a little paranoid.










