Thursday, July 7, 2016

Study Apps for College Students

   

Study Apps for College StudentsWell some of the best things in life are free, and that includes study apps. While some people might say that your brain is the only study tool you really need, it doesn’t hurt to have some free software to help out. So we’ve put together a list of apps that can help with studies. This list is primarily for Apple iOS apps, though several entries have links for Android, Web, or desktop (Mac OS X, Windows, sometimes Linux). All of them are free, though some might have IAP (in-app purchase) options for advanced features (or sometimes just for getting rid of annoying ads). Occasionally, alternatives are listed, especially when an app is only on iOS.


iTunes University

Apple’s iTunes University (iTunes U for short) has a wealth of curriculum course material from many top universities and colleges. Your own school’s course materials might even be on iTunes U, but if not, you might find similar content from the equivalent courses at other schools. The app is only available for iOS, and content is a mix of text (multiple formats), audio and video, depending on the content provided by the course content creator.
Other App Info:


iStudiez Lite

Have you been watching too much TV instead of studying? How many times can you watch Breane of Tarr in the Game of Thrones kick The Hound’s backside, anyway? It might be time to map out your semester to organize your course, assignment and exam schedule, and the award-winning iStudiez app can help. The free Lite version allows you to manage one semester of up to five courses, 15 classes/exams per course, 15 assignments, five instructors and two holiday periods, and you can set alarms. If you like the free version, $2.99 gets you the iStudiez Pro version (separate install; not an in-app purchase), which takes away the limits, adds push notifications, backup and other features.
For a student time management app alternative for Android, try Timetable by Gabriel Ittner.
Other App Info:


Exam Vocabulary Builder

AccelaStudy claims over 6 million users who have used their Exam Vocabulary Builder app to improve English vocabulary, whether for college freshman/ graduate entrance exams, professional advancement or for language proficiency. The app uses “spaced repetition” to help with retention. In addition to search and organize features, there are several modes, including Study, Flashcard, and Quiz. This app is particularly useful to ESL/ TOEFL students for whom English is not their first language. Note: iOS-only. An Android alternative is GRE Vocabulary Builder by Magoosh, who have a number of similar apps for iOS.
Other App Info:


Dictionary.com

Vocabulary builder apps are fine for prepping for exams, but they typically have a limited set of words. Enter Dictionary.com for all your English learning needs, with 2,000,000 definitions. The main app is free (with ad banners) and has search history, word origin and history, Word of the Day, synonyms, antonyms, a thesaurus and more. In-app purchase options include a medical dictionary, encyclopedia and more. The iOS version has accumulated over 43,000 ratings on all version for a total of 4.5 stars — which pales in comparison to the 610,000-plus ratings for the Android version.
Other App Info:


Skype

Sure, you thought Skype was just a communication app. But because of that and its features (text chat, voice chat, video, file sharing), it can also be a study app. When it’s late, or cold outside or you’re studying last minute for an exam and need something from a classmate, Skype can be your saving grace. Sure, they could email the scanned notes to you, or share it over Dropbox, or use the lame “virtual classroom” software that your college has, but Skype lets you chat with them while they send you the file. And when the file has downloaded, your pal can help you decipher their horrible handwriting scrawl so you can actually use the notes. (You might recommend that they try the MyScript Smart Note app (#3) for their terrible handwriting.) Alternately, if you a tutor who does not make house calls, Skype is the next best way to have a tutoring session. Note: iPad version separate from iPhone version. Desktop versions downloadable from the main site.
Other App Info:


Coursera

Here’s a crazy thought: succeed in college by creating more homework for yourself. In some countries, there are statewide or country-wide exams, and it’s too bad for you if your college professor “didn’t teach that.” It’s your responsibility to know a subject. While this does not happen in the U.S., what if you took the same attitude of responsibility for your own knowledge and put in some extra effort? You don’t have to be a study-masochist to get an advantage from this effort. Coursera.org is an online education site that has partnerships with many dozens of top colleges and universities in the United States, including Ivy League schools. These schools offer both curriculum course study materials and MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses).
Sign up, study at your own pace, and supplement your knowledge for that extra advantage. You can use Coursera’s Web site or mobile apps to to study a selection of courses and supplement whatever you are learning at your college. Even better, use Coursera to introduce yourself to subjects before you enter college each semester. Because wouldn’t it be nice to ace your actual courses, get on the Dean’s Honor List, win awards and maybe a bit of extra scholarship cash?
Other App Info:


Google Drive

Take notes, draw diagrams, create spreadsheets, build presentations and keep them all in the cloud, accessible from an Internet-connected computer or mobile device when you need them.Google Drive is a collection of cloud-based “Office” apps that includes capabilities for spreadsheets, documents, presentations, diagrams and more. Google also provides each Drive account with probably more than enough cloud storage for the files of an average college student. But if you run out, you can pay for more. Drive’s collection of apps are Web browser-based, though there are iOS and Android versions, linked below. Sign up free with an email address; automatic if you have a GMail account.
Other App Info:


Dragon Dictation

Do you have study notes to type up for an overdue class project and your poor fingers are so tired from flipping through those ancient things called print books? Or maybe granny is paying for your college and you need to get your weekly email out to her fast, and your typing sucks. No problem. Just start talking into Dragon Dictation and it’ll convert everything for you digitally, which you can paste into other apps, send as an email message, or save it for later. Save your fingers for texting. Actually, you can use Dragon Dictation for text messages as well — at least the kind where you need to type entire English words in full. Note: iOS only. Nuance has Dragon apps on Android, but not this one.
Other App Info:


Brainscape – Smart Flashcards

Brainscape has a number of flashcard style apps for iOS. One such is “Brainscape – Smart Flashcards,” which is bill as being “brain games to study Chinese, SAT and more.” Create your own flashcard sets or download from the Market (has both free and paid content). It’s relatively easy to use, easy to create flashcard sets with, and free (if you don’t mind ad banners). Brainscape also has the the Flashcards*/ Flashcardlet app which can access content created with the main Brainscape app, in a less distracting environment (albeit also with ads; both apps charge $2.99 to get rid of ads).
Other App Info:


 Flashcards+

Flashcards+ is not just another flashcards app. It’s an app by young serial entrepreneurial and wunderkind Connor Zwick, who started making waves at 13, was simultaneously accepted to startup incubator Y Combinator and Harvard in 2011 (at 18), and who left Harvard at 19 to take advantage of a Thiel Fellowship with a $100K grant. While he’s supposedly concentrating on a mobile phone game controller, he has also produced the Flashcards+ app for iOS, which passed a million downloads by some time in late 2012. The app has a one of the cleaner interfaces for this category, and with nearly 47,000 ratings and an average of 4.5/5 stars, it has a lot going for it. Features include pronunciation help for 22 languages, millions of decks accessible from the Quizlet app (#4 in this list), deck shuffling and more. In-app purchase options include multiple male/female voices for pronunciation help.
Other App Info:


Quizlet

Quizlet, a general study tool, boasts millions of flashcard study sets for numerous topics, created by student users (high school and college). If you can’t find the subjects you’re looking for in such a large collection, you can of course make your own. Quizlet also lets you use images and audio in your flashcard sets, which adds variety to the learning process. Quizlet has support in other flashcard study apps. So even if you create study sets now but later switch to flashcard app that supports Quizlet, you can reuse your content — or anyone’s shared Quizlet content.
Other App Info:


Todoist

If you find Evernote(#1) too intimidating with all its notetaking features and really only want a todo list app, maybe with Web URL bookmarking features, try Todoist. Sure there are dozens of todo list apps, but Todoist is arguably one of the best, and it’s one of few that does project/ subprojects and tasks/ subtasks well. Use it track your course assignments, set reminders, bookmarking Web pages you visit and more. Combine the Mobile app with a Web browser plugin for optimum use. Todoist also has Mac and Windows desktop versions, Chrome and Firefox browser plugins, and plugins for Outlook, GMail, Thunderbird and Postbox email clients. Paid version (subscription) includes unlimited projects and tasks and other features.
Alternatives to Evernote include Pocket for bookmarking and Wunderlist for todo lists — both on browser and mobile, plus desktop editions for Wunderlist. Do you have a budget for some mobile apps, and want something more sophisticated for advanced todo lists or light project management? Drop an Andrew Jackson ($20) minus a Lincoln penny and you can have a much more sophisticated app called “Things for iPad”. There’s also a version for Mac desktops.
Other App Info:


MyScript Smart Note

If you’re the type of student who prefers to write down notes in class instead of typing (or borrowing notes later) and wished it were as easy to write on a tablet as on paper, you’ll have to wait a bit longer. Sure, there are a dozens of “notebook” apps that allow you to handwrite with a finger or stylus, but none are really suitable for the speed with which class lectures would require. However, if you want an app that should suffice for taking notes on a tablet while studying in the library or your dorm room, then MyScript Smart Note is an excellent start. After trying out close to a dozen similar apps, we’ve decided that none seem to recognize handwriting as well Smart Note — and in multiple languages, no less.
The app is available free (but with limited features) for both iOS and Android, and while the two versions are slightly different in functionality, both have the kind of killer features you want in a note-taking app, namely quite impressive handwriting recognition abilities, often even with a scrawl. Even if your handwriting is mostly legible, Smart Note is pretty accurate in understanding it. On the Android version, you can have the handwriting converted and replaced by the digital equivalent, so you can easily see what the app thinks you wrote. Unfortunately, that’s not true for the iOS version (except in the search mode panel). However, both versions do recognize handwriting and allow you to search. (Note: you made need a suitable stylus.)
If that’s not enough, the app allows you to edit your handwriting with special gestures. There’s also an adjustable palm-rest feature, a drawing mode, and you can insert media such as math equations, images, sound or PDF files from various cloud storage services including Dropbox and Evernote (#1). There are also dozens of language packs downloadable for free. If you need more notebooks, unlimited pages, export ability, backups, and more, you’ll need to drop a few dollars ($1.99 for iOS, $2.71 for Android). Check MyScript’s home page for additional apps, including for math and music, as well as for Android phones. (NOTE: snapshot above sourced from iTunes profile of Smart Note.)
Other App Info:


2. XMind

If the “radial thinking” paradigm of mind mapping suits your workflow (try it), then this is an ideal method for note-taking and studying. One of the best free mind mapping apps around is XMind. Unfortunately, it only runs on desktops/ laptops — Windows, Mac, Linux: no mobile apps, no Web apps. However, if you have access to desktop/ laptop computer, you can use it as a planning tool, for projects, for studying. If you’re willing to give up mobility using a desktop-only app, you’ll get an incredibly robust research and study tool that has enough features in the free version alone to cover at least a quarter of the apps in this list, maybe more. You will have to pay for cloud storage — XMind has a subscription service.
Since XMind is free and feature-packed, it’s worth a try — even if you have never used a mind mapping tool. There are paid versions of XMind, which offer additional business-level features, but the free version should suffice for the average student. The Web site has a gallery of hundreds of mind maps that users have shared, to give you an idea of how much you really can do with this free desktop app.
For people who swear by mind mapping and don’t want to pay several hundred dollars for similar functionality, XMind is a good choice. You could try mind mapping mobile apps, but you’ll probably find like we did that some apps are better on the desktop — although if you insist, there’s the free SimpleMind app for iOS (iPhone/iPod Touch and iPad) and Android.
Other App Info:


Evernote and Penultimate

Evernote is the king of note taking apps, with a feature set that combines bookmarking, composing, clipping and more. You could even use it for todo lists, if need to ditch all the todo list apps taking up space on your mobile device. If you really had to pick just one app for you study kit, it should be Evernote. It’s available on multiple platforms, usable in Web browser and mobile apps, comes with Web browser plugins/ addons, and it’s all free.
If money is burning a hole in your pocket, you can upgrade and get more storage space for your documents. If that’s not enough, Evernote announced two new features for release some time in fall 2014. One is Work Chat, and it’ll let you text chat with other Evernote users, obviously including classmates. If this isn’t *the* study app that all college students need, then we don’t know what is.
If you install the iPad version of Evernote, add the Evernote Peek (iOS app only) for the ability to do distraction-free, flashcard-style quizzing on question sets that either you create, or download from shared content.
Other App Info:

Tuesday, July 5, 2016

Website tools for various online activities

   

website tools for various on line activities. below are various websites which are very useful. all websites are updated and useful in online work.Please check below the weblinks are enjoy and make easy online work.





  1. TinyURL – Make long URL’s Shorter
  2. Bug Me Not – Don’t sign up.
  3. PDf me Not – View PDFs without Adobe
  4. CiteBite – Cite to parts of a page
  5. Awesome Highlighter – Highlight and send web pages
  6. PDF Escape – Annotate PDFs
  7. Addictomatic – One stop shop for buzz
  8. IMO.im
  9. PDF Creator – Printer driver to print to PDF
  10. I Love PDF
  11. Print Friendly – Make any page print friendly.
  12. Poll Everywhere
  13. Tracked – Company information.
  14. Fill Any PDF – Edit PDFs
  15. Tumblr – Microblogging
  16. Cool Previews – Browser inside a browser
  17. Deepest Sender – WordPress Posting Tool
  18. You Send It – Send Big Files
  19. Ping.fm – Update all of your apps at once.
  20. Fasterfox – Make Firefox faster
  21. Page 2 RSS – Create RSS Feeds for pages that don’t have them
  22. Update Scanner – Notification of new content
  23. Watch That Page – E-mail updates of new content
  24. You Tube RSS Trick – Create RSS Feeds for You Tube content
  25. Justia Dockets – RSS feeds for new litigation
  26. Web Site Watcher – Desktop app for tracking pages
  27. Convotrack – Keep Track of the entire conversation
  28. Open Congress – Keep track of Congress via RSS
  29. Votes Database – RSS enabled.
  30. GovTrack/ – Use RSS to Track the Government
  31. Kwout – Create a widget for a part of a page
  32. Download Them All – Multiple downloads
  33. Picnik – Edit images.
  34. Bib Me – Bibliography Maker
  35. Auto Reload
  36. Brizzly
  37. Feedly
  38. Google Reader Compact
  39. Monkeyfly
  40. PingThis!
  41. Browser Preview
  42. RSS Easy Subscription
  43. Libworm – LIS specific search engine
  44. Pandora – Free Social Music Site
  45. Auction Bloopers – Misspellings on E-bay
  46. RSS Auction/ – RSS feeds for E-bay searches
  47. Amazon RSS – RSS Feeds for Amazon Wishlists
  48. E-Lis – E-Lis – Open source LIS Papers
  49. Tic Tocs – RSS Feeds for TOCs
  50. Ad Block Plus – Block Ads in FireFox
  51. Better Gcal – Add Features to your Google Calendar
  52. ScreenGrab – Save parts of a page as an image.
  53. Compfight – An easier way to search for images.
  54. Google Groups/ – Underestimated as a research tool.
  55. Internet Archive — Look at old versions of web sites.
  56. Library Thing – Tag Books and more.
  57. Mashable – Great tech blog to keep up with new tools.
  58. Zoho – suite of online tools
  59. Read Write Web – Another great blog to keep up with new tools.
  60. BackupURL – Creates cached pages for URLs
  61. World Cat – Duh.
  62. Ehub – More new tools
  63. Delicious tag for tools – A great way to keep up with new tools.
  64. Media Convert – Convert any file to any file.
  65. Refresh Every – Automatically refresh any page.
  66. Password Meter – Do you have a safe password
  67. Catchvdeo – Download Web Videos
  68. Zamzar – More file conversions.
  69. Typetester – Compare Typesets
  70. Flickr apps – THE place for Flickr applications.
  71. html 2 PDF – Convert a web page to PDF
  72. Open Office – Forget MS Office
  73. Techcrunch – Very popular tech blog.
  74. Survey Monkey – Free online surveys
  75. FotoFlexer – Another great image editing tool.
  76. Instant Domain Search – Instant domain search.
  77. Mail Big File – Send a big file
  78. Dark Copy – Full screen editor to get rid of distractions.
  79. SlideShare – Upload your PowerPoint Presentations to the web.
  80. Docstoc – YouTube for Documents
  81. 280 Slides – Online PowerPoint.
  82. LaLa – Social music site
  83. Instapaper – Save stuff for later.
  84. Pageflakes – Starting page
  85. Twitterfeed – RSS to Twitter
  86. Wayfaring – Personalized Maps
  87. Bookmooch – Give books away.
  88. Scribd – The YouTube for documents.
  89. Down For Everyone – Or is it just me?
  90. Resizr – Resize Photos
  91. Linkbun – Put multiple links in one small link
  92. TwitPic – Send a picture to Twitter
  93. Yourli.st – Remind Yourself  –
  94. 10 minute e-mail – Get a throwaway e-mail address
  95. Tweetstats – Stats for your Twitter account.
  96. PDF Download – Do what you want with PDF downloads
  97. LinkedIn – Great place to network
  98. TwitterBar – Post to Twitter directly from your Firefox Address Bar
  99. URLBarExt – Short Shortcuts
  100. Reading Blinds – Makes online reading easier
  101. Print What You Like – Print only parts of a web page that you want.
  102. WWWhatsnew – Great blog in Spanish
  103. I want to – Made by a librarian!
  104. Museum of Modern Betas – New sites, new tools
  105. Killer Startups – Analyzes new tools
  106. SlickPlan – Free Flowcharts
  107. undocopy.com - Computer, Blogging, Internet, Tips.

Monday, July 4, 2016

Jupiter Need-To-Know Things

   

Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and the largest in the Solar System. It is a giant planet with a mass one-thousandth that of the Sun, but two and a half times that of all the other planets in the Solar System combined. Jupiter is a gas giant, along with Saturn, with the other two giant planetsUranus and Neptun



1. The Biggest Planet
If the sun were as tall as a typical front door, the Earth would be the size of a nickel and Jupiter would be about as big as a basketball. About 1,300 Earths could fit inside Jupiter.


2. Fifth in Line
Jupiter orbits our sun, a star. Jupiter is the fifth planet from the sun at a distance of about 484 million miles (778 million km) or 5.2 Astronomical Units (AU). Earth is one AU from the sun.


3. Short Day / Long Year
One day on Jupiter takes about 10 hours (the time it takes for Jupiter to rotate or spin once). Jupiter makes a complete orbit around the sun (a year in Jovian time) in about 12 Earth years (4,333 Earth days).


4. What's Inside?
Jupiter is a gas-giant planet and therefore does not have a solid surface. Jupiter may have a solid, inner core about the size of Earth.


5. Atmosphere
Jupiter's atmosphere is made up mostly of hydrogen (H2) and helium (He).


Read About:Juno probe successfully enters Jupiter's orbit after 'amazing' mission

6. Many Moons
Jupiter has 53 known moons, with an additional 14 moons awaiting confirmation of their discovery -- that is a total of 67 moons.


7. Ringed World
Jupiter has a faint ring system that was discovered in 1979 by the Voyager 1 mission. All four giant planets in our solar system have ring systems.


8. Exploring Jupiter
Many missions have visited Jupiter and its system of moons. The Juno mission is arrived at Jupiter in June 2016.


9. Ingredients for Life?
Jupiter cannot support life as we know it. However, some of Jupiter's moons have oceans underneath their crusts that might support life.


10. Did You Know?
Jupiter's Great Red Spot is a gigantic storm (about the size of Earth) that has been raging for hundreds of years.

Juno probe successfully enters Jupiter's orbit after 'amazing' mission

   




After an almost five-year journey to the solar system’s largest planet, NASA's Juno spacecraft successfully entered Jupiter’s orbit during a 35-minute engine burn.  Confirmation that the burn had completed was received on Earth at 8:53 pm. PDT (11:53 p.m. EDT) Monday, July 4.

“Independence Day always is something to celebrate, but today we can add to America’s birthday another reason to cheer – Juno is at Jupiter,” said NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden. “And what is more American than a NASA mission going boldly where no spacecraft has gone before? With Juno, we will investigate the unknowns of Jupiter’s massive radiation belts to delve deep into not only the planet’s interior, but into how Jupiter was born and how our entire solar system evolved.”

Confirmation of a successful orbit insertion was received from Juno tracking data monitored at the navigation facility at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, as well as at the Lockheed Martin Juno operations center in Denver. The telemetry and tracking data were received by NASA's Deep Space Network antennas in Goldstone, California, and Canberra, Australia.

“This is the one time I don’t mind being stuck in a windowless room on the night of the Fourth of July,” said Scott Bolton, principal investigator of Juno from Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. “The mission team did great. The spacecraft did great. We are looking great. It’s a great day.”

Preplanned events leading up to the orbital insertion engine burn included changing the spacecraft’s attitude to point the main engine in the desired direction and then increasing the spacecraft’s rotation rate from 2 to 5 revolutions per minute (RPM) to help stabilize it.

The burn of Juno’s 645-Newton Leros-1b main engine began on time at 8:18 p.m. PDT (11:18 p.m. EDT), decreasing the spacecraft’s velocity by 1,212 mph (542 meters per second) and allowing Juno to be captured in orbit around Jupiter. Soon after the burn was completed, Juno turned so that the sun’s rays could once again reach the 18,698 individual solar cells that give Juno its energy.

“The spacecraft worked perfectly, which is always nice when you’re driving a vehicle with 1.7 billion miles on the odometer,” said Rick Nybakken, Juno project manager from JPL. “Jupiter orbit insertion was a big step and the most challenging remaining in our mission plan, but there are others that have to occur before we can give the science team members the mission they are looking for.”

Over the next few months, Juno’s mission and science teams will perform final testing on the spacecraft’s subsystems, final calibration of science instruments and some science collection.

“Our official science collection phase begins in October, but we’ve figured out a way to collect data a lot earlier than that,” said Bolton. “Which when you’re talking about the single biggest planetary body in the solar system is a really good thing. There is a lot to see and do here.”

Juno's principal goal is to understand the origin and evolution of Jupiter. With its suite of nine science instruments, Juno will investigate the existence of a solid planetary core, map Jupiter's intense magnetic field, measure the amount of water and ammonia in the deep atmosphere, and observe the planet's auroras. The mission also will let us take a giant step forward in our understanding of how giant planets form and the role these titans played in putting together the rest of the solar system. As our primary example of a giant planet, Jupiter also can provide critical knowledge for understanding the planetary systems being discovered around other stars.

The Juno spacecraft launched on Aug. 5, 2011, from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. JPL manages the Juno mission for NASA. Juno is part of NASA's New Frontiers Program, managed at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, for the agency’s Science Mission Directorate. Lockheed Martin Space Systems in Denver built the spacecraft. The California Institute of Technology in Pasadena manages JPL for NASA.

More information on the Juno mission is available at: http://www.nasa.gov/juno



What the Juno mission will look like