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ATP: A new look, a new domain, the same old stuff!

Posted on September 1, 2006
Filed Under >Adil Najam, About ATP
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ATP Team

Welcome to Pakistaniat.com. The new home of All Things Pakistan (ATP).

We moved all the posts and comments from the old ATP address here late this evening; because it had to be a real time move, we are now in the process of ironing out some small kinks, which we hope to remove soon. So, please bear with us; and if you have any suggestions do let us know since we will finalize this over the next couple of days.

It has been a whirlwind of a ride for us here at ATP. The blog is just two and a half months old. Adil Najam started the blog as ‘something to do over the summer’ and the first post had gone up on June 11, 2006. By July 16, we were up to 100 posts and had developed a small but faithful readership. One August 18, ATP formally became a team blog with Bilal and Owais joining Adil. Today, on September 1, we have moved to our own domain-name (Pakistaniat.Com) in this redesigned format.



We hope you will like the new look and the many additional features, most of which have been added in direct response to reader’s suggestions. I must confess that I kind of liked the simplicity of our old page, but as the number of readers and comments have grown, particularly in recent days, new needs have emerged. Here are some things that are new or changed:

  • The comments section uses a larger and easier to use font size.
  • The box for writing comments is now bigger and uses a bigger font size.
  • You will have up to 3 minutes to review and re-edit your comments after posting them (in case you make a mistake).
  • We are trying to bring in essential editing features to the comments section; working on it.
  • The link to comments is now placed at the top of each post on the front page.
  • Easy to access information about current discussions and recent comments will be on the front page at the top of the middle column.
  • The ‘ATP Discussions’ section will list the posts with the most recent comments, and include names of recent commenters on that post.
  • The ‘ATP Comments’ section will now include a longer list of recent comments.
  • The front page will (soon) allow you to search both within the site and on Google.
  • The ‘EMail this post’ feature allows you to send any post you like directly to your friends.
  • The Archives page currently has a slight glitch on search by date (working on it) but the search by category works fine and allows easier and at a glance access to past posts.
  • The search feature will now lead to an easier to read and summarized results.

These are a few of the feature we have already added. There are more that we will add over the next many days and weeks.

Bear with us as we fix any problems but do explore the site; please change you bookmarks; and keep coming back often. Most importantly, we hope you will bring the same spirit of healthy discussion to Pakistaniat.com that you had invested at the old ATP. It is the discussion that really makes this blog. Many have commented that the quality of the comments — in terms of substance as well as tone — is different from other places that can sometimes turn into shouting matches. We hope to keep it that was, one our part we will keep weeding out inappropriate behavior; on your part, please keep the thinking juices flowing!

Finally, let us just repeat – yet again – the ideas and thoughts we had offered in the very first ATP post through this quick journey of verse and image, based on Faiz Ahmed Faiz’s ‘Hum daikhain gay’, produced by Adil Najam, which serves as a statement of hope that, we hope, exemplifies the spirit of this blog:

How to track down a stolen gadget.(Innovation)

The Christian Science Monitor June 28, 2011 | Gaylord, Chris Byline: Chris Gaylord Theft is a tough crime to crack. Burglars rarely leave behind any evidence; witnesses are few and far between; and police resources, especially in cities, often go toward homicides and other more pressing crimes.

In Oakland, Calif., three police investigators must juggle 2,400 new reports of stolen property each month. in our site blackberry protect login

“Laptops are not so much a priority,” says Holly Joshi, spokeswoman for the Oakland Police Department. “Unless a citizen has seen the burglar, we don’t have the staffing levels to chase everything down.” So when Joshua Kaufman reported the theft of his MacBook to the Oakland police in March, he didn’t hear anything back. But Mr. Kaufman had a secret weapon. Before his computer was stolen, he had installed Hidden, a laptop locator.

Hidden, and other forms of software like it, offer gadget owners some peace of mind. The programs help track down and recover lost or stolen electronics. Here are some of the best options for Macs, PCs, phones, and digital cameras:

Computers: The Hidden software runs quietly in the background, providing three useful, if borderline creepy, tools to locate iMacs and MacBooks. For $15 a year, the program can pinpoint a missing machine to within a quarter-mile radius, allow a Mac’s true owner to take screen shots of what programs are running, and remotely turn on the laptop’s webcam to snap pictures of the person using it.

After some extra nudging from news outlets and social media, including Kaufman’s own blog (called This Guy Has My MacBook), the police arrested the man on May 31 and reunited Kaufman with his missing laptop.

Unfortunately, Prey and Hidden only work if the computer is turned on, and a smart crook could wipe your hard drive, removing the software. Still, applications such as Hidden and Prey are “definitely a helpful tool,” says Ms. Joshi, with the Oakland police. “It’s not very expensive, so if people feel comfortable doing so, they should look into installing it.” Go to hiddenapp.com and preyproject.com for details and downloads.

Phones: Between satellite data, Wi-Fi triangulation, and cell-tower signals, mobile phones are one of the easiest devices to track down – if you have the right software. site blackberry protect login

Apple has a free Find My iPhone feature. The service, part of Apple’s MobileMe, will pinpoint a lost or stolen iPhone, iPad, or iPod Touch to within a few yards. The owner can send an alert that will pop up on the device’s screen, such as a message that reads, “If found, please contact …” Apple can also remotely add password protection or erase the hard drive entirely.

Android phone users can download Lookout, a free app that locates lost phones, as well as back up contacts and install anti-malware protection. The company also has a $30-a-year premium service that lets you lock down or remotely wipe an Android device.

In March, a beta version of BlackBerry Protect opened up free tools to locate and erase handsets. Many of these features already came included in BlackBerry’s enterprise packages.

Cameras: Most digital photographs come with detailed information hidden inside the code. These secret tags note the shutter speed, flash settings – and the serial number of the camera.

GadgetTrak.com/CameraSearch scours the Internet for images and logs every serial number it can find.

The new website has filed 3.5 million unique identifiers in less than a month. Enter your serial number and the free service will sniff out photos taken from that camera.

If GadgetTrak brings up images you don’t recognize, it may have just ratted out a sneaky child who’s borrowed your camera without asking – or identified the thief who’s made off with your stolen dSLR.

Increasingly, modern cameras also record where an image was taken, providing extra evidence against a culprit.

GadgetTrak’s Camera Search and competitor StolenCameraFinder.com are rather new services. They may not have indexed your photos yet. If a serial-number search comes up dry, try again in a few weeks or months.

Gaylord, Chris

24 comments posted

Comment Pages: « 3 2 [1] Show All

  1. BD says:
    September 2nd, 2006 2:46 am

    I see that you are using K2. May be this might help:

    In the K2 options section there’s a button “Setup ELA for K2 archives page”. I remember having faced a similar problem; clicking on that button solved it.

  2. September 2nd, 2006 2:18 am

    AoA!

    Time flew so fast.I remember you just started 2 months ago.Am I right and this site become favorite of many online users specially for people of PAkistan and other countries of subcontinent.

    I hope this website will not only maintain its standard but also will discuss social issues in our society and will provide solution for them.

    I also suggest to Adil bhai and his team which I assume all are overseas Pakistanis,that please preach pakistanis to come back and do take part in every field.

    Thanks

  3. Adil Najam says:
    September 2nd, 2006 1:46 am

    BD, thanks. Yes, we are trying to figure out what is going wrong there. The Archives seems to work by Category but not by date… working on it.

    There is also an ongoing issue with the RSS feed that we are trying to resolve.

    Bear with us on both, please.

  4. BD says:
    September 2nd, 2006 1:33 am

    The extended live archives needs a bit of work. The post titles are all overlapping with each other.

    Take a look at the screenshot

  5. Ramesh Balakrishnan says:
    September 1st, 2006 10:36 pm

    Good work. Can we revive polls? Suggested poll question.

    Who is the greatest leader Pakistan has ever produced?

    1. Ayub Khan
    2. Pervez Musharraf
    3. Benazir Bhutto
    4. Farooq Leghari
    5. Z.A.Bhutto
    6. Altaf Hussain
    7. Chaudhry Hussain
    8. Pervez Elahi
    9. Imran Khan
    10. Nawaz Sharif
    11. Yahya Khan
    12. Mr.Jinnah
    13. Shaukat Aziz

  6. September 1st, 2006 10:34 pm

    In addition to all of you who I need to thank for ‘showing up’ once we made the blog, I wanted to thank a few individauls in particular for their technical assistance. iFaqeer for introducing me to blogs and explaining patiently what they are and how to get started. Dr. Awab (TeethMaestro) for suggesting that we should get our own domain and then being a patient guide through the process. I have been incessantly sending him emails with problems and he has been graciously responding always with assistance.

    Saad. Thanks for pointing out the feed issue. Something is worng and I am working on finding a fix.

  7. Saad says:
    September 1st, 2006 10:00 pm

    Looks fabulous! Great work.

    edit: Kindly check if the RSS feeds for this site are running fine, i can’t seem to get any :s

  8. September 1st, 2006 9:48 pm

    Dear Adil and team,
    Wish you the very best !
    regards,
    bhupinder

Comment Pages: « 3 2 [1] Show All



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