Learn How to Add Google Gadgets to a Joomla Website

Monday, April 30, 2012


Google offers a tremendous amount of "gadgets" that can be embedded in to your site. These gadgets can be many things including movie show times, currency converters and weather data. If you find one of these that you like, or if you have a client that would like to add one of them to their website, you will need to understand how to include them in to a Joomla website.
The most important part of adding Google Gadgets to a Joomla site is finding where and how to put the code so that it will appear only in the locations you or your client specify. This is relatively easy, and I will explain it step by step next.
The first thing to do is to find out where to find all of Google's Gadgets. Go to google.com/ig/directory. Next, choose a Gadget you would like to have on your site and click on "Add to your webpage". Then click on "Get the Code" underneath the gadget and copy the code and paste it in to a text document and save it someplace on your hard drive.
Next, login to the administrator area of your site. Go to Extensions > "Module Manager" and click on "New". When you are prompted to make a choice, choose "Custom HTML" and click "Next". Give the module a title and decide if you want the title to show up in the browser for all of your visitors to see.
You will have to decide which module position and which pages the Gadget will appear on next. Hopefully you will have thought this out ahead of time and then can add the pages under the "Menu Assignment" pane and choose the module position from the pop-up menu. You can always change both of these anytime you want if you don't like how the gadget appears on certain pages.
Finally, in "Custom Output" click on HTML in the bottom of the pane if you are using an html editor, then paste the code obtained from Google that you had saved in to a text document earlier. If you are not using an HTML editor, just paste the code right in to the Custom Output pane. Now, click "Save" and your Gadget will be in the module position on the pages you had specified.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/3665375

3 Tips for Organized Gadget Travel

I travel quite a bit for both business and for fun, and I can't think of the last time I went somewhere without some tech in tow, whether a digital camera, my mobile phone, iPad, laptop or netbook, or some other gizmo. These devices are so much a part of our lives that it's hard for us to go anywhere without them. But how can we take them with us in a way that makes sense, keeps them accessible and organized, and doesn't leave us with a huge and heavy carry-on bag?
Consolidate. This may seem like strange advice coming from a huge gadget fan, but when traveling, my general philosophy is "the fewer devices, the better." The less you bring with you, the fewer devices you have to worry about losing, the fewer chargers you need to bring, and less you have to carry. One way to bring less tech with you is to leverage something you probably already use all the time - your mobile phone. Your cell phone can do so much for you - and can save you tons of bulk during a trip by consolidating the functions of many other devices into one. Especially if you have a current smartphone, you can often leave your digital camera, mp3 player, portable video game, camcorder, and GPS unit behind. Granted, you may not get every single feature that you'd have with each and every individual device, but the benefit of leaving them at home is far less bulk, and less to lose. One note: if you're traveling abroad, make sure to review your data service plan or turn off your data (just leave your phone in flight mode) to avoid exorbitant roaming charges.
Charge smart. It used to be that every device needed its own charger, which can add lots of bulk to your travel case. I remember the days when I'd bring a charger for my laptop, my camera, my cell phone, my mp3 player, and my portable video game - and I'd try to shoehorn it all into one small bag. By the time I was done, my carry-on would be filled with chargers and cords! Luckily, that's no longer the case. Many current devices can be charged via the USB port on your computer, or via a wall charger with a USB port. Instead of carrying around a wall adapter for each device, instead carry one USB-equipped wall adapter, and use a USB charging cable for your device (most devices, including cell phones, mp3 players, and many digital cameras, already come with such a cable). If you're bringing your laptop with you, you may not even need to bring the wall adapter at all!
Organize and contain. Even if you have whittled down your devices to just one or two and have consolidated your cables to the bare minimum, you're still going to have to deal with what can often be a tangled mess. What you don't want is to open your bag and have to untie a big knot of cables - that's no way to get a trip started on the right foot! Instead, make sure you're using the right tools to help organize your cables and keep your devices safe. You'll want to make sure you have a space for each of your devices, along with any chargers, adapters, extra memory cards, and the like.
When I travel, I like to use the Grid-It ( Southall-Travel.com ) system to help keep all my chargers and cables organized. What's great about this particular system is that it's flexible and adaptable to whatever combination of gizmos and cables you happen to have with you, and it holds your stuff securely. I also like the Kangaroom Personal Media Pouch which can hold your devices and cables and then can slip into your larger laptop bag or briefcase.
These days, we all travel with something that has a button or a battery. What do you do to keep your tech organized when you travel?
Joshua Zerkel, Productivity Strategist, is a Certified Professional Organizer and the founder of Custom Living Solutions, the San Francisco Bay Area's premier productivity and organizing consulting firm. Joshua specializes in helping busy entrepreneurs save time, be more productive and make more money by getting organized at home and at work.

Apple vs. Samsung: Who sells more phones?


Smartphones are the hottest gadgets in the world. But who's the biggest smartphone maker? We don't really know.
Samsung, Apple's chief competitor, gives only vague indications of how many it makes, which means industry watchers come up with widely diverging estimates. Apple Inc. reports its iPhone sales down to the thousands. In the January to March period, it shipped 35,064,000. South Korea's Samsung Electronics Co. may have sold 32 million, 37.5 million or 44.5 million, depending which analyst you believe. The company itself refuses to say.
What's at stake, of course, are bragging rights. More accurate sales figures from Samsung would also be useful to competitors and to partners like wireless carriers and retailers.
When it reported first-quarter results Friday morning, Samsung said only that overall phone shipments (including "dumb" phones) were down more than 10% from the fourth quarter, and that smartphone sales were about the same percentage of the company's overall sales as they have been before.
The problem is that Samsung hasn't reported any hard sales figures in a long time, so analysts are applying these vague hints to their own estimates, which in turn are based on vague hints from previous quarters.
There's even a debate about what Samsung's few guideposts really mean. Jan Dawson, an analyst at Ovum, says the analyst community is split over the interpretation of Samsung's reported "300%" increase in smartphone sales in the third quarter of 2011, over the third quarter of 2010. A 300% increase means a quadrupling, but did Samsung really mean that? Or did sales triple, and they made the common mistake of calling that a "300% increase?"
The two schools of thought account for some of the widely diverging estimates, Dawson believes. Analysts and reporters haven't been able to get Samsung to clarify the issue.
Wayne Lam, an analyst with IHS iSuppli, likens the process of estimating Samsung sales to "using compasses instead of GPS." His estimate for first-quarter smartphone sales is 32 million, which would put Samsung behind Apple.
IDC Corp., a research firm that tracks phone sales, postponed the release of its quarterly phone sales ranking. It was originally scheduled for just after Samsung's report, but analyst Ramon Llamas said "additional insight" was needed.
Analysts agree that in terms of overall phone sales, including non-smart ones, Samsung outdid long-time No. 1 Nokia Corp. in the first quarter. But they differ on the margin of victory. Finland's Nokia said it sold 82.7 million phones. ABI Research's Michael Morgan puts Samsung at 83.4 million, only just ahead. Strategy Analytics has it at 93.5 million.
The estimates differ by 10.1 million phones, roughly enough for all the adults in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago.
Samsung is not alone in espousing vagueness. Taiwan-based smartphone maker HTC Corp. recently stopped reporting how many phones it makes, possibly because its sales are in decline.
"The bottom line is Samsung and Apple are definitely consolidating at the top," Lam said. "The lead will trade back and forth a bit."

Cool Home Security Gadgets That Are Way Hot

With home burglary increasing in popularity among the bad guys as a way to make their living, homeowners need every little edge they can get to protect their homes. Home security gadgets provide that edge. Some are a little off-the-wall and unusual but they all work at providing a level of security for your home to make it safer for your family.
A good example is the door stop alarm. It is a simple wedge-shaped doorstop with a sensor on the top that when activated sounds a loud alarm. It is a great device for dorm rooms, motel rooms, apartments and homes to provide a level of security that otherwise would be unavailable.
Security cameras are a great deterrent to burglary and home invasion. The problem is they are too expensive for many people especially when you may need more than one. That's where fake security cameras come in. They are so realistic looking that no one except the person who paid the low price for them can tell the difference. Some have antennas just like the real thing. Almost all of them have blinking LED lights that add to the realism.
Key hiders are a great home security gadget that allows you to hide a key someplace other than under the front doormat where every burglar in the world knows to look. Some key hiders look like small rocks that have hidden compartments in them big enough for a key. Another one is a working thermometer that can be placed by the front door. Never get locked out again with a key hider.
The photo patrol is a wireless, weatherproof, motion activated camera that can take up to 200 photos. Place it by your front door or driveway and you can capture pictures of burglars entering your house or vandals damaging your car.
Nearly everyone has nuisance animals in their yard whether squirrels, rodents, dogs or cats. Some people out west even have too many deer in their yard. There is a product called the Scram Patrol animal chaser that emits an ultrasonic sound that chases animals away. Point this "scram patrol" at the animals you want to rid from your yard and the ultrasonic sound will chase them away. It works on coyotes, wolves and any other nuisance animal you can think of. It can also be used as a training tool for dogs.
These hot home security gadgets are cool ways to improve your home security and make your home a safer place for your family.
Please check all of our cool Home Security Gadgets. One of them may be just what you are looking for.
The Home Security Superstore is one of the oldest and largest independent distributors of high quality home security, surveillance, spy, self-defense, survival and safety products. We carry a wide range of self-defense products including tasers, stun guns, pepper sprays and other nonlethal weapons that can save your life in the event of an attack.
 
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