The main difference between http:// and https:// is It’s all about keeping you secure
HTTP stands for HyperText Transport Protocol, which is just a fancy way of saying it’s a protocol (a language, in a manner of speaking) for information to be passed back and forth between web servers and clients.
The important thing is the letter S which makes the difference between HTTP and HTTPS.
The S (big surprise) stands for “Secure”.
If you visit a website or webpage, and look at the address in the web browser, it will likely begin with the following: http://.
This means that the website is talking to your browser using the regular ‘unsecure’ language. In other words, it is possible for someone to “eavesdrop” on your computer’s conversation with the website. If you
fill out a form on the website, someone might see the information you send to that site.
This is why you never ever enter your credit card number in an http website!
But if the web address begins with https://, that basically means your computer is talking to the website in a secure code that no one can eavesdrop on.
You understand why this is so important, right?
If a website ever asks you to enter your credit card information, you should automatically look to see if the web address begins with https://.
If it doesn’t, there’s no way you’re going to enter sensitive information like a credit card number!
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Nokia Money
Mobile money services puts you in control of your daily finances – transfer funds, pay bills, and buy goods and services quickly and securely with your mobile phone.Nokia Money enables consumers to pay directly from their Nokia mobile phones in India. It is currently available in Mumbai, Delhi National Capital Region (NCR), Nasik, Pune, Chennai and Chandigarh. And it will soon commence its operations in Surat, Baroda, Rajkot, Lucknow, Kanpur, Kochi and Kozhikode. Nokia Money, the mobile payment services of Nokia is looking for a pan India coverage.
Nokia at present has a tie-up for the e-wallet facility with Yes Bank and Union Bank of India, and the company is considering for a tie-up with other banks too.
Nokia Money Services allows mobile phone users to transfer money to another person by using the person’s mobile phone number and also top up the prepaid card or pay utility bills.
Read more at TECK.IN: http://teck.in/nokia-money-mobile-payment-service-in-india.html#ixzz1OrWlnlBm
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Internet Explorer 9 is now available in more local languages than any other browser on Windows operating system. Microsoft released support for IE9 in 53 additional languages, making IE9 available in a total of 93 languages.Explorer 9 is available in, starting with the originally released 40 and followed by the 53 new languages in blue:
| Arabic | Lithuanian | Bengali (India) | Malayalam |
| Bulgarian | Norwegian (Bokmål) | Bosnian (Cyrillic) | Maltese |
| Catalan | Polish | Bosnian (Latin) | Maori |
| Chinese (Hong Kong SAR) | Portuguese (Brazilian) | Filipino | Marathi |
| Chinese (Simplified) | Portuguese (Portugal) | Galician | Nepali |
| Chinese (Traditional) | Romanian | Georgian | Norwegian (Nynorsk) |
| Croatian | Russian | Gujarati | Oriya |
| Czech | Serbian (Latin) | Hausa | Persian |
| Danish | Slovak | Icelandic | Punjabi |
| Dutch | Slovenian | Igbo | Quechua |
| English (US) | Spanish (Spain) | Inuktitut | Serbian (Cyrillic) |
| Estonian | Swedish | Irish | Sesotho |
| Finnish | Thai | isiXhosa | Setswana |
| French | Turkish | isiZulu | Sinhala |
| German | Ukrainian | Kannada | Tamil |
| Greek | Vietnamese | Kazakh | Tatar |
| Hebrew | Albanian | Khmer | Telugu |
| Hindi (India) | Afrikaans | Kiswahili | Urdu |
| Hungarian | Amharic | Konkani | Uzbek |
| Indonesian | Armenian | Kyrgyz | Welsh |
| Italian | Assamese | Luxembourgish | Yoruba |
| Japanese* | Azerbaijani | Macedonian | |
| Korean | Basque | Malay (Brunei Darussalam) | |
| Latvian | Bangla (Bangladesh) | Malay (Malaysia) |