Friday, January 11, 2013

Mobile Phones

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Today mobile phone is a very useful thing in modern world. Mobile phone that is a amazing gift of science. It has changed the modern world of communication. Now man can communicate anywhere, anytime to anyone living thousands of kilometers away from through his mobile phone.
mobile phone price

The newest version of mobile phones gives us many great facilities like music, photography, internet, GPS navigation so on. In now everything we have in our mobile. Now we can communicate, browse internet and can do everything using our mobile in anywhere. We no need a PC anymore with our newest mobile.
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Monday, March 12, 2012

HP readying competitor for Amazon's cloud computing, plans to launch soon

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We're still waiting to see where HP goes with webOS, but according to the New York Times it will officially launch a cloud computing service that competes with Amazon Web Services in the next couple of months. HP Senior VP and General Manager Zorawar Singh is quoted saying the currently in beta service projects as an alternative to what Amazon has built with a focus on personalized sales and service and additional tools for third party developers, as well as a system of small data centers around the world. Throw in analytics based on technology it's obtained by purchasing Vertica and Autonomy, and maybe Meg Whitman's ship has something here, but we'll wait until the next Netflix is running its operations from this cloud before declaring it on the same level.

source: nytimes
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German government proposes to charge search engines for excerpting news sites

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A German government committee is proposing changes that could force search engines operating in the country to pay for using news excerpts. The plans involve setting up a department to charge royalties from sites that aggregate news feeds, and covers them for 12-months from date of publish. This isn't the first country to attempt to protect publishers' material, with the Newspaper Licensing Agency in the UK also performing a similar role. Before you hide your news blog from German eyes, the ruling will only affect commercial outfits.
Germany's publishing executives have been pushing for such a move since a case in Belgium that saw Google News forced to stop excerpting articles. Unsurprisingly there is strong support from the industry, with 149 execs from the country already having petitioned the government with a "Hamburg Declaration on Intellectual Property Rights" proposal in 2009, and both the German Federation of Newspaper Publishers and Association of German Magazine Publishers also campaigning for change. Now that the committee has laid down clear plans, it remains to be seen if or how they will be implemented, but with the nation's track record for pulling no punches where technology is concerned, search engines might have to prepare for a rapid change in policy.

source: paidcontent
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Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Huawei announces Ascend D Series – includes ‘world’s fastest smartphone’

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Huawei Chairman Richard Yu took the stage at the Mobile World Congress to unveil what he claims to be the world’s fastest smartphone – Huawei Ascend D Quad. Unlike most of today’s quad-core smartphones, it has a unique processor – the K3V2 built by the same company. Huawei says the K3 processor is faster than any other quad-core processor in the market.

NVIDIA and Qualcomm are today’s leading manufacturers of smartphone processors. NVIDIA already pushed out Tegra 3 4-PLUS-1 processors for HTC One X and LG Optimus 4X HD. Huawei took a big leap by making their very own quad-core processor, K3V2. They say it’s 49 percent faster than today’s fastest smartphones – which is a bit vague since they may be referring to dual-core devices.

In addition to a quad-core processor, Ascend D Quad runs on Ice Cream Sandwich. It has a large 4.5-inch screen with 720p HD display, 1 GB RAM, 1800mAh of battery, an 8MP rear camera, a 1.3MP front-facing camera, 1080p video capture, and 5.1 Dolby Digital surround sound for audio. Measuring 8.9mm in thickness, it is about 1mm thicker than the thinnest smartphone to date – HTC One X.

Also announced by Huawei Chairman is Ascend D Quad XL. Packed with similar specs but a better battery, it can last up to three days of use. Huawei Ascend D1 was also shown during the event. Specs-wise it resembles Ascend D Quad. However, it only has a dual-core processor and a humble 1670mAh battery. We can expect a cheaper price tag on it.
source: gadgetmania
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LG Optimus 3D Max – maximum 3D in a thin and light body

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Despite what various manufacturers are saying, 3D isn’t really catching on – at least not as fast as they would want it to. It’s slowly coming to new HDTVs, and it’s been tried on laptops, tablets and of course, smartphones, but it kind of went away after a few devices. One of the few smartphones to have a 3D display and to actually enter production was the LG Optimus 3D, which you might remember from last year.
Well, apparently, LG thinks 3D is a niche worth fighting for, as they’ve got yet another 3D smartphone in line that will be officially announced during this year’s Mobile World Congress in Spain. The device is called the Optimus 3D Max, and unlike the other Max(x) on the market, it’ll most probably have an abysmal battery life.

Judging by the mockups and snapshots, the Optimus 3D Max will look just like any other slab smartphone, with not much to make it stand out. While that’s not necessarily a bad thing, it would be nice to see something new in the smartphone’s exterior design once in a while – I suppose that LG is leaving the “wow” effect to the display. The 3D Max is touted as thinner and lighter than its predecessor, though, and that certainly seems to be the case: the phone is now 9.6 mm slim and 148 grams light, which is in line with most other non-3D phones on the market.

The display of the Optimus 3D is a 4.3 inch LCD unit with LG’s own NOVA technology for a higher brightness and lower power consumption (first seen on the Optimus Black), however it will have the same old resolution of 800×480 pixels, which means that in 3D, you’ll be seeing 400×480 pixels in each eye – not exactly successor-worthy, I think.

The other hardware specs are pretty much similar to all the other flagship phones on the market. There’s your standard Wifi N, Bluetooth 3.0 and GPS adapters, a nice selection of sensors, DLNA support, 8 GB of internal storage space (and I hope it has a micro SD card slot), HSPA+ radio, and a dual 5 megapixels cameras array for 3D photos and video recording, plus a front facing 1.3 megapixels camera for video chat and whatnot. There’s also an NFC radio with support for LG Tag+ – LG’s new stickers that can be read with NFC and perform various actions based on the input.

Performance wise, everything seems to be in order with the Optimus 3D Max – there’s a Texas Instruments OMAP 4430 chipset inside, with a dual core 1.2 GHz processor and the PowerVR SGX540 graphics adapter – more than enough to run any apps and games, and it’s also fast in Web browsing, video playback, document editing and any other tasks. There’s also a full gigabyte of RAM inside to aid the processor and make things smooth even under the heaviest of loads. The 1520 mAh could be a big problem – with a dual camera array and 3D display (even a NOVA unit), it can’t last longer than 6-7 hours, for sure.
The Optimus 3D Max will initially be powered by Android 2.3 Gingerbread, which is quite a weird decision seeing as Ice Cream Sandwich is out, but an update to ICS will be available right away, so it’s not that much of an issue. The phone will be officially announced during MWC, so stay tuned for details in a couple of weeks

source: gadgetmania
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