Friday, December 24, 2010

Logitech G19 Gaming Keyboard [Review]......!!!

The G19 is a costly keyboard that relies on software installed on your system for most of its magic. With the drivers installed, and on operating systems for which the driver is not available its special features don't function at all. The display is underutilized, especially by the very games it is meant to support.
Pros
  • Inbuilt LCD display
  • Macro keys can be programmed on the fly
  • Changable back-light colors
  • Windows-ley disable lock
  • Good software configuration interface
  • Support for Windows SlideShow

Cons
  • No support for Linux
  • Severely limited functionality without drivers
  • Limited support in Games, display is underutilized
 The Logitech G19 is a unique keyboard in some ways, for one it has a colour LCD screen built right into it, and is the only keyboard we know of that includes its own adapter for extra power! It is the highest-end gaming keyboard available from Logitech, and for the most part is a Logitech G510 with a colour display instead of a monochrome one. Oh and it costs around Rs. 10,995.
The keyboard looks and feels great, it's not one of those annoying compact layout keyboards that mush together keys to save space. The build quality is quite good as well, though we noticed that the back-lighting is not aligned on some keys, the "Tab" and "Caps Lock" keys particularly. They don’t appear fully illuminated unless viewed directly from above ‒ an unlikely scenario. While this is a minor blemish, it is not expected of a keyboard that costs as much as this. This keyboard is rather large, with perhaps more than the standard spacing between keys, and an extra two columns of macro keys (or "G-keys") available that can be programmed to perform any function.
g-keysmodesThe 12 macro keys ‒ labelled G1 to G12 ‒ can be programmed to perform three different functions under three different modes. In essence you have 36 combinations possible. The mode keys appear at the top-left of the keyboard, and each mode can be assigned a different back-lighting color so you can tell at once which mode is active. The back-light supports virtually any colour.
One of the best features of the macro keys is that they can be assigned a function straight from the keyboard itself as long as the software is installed and running. Using the macro record key, you can assign a key-combination, or even a series of keys to any G-key even while in the middle of a game. You can quickly capture new combo moves with the feature without leaving the game.
windows lockLike other G-Series keyboards the G19 features a lock to turn off the Windows key while you are gaming, so accidentally pressing it while gaming is a preventable disaster. It would be great if the activation of a gaming profile could automatically trigger this switch, but such a thing is not supported, since this is a hardware toggle. The G19 also has a set of multimedia keys for controlling volume and media playback. For volume control the drum is particularly useful for quickly changing the volume in a natural manner.
  The Logitech software itself is a little disorganized. As the owner of a Logitech gaming mouse, I now have about four different applications installed for managing the two devices.  The recently released "Logitech Gaming Software 7.0"  is a huge step up from the earlier version that we did most of the testing with. The new software has a unified interface to manage all you keyboards features, while the older one has two different applications for the same.
The software shows you an image of the keyboard where you can click on the LCD to manage LCD applications, you can click on the mode keys to change the back-light colors, or on the G-keys to configure macros.

Logitech Game Manager

You can configure which applets to run on the device; a number of them come installed with the device software, including a clock, a picture viewer, a media player, a performance monitor, etc. Also included is a YouTube player that lets you browse YouTube and play videos on the device without interacting with your computer. Beware that each applet you enable on the LCD display consumes resources on your own computer as well!

You can toggle LCD applets on or off from here and control display settings
LCD processes running on your system

Process Explorer showing the processes running for displaying applets on the G19 LCD

Third party applications can also display data on the display, for example Media Player Classic shows information of currently playing media. The display is also supports Windows SlideShow, a Windows feature that supports displaying widgets on secondary displays. You can download Windows SlideShow widgets from the Microsoft website and display them on the device.
media player classic on g19
Media Player Classic Home Cinema on the G19 LCD The Logitech performance monitor on the G19 LCD
The YouTube applet running on the G19 LCD Switching between active programs the G19 LCD

Here comes the important part, applications need to support the keyboard to display data on it. The Logitech software does not latch into a game to show it on the screen, instead, the game or any other application will need to include code that supports displaying data on this keyboard. For this purpose there is an SDK Logitech has made available, although you need to be a developer to use it. There are an increasing number of third-party plugins for media player etc that can use the display.

We were disappointed by how games used the display, considering that is the primary purpose of this gaming keyboard, The games we tried didn't use the colour display to the fullest. While playing Dragon Age: Origins, the only data displayed are the character stats, Civilization IV displays the event log ‒ not very useful. Since the games need to support the keyboard, there is little hope for better utilization of the display in older games and most of these games seem to be designed to send data to the older monochrome character display LCD, so the extra money on the colour display is wasted.
Other than that, the software lets you define the back-light colours for each mode, the bavk-light colour changes instantly as you change it in the software so you can get exactly the shade you want.

The mechanism for defining key bindings and macros for the G-keys is especially well done. The software downloads profiles for a number of games (nearly 200), and can be configured to automatically select the profile when the game is launched ‒ if you provide the game's location. With a game profile loaded, you can directly assign in-game actions to your keys, instead of the actual key combination! So instead of setting the G6 key to "c" for crouching in your game you can set it directly to something like "Crouch" or "Next Weapon". The assigning of commands etc is all done using a simple drag-drop interface.

You can drag actions on the lefr tot he keys on the right to assign them





The command editor lets you assign functions, keystrokes, key combinations, shortcuts, and even text-blocks to G-keys

The biggest flaws of this keyboard, is that it is almost "brainless". Upon learning that this keyboard itself is powered by Linux, we were excited by the possibilities it might offer. Unfortunately, the keyboard itself ‒ even when connected to power ‒ refuses to go anywhere beyond displaying the Logitech logo unless the drivers are installed on the system. In this case the macro keys don't work, and the back-light is fixed to white. The media keys and the Windows-key toggle should work though.
It is rather annoying that Logitech leeches on the effort of Linux developers by using it to power this keyboard's display feature, while not even contributing drivers for their devices to the Linux community. There are community-created drivers available ‒ and I must say they offer better features than Logitech's own Windows software ‒ however they are not very stable yet.
The keyboard is great if you can really afford spending this much on it, and find the LCD useful for running small applet, however if you are expecting support for your favorite games, check first. The problem is, displays on keyboards are not standard issue, and most game developers will probably not find it worth coding substantial extra features just to appease the minority of audience that bought this specific keyboard. As a result it is unlikely that it will ever be supported by a majority of games. Quite a few major titles support it, however not enough for the hardcore game player the keyboard is targeting.
If you find the extra display useful, you might consider actually purchasing an additional 15" / 17" LCD display and the cheaper Logitech G110, which will set you back by approximately the same amount, and will give you nearly the same features plus an additional audio jack in the keyboard.
Overall the G19 is nothing to save up for, if you can already afford it easily, go for it, but don't expect it to enhance your gaming experience significantly. With a little more brains in the keyboard, and a little more functionality out-of-the-box, this would be a killer keyboard. As it stands most features of the keyboard are underutilized.
Ratings
Features 9
Performance 8
Build Quality 7.5
Value for money 6
Overall 7

Contact: Logitech
Phone no: 9717597424
Email: response@logitech.com
Website: www.logitech.com
Price : Rs. 10,995/-

Features:
  • LCD display of 320x240 pixel color with navigation buttons
  • 12x programmable macro keys
  • Macro keys are programmable on the fly
  • 3x modes for each macro
  • Changable back-light colors
  • Ability to press up to five keys simultaneously
  • Windows-ley disable lock
  • Multimedia controlswith drum volume control
  • 2x USB powered ports

Apple Releases iPhone Configuration Utility 3.2...............!!!


Apple today released iPhone Configuration Utility 3.2 for Mac and Windows, an update to the company's software to allow system administrators to deploy iOS devices in enterprise settings.
iPhone Configuration Utility lets you easily create, maintain, encrypt, and install configuration profiles, track and install provisioning profiles and authorized applications, and capture device information including console logs.

Configuration profiles are XML files that contain device security policies, VPN configuration information, Wi-Fi settings, APN settings, Exchange account settings, mail settings, and certificates that permit iPhone and iPod touch to work with your enterprise systems.
It is unclear what changes are included in the update.

The Mac version weighs in at 10.17 MB and requires Mac OS X 10.6, while the Windows version weighs in at 35.31 MB and requires Windows 7. Vista SP1, or XP SP3, along with .NET 3.5 SP1.

LG Optimus 2X dual-core Android phone hits Europe in January.........!!!


LG Electronics (LG): Legendary Composer Ennio Morricone Makes Beautiful Music For LG Smartphones

LG Focuses on Creating Original Content for Today's Mobile Entertainment Devices

LG Electronics (LG) today announced the release of an exclusive collection of music and ringtones written by movie soundtrack maestro Ennio Morricone. The first such collaboration of its kind, both newly composed pieces as well as a selection from Morricone's legendary oeuvre, including Cinema Paradiso, The Mission and Love Affair, will be included in the collection.

To ensure that the beautiful music is paired with a suitably impressive platform, LG engineers have been hard at work perfecting the audio performance on its latest mobile phones. The exclusive music will be preloaded on LG smartphones starting with the LG Optimus 2X set to debut next month in Europe. LG smartphone users will be able to enjoy a total of 25 of Morricone's creations -- 15 ringtones composed specifically for LG and 10 of his best-known tunes from the world of cinema.

Born in Italy, Morricone is one of the most prolific and influential film composers in the world. He has composed and arranged scores for more than 500 films and TV programs over his illustrious career.

"Signore Morricone is one of the best-loved soundtrack composers of all time," said Dr. Jong-seok Park, President and CEO of LG Electronics Mobile Communications Company. "Reproducing his work with such amazing clarity on the Optimus 2X, gives smartphones a whole new level of respect as the primary device for on-the-go music."

In addition to the collection of 25 ringtones and music, LG plans to develop a range of apps with Morricone-related content such as images and video clips for free downloading from the LG Application Store (www.lgapplication.com) starting next year.

The partnership with Ennio Morricone is part of LG's Mobile Signature Sound Series, which kicked-off in 2006 with The Real Group, the award-winning a cappella group from Sweden.

Dell Venue launched in Hong Kong, we go hands-on.............!!!


Isn't it fun when you hit the right place at the right time? We just happened to be chillaxing in Hong Kong when Dell chose the city for the Venue's global launch (and it's actually hitting the shops slightly ahead of South Korea), so a quick hands-on is inevitable. As we've seen previously, this HK$3,999 (US$514) handset is essentially the Venue Pro's Android 2.2 cousin, sporting the same curved (or "Shear Design") vibrant AMOLED display at 4.1 inches and 800 x 480, but missing the slide-out keyboard. Under the hood lies a 1GHz Snapdragon with 1GB ROM and 512MB RAM, along with the usual microSD expansion, 1400mAh battery, 8 megapixel AF camera with LED flash, Bluetooth 2.3 EDR, WiFi and AGPS.

There aren't any surprises in terms of software -- the Venue shares the same snappy Stage UI and Swype keyboard with the Streak, except for the lack of landscape orientation for the homescreen (and that's with orientation enabled in system settings). As for hardware, the killer feature here is the screen, and we found its curved Gorilla Glass to be surprisingly nice for our thumbs while swiping across it. The AMOLED panel underneath is also vibrant with great viewing angles. Elsewhere, build quality is almost solid bar the squeaky battery door, but at least it provides some grip. That's all we got for now -- we'll delve into more details in our forthcoming review, so stay tuned.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Mouse for Men Concept Design Features Flexible Touchscreen............!!!




There are a lot of different options out there for people who are looking for a particular mouse accessory for their computer. Touch controls are becoming popular, so here’s a concept design that not only has touch controls, but also a flexible touchscreen, and pressure sensitive controls to boot. Not only that, but the designers made sure that when you look at this Mouse for Men, you realize that a real mouse was used for the inspiration.

While the technology within the concept may be unique enough, there’s the fact that the “tail” of the Mouse for Men is actually detachable. It was conceived by designer Nitin Mane, the Mouse for Men is meant to be comfortable to use over long periods of time, thanks to its ergonomic design. The touch controls, along with the pressure sensitive design elements, are all meant to make sure that the user doesn’t have to exert any extra force to use the mouse.

As for the touchscreen display? It’s an OLED. It’s also meant to inform the user as to what type of “mode” you are in, at any given moment. You can change from a standard mouse controls, or to a multimedia mode as well. The controls on the front of the mouse will change depending on what you need. The Mouse for Men was designed for the LG cube Competition 2010.

Try This !!! It is very thrilling......!!!

Dear All, Please try this.  It's interesting.

Copy this onto notepad, press ctrl + H, press 6 in find box and underscore( _ ) in replace box and click replace all button. U will get thrilled.


 

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Wednesday, December 22, 2010

A Poor But Rich Family..........!!!


When I was in the Final Year of my Graduation Studies, we visited one of our friend's home for a lunch. I had no idea about where he lived, I mean, how it could it be?! I just knew that he took the bus from his home to our college.

The moment we reached his house, I found the staircases of his building were not so good nor was his home painted very well. I can't describe in words but it was not even the type of house in which a typical middle class Indian family lives in.

One of the greatest things I did find there were loving parents. We sat on the ground for the lunch because they didn't have a dining table. His mother served us very delicious food, smiling throughout and showed care for the entire lunch session; that I can never forget.

His father worked as a normal mechanic and I wondered if he earned enough money to support their 2 sons.

While we were taking lunch, his father returned home to meet with us. When he entered their home, his hands were dark black and his clothes were very dirty. I remember our friend had no hesitation about his father and made our introductions. I think it is rarely what we see in today's generation. How loving this family was!

Now, I am telling you the remarkable moment of the story. As soon as his father came in, after just 4-5 minutes, our friend asked us if we wanted "Papad" ( A Typical Indian Food ) to eat. Before we could say anything, our friend's mother said there were no "Papad" in the house.

Quickly, our friend asked his father if he could get some. Very gently and kindly his father brought it for us, after going through many staircases even though he was looking tired.

Don't you think of this as Richness of a Poor Family? I think all readers would agree with me.

The story doesn't end here... the interesting part still continues.

Today, our friend is a Team Lead in one of the leading MNC(s) that is Oracle. He is able to pay high rent in Hyderabad and have a new, beautiful home. Not only that, he helped his brother financially in his studies and is still helping.

So, friends, what can we figure out from this story?
The moral I understand is this:

"The amount of money you make won't win others' hearts; the only way is with love and kindness. The second point is that struggle and bad periods are needed in life for everyone, as it makes us strong. If you have strong willpower, goals and also the attitude of hard and smart work, you can definitely be a successful person in some areas of life, if I am not wrong. God always helps."

Some moments you always cherish in life.

I am planning to ask our friend for one more lunch or dinner at his home when comes back to our hometown. And I always tell him and remind him of one of the most remarkable days of my life, the day I had lunch with him and his parents.

Microsoft introduces new range of inexpensive wireless input devices in India [price]..........!!!


Microsoft has reportedly launched a new range of wireless input devices in India, with the intent of capturing the lost ground in the peripherals segment of computer hardware market. The new range of products include: Wireless Desktop 800, Wireless Mobile Mouse 1000 & Wireless Mobile Mouse 3500. Adopting an attractive lifestyle design and sleek form-factor, the new product range is projected to be a perfect blend of ergonomics and technology, while also boosting the user productivity requirements.

The BlueTrack technology incorporated specially into the Wireless Mobile Mouse 3500 is reportedly designed for use on 40 different surfaces like a granite slab, an airport bench or a living room carpet. The BlueTrack technology apparently uses a blue beam of light which is four times wider than the normal optical beam. Hence, it illuminates a larger surface area resulting in more light to enter the sensor. Thereby, it even allows tracking on uneven surfaces like carpet where a smaller beam could get lost between two strands of fibers.

Playbutton promises to let you wear your music proudly......!!!


It's not just slotMusic trying to sell digital music in some sort of physical form -- this so-called Playbutton concept has been making the rounds for the past few months, and it's now finally set to go on sale in February with eight different albums to choose from. As you might be able to surmise, the button is actually an MP3 player, but there's no way to get the music off of it and, to keep things as album-like as possible, there's no shuffle button either. There is a bit of room for some artwork to let folks know what you're listening to though, and you can thankfully plug in your own set of headphones. As for how much they'll cost, Playbutton founder Nick Dangerfield says albums sold on the buttons could be as much as $30 apiece, although he notes that it'll be up to the artists to decide how much they want to charge -- he suggests the "ideal price" would be $15 if bands sold them at shows.

Pantech Vega Xpress comes with DDR2 memory, extravagant performance claims.......!!!


Pantech's bringing a new wrinkle to the mobile hardware space with its newly announced Vega Xpress handset. This 4-inch Android 2.2 beastie will come equipped with an unspecified amount of DDR2 RAM -- yes, the stuff that usually goes into x86 laptop and desktop computers -- which Pantech will have you believe is going to blow the competition out of the proverbial water. The company claims the new phone doubles 3D graphics performance relative to its previous best, while power efficiency is also said to be two to three times better. Other specs include a 5 megapixel autofocus camera, 802.11n WiFi, an 800 x 480 resolution, and a 1500mAh battery. Yours, provided you're anywhere near Korea, some time soon.

HTC EVO Shift 4G spotted in the wild, said to have 800MHz CPU......!!!


We had our doubts the last time we encountered an HTC EVO Shift 4G, but it looks like they were mostly unfounded -- here's Sprint's new QWERTY slider in the flesh -- armor finally shed -- revealing a chrome bezel beneath. PhoneArena obtained these pics from an anonymous tipster, who says the device has an 800MHz processor much like the T-Mobile G2, and while we can't infer much more about the internals than we have before, there are a few new things to note: HTC Sense is alive and well, there's a particularly large camera module buried in the smooth plastic back and a headphone jack up top, and it appears there's a pair of status LEDs for Caps Lock and Function Lock right above the keyboard. See two more pics of the device at the source link below, while we wait for Sprint to own up.

Ford Sync AppLink ready to download for 2011 Ford Fiesta, iPhone support coming early next year...........!!!


Summary:
Wouldn't it be nice to connect your phone to your car and control Pandora with your voice? If you drive a 2011 Ford Fiesta, you can do so right now, by downloading the Ford Sync AppLink platform that's finally ready for primetime. So far, Pandora's one of only two apps that natively support voice commands (the other being OpenBeak) and it only works on BlackBerry and Android, but Ford says that Apple's iPhone will play nice with AppLink sometime in "early 2011." You'll find a thorough press release trumpeting the news after the break, and the download should be available at our source link any minute now. Then, you get to transfer it to a USB stick, and plug it into your car. Just imagine saying that to someone fifty years ago. 


Press Release:


· SYNC® AppLink, the industry-first software application that gives SYNC users hands-free voice control of their smartphone apps, is now available as a free download for 2011 Ford Fiesta owners at www.syncmyride.com

· Ford announces that Apple iPhone will be compatible with AppLink, along with initially announced BlackBerry by RIM and Android-based smartphones

· Pandora internet radio, Stitcher news radio and OpenBeak are the first SYNC-enabled mobile apps, some of which can be downloaded today from Android Market and BlackBerry App World, and soon from Apple App Store

· SYNC AppLink comes first to 2011 Ford Fiesta owners, with more SYNC-equipped vehicles soon to follow

DEARBORN, Mich., Dec. 22, 2010 – More than 14,000 owners of SYNC®-equipped Ford Fiesta vehicles can start celebrating the holidays now by treating themselves to the gift of AppLink, a free software program that gives SYNC users voice control of apps stored on their smartphone.

The industry-first capability puts Ford out front in the race to integrate smartphone apps into the car. The AppLink download for Fiesta owners went live today on the SYNC owner website, www.syncmyride.com.

"More and more drivers are using their devices and their apps while in the car," said Doug VanDagens, director of Ford Connected Services. "With AppLink, SYNC is a smarter solution for these drivers who choose to use these apps while driving – making it the only connectivity system available that can extend app functionality to the car using both voice and steering wheel controls."

Ford is also announcing a surprise new member to the AppLink family: the Apple iPhone. The popular smartphone makes for a powerful addition, and will be joining Android and BlackBerry smartphones as compatible devices with the software that allows apps to be controlled through the SYNC voice recognition system – a smarter alternative to manually controlling apps while driving.

Recent studies indicate 46 percent of adult smartphone users have apps on their phones and 36 percent of those admit to using those apps while commuting. Moreover, the 2010 study "Staying Connected on the Go: A Look at In-Vehicle Smartphone Integration Systems" conducted by the Consumer Electronics Association reports that 55 percent of smartphone owners prefer voice commands as their user interface for in-car smartphone integration, making the business case for SYNC and AppLink even more compelling.

"SYNC and AppLink work hand-in-hand to answer consumer demand for safer, smarter control of smartphones while in the car," said VanDagens. "Ford has worked hard to be a step ahead or at least in step with the speed of the consumer electronics market, and to leverage the technologies, features and services we know our customers want to be connected to while driving."

Easy downloading
2011 SYNC-equipped Ford Fiesta owners need to log in to their account on www.syncmyride.com to access the free AppLink download in the Update & Customize section.

As with any typical download, the AppLink software can be stored on a USB memory stick, and then inserted and uploaded to the vehicle via the SYNC system's USB port. In-car installation takes less than 10 minutes.

The first SYNC-enabled apps to market are Pandora internet radio, Stitcher news radio and OpenBeak for listening to Twitter posts. Once the AppLink upload is complete, customers can then visit their phones' respective app store to download the latest SYNC-enabled Pandora, Stitcher or OpenBeak app to their smartphone as they would any other app.

Current availability of SYNC-enabled apps:

- Pandora
- Apple iPhone: Coming early 2011
- Android: Available now (V1.5.3 or higher)
- BlackBerry: Available now (Version 1.1.6 or higher)

- Stitcher
- Apple iPhone: Coming early 2011
- Android: Coming early 2011
- BlackBerry: Coming late 2011

- OpenBeak
- BlackBerry: Available now from http://m.openbeak.com and soon in Blackberry App World (Version 1.4 or higher)

Seamless voice control
AppLink makes the connection between app and SYNC fairly seamless and simple, using Bluetooth streaming on paired Android and BlackBerry smartphones and the USB port for a connected Apple iPhone.

To access a mobile app with a SYNC-paired phone, the user simply has to press the VOICE button on the steering wheel and say the command, "Mobile applications," followed by the name of the app he or she would like to launch.

Once linked to Pandora, SYNC users can access their favorite personalized radio features, including creating and choosing stations, bookmarking songs for purchase, and giving songs a thumbs up/down all through voice. Command structure is intuitive and simple: "Play station classic rock radio," "Bookmark song," "Thumbs up" or "Thumbs down."

"Where before users would pick up their phone, taking their eyes off the road and hands off the steering wheel while driving to select a station and hit play, AppLink makes all of that functionality available through voice control, just like managing AM and FM radio or your MP3 player through SYNC," said Julius Marchwicki, SYNC product manager.

Similar voice command pathways and functionality exist for the Stitcher and OpenBeak apps. With Stitcher, for example, you can say the command, "Play station news" to listen to your favorite news radio or "Play station sports" to hear on-demand sports programming. Other popular Stitcher features such as skip station, thumbs up/down and "Add to favorites" are also available via voice.

Through the OpenBeak app, drivers can simply say the SYNC command, "Read timeline." In seconds, their feed is read aloud using the SYNC text-to-speech engine – a very similar experience to listening to talk radio.

Additional SYNC-enabled apps and smartphone integrations are coming soon, said Marchwicki. AppLink will also be introduced on other SYNC-equipped new model vehicles in 2011.

Ford will feature demos of AppLink at the Pepcom Digital Experience media event in Las Vegas on Jan. 5, 2011, and then at the 2011 International CES consumer technology trade show in Las Vegas between Jan. 6 and Jan. 9, 2011.

Google Nexus S (T-Mobile)..........!!!


Pros: First phone with Android 2.3 "Gingerbread" OS. Elegant design. Fast UI. Only U.S. phone with Near Field Communication (NFC) technology.

Cons: Mediocre voice performance. Multimedia performance behind class leaders. No HSPA+. Not many NFC applications.

Bottom Line:The Google Nexus S for T-Mobile promises frequent Android updates, but average consumers can find even-better high-end smartphones.

The Nexus S for T-Mobile is a cell phone for developers, designed by Google and Samsung to always have the newest, freshest version of Google's Android cell phone OS. It's a decent high-end phone to be sure, but there are better buys out there if you aren't enticed by Google's promise of being the first on the block to get software upgrades.

There are a lot of people out there who think "Nexus" means "absolutely cutting edge in every way." They're going to be disappointed. I think this Nexus S shows that Google is pretty happy with the way Android hardware innovation is going. Rather, the company wants to make sure there's a clean version of Android in developers' hands.
Google has wisely chosen to abandon its Web-sales model for the Nexus S. The earlier Nexus One phone was initially available only online, with Web-based support, as part of a Utopian scheme to shatter carriers' control of the U.S. mobile-phone market by selling the same phone, compatible with every carrier, direct to consumers. That didn't work out. Now the Nexus S is available at Best Buy stores for $529 without contract or $199 with a two year contract, and it will be supported by T-Mobile. In general, this is a model that Americans are much more comfortable with.

Specifications

Service Provider: T-Mobile
Operating System: Android OS
Screen Size: 4 inches
Screen Details: 800-by-480 TFT LCD capacitive touch screen
Camera: Yes
Network: GSM, UMTS
Bands: 850, 900, 1800, 1900, 2100, 1700
High-Speed Data: GPRS, EDGE, UMTS, HSDPA
Processor Speed: 1 GHz

Design, Network, and Phone Performance
At 4.9 by 2.5 by .4 inches and 4.5 ounces, the Nexus S is a black slab phone similar in size and shape to Samsung's popular Galaxy S line, especially the Samsung Vibrant ($199, 4 stars). The Nexus looks more elegant because it uses more rounded corners and a black bezel, rather than cheaper-looking chromed plastic. The 4-inch, 800-by-480 Super AMOLED screen is curved to cradle your face, but, in use, I couldn't find any difference between it and a perfectly flat screen.
The one major new hardware feature here is NFC (Near Field Communication technology), which lets the phone interact with physical tags and could eventually let you use your phone as a credit card or to, say, check in with Foursquare by tapping on a restaurant's welcome sign. For now it's essentially useless in the U.S., though.

The Nexus S connects to the Internet either through HSPA 7.2 on T-Mobile's or foreign networks, or through Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n. While the S isn't compatible with T-Mobile's faster HSPA+ system, I got very good speeds for an HSPA 7.2 phone, as high as 2.2Mbps down and 1.3Mbps up. The phone can also be used as a Wi-Fi hotspot.

I wasn't thrilled by the voice performance. RF reception is fine, on par with the Editor's Choice T-Mobile myTouch 4G ($199, 4.5 stars), but the phone sometimes had trouble finding a signal after leaving a dead zone. Voice quality is just okay. The earpiece is clear and of moderate volume, and the speakerphone is nice and loud. But with transmissions through the mic, I had trouble with background and wind noise, and wind could sometimes cause skips in the earpiece audio.

The Nexus S paired easily with my Aliph Jawbone Icon Bluetooth headset, and voice dialing performance was unusually good; it had no trouble recognizing names or numbers.

The phone registered six hours and 2 minutes of continuous talk time, which is decent, but I had some other battery life issues.


OS, Software, and Apps
The Nexus S is the first phone with Android 2.3, also called "Gingerbread." The handset has zero bloatware, and it's always guaranteed to get Google's updates first. Neither Samsung nor T-Mobile get to have anything to do with this phone's software, which will be a major selling point to some consumers.

The Nexus S uses the same basic hardware platform as the Samsung Vibrant, based on a 1GHz Samsung Hummingbird processor. The UI is faster all around than on Android 2.2 phones, though Web performance isn't; I got the same page load times using Wi-Fi on this phone as on the myTouch HD. Our Android benchmarks showed better performance on memory and file-management tasks.

The UI in general has more transparency, the keyboard supports multitouch and there's a new camera app. The UI improvements total up to a lot of little things, but nothing to get excited about. There's also limited voice-over-IP support based on the enterprise-friendly SIP protocol (which isn't used by U.S. consumers much.)

Gingerbread spends some time focusing on power management. You can clearly see what's eating up your battery, and a new UI theme with more black spends less power lighting up the screen. But whatever issue that caused the Microsoft Exchange push e-mail client to manically drain the battery in Android 2.2 is still there, and I didn't get longer battery life with the Nexus S than with Froyo phones.

As this has a clean build of Android, there aren't many apps on here to start with; it doesn't even integrate Facebook and Twitter contacts until you download third-party clients. Of course, you do have 100,000 Android Market applications at your disposal.

I also ran into one very annoying bug: The built-in Maps and Navigation programs couldn't initialize the GPS for the first time after a factory reset. Downloading a free program called "GPS Test" fixed the problem, after which, the feature worked fine.

Multimedia and Conclusions
The Nexus S is a pretty good media phone, although it's not quite as solid as other top-of-the-line phones. For one thing, there's no removable memory; only a non-expandable 16GB of internal storage.

Audio and video support also have some trouble with key codecs. The music player supports most file types except WMA, and high-bit rate H.264 video files showed visibly jerky frame rates. I'm being picky here, but the Samsung Vibrant and the myTouch 4G don't have a problem with either of those things. Music and video sound great through wired or Bluetooth headphones, though, and YouTube plays in HQ mode if you have sufficient network speed.

The Nexus S has a 5-megapixel camera on the back and a VGA camera on the front, for video calling. There still isn't any adequate Android video calling software, but I found the front camera useful for recording video messages to my family.

The main camera took relatively sharp but somewhat desaturated photos outdoors, but indoors it really struggled with low light; I got very low shutter speeds, leading to blur. Outdoors, the video mode took smooth 720-by-480 videos at 30 frames per second, but that dropped to a jerky 17 frames per second indoors.
Google needs a developer phone with a clean build of Android. The Nexus S fits that bill. But it isn't the best Android phone for T-Mobile users (or for anyone, for that matter.) The T-Mobile myTouch HD outdoes the Nexus S with better battery life, faster Internet, a better camera, removable memory and some cool included software. On Sprint, the Samsung Epic 4G ($199, 4 stars) gives you WiMAX and a keyboard.

If you get all worked into a lather over who's on Android 2.1 and who's on 2.3, the Nexus S is a fine phone for you. Otherwise, it's just another high-quality, high-end Android phone in a crowd of good choices.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Good News: Chrome Now Sandboxes Flash for More Secure Browsing......!!!


Adobe Flash Player is now sandboxed in the latest dev channel release of Google Chrome, bringing a huge security benefit to Chrome users.

Here's why:

You'll hear a lot of Flash bashing on the internet, and while we're not as down on Flash as some (it has its flaws, but it's also been instrumental in shaping many of the things we love about the web), perhaps Flash's biggest flaw lies in security—or lack thereof. Flash is a common in-road for hackers aiming to execute malicious code in browsers. In a broad nutshell, sandboxing Flash means that this malicious code will have limited access to your system, and will be considerably less able to achieve its goal. From Google's Chromium releases blog:

This initial Flash Player sandbox is an important milestone in making Chrome even safer. In particular, users of Windows XP will see a major security benefit, as Chrome is currently the only browser on the XP platform that runs Flash Player in a sandbox. This first iteration of Chrome's Flash Player sandbox for all Windows platforms uses a modified version of Chrome's existing sandbox technology that protects certain sensitive resources from being accessed by malicious code, while allowing applications to use less sensitive ones. This implementation is a significant first step in further reducing the potential attack surface of the browser and protecting users against common malware.

Google notes that this initial sandboxing is just a start, and that they're still working to improve its effectiveness. Currently Flash sandboxing is only available on the dev channel for Windows, but they're planning to support all platforms eventually.

Microsoft over 1.5 million Windows Phone 7 devices sold to carriers and retailers......!!!


Microsoft has decided to finally dish out some sales figures for its new Windows Phone 7 platform, but alas, these are not the sales figures we are looking for. Instead of giving us the juicy number of actual devices sold to end users, the Redmond crew has provided a neatly rounded figure of 1.5 million sales to mobile operators and retailers. That tells us that the mobile industry is cautiously buying into Microsoft's new OS, and it'd be foolish not to, but it doesn't really educate us on the relative success of the platform's launch -- 1.5 million units is a tiny, tiny number when you consider the platform launched on 10 devices on over 60 carriers in over 30 countries. All that Microsoft's Achim Berg would say is that early sales have been "in line" with expectations.

Google, Yahoo hiring in India....!!!

Internet search engine Google Inc is hiring people to fill over 70 vacant positions in India in different areas to meet its business requirements.

The company, which has about 2,000 employees in India that is one of the largest locations outside the US, has about 72 openings in areas such as advertising sales and enterprise, engineering operations, finance, human resources and software engineering, a job posting on its site said.

The Internet search titan is also hiring in legal and public policy, marketing and communications, product management administrative and enterprise sections in India. However, the timeframe for these appointments is not known.

The company has 23 vacancies in Hyderabad centre, followed by 22 in Bangalore, 21 in Gurgaon and the remaining 6 in Mumbai.

“From our flexible, project-based approach to corporate structure to our innovative perks and benefits, we do everything we can to make sure our employees not only have great jobs , but great lives,” Google said.

Meanwhile, Internet company Yahoo is also hiring people for its research and development unit in the country after it announced last week that it is preparing to retrench between 600 and 700 employees ahead of a holiday trimming due to its lackluster growth.

The latest planned lay off was touted as Yahoo’s fourth mass retrenchment in last three years, representing about 5 percent of the company’s workforce of 14,100 employees.

This round of cutbacks is expected to be concentrated in the Internet company’s U.S products division.

Meanwhile, Yahoo India has now openings for business manager, product manager, lead engineer, research scientist, engineering manager, technical architect, QA lead and system administrator.

Dancing to the Music of Life...........!!!

Love hurts, love scars, love wounds.. Most of the time that's what we hear when we turn on the radio.. Songs are always about love, about second chances, about broken relationship which most often than not makes us nostalgic on that part of our life wherein we once became foolish just because we choose to fight for that intense feeling that back then we don't really know what to call.

isn't it ironic that back then, when we were still young, we used to be so excited about having that first dance? Excited about the magic of that dream first kiss? How we dream about to be that faithful and beloved person for that dream partner? WE wanted to be perfect on that dream that when it is time for us to wake up, we already set that dream as one of our major standard in dealing with this imperfect world.

We became too busy in making the things around us to be perfect. Perfect enough for ourselves that in the process we became blind and deaf about the other things and all the people around us. We build ourselves a so-called world of our own, just you and your partner, never minding the people who cares enough to tell you that what you are doing is wrong. 'Cause for you, as long as you are happy, everything is perfect.

But as they always says, when you start building something in the wrong foundation, no matter how hard you try to hold on to that thing, it will eventually fall. As for the relationship, if it isn't meant to last, it will eventually, too, reach it's final destination.. breaking up.. parting time.. That's the time you'll ask yourself what went wrong?

You'll be hurt, broken.. you'll cry your heart out.. " Did I became too giving? too nice? To good to be true?" You'll start asking for opinion, seeking for advices.. You'll start to trespass in the wall that you put up for yourself before to look up for company, to look up for the people who, you know, really cares for you, those people you once forgotten..And then they'll tell you things you don't want to hear but you must.know. For you to be able to cope up and move on.

And then as time goes by, You'll be mending your own broken heart, starting to move forward isn't easy but you know you have to.. you must.

Step by step you will make it. And when that day comes wherein there's no more pain, no more bitterness, grudges and all that stuff in your heart, looking at your own reflection in the mirror, you will just laugh at your own foolishness. You'll be grateful that you've been through all that struggles 'cause you became stronger. Thankful that you once fall the hardest and now you're up there, you bounced back the highest. Strong, contented and happy.

You can now listen to the music of life, dance with the tune of it..Waiting for that imperfect relationship with the right foundation. Having two imperfect person in an imperfect relationship with the perfect God in the center.

Now as we listen to all this songs of love whenever we turn on the radio, we became nostalgic, 'cause we miss the old us.. but the good thing is: We are still the old us with the better new outlook in life. Singing and dancing with whatever the song of life is, with a happy and contented life waiting for the promise of that One perfect Person.. God.

Samsung Wave II S8530 storms into India at Rs.18,999......!!!


The much anticipated successor to the renowned Samsung Wave S8500, the Wave II or Wave S8530, is now unofficially available across various retailers in the country, and can be procured online at Flipkart.com or Univercell.in for Rs. 18,999. Sporting a 3.7-inch Super LCD display, the S8530 has a bigger form-factor than its predecessor. Although the display resolution has been retained at 800 x 480, the bigger screen dimensions will play a significant role in enhancing the visual appeal for movie-watching and provide more room for the on-screen QWERTY keypad in portrait mode.

While you might be upset about the lack of AMOLED in this Wave, the new Super LCD technology incorporated into the Wave II S8530 should actually result in better colour accuracy and image clarity compared to the much-hyped Super AMOLED display of the Wave S8500. Another new feature of the display is that the touchscreen of the Wave S8530 incorporates a scratch-resistant layer in addition to an anti-fingerprint layer.

Inheriting all the goodies from the Wave S8500, the S8530 makes a strong statement with the inclusion of: 5MP camera, 720p video recording, Bada OS (new v1.2), 1GHz Hummingbird processor, 2GB internal memory and up to 32GB external memory. The Samsung Wave II S8530 is reportedly priced about Rs. 1,500 more than the Samsung Wave S8500 at Rs. 19,000. However, owing to market competition the retailers have been apparently selling the smart phone at much lesser price, even as low as Rs. 17,500.

Nokia in talks with Microsoft to make Windows Phone 7 devices.....!!!

Amidst all the controversy surrounding Symbian^3 in the days before the launch of the Nokia N8, the Finnish giant declared it would not be making any phones with Google’s Android operating system in the future, but concentrate on developing Symbian and MeeGo instead.

Now, Eldar Murtazin, a mobile reviewer best known for his Nokia insider information, has let slip that Nokia is planning on launching Windows Phone 7 mobiles in the near future, and that the Finnish phone maker is already in talks with Microsoft about it.

Nokia’s new CEO, Stephen Elop, is himself a former Microsoft employee, and so it does seem likely that he’s the driving force behind this turn of events, and probably initiated the idea.

If true, the move will come as a paradigm shift for the mobile industry, and the future competition between such OEMs as HTC, LG, Samsung and Nokia on the same platform will be awesome news for the consumers.

Nokia’s hardware, or rather, build quality, is unarguably top-notch, and it’s brand image is nothing if not “reliable”. While it hasn’t really been at the forefront of cutting-edge mobile hardware innovation, some of its recent technologies, developed for devices such as the N8 and newer smartphones, might just be quite compelling on a Windows Phone, i.e., ClearBlack display, USB-on-the-Go, the integrated graphics media accelerator, and of course, the stunning 12MP camera sensor of the N8.

We just hope the decision being made here is a completely informed one, and Nokia is not choosing Windows Phone 7 over Android because of past statements.


Monday, December 20, 2010

Touching life story..... !!!


A young man was getting ready to graduate college. For
     many months he had admired a beautiful sports car in a dealer's
     showroom, and knowing his father could well afford it, he told
him that was all he wanted.

     As Graduation Day approached, the young man awaited
     signs that his father had purchased the car. Finally, on the
morning  of his graduation his father called him into his private
  study. His father told him how proud he was to have such a fine
son, and  told him how much he loved him. He handed his son
a beautiful   wrapped gift box.

     Curious, but somewhat disappointed the young man
     opened the box and found a lovely, leather-bound Bible. Angrily,
he raised his voice at his father and said, "With all your money you
give  me  a Bible?" and stormed out of the house, leaving the holy
book.

     Many years passed and the young man was very successful in
business.
     He had a beautiful home and wonderful family, but realized his
     father was very old, and thought perhaps he should go to him. He
had   not seen him since that graduation day. Before he could make
     arrangements, he received a telegram telling him his father had
     passed away, and willed all of his possessions to his son. He
needed   to come home immediately and take care things.
When he arrived at  his father's house, sudden sadness and
regret filled his heart.

     He began to search his father's important papers and
     saw the still new Bible, just as he had left it years ago. With
tears,  he opened the Bible and began to turn the pages. As he
read those   words, a car key dropped from an envelope
taped behind the Bible.
It  had a tag with the dealer's name, the same dealer who had the
sports  car he had desired. On the tag was the date of his graduation,
     and the words...PAID IN FULL.

     How many times do we miss God's blessings because they are not
     packaged as we expected?

World's first 4D mouse - Genius's Traveler 355 Laser - revolutionizes web browsing....!!!


Inspan Infotech, one of the largest IT distribution companies for motherboards and hardware has reportedly announced the launch of the world's first 4D mouse – Genius's Traveler 355 Laser, optimised with OptoWheel technology, which is supposedly the latest in optical sensor technology, where turbo-scroll replaces the traditional mechanical wheel scrolling. This enables the user the power of four-way scrolling, which includes forward and backward webpage scrolling and up/down document scrolling.

The presence of advanced laser technology at the bottom of the mouse, allows its operation on any type of surface with superior tracking & higher precision than the regular optical mice. With a single click of the OptoWheel known as “the Blue eye”, one can easily scan through the documents or skip webpages at the wink of an eye. At the same time, one can stop the scrolling function with the second click of the OptoWheel.

With such unique and innovative features, which are well complemented by a stylish design, the Traveler 355 Laser makes a strong selling statement for a normal PC user, as well as a hard-core gamer - who looks for something sophisticated for that killer edge in the modern FPS games! If you were wondering about the most important factor - price, that could seal your buying decision, then you would be overwhelmed to know that it is rather affordably priced at Rs. 645. We would love to get one here for a test drive to ourselves!

Samsung to ruffle feathers with 10-inch Windows 7 QWERTY tablet - Galaxy Tab Gloria......!!!


The Samsung Galaxy Tab has been doing relatively well globally, Samsung recently announced hitting the 1 million units sold milestone. In the meanwhile, a new device from the Korean giant seems to making rounds of the rumour mills, a 10-inch tablet called the Samsung Tab Gloria that will sport a slide-out QWERTY keyboard and run Windows 7. Seen above is a render of what the Galaxy Tab Gloria tablet will possibly look like, and apparently Samsung is working hard to make Windows 7 even more touch-friendly in the time up to the tablet’s release, expected in March/April of 2011.

Huawei announces inexpensive Android 2.2 phone for India, and more to come...!!!


According to recent reports, Huawei has announced it will be bringing the Ideos U8140 to India, its popular and inexpensive Android 2.2 Froyo smartphone. It will apparently launch sometime this month, and will cost less than Rs. 8,000, putting it in direct competition against the recently announced Micromax Andro as well as the Galaxy 5, with some distinct advantages.
The first of those is the Ideos' Android 2.2 Froyo operating system, instead of 2.1 Eclair the Andro and Galaxy 5 possess. The next is a 2.8-inch capacitive touchscreen compared to the Andro’s resistive touchscreen.
Huawei will supposedly also be bringing its recently released (in Australia), higher-end Android Froyo handsets into the Indian market by mid-January, called the Ideos X5 and X6.
Check out the known specifications of the three phones below:
Model
U8140
X5
X6
2G Network
GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
3G Network
HSDPA 900 / 2100
HSDPA
HSDPA 850 / 1900 / 2100
 
HSDPA 1700 / 2100
 
HSDPA 900 / 1900 / 2100
Dimensions
104.1 x 55.9 x 12.7 mm
-
122 x 66 x 10 mm
Weight
102.1 g
-
143 g
Display
2.8-inch (240x320) capacitive touchscreen, 256k colours
3.8 inches capacitive, 16 million colours
4.1-inches (480x800) capacitive touchscreen, 16 million colours
Camera
3.15 MP, 2048x1536 pixels, geo-tagging, video recording CIF
5 MP, 2592x1944 pixels, autofocus, LED flash, 720p video recording
5 MP, 2592х1944 pixels, autofocus, 720p video recording
OS
Android OS, v2.2 (Froyo)
Android OS, v2.2 (Froyo)
Android OS, v2.2 (Froyo)
CPU
Qualcomm MSM 7225 528 MHz processor
-
Qualcomm Snapdragon QSD8255 1 GHz processor
Memory
256 MB RAM, 512 MB ROM
-
512 MB RAM, 2 GB ROM
Storage
microSD expandability, up to 32GB
-
microSD expandability, up to 32GB
GPRS
Class 10 (4+1/3+2 slots), 32 - 48 kbps
-
-
EDGE
Class 10, 236.8 kbps
-
-
3G
HSDPA, 7.2 Mbps
HSDPA, 14.4 Mbps; HSUPA, 5.76 Mbps
HSDPA, 14.4 Mbps; HSUPA, 5.76 Mbps
Connectivity
Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth v2.0 w/A2DP, microUSB v2.0
Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth v2.1 w/A2DP, microUSB v2.0
Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth v2.1 w/A2DP, microUSB v2.0
Audio support
3.5 mm audio jack, MP3/WMA/eAAC+ formats, FM radio
3.5 mm audio jack, MP3/WMA/eAAC+ formats, FM radio,
3.5 mm audio jack, MP3/WMA/eAAC+ formats, FM radio,
Video support
MP4/H.263/H.264 formats
MP4/WMV/H.263/H.264 formats, HDMI out
MP4/WMV/H.263/H.264/DivX formats, HDMI out
Colours
Black body / blue, red, yellow backpanels
Black
Black
Battery
Standard battery, Li-Ion 1200 mAh
-
Standard battery, Li-Ion 1400 mAh
Stand-by
Up to 288 h
-
-
Talk time
Up to 9 h
-
-
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