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Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Samsung Launches Galaxy S III Mini?

Samsung Launches Galaxy S III Mini | Samsung rumored to be soon released the Galaxy S III version of mini. The issue was revealed when Samsung has begun sending out invitations to an event on October 11, 2012. At the invitation is also visible logos S.


And with phrases that read "Something small will be really big," and "Get ready for a little sensation." Analysts speculated that the smartphone Galaxy S III Mini is the only device that is likely to be launched at the event.

Samsung will release the Galaxy S III Mini, perhaps intended to fill the lower-middle class market who want a phone that is flaghship. Estimated Galaxy S III Mini has a size smaller than the Galaxy S III and will be using Android OS 4.1 Jelly Bean. Predicted if true, then the phone will come with a dual core processor and possibly a lower megapixel camera.
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New Features Multi View in Firmware "Galaxy Note II"

New Features Multi View in Firmware "Galaxy Note II"


Samsung has released a firmware update for phoneblet "Galaxy Note II" as part of the anticipated features split-screen and multitasking, reported by GSMArena site.

Multi-Window time also supports Google applications (Gmail, YouTube, Chrome and Talk). Multi-View enhance multitasking abilities Galaxy Note II, which allows you to run two applications simultaneously, and both performed simultaneously with two separate screens (multi-window)

Latest updated version of firmware for the Galaxy Note II XXALIJ1 and comes with new baseband and update to Google Chrome. If you have a Samsung Galaxy Note II, you can check for the latest firmware by going to the About menu Devices -> Software Update.
Firmware Galaxy Note II

Firmware Galaxy Note II

Samsung Release Smartphone with 3GB RAM

Samsung Release Smartphone with 3GB RAM | SamMobile reported that Samsung will launch a high-end smartphone with 3GB RAM in 2013. This report is based on the leaked photos of the prototype Samsung phone leaked, showing label 3GB RAM.

Smartphone is suspected to be a device that is used for testing, but the name of the product is still a mystery. Growing speculation smartphone that just leads to the next Samsung flagship, the Galaxy S IV were originally going to present a successor to the Galaxy S III.

Other interesting things seen in the leaked image above is a prototype smartphone samsung does not have hardware buttons. So, even though Samsung was also the focus of releasing Windows Phone smartphone platform, quite reasonable if many people who assume that 3 GB RAM memory that will be embedded in the superior Android smartphone later.



Monday, October 8, 2012

Samsung Galaxy S IV Will Wear Sensor Resolution 13 MP Camera

Samsung Galaxy S IV Will Wear Sensor Resolution 13 MP Camera

Not even 6 months of age of the Samsung Galaxy S III, rumors about his generation, namely: Galaxy S IV immediately exhaled. Galaxy S IV mentioned would serve a camera with the resolution 13 megapixels.

The camera module will allow users to take pictures with a resolution of up to 4208 × 3120. Besides the camera, the Galaxy S IV also identified to be present with dimensions of 8.5 × 8.5 × 5.9mm and mentioned will be announced at MWC 2013.

Given the camera features 13MP, has now become a new standard for Android flagship smartphone from manufacturers such as LG and Sony, it is possible that Samsung will soon overtake both the producer in terms of camera features 13MP. Will the Galaxy S IV comes with a 13 megapixel camera or whether it is only a speculation, we wait for its development.


Nokia Lumia 510 Will Priced 1.4 Million?

Nokia Lumia 510 | Nokia Lumia 510 has just appeared in a picture, price and specifications. It is undeniable that the low-end segment of the market was waiting for the latest smartphone from Nokia at an affordable price.

As previously reported, the Lumia 510 has a 4-inch display and runs on Windows 7.8, not the latest Microsoft OS Windows 8. The device is powered 800MHz processor, 256MB RAM and 4GB internal memory.

This smartphone would be cheapest Windows Phone from Nokia. With the following specifications:

Specifications Nokia Lumia 510

  1. 4 inch screen
  2. A resolution of 480x800 pixels
  3. The internal memory of 4 GB
  4. RAM is only 256 MB

Production costs can be reduced as low as possible. This causes the phone will only be priced at $ 150 or approximately Rp. 1.4 million just in the initial launch. See its video hands-on here.


This is the Final Form of iPad Mini

This is the Final Form iPad Mini | iPad mini is often leaked by various sources in cyber space. However, of the many pictures that claimed to be iPad Mini, maybe what you've just uploaded the source on Gizmodo interesting to see.

The picture presented this time also presents a variety of possible variants of color to the casing iPad mini. Not only that, the rumored to tablet will feature 7.85-inch screen, it also has a bezel that better illustrated than the standard iPad models.

TomTom Navigation Present on Android

TomTom Navigation Present on Android | Manufacturer of Global Positioning System GPS device, TomTom now present on the Android operating system. Where this application has the same features as in iOS, including integration with Foursquare.

Features offered include the direction "turn by turn" that spoken in several languages ​​and speed warnings and traffic information. Automotive navigation systems manufacturer based in the city of Amsterdam, promised to provide updates lifetime, at least four releases per year.

This application [TomTom] is available in several versions. For a map of North America priced at $ 58.25, the map of Europe for $ 77.67 and a map of Southeast Asia valued $ 51.78. Prices were posted on Google Play is somewhat less expensive when compared to the Apple App Store. TomTom said prices are as 'introductory price', and is likely to rise in the future to match the IOS.

For now, the TomTom navigation app is not yet compatible with popular devices like the Galaxy S III, Galaxy Note II, and Galaxy Nexus, as well as some products smartphone / tablet to date. TomTom says that support for the new devices will be present at the end of this year.

TomTom Navigation Present on Android

You will be able to use some features, such as:
- 2D/3D driving view
- Clear voice instructions
- Fast route recalculation
- Multi-stop routes
- Eco Routes
- Navigate to contacts
- Search TomTom Places and POIs
- Automatic music fading
- Automatic day and night mode
- Car symbols
- Map colors


iPhone 5 is Steve Jobs Last Legacy

iPhone 5 is Steve Jobs Last Legacy | Many people doubted Apple after the death of Steve Jobs. Doubt these people are finally starting to prove to the iPhone 5. The initial user of the iPhone 5 this many were disappointed with the features presented. Especially in terms of the map. Based on the testimony of two people who do not want to be named, said that the iPhone 5 is the last smartphone that Apple still has a touch of former Apple CEO "Steve Jobs". Latest device from Apple is still time to get ideas, advice and approval for production of the late Steve Jobs.

Steve Jobs was the one who took the initiative to develop a map application for iOS. Because of the seriousness of Jobs on the map application, he came to make a secret team that put on the 3rd floor of building 2 Apple Campus.

Previously been many who preach the opposite leadership styles between Tim Cook and Steve Jobs. So after this next-generation iPhone will certainly be something completely new or without the intervention of Steve Jobs again. Would be like what Apple next products ?


Saturday, October 6, 2012

Galaxy Note II firmware update comes with multiview and multitasking support


The Samsung Galaxy Note II in Europe today received a new firmware update that adds a multi-view function. What is multi-view? It is a slick feature that allows users to have two windows open on one screen. This opens up tons of options for multitasking in a more computer-like way.
Imagine watching a movie on your device and having an IMDB window open at the same time to find out who the stars of said movie are. The potential uses for this new feature are nearly limitless. Of course, not all Android apps support this feature, but as more devices have the feature we expect more apps to start using it.
New Galaxy Note II devices in stores had this feature installed already, and it is good to see Samsung issuing the feature for devices already in the wild. Right now the new firmware is available in Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom. Besides multi view, it is not clear what else is included in this updated firmware.

Users can update their devices over the air or using Samsung KIES. Either way, if you live in one of the supported regions, you should be able to get this new firmware right now. 
The Samsung Galaxy Note II comes pre-installed with Android 4.1.1 Jelly Bean
The first firmwares are specially for France and the United Kingdom.
You can download firmwares for both countries from our Firmware page.
About the firmwares:
N7100XXALJ1 DOWNLOAD (INFORMATION) (France) 
N7100XXALJ1 
DOWNLOAD (INFORMATION) (United Kingdom)
Samsung introduced the Galaxy Note II at IFA 2012 in Berlin.Starting from this week you can buy the Galaxy Note II with 5.5” and 1.6 ghz Quad-Core processor and 8 megapixel in Europe.
Most countries will start getting the Galaxy Note II in the beginning of October. U.S. needs to wait for one more month.
The price is between the 600 and 700 euros.
Samsung is currently selling the Galaxy Note in 2 variants, LTE version GT-N7105 and the non LTE version GT-N7100.
Let us know in the comments how you like the new feature.

VIA Download Source

LG Nexus includes wireless charging and set to launch at the end of october


MoDaCo founder Paul O'Brien has just released details on the purported LG Nexus, which he says came from a source he trusts "101 percent." and is based on the flagship Optimus G, but the device will not look the same as LG's. The leaked specs include a 1280x768 "True-HD" IPS screen, quad-core Snapdragon S4 processor, and 2GB of RAM. It will also have a sealed, non-removable battery and, initially at least, either 8GB or 16GB of internal storage with no microSD expansion. Although MoDaCo doesn't say how large the LG Nexus' screen might be, if it's based on the Optimus G 4.7-inches would be a good guess.
Aside from a spec sheet that's among the best on the market, a big selling point for Google seems to be wireless charging out of the box — a feature that's never been found in a Nexus device in the past. O'Brien says it's not clear if the device will be the only Nexus to be released, or one of many.
Of course, assuming this information is all reliable, there’s still one big question in play here: will the LG Nexus phone be alone? After all, Google’s M.O. these past few years was to collaborate with a hardware partner on a single reference smartphone. The prevailing rumor at this point is that LG’s Nexus device will be only one of many that will soon find their way to the Google Play Store’s Devices section. There’s some evidence that Samsung (who has worked with Google on Nexus hardware twice now) is busy putting together a follow-up to its venerable Galaxy Nexus, and former hardware partner HTC may be working on a 5-inch Nexus-branded device of its own.
Regardless of what their rivals may do, the news could mean big things for LG. To put it mildly, the company hasn’t had the sort of runaway success in the smartphone market that Samsung or even HTC has had. While a Nexus-branded collaboration with Google isn’t guaranteed to be one, it stands a decent shot at being one of the company’s stronger competitors. Marketing tactics like an aggressive off-contract price point could help strengthen that possibility, and it wouldn’t be a shock to see details like that (plus a whole host of others) over the next few weeks.

 CNET reporting that the LG Nexus will be officially announced at the end of October.



The Hilarious Truth Behind Apple Maps: It’s a Dark Art Project


This mockumentary exposes the truth behind Apple Maps: it was a massive art project made to put disturbing semi-realistic imagery into every iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch on the planet. Just check out this 'found footage' where Jean-Marc Rosseau, the man behind the artsy mess, talks about his work and inspiration. Is it sad that the Apple Maps are really so bad that it makes this parody video almost believable?

Is it sad that the Apple Maps are really so bad that it makes this parody video almost believable



VIA

Friday, October 5, 2012

Motorola Droid RAZR MAXX is now only $50 at Amazon


The Motorola DROID RAZR MAXX can be yours for as low as $49.99 at Amazon
The Motorola DROID RAZR MAXX can be yours for as low as $49.99 at Amazon
Some time in the near future, theMotorola DROID RAZR MAXX HD will be launched at Verizon. What this means is that theMotorola DROID RAZR MAXX (sans the HD) will be coming down in price.  Amazon had been swinging its price cutting ax at the latter device, stopping when the price tag read $49.99. Of course, you are required to sign a two-year pact and you need to be a brand new Verizon customer, or adding a new line to an existing account. Current Big Red customers upgrading a current line will have to pay $69.99 for the phone carrying the long-lasting 3300mAh cell.

On the other hand, you might want to wait for the new model. Instead of the 4.3 inch qHD Super AMOLED screen with a 256ppi pixel density, the newer model will have a 4.7 inch Super AMOLED display with a 720p resolution and a pixel density of 312ppi. In place of the dual-core 1.2GHz TI OMAP 4430 driving Miss Daisythe current model, it's the hardest working chip in show business, the dual-core 1.5GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 MSM8960 under the hood of the upcoming unit.

We don't know yet what the price for the Motorola DROID RAZR MAXX HD will be, but what we do know now is that Amazon is offering you all-day battery life (21 hours talk time) for as low as $49.99 with the Motorola DROID RAZR MAXX. 



VIA

Video Ads Lumia 920 quipped iPhone 5

Video Ads Lumia 920 quipped iPhone 5 | Nokia Germany has just released a new ad for Lumia 920 with iPhone 5 insinuating manner. iPhone made ​​known only in a few types of color, in contrast to its rivals, which gives the option many color choices.

In the new ad, Nokia wants to emphasize about the lack of color options available for iPhone 5 when compared to Lumia 920. In the video tells a buyer lined up to purchase the iPhone 5 black or white. However, the queue is there a different buyer.

Quite unexpectedly, the request will actually make the majority of visitors panicked fear. Disappointed with what they get, the main characters leave the store and found that there are some people who use mobile phones with unique colors, and Nokia Lumia 920 figure immediately displays the tagline 'This is Lumia.' Check out the video here.


Waiting for Apple's next big thing

It's been one year since Steve Jobs died and Apple is as strong as ever. Does CEO Tim Cook need another "holy cow" product to keep his company rolling?


Tim Cook with Steve Jobs at Apple headquarters in 2007 (Credit: James Martin/CNET)
Steve Jobs would surely be pleased.
A year after his death, the company he co-founded and brought back from near-ruin is on a tear. With its top executive team still in place, Apple is set to close out its most profitable year ever. Its stock, now up 65 percent for the year, gives Apple a market value far more than Google's and Microsoft's combined. The iPhone 5 is selling at a record pace, and fans continue to line up and even camp out for a chance to be one of the first with a new Apple product.
Now comes the hard part: Maintaining the formula for that wild success. It's CEO Tim Cook's biggest challenge as he moves beyond the keeper of the Jobs flame and puts his own stamp on the company. Jobs once said Apple is the biggest startup on the planet. Despite its more than 70,000 employees and hundreds of millions of customers, Apple's greatest strength has been its ability to reinvent a market, from the iPod to the iPhone to the iPad.
Now, nearly three years since the the iPad was released, longtime Apple watchers are wondering when Apple's next big thing will arrive. Tackling a new market is a must if Apple is going to maintain that historic success. Certainly, it could continue to improve on its main categories for years to come, squeezing profits from a customer base that's the envy of corporate America. But that kind of complacency isn't how Jobs took his company back from the brink in the late '90s. It's simply not an Apple thing to do.
"That's how Apple has done it," said Charlie Wolf, a vice president with research firm Needham and Company who has followed Apple since 1985. "But I can't identify any market that Apple can easily enter and disrupt right now -- that's with Steve Jobs, or without Steve Jobs."
To say that Apple is in trouble, of course, would be silly. But tech industry history buffs know it's when companies are on top that they make the mistakes that cause problems years later. IBM didn't take the PC revolution seriously enough. Sun didn't respond quickly enough to cheap Linux servers. Microsoft missed the boat on phones and tablets, and is still playing catch-up. RIM didn't have a good answer to the iPhone (it still doesn't). The list goes on and on.
Turning markets on their head is what Apple did best under Jobs. That leads to the obvious question: What's the next act in Apple's decade of market disruptions? Is it an Apple TV? Something else? And do Cook and his executive team have what it takes to do it again?
Keeping the band together
We know one thing: Cook has kept top executives from bolting. That includes Jony Ive, Apple's chief of industrial design, who Jobs said in Walter Isaacson's biography was left with "more operational power" at than anyone else at the company.
Cook's team: Jony Ive, Eddy Cue, Scott Forstall, Phil Schiller, Bob Mansfield
(Credit: Apple/CNET )
The band also includes most of Jobs' team since the mid-'90s, including marketing head Phil Schiller, iOS chief Scott Forstall, hardware honcho Bob Mansfield, and Eddy Cue, the man who oversees iTunes and has been a key negotiator the content companies. It helps, of course, that Cook showered them with huge stock packages, but Apple watchers are impressed nonetheless. "Not only have they stayed, but they seem to have renewed enthusiasm," said Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a senior associate dean at the Yale School of Management.
So the backup band is still in place and we know what they can do. What's not so clear is whether someone can step in and make deals the way Jobs did. The stories of Jobs the mercurial and demanding boss are widely chronicled. But he was also persistent. When Jobs wanted to buy a startup called Siri, for instance, he called CEO Dag Kittlaus 30 times over a span of 35 days to persuade him to sell, according to a former Siri board member. Jobs was successful, and Apple went on to turn the software into the marquee feature of the iPhone 4S.
That was classic Jobs, determined to get his way. Cook, the master of operations, also is clearly driven, but we don't yet know how his Apple will separate from Jobs' Apple on the design of a new product. We don't know how obsessively he will drive to get what he believes is needed done. The iPhone 5 was probably the last product for which Jobs fully applied his obsessive attention to detail. Will Ive fill that role? Will several people?
In the interim, all eyes have been on Cook to see how he handles the pressure. Already, he appears more willing than his old boss to admit an error, and do it faster.
In 2010, users began complaining that the iPhone 4 lost reception when held along its new exterior antenna. Apple stayed quiet on the matter, short of a widely-posted e-mail between Jobs and a customer, with Jobs telling him to "just avoid holding it in that way." The company followed up saying the issue was "just a fact of life for every wireless phone." When the issue persisted, Apple held a press conference at its headquarters where an agitated Jobs offered unhappy buyers a refund, or a free rubber case. That was after a 32-minute presentation pointing out that competing devices experienced the issue too.
Steve Jobs in 2010, during "Antennagate"
Spin forward to last month. When it became clear after the release of the latest iPhone that a homemade replacement for Google maps on iPhones and iPads was flawed, there was no foot-dragging from Cook. He owned up to the mistake.
"At Apple, we strive to make world-class products that deliver the best experience possible to our customers," Cook said in a letter posted on Apple's Web site. "With the launch of our new Maps last week, we fell short on this commitment."
Cook went one step beyond, urging upset customers to try out software from competitors, including Google. It's hard to imagine that moment from Jobs, who told Isaacson that he was "willing to go thermonuclear war" against Google over Android.
Plenty of pundits have argued whether Jobs would have even released that flawed product, but one thing seems indisputable: Jobs was no friend of Google, and Google's refusal to provide turn-by-turn voice navigation for maps, as it does on Android is reportedly what pushed Apple to take on maps itself.
An ability to make a public apology, of course, has little do with with innovating and creating great products. That's the real job of Cook and his core team. And without the autocratic, deal-making Jobs at the helm, there are new challenges. Already, there are reports of infighting and turf battles inside Apple, a company that for the past decade has seemingly moved with a single purpose. And without Jobs' intense influence, can Cook and his well-compensated management team balance their existing lines with the search for the next big thing?
Apple's 'hobby' TV product
Set on TV?
Ever since Jobs told Isaacson that he wanted "to create an integrated television set that is completely easy to use" and that he "finally cracked it," the Apple speculation apparatus has ginned up a series of inconclusive reports. Yes, Apple makes its $99 set top box, but Cook himself still refers to it as a "hobby." Jobs seemed to be referring to a bigger vision. Was Jobs talking about Apple's next billion-dollar opportunity, a complete reinvention of the way people watch TV shows and movies at home? Or something more modest?
Everyone hates the messy interface of most televisions providers, not to mention confusing, button-heavy remote controls. Yet companies like TiVo, which have offered slick alternatives have not produced sweeping changes. Early speculation was that Apple would skip the box game entirely and instead come out with its own TV set, aiming, naturally, to upend the entire TV market in the way it did with the iPhone and hopefully do away with those god-awful remote control buttons.
But there's a big sticking point if Apple really does want to reinvent the TV entertainment experience: the entertainment industry. Two years ago, Jobs was trying to cut deals to for TV shows and movies that it wanted to offer on iTunes for deeply discounted rates. But Jobs ran up against roadblock after roadblock in Hollywood. The studios and TV networks were determined not to end up like the music industry and let Apple grab too much control of their digital distribution. The exception was Disney. He was, after all, the studio's biggest shareholder and a member of its board.
And Jobs managed to cut a personal deal with News Corp. boss Rupert Murdoch: News Corp. won Apple's assistance in launching The Daily, an iPad-focused news app that debuted in February 2011, but has since struggled. In return, Fox signed on, along with Disney, to offer TV shows for rent on iTunes for 99-cents. Up to that point, iTunes sold individual episodes of TV shows for download for as much as $3.99. Ultimately, the 99-cent rentals didn't go far. Disney and Fox were the only majors to participate and the discounted rentals were halted after a year.
Point is, not even the esteemed and respected Jobs could budge the Hollywood poobahs. Now, the task of reinventing TV is left for Cook and Jobs' former deal-making partner, Eddy Cue. "The one who would step in and did a lot of the work is Eddy Cue," said Wolf. "Eddy is good, but nobody's as good as Steve. So consequently, that increases the challenge in trying to obtain content, and Apple may never succeed."
Dealmaker Eddy Cue showing off iTunes 11 at the company's iPhone 5 unveiling last month
(Credit: CNET/James Martin )
Others think Apple still has options to grow in the proverbial living room business.
"I totally don't believe there's a TV set in the works. That makes no sense," said Tim Bajarin, an analyst with Creative Strategies."The real opportunity is the to retrofit TVs, not make TVs. The TV business itself is cutthroat and nobody is making any money."
Instead, Bajarin says Apple should play to its strengths and focus on on-demand content, applications and interactivity. Yes, the stuff that even Jobs had a hard time nailing down.
There are signs Apple's still has sights on the content piece of the puzzle. Last month, Apple tested the waters with live video broadcasting in its month-long iTunes Festival. For the first time, the annual concert was available for both live and on-demand streaming on its current Apple TV set top box. Apple has also become more democratic about allowing potential competitors, like Hulu as apps on the Apple TV. Hulu subscribers can now watch TV shows they might otherwise purchase outright through iTunes.
"There's a lot of people who have gotten rid of the cable system, who only have Roku or Apple TV. That fundamentally suggests a business model that is totally on-demand," Bajarin said.
In the near term, Apple is said to be simply trying to extend its set-top box idea, and turn it into a product with the reach the likes of an iPod, iPhone or iPad. Recent reports from Bloomberg and The Wall Street Journal say Apple is working on something more like a traditional cable box that would include more live content. It could even be offered through cable companies.
Whether you can imagine Apple handing over tech support duties for its hardware to the likes of a Comcast or a Time Warner is, perhaps, beside the point. Those are the current rules, and way of doing business in the TV world. Of course, keep in mind that Apple shattered through similar the "way the phone industry worked" on its way to rolling out the iPhone.
"I've got more confidence in the iPad than the iPhone. I don't think we've even seen what the iPad can do -- it's astonishing - particularly since invading the business market," said Wolf. "That, to me, is the big story."
Will the iPad become Apple's biggest money maker?
So what then should Apple do next -- an iTV, wearable computing, robots? None of the above? More than a few are still beating on a foray into television. Critics may scoff, but remember this is a company that's made a habit of proving it knows its business better than its critics. Not that long ago, plenty of people said Apple stores were a terrible idea and Apple was headed for trouble by trying to compete with tough companies like, ahem, Best Buy and Circuit City.
The original iPod was a clunky thing that couldn't store many songs and were no better than MP3 players on the market, critics scoffed. The iPhone was headed into a crowded market. And the iPad, well, what was the point of a large iPhone without the phone? Jobs & Co. always had the last laugh.
"If someone asked you about your leadership, you'd probably say give me more than 12 months," said Michael Useem, director of the Center for Leadership and Change Management at the Wharton School. "It would be shocking if there was anything significant in a year. But over two or three years, it will be apparent."
Now it's time to see if Cook & Co., whatever it is they do next or even if they stand pat with the current product lineup, get the last laugh, too.

BlackBerry 10 Aristo, High-end Smartphone from RIM

Following leakage of BlackBerry 10 Laguna, Now one other device leak back, and show us the first phone BlackBerry 10 A-series. One of the "BB10" A-series that appears to the public called 'Aristo'.

BlackBerry Aristo or Series A has a specification that is qualified, so assessed would be the latest high-end smartphone made ​​by Research In Motion (RIM). Aristo using processor Qualcomm APQ8064 Krait quad-core 1.5 GHz. At the front there is a screen to OCTA Glass OLED 4.65 inches with a resolution of 1280x720.

OCTA screen developed by Samsung, and the Aristo is said to be the thinnest BlackBerry device with a thickness of 8.85 mm. Aristo other specifications, includes 2 GB of RAM memory, 16 GB of internal memory, which can be expanded via a microSD card, and an 8 megapixel rear camera and a 2 megapixel front camera class.

For connectivity, Aristo comes with a microUSB port, a mini HDMI, Wi-Fi Direct, NFC, DLNA, and Bluetooth 4.0. With a large enough battery capacity, which is 2800 mAh. this RIM Information smartpohne is increasingly let you know that there are some BlackBerry devices 10 which was launched at the beginning of next year.


HTC Windows Phone 8X Three UK PAYG pricing set at £350


Shortly after the HTC Windows Phone 8X announcement we learned that the SIM-free version of the device might cost a rather hefty £399. It turns out that wasn't entirely accurate as Three UK, will be selling the smartphone off-contract for the easier to swallow £350 ($564 / €436).
The image above was sent to us by a source from Three UK who wished to remain anonymous. As you can see, the PAYG (no-commitment) price of the smartphone stands at £350. You will also be able to grab the HTC Windows Phone 8X for as low as £29 if you are willing to sign a two-year £30/month contract.

The full list of Three UK plans for the HTC 8X
There's still more than a month until the 8X arrives in UK on November 15, so let's hope other UK retailers follow Three UK's lead and bring their prices down as well.



Thursday, October 4, 2012

Facebook Is Too Big To Hate

 

 The first billion was just the beginning. Only 6,000,000,000 to go.

 

Facebook has a billion users. A B I L L I O N. That's one-seventh of the entire mass of humanity that covers this planet, one-hundredth of the number of human beings to have ever lived, ever. Staggeringly few other cultural experiences have been shared so broadly, so synchronously. It's a genuine milestone not just for technology, but for humanity (seriously). And that's exactly how Facebook hopes we'll see it when we look back in a few years. Facebook is a chair. And a bridge and an airplane:


When Microsoft built Windows, the mission was to put a PC on every desktop in every home. There weren't a billion PCs in use until just four years ago. And as of the end of last year, roughly one third of the world's 7 billion people — 2.3 billion, give or take — were using the internet. In other words, nearly half of the internet-using population is on Facebook, and that's with it officially banned in China.
The mission of Facebook, as Mark Zuckerberg puts it in his profile, is "making the world more open and connected." The (obvious) subtext of that "let's all hug together, naked" worldview is that it's Facebook making the connections. Not on an abstract level — though being a shared cultural touchstone on that scale does provide a kind of mutual emotional infrastructure — but in a concrete way. Facebook wants to be infrastructure in a fundamental way. I mean, Facebook seriously compared itself to chairs. And that's what's transformative about hitting a billion users, as Zuckerberg himself explains (emphasis mine):
But even when we were at half a billion people, you got these large-scale services like Skype or Netflix that also had big user bases. And we weren’t yet at the point where the majority of their users were Facebook users, so they couldn’t really rely on us as a piece of critical infrastructure for registration. A lot of startups did, but the bigger companies couldn’t. Now really everyone can start to rely on us as infrastructure. That’s a pretty big shift.
With Facebook Connect and Open Graph — what you mostly notice as Like buttons and Facebook logins sprinkled across the web — Facebook has spread itself across the web in a way that it underpins vast swaths of it, processing 2.7 billion Likes a day. Facebook is now officially integrated into nearly a quarter of the top 10,000 sites on the web by one count, and it's linked by nearly half of them. What was the last news site you went on that wasn't begging you to share the thing you're reading on Facebook? (Which, you know, I wouldn't mind if you passed this along. Thanks very much.) It's hard to think of new services or startups with real ambition for giant userbases — except ones that are explicitly anti-Facebook, like Dalton Caldwell's App.net, which is basically Twitter but "open" —  that don't integrate with or build on top of Facebook, like Sean Parker's Airtime, a massively hyped videochat startup, or Pinterest. As more apps, sites and services hook into Facebook, Zuckerberg's law becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy:
“Each year the amount of stuff that each individual shares is growing at this exponential rate. And that lets us project into the future and say, ‘OK, two years from now people are going to be sharing twice as much, [in] three years, four times [as much], four years, eight times as much.’”
Beyond the advent of "frictionless sharing" last fall, which constantly and instantly and ceaselessly poured what you're reading and listening to and watching into Facebook, Facebook's moved toward subsuming apps and app stores with its App Center, and even email and IM. It's moving into the real world and bringing it back into Facebook, like with one of the new ways it sells and analyzes ads — it can use email addresses collected from real-world stores like CVS to better target advertisements. (You didn't think that loyalty card was just because they really like you, right?) The endpoint of this, explains Facebook's Mike Vernal to Bloomberg BusinessWeek:
“We are trying to map out the graph of everything in the world and how it relates to each other."
Facebook as a chair Source: funkyfurnitureandstuff.com

That is what a billion users means. The only other company that can even credibly claim to begin to do that — or try to — is Google, whose mission is to "organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful." Google is, no doubt, a basic part of the web's infrastructure, making sense of the 42 billion or so webpages in its index for the world to the tune of 100 billion searches a month. But Facebook is on the verge of becoming something even more than the world's fastest, smartest librarian. It's not about about sheer data. It's about connections; it's about identity. (Remember when you didn't use your real name on the web, when you weren't you on the internet, but simply whoever you claimed to be? Facebook changed that.) Put another way: Is Facebook doing things to be more like Google right now, or is Google doing things to be more like Facebook? (Hint: Which company's core products like search and local listings feel like they've been invaded and overwhelmed by another species? Superhint: The invasive species starts with "Google" and ends with "+.")

And so we've perhaps reached the point at which Facebook is too big to fail. (At the very least, it'll take a generation or two, as web pioneer Dave Winer says.) You might hate using Facebook, but you still do. Because your friends are on it or your family or someone that you don't or can't connect with any other way, and they're sharing things that matter to you, even if Facebook doesn't. Ripping yourself away from Facebook is hard, and it's getting harder as it becomes more entrenched as a basic part of the web, and more insidiously, as a basic component of identity on the web. That's when you know Facebook has become something more than just another social service, uttered in the same breath as Twitter and Google Plus — that it's become a core piece of social infrastructure.

All of which makes it harder than ever to digest Zuckerberg talking about breaking things so cavalierly — "We make more mistakes than other companies do... Microsoft has a huge focus on really rigorous, bug-free code. That’s cool." Websites can break. Services can break. Infrastructure isn't allowed to break. Imagine if every chair or every bridge in the world just broke, or stopped working the way you expected them to, even for five minutes. Can't happen. Well, that's Facebook now. Here's to the next billion.



VIA

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Siri's strange movie reviews: it's tough being a robot


You may or may not have noticed that sometimes Siri says crazy things. We recently noticed that Siri summarizes movies in a pretty funny way, too. Siri seems to have a distinct preference for Sci-Fi (who can blame her?), though she also has a few words to say about the classic Wizard of Oz, as well as Pixar's Toy Story.
Siri also has several different answers when you ask her about The MatrixSadly, she has no thoughts on Gone With the Wind, nor can she tell us which version of Blade Runner is superior. Let us know if you find others!
Blade Runner (1984)
Alien (1979)
Inception (2010)
Matrix (1999)
The Wizard of Oz (1939)
Star Trek (2009)
Star Wars (1977)
The Terminator (1984)
Wall-E (2008)
Toy Story (1995)