Angry Birds Rio for Mac os
The success of the Angry Birds game was remarkable, and has launched many versions of this game, be it a PC version, Portable PC version, Angry Birds Rio PC version, or Chrome Web browser version, this time has been also available Angry Birds Rio for Mac OS version.
Is Microsoft Cooking Something to Go Against the Google Glass ?
Everyone has heard about Google Glass, the wearable computer that can be slipped on like a pair of glasses, though it is much more than mere glasses. Undoubtedly the first of its kind, it comes with builtin navigation software that helps you with directions while driving, biking or even walking
Minebea Cool Leaf - Touch Screen Keyboard
Minebea, a Japanese multinational corporationand producer of machinery components and electronics devices, has recently launched its new flat keyboard called as Cool Leaf
Simple shortcuts Windows 7
Might have yet know, on a windows 7 a lot of shortcuts that will help us while working using windows..
Bad Piggies successful as Angry Birds
Bad Piggies, latest games Rovio, are likely to follow the success of Angry Birds and the Amazing Alex. The naughty green pigs is apparently managed to attract the gamers, at least on the iOS device users in the United States (U.S.).
Unordered List
smallest PC in the world, Apple Size
With Google, Bconnect Launch AHA Cheap Internet
Bakrie Telecom's subsidiary on data service, Bakrie Connectivity (BConnect), teams up with Google and launched data service and broadband internet modem in Indonesia today.
"Bakrie Telecom is known by its affordable voice and short message services. We're now willing to focus on data services," said Anindya Bakrie, Bakrie Telecom CEO and President Director, on June 24.
According to Anindya, also chief commissioner of Bakrie Connectivity, the internet penetration in Indonesia only hits 30 million, which equals 12.5 percent of the total Indonesian population.
"It is expected that Bconnect may tighten digital disparities in Indonesia as well as increasing people competing power," he said.
"BConnect calls its data service AHA, or affordable hyper-speed access, which makes use of EVDO Rev A network technology (3.75 G) with an access speed of, theoretically, until 3.1 megabyte per second," said Anin
Nexian NX-270D Trio Three On, GSM-GSM-CDMA
The social networking such as Y!M, MSN, eBuddi, Facebook and Twitter are still available.
The display screen of Nexian NX-270D is 2.2. inch QVGA LCD.
The following are the specifications in general of Nexian NX-270D:
- Dual GSM + CDMA (Trio Three On)
- 2.2 inch QVGA LCD
- Trackpad Navigation
- Supports Chatting Applications: Y!M, MSN, eBuddy
- FM Radio
- Support Java
- Stereo Speaker
- MP3 Player
- Video Chatting
- GPRS
- Camera
- Bluetooth
- Handsfree
- External Memory
- Language : Indonesian – English
Sony Ericsson Cedar with 3G HSDPA
Sony-Ericsson Cedar
The new Sony-Ericsson Cedar mobile phone offers users an easy-to-use social networking experience with the Widget Manager 2.0 - an software application which allows users access social networking via the stand-by screen. In addition, the Sony-Ericsson Cedar phone also features the human curvature design that is now consistent across the Sony Ericsson mobile phone portfolio.
Sony-Ericsson Cedar affordable phone
“The Sony Ericsson Cedar handset is the ideal product for consumers who are looking for the perfect balance between a business and social device.” said Quentin Cordier, Global Marketing Manager, Sony Ericsson. “Featuring 3G HSDPA, a 3.5mm jack and a port for easy connection to your laptop - the Sony Ericsson Cedar is an affordable GreenHeart phone which allows consumers to easily connect to their various communities whether it’s for work, fun or play.”
Sony-Ericsson Cedar features
• Widget Manager 2.0 - Access to your social network and applications
• Social network applications - Facebook, Twitter and MySpace
• Keep contacts close - Hassle free phone book transfer and web backup
• Stay organised with calendar, phone book, e-mail
• Fast browsing with 3G and direct access to the web browser
• EAS Push e-mail and modem connectivity
• Connect your headphones on the 3.5mm jack
• Capture the moment with the 2MP camera and send it by MMS
• Human curvature design - Fits into the palm of the hand
• GreenHeart mobile phone - For a greener choice
Sony-Ericsson GreenHeart phones
In line with the company’s GreenHeart commitment, Sony Ericsson Cedar mobile phone features various green credentials such as recycled plastics, a low power consumption charger, an e-manual, waterborne paint and compact packaging. The new Sony-Ericsson Cedar phone is perfect for businesses that are looking for a green alternative as it offers push mail, Bluetooth connectivity and HSDPA.
Sony-Ericsson Cedar price & availability
The Sony-Ericsson Cedar cell phone supports UMTS HSDPA 2100 and GSM GPRS / EDGE 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900, UMTS HSDPA 850 / 1900 / 2100 and EDGE 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900. The Sony-Ericsson Cedar mobile phone will be available for retail from Q3 in the colours Black/Silver and Black/Red. The new Sony-Ericsson Cedar will retail for less than €100.
RIM is rumored to be a Making a Blackberry Tablet PC
Supply of the RIM tablet PC components were imported directly from Foxconn Technology Group. Foxconn and another three Asian companies who participate supplying tablet component has also confirmed the truth of this news.
Foxconn is the largest manufacturer of electronics and computer components worldwide, and mainly manufactures on contract to other companies. Among other things, Foxconn produces the Mac mini, the iPod, the iPad, and the iPhone for Apple Inc.; Intel-branded motherboards for Intel Corp.
According to these reports, RIM is working on a Q3 or Q4 launch will come with a 3.5G modem and Wi-Fi capabilities. As expected, the device will also allow users to sync their tablet with their Blackberry.
IPad presence, no doubt has triggered a number of vendors to make similar products. Before RIM, Samsung and Nokia are also rumored to be developing these touch-screen tablet PC
For that please you imagine her with a BB for a big screen, whether it would be cool or even so strange. Let's wait its presence
HTC Desire Specification and Review
Design
There's no denying the similarities between the Desire and the HTC-manufactured Google Nexus One, they look like identical twins who get different haircuts to assert their individuality. There are a few obvious differences in detail, but overall you have a very similar shaped and sized handset with a similar two-tone colour scheme and matching 3.7-inch AMOLED WVGA touchscreens. For our money, we like the Desire better, the optical trackpad works nicely, and we prefer the mechanical buttons below the screen over the touch-sensitive ones you find on Google's phone.
Once you fire up the Desire, the comparisons end and the Desire streaks ahead. HTC's Sense UI gives Android something you can't find on the competition's offerings: a mixture of usability and style that truly sets it apart. HTC Sense features seven customisable homescreens (as opposed to the standard five on Android 2.1), to which the user can apply a wide range of widgets and shortcuts. But as owners of the iPhone will attest, scrolling back and forth across seven different screens can be a laborious task, so HTC has implemented a new tweak to Sense called 'Leap': a pinching touchscreen gesture that displays all seven screens as thumbnails, allowing you to 'leap' from one screen to the next without scrolling across the screens between.
Sense doesn't totally overwhelm the homescreen functionality; in fact Live Wallpapers, one of our favourite features of the Nexus One (and of Android 2.1 in general), is still active. Live Wallpapers are animated homescreen backgrounds, and in some instances are touch-active too, which really helps to make your phone feels somewhat alive, if at the expense of your battery life.
Features
If you've followed the progress of Android, and you've read our Nexus One review, then you're basically up to speed with the capabilities of the HTC Desire. It sports all the smartphone hardware you'd expect; it supports Telstra's 850MHz network plus standard 2100MHz HSPA data transfers; it has a GPS receiver, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, supported by the standard suite of Google apps; and it has an excellent Webkit browser. Out of the box you'll find a comprehensive mixture of apps and web shortcuts to play with, representing the three corporations behind this release: Google, HTC and Telstra (in Australia), but any service or tool not on the phone when you receive it is likely to be found on the Android Market to download.
HTC has made sure the Desire is as capable a business smartphone as it is a phone for fun, extending its usual support for Microsoft Exchange email to include the ability to search a corporate database for contacts, a feature rarely seen on even the most advanced smartphones. Quickoffice is also installed for viewing and editing Microsoft Office documents, and the pre-installed HTC calendar is a winner with its clean UI and the integration of the weather into calendar entries over the upcoming five days.
Staying in touch
All new smartphones now support a wide range of communication methods. From Facebook and Twitter, to old favourites like SMS and email, staying in touch with contacts and the wider web is one of the highest priorities to those of us searching for a new phone to buy. The Desire ticks all of these boxes, and does it in some really innovative ways. Previous HTC Androids, like the Hero and Tattoo, featured HTC Peep for Twitter and integrated Facebook with the phone's address book. The Desire maintains this functionality and adds to it with Friends Stream, a new homescreen widget that aggregates Facebook and Twitter updates into one place and gives you the ability to update either profile without launching an app or the browser.
On top of this, the Desire also sports HTC Footprints, a geotagging app that tags photos you take with a location it generates using your current location, and Google's Latitude widget, which lets you see where your friends are using Google Maps. Within the phone's address book you can view photos via a contacts Facebook or Flickr stream, and you can merge contacts from a variety of sources into a single address book listing.
Media and the web
In previous Android reviews, we've complained about the various media capabilities of earlier devices, but the Desire features a media player of a high enough quality to keep us quiet this time around. This is by no means a show-stopping piece of software, but it does the job of organising and playing media files, and it looks good doing it. Media file recognition is marginally better than previous HTC Androids, adding Windows Media video and audio files to the usual assortment of MP4 videos and MP3 and AAC music.
We mentioned it before but we'll say it again: this web browser is a winner. Pages load quickly and render correctly, scrolling over long pages is smooth and fluid, and the browser supports some Adobe Flash content too via its Flash Lite plugin. To be honest, we were never really too concerned about the iPhone not supporting Flash content, but now that we've watched videos in the browser, we never want to go back to Apple's restrictive web experience. Also to Apple's ire, the Desire features multitouch pinch-zooming in the browser, as well as in the photo gallery and apps like Google Maps.
The only let-down in the media experience is the content you create yourself, namely photos and videos shot with the Desire's 5-megapixel camera. On paper this camera passes muster with its decent image resolution, touchscreen auto-focus and bright LED flash, but the end results aren't nearly as exciting. Our photographs look colder than in real life, with a chilly blue hue produced by the flash, and the auto-focus really struggles, especially with subjects that are prone to moving. Of our thirty-plus test images, only a small selection of them were captured clearly.
Performance and battery
Not only is the Desire a sexy phone full of excellent features, it is also a veritable powerhouse, packing a 1GHz Snapdragon processor and a huge 576MB of RAM. The results speak for themselves, with consistently zippy performance in the complex menus and inside the various apps we installed. We should point out that we turned down the animations in the display settings from 'All animations' to 'Some animations' to iron out some subtle jaggedness in the homescreen animations, specifically some tiny pauses when scrolling in the 'All programs' shortcuts list.
Importantly, the Desire also makes the grade as a mobile phone. Our test calls sounded clear in a variety of situations, and messaging is a breeze with the great on-screen keyboard.
With the top-line hardware and the large touch display, it's not surprising that battery life maxes out at a single work day, though this can be as low as eight or 10 hours depending on how you use the phone. The good news is that HTC provides you with a variety of widgets to manage the battery consumption as much as is possible with a phone of this calibre. There's a standard power settings widget that switches the Wi-Fi and GPS on and off, as well as controlling the auto-sync schedule and screen brightness. There's also a mobile network widget that turns mobile data on and off, a great way to save battery and make sure you're not overspending on your monthly data allowance.
Overall
HTC is onto a real winner with the Desire, striking a perfect balance between design, features and performance. The screen is fantastic, the software is best-in-class and the performance throughout the phone is mostly flawless. There are a few shortcomings, the 5-megapixel camera needs work and the phone could do with the addition of some substantial internal storage, but these issues are easily forgotten while surfing the web or communicating with friends using a wide variety of different protocols or social networks. You will have to manage the battery to get the most out of it, but HTC makes this task simple with its custom-designed homescreen widgets. Best of all, the Desire is priced aggressively at AU$779 outright and unlocked, but don't forget you'll probably want to upgrade the included 2GB microSD card, so you'll need to budget that into the cost.
- Prosesor: Qualcomm QSD8250 1Ghz
- OS: Android 2.1 with HTC Sense
- Memory: ROM 512MB dan RAM 576MB
- Dimention: 119mm (L) x 60mm (W) x 11.9mm (T)
- Weight: 135g (with battery)
- Touchscreen WVGA 3.7 in with 480 x 800 resolution
- Wi-Fi: IEEE 802.11 b/g
- GPS: internal GPS, HTC Footprints™, Google Maps
- 3.5mm stereo audio jack, Standard micro-USB (5-pin micro-USB 2.0)
- Camera:5.0 Mpixel with auto focus and flash, Face detection, Geotagging.
- Battery capacity: 1400 mAh
- Memory slot: MicroSD upto 32 GB
cnet.com.au