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Sunday, June 3, 2012

Samsung Galaxy S3 blitz (I'm in love)







So you must have seen/ heard about this amazing new Samsung phone called Samsung Galaxy S3. This year Samsung changed tact with regards to showcasing its latest Galaxy S smartphone by giving the handset an unveiling all of its own in London, while in previous years the company revealed the new model at the annual MWC event. It seems that all the hype and publicity has helped the Samsung Galaxy S3 to blitz the iPhone 4S already when it comes to a chart complied in the UK.


According to uSwitch the Galaxy S3 soared to the top of its Mobile Tracker chart and ending the white version of the iPhone 4S brief stay at the top of the tree. The chart is compiled by combining actual sales and web searches and comes only a couple of days after the Samsung smartphone being released.


Previously before the iPhone 4S hit the number one spot last month the Galaxy S2 had been at the top of the chart for eleven months on the trot, and it was only revealed yesterday how well last year’s device had been selling. Even though it has now been replaced by this year’s model it is still sitting at number three in the chart.


Meanwhile the recently released HTC One X is placed at number four one place ahead of the popular Samsung Galaxy Note. Many reviewers comparing the two handsets have favoured the Galaxy S3, and the device is probably the most hyped handset besides the iPhone.


It has to be remembered though that the iPhone 4S has now been available since October, and the device is basically a reworked iPhone 4 with its main new feature being an improved processor alongside the built in Siri application.


Many consumers will now be sitting tight to see what Apple next does with its flagship smartphone before deciding what to buy next. Speculation is mounting that we will see an all new handset this year, and one that brings with it a slightly bigger screen.


SO what will you do? Will you be getting the Samsung Galaxy S3 or are you waiting to see what the iPhone 5 will be like?


Saturday, March 31, 2012

Yahoo Accenture Innovation Jockey! (Need Help!!)


Hello people!
Been a while since I posted something. It's just been a hectic time and day. Have you ever noticed how hard it gets when you have too much on your plate.

Well, anyways a month back I saw this amazing add of a competition that Yahoo was hosting along with Accenture searching for the most Innovative minds of India. I got really excited, it sounded like the perfect plot for me! I instantly told my friends about it and we started working on finding technical solutions to our everyday problems.

And there we were for three days scribbling ideas, and then I thought we should do something which would show us that our College Bus has arrived or departed. So one of my other friends modified it and converted it into this amazing all rounder.

SMSBusTrans

  • So we posted an idea which will tell you which bus to take if you're going from one place to another
  • It will also tell you the exact time and place of where that particular bus is at.
  • And also which is the nearest bus stop and what time the bus will arrive there


For detailed information. Please do visit the following link:

http://innovationjockeys.yahoo.net/presentation-detail.php?id=689

Please guys, do check it out and "Like" it using your Facebook or "Tweet" about it! Please support us, it would mean a lot to us!! You can even send your reviews on my mail.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

New Revolutionaries Technologies

Found this amazing article which describes the 15 hottest trends following this year and coming. 


Let's start with MEMRISTOR
The memristor, a microscopic component that can "remember" electrical states even when turned off. It's expected to be far cheaper and faster than flash storage. A theoretical concept since 1971, it has now been built in labs and is already starting to revolutionize everything we know about computing, possibly making flash memory, RAM, and even hard drives obsolete within a decade.

The memristor is just one of the incredible technological advances sending shock waves through the world of computing. Other innovations in the works are more down-to-earth, but they also carry watershed significance. From the technologies that finally make paperless offices a reality to those that deliver wireless power, these advances should make your humble PC a far different beast come the turn of the decade.
The following links lead you to the pages where each and everyone of these new and revolutionary technologies are explained in more detailed manner.


                              Sunday, October 30, 2011

                              Nokia unveils their first Windows Phones

                              Nokia unveiled its long-awaited first Microsoft Windows phones, betting on the two sleek new models to get it back into the race with Apple and Google.


                              The top-end Lumia 800, featuring easy access to social networks like Facebook and high-definition video playback, will sell for about $584 excluding subsidies.

                              With vivid colours and a curved, black display, features Windows Phone's live icons on the home screen, which automatically update news, weather and Facebook feeds.

                              It also boasts free navigation and Microsoft's new Internet Explorer 9 browser, putting it in the same bracket as Apple's iPhone and Samsung's top Galaxy phones.




                              "It's a new dawn for Nokia," Chief Executive Stephen Elop said as he unveiled the high-end Lumia 800 and mid-range Lumia 710, which will go on sale in key European markets next month.


                              The Lumia 710 runs on Windows Phone 7.5 Mango and has three new apps - Nokia Drive, Nokia Music and the ESPN hub - which will be found exclusively on Nokia made Windows phones.

                              The Lumia 710 has a 3.7-inch screen with 800-by-480 resolution and is powered by a 1.4 GHz processor. The 710 has 5 megapixel camera with LED flash with a 8GB internal storage memory.




                              Analysts were positive about the new phones, though they said the first results of the Nokia-Microsoft pairing remained well short of an iPhone killer.

                              The phones will go on sale in France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and Britain in November, and in Hong Kong, India, Russia, Singapore and Taiwan before the end of the year.

                              The business that this phone might do overseas is other criteria but for what I think this actually might work in India. Kind of like all in one for us, we'll get the familiarity of Windows and the never ending love for Nokia phones that we already have, all at once. 

                              Nothing can be surely said until it's actual release.

                              Source:www.yahoo.com














                              Monday, September 12, 2011



                              Sony unveiled its long-awaited Android tablets on Wednesday – but the price tags had analysts claiming it will struggle to compete for the No 2 spot in a market dominated by Apple.
                              The basic model of Sony's main tablet, shown at the IFA show in Berlin, is priced at €499 (£441), the same as the iPad – a price where Hewlett-Packard and other tablet companies have failed to dent Apple's dominance.
                              Sony had vowed in January that by 2012 it would become the world's No 2 tablet maker – behind Apple – and it stuck by this bold claim at IFA where its chief executive Howard Stringer introduced the devices.
                              "We want to prove it's not who makes it first that counts, but who makes it better," Stringer said.
                              Sony is late to the game, with its first tablet due to hit store shelves in September. Its release is more than 18 months after Apple released the iPad, and almost a year since Samsung came out with its first Galaxy Tab.
                              Both of the tablets deviate from the now-standard slimline format that has Samsung in legal trouble with Apple, where it is accused of copying elements of the iPad – leading to an injunction on the sale of its latest tablet in Germany, and potentially across Europe.
                              From the side, the Sony Tablet S, which has a 9.4-inch screen, resembles a cross-section of an aircraft wing. The Tablet P, which will be heavily promoted as an ebook reader as well as a web-browsing device, is a clamshell device with twin 5.5-inch screens. Both will come with Google's Android 3 "Honeycomb" tablet software: the Tablet S with 3.1 and the Tablet P to follow with Android 3.2.
                              Sony is trying to distinguish its Android tablets with features that let one tablet function as a universal remote, while another one folds like a clamshell.
                              Both tablets come integrated with Sony's music, video and ebook services, marking them out from many other Android tablets, which have struggled to integrate compelling content services in the way Apple has with iTunes music, TV, film and app stores.
                              Stringer, the company's Welsh-born chairman, president and chief said Sony, which owns film studios and a record company, is uniquely positioned as a producer as well as distributor of such media. "Apple makes an iPad, but does it make a movie?" he asked.
                              Sony's European tablet product manager, Samir Militao, said: "We think that we have a unique design. We try to differentiate our products to [various criteria] and design is one of them."
                              Militao said the tablets tie in with Sony's extensive range of consumer electronics. The Tablet S has infrared functionality that makes it usable as a remote control for Sony TV sets, for instance, and users can also "flick" music to DLNA-enabled hi-fi systems.
                              Sony has priced the devices firmly at the high end, alongside Apple. The Tablet S will go on sale in Europe from the end of September at a starting price of €479, depending on the configuration. The pocket-sized Tablet P will follow in November, starting at €599.
                              Sarah Rotman, at research firm Forrester, said: "Sony is no copycat … but the price raises a red flag. We've been down this road before: Motorola and HP both priced their devices on par with the iPad, and both were unable to sell their devices in volume until they lowered the price significantly."
                              She added: "My concern for Sony is not price competition with Apple but price competition with Amazon, whose [Android] tablet we expect to be significantly cheaper."
                              At least one gadget reviewer who has played with the new "Sony Tablet S" is not so sure Sony will achieve its aim of becoming the second behind Apple. "I don't think it has the premium feel, design and build quality that either the iPad 2 or [Samsung] Galaxy Tab has right now," said Tim Stevens, editor-in-chief of Engadget.
                              "I honestly don't think this is going to be the tablet that really catapults Sony into the lead on the Android front, which is where it needs to be if it wants to be No 2 in the tablet market."
                              There has been little buzz generated ahead of the release, unlike the anticipation for the iPad or even the Galaxy Tab.
                              Sony hopes the tablet will restore its leading position in consumer electronics. Once a symbol of Japan's high-tech might, the Japanese electronics conglomerate is struggling under the weight of its money-losing TV division and badly needs the boost of a new hit product.
                              "Sony really must be in the tablet market and must succeed," said Mito Securities electronics analyst, Keita Wakabayashi.
                              Worldwide tablet shipments are forecast to more than triple this year to 60m units, and then rise to 275.3m units by 2015, according to a report this month from research firm IHS iSuppli.
                              Meanwhile Dixons Store Group said that it would allow online pre-ordering of the Sony Tablet S for the next two weeks. Mark Slater, category director at Dixons Retail, said: "Sony's Tablet S is a real contender in the tablet market and one we expect to be a big success. The two week preorder period for the Sony Tablet S will be a very exciting period for us to see how popular this tablet will be with our customers."


                              Friday, July 15, 2011

                              APPLE ANNOUNCES THE NEXT MAJOR RELEASE OF IOS 5 AT WWDC 2011 FOR IPHONE, IPAD AND IPOD TOUCH.

                              Are you aware of  iOS 5, Apple’s new mobile operating system? If you think of downloading it, however, be sure to get iTunes 10.5 beta first. The new version iOS 5 includes over 200 new features and 1500 new APIs.

                              iTunes 10.5 is the second release of iTunes. It provides support for Apple’s new iTunes in the Cloudofferings and is available to the general public. It adds support for iOS 5 and, much like the OS itself, is only available to registered developers.
                              In addition to iOS 5 support, iTunes 10.5 also supports more iCloud features that aren’t available in iTunes 10.3 yet and several user interface enhancements, such as disposing the window buttons horizontally (they were displayed vertically ever since 10.0, which upset some users) and slightly adjusting the look to better match Mac OS X Lion, with a slightly revised sidebar and toolbar buttons.
                              Other changes include the ability to disable automatic over-the-air downloads, a feature present in iCloud.
                              You can learn on how to obtain a legal Apple Developer account on Apple’s Developer portal. Registered individuals and companies can obtain access for as much as $99 a year which gives access to all Apple goodies  including builds of the upcoming Mac OSX Lion, as long as you keep your subscription active.

                              iOS 5 Features:
                              • Revamped MobileNotifier-esque notification system
                              • An improved Safari browser
                              • System-wide Twitter integration
                              • Ability to disable automatic over-the-air downloads, a feature present in iCloud.
                              Things you need to download:
                              • Download iOS 5 for iPhone, iPad, iPod touch
                              • Download iTunes 10.5 Beta To Install iOS 5 On iPhone, iPad, iPod touch
                              • How To Activate iOS 5 Beta 1 Firmware
                              How to upgrade iOS 5 Beta 1 On Apple TV, iPhone, iPad and iPod touch:
                              • Download the iOS 5 beta 1 firmware file for your respective iOS device.
                              • Extract the IPSW files on your desktop.
                              • Connect the iOS device to your computer.
                              • You have to get the UDID registered on the iPhone Developer program.
                              • After that start iTunes. Press and hold the Shift key (for Windows) or Option key (for Mac) and click Restore.
                              • Navigate to the path where you have save the iOS 5 beta 1 IPSW.
                              • Now wait and let iTunes install iOS 5 beta 1 on your device.
                              WARNING:
                              • Don’t try this upgrade on an unlocked iPhone. Those users who have locked AT&T and Verizon iphone  need to get their UDID registered before they can upgrade to iOS 5 beta.

                              Friday, June 17, 2011



                              Russia’s biggest retail bank is testing a machine that is both hillarious and sort of useful (I think) , an A.T.M. with a built-in lie detector intended to prevent consumer credit fraud.

                              Consumers with no previous relationship with the bank could talk to the machine to apply for a credit card, with no human intervention required on the bank’s end.

                              The machine scans a passport, records fingerprints and takes a three-dimensional scan for facial recognition. And it uses voice-analysis software to help assess whether the person is truthfully answering questions that include “Are you employed?” and “At this moment, do you have any other outstanding loans?”
                              The voice-analysis system was developed by the Speech Technology Center, a company whose other big clients include the Federal Security Service.