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Monday, 12 March 2012

INTRODUCING THE NEW PRODUCT OF ASUS NAMED AS PAD PHONE

                             THE NEW ASUS PAD PHONE

First unveiled at Cebit, we’ve now got our hands on the final iteration of the Asus PadFone, which is set for an April launch. Despite its name change, the PadFone undoubtedly fits into the same product category as the excellent Transformer tablet-laptop hybrids. In a way it’s the ultimate evolution of those products. Thanks to the keyboard add-on demonstrated for the first time today, the PadFone will be a smartphone, tablet and laptop in one.



As well as the keyboard, Asus also announced an ingenious stylus. Not only can it be used to make graphical notes and sketches onscreen, but it also doubles as a Bluetooth headset, ideal for answering calls when the phone is tucked away inside the tablet.



If you’re unfamiliar with the PadFone, it’s basically a powerful Android handset that slots into a tablet-style docking station when you want a larger screen. That unit then slots into the keyboard dock to turn the PadFone into an ad-hoc laptop. It’s an ingenious idea that has numerous advantages for casual computing on a day-to-day basis.



Battery life is one of these advantages. The handset has a fairly typical 1,520mAh battery built-in, but by adding the tablet dock this is increased by five-fold, add the keyboard too and this goes up to nine times. The battery capacity is always transferred to the smallest device so the keyboard charges the tablet and the tablet charges the handset. This way you can top up the handset battery while still using the tablet wire-free.

With just a single device like this, the PadFone will massively simplify keeping your apps up-to-date and your data synchronized. For those who currently maintain and lug multiple gadgets about with them for every possible need, this could be a huge time saver. There’s also the fact that you only need one SIM and one data contract for both phone and tablet, without any fiddling switching or tethering.



The pad feels as well constructed as any of the Transformer line, which have been excellent to date. It does feel a little weighty with the phone docked, but then you aren’t carrying two seperate devices, so it’s a fair swap we reckon.

We found docking and un-docking the phone easy, you just push it home and shut the door to dock it, which also elicits a little haptic/rumble feedback to let you know you've connected it properly. To udock it you push up the door and that eases the phone smoothly off the connectors, so you won't damage them or the handset with repeated use.



The PadFone at the heart of all this is no slouch. It uses a 1.5GHz top-end Qualcomm Snapdragon processor with a fast Adreno 225 graphics chip. It will come with options for 16, 32 or 64GB of RAM, plus a micro SD slot for more affordable storage expansion. The phone’s screen is an AMOLED qHD (960x540) display, which then upgrades to a 1,280x800 LCD panel when in tablet mode. Asus’s DynamicDisplay technology means that you got a practically seamless switch between phone and tablet, letting you dock the two even while watching HD video.



It also a brilliantly realised handset in its own right. It's good enough to make you wonder why Asus don't make their own range of smartphones. The design cues come from the ZenBook, with a subtle tapering down the length of the handset. The metallic finish on the rear bears the circular pattern that the company has made its trademark, making it look really striking.



Despite all the customization that must have gone into the PadFone, it will be launching with Android 4.0 when it goes on sale in April. No prices have yet been announced.

Saturday, 10 March 2012

TechCrunch: SURFACE COMPUTING

TechCrunch: SURFACE COMPUTING:                               SURFACE COMPUTING I can’t even imagine how things got done before the implementation of touch screens. Runn...

Tuesday, 6 March 2012

SURFACE COMPUTING


                             SURFACE COMPUTING
I can’t even imagine how things got done before the implementation of touch screens. Running around with little pieces of paper, hoping the cooks can read your handwriting, praying one of those slips doesn’t get lost, calculating people’s bills, and if a group of 6 wants to split the bill…f***! Thanks to touch screen technology, I was able to punch in the drink orders, appetizers, main courses, desserts and coffees for huge groups of people in seconds. Once I pressed “Send,” the information was then printed in the kitchen, the bar and the dessert counter, complete with table and client number, so that not only does everyone know where the items are going, but which client gets what. The bills were calculated automatically, and you could split the price of a pizza 12 ways if you needed to.




(image source)

As amazing as this was, this was touch screen technology at its most basic. Things have become a little more exciting since then.



(image source)

Moviegoers were extremely impressed in 2002 with the touch screens used to solve future crimes in Minority Report. But in 2006, Jefferson Y. Han, a research scientist at NYU blew people’s brains apart when he transformed the concept into reality. During the annual Technology Entertainment Design conference (TED) in California, Jeff introduced multi-touch interface technology to the world. On a rear projection drafting table equipped with a multi-touch sensor, he demonstrated how users can manipulate what they see on a computer screen using all ten of their fingers at the same time, shifting items around, expanding, compressing, and rotating images, independently of each other or as an entire unit. The main difference between Han’s technology and Spielberg’s sci-fi interpretation is the fact that we still have to physically touch the screen, whereas Tom Cruise wore gloves equipped with sensors, but rest assured, people are working on that.




He went on to found the company Perceptive Pixel which would produce and distribute the technology to sectors like medical imaging, mapping, broadcasting, defense and intelligence. Anyone watching the 2008 presidential elections witnessed the practicality of multi-touch technology as CNN kept viewers up to date using their “Magic Wall.”



in 2008, Microsoft adopted multi-touch technology to transform an ordinary coffee table into a revolutionary super tool. With the incredible popularity of the iPod, iPhone, and the most recent addition to the i family,the iPad, Apple already capitalized on the word “touch” when it came to computer interaction. There were even April fools jokes about an upcoming iTable. But as computer screens are reaching furniture-esque proportions, and the jokes are becoming ever more real, Microsoft was wise to capture the spirit of the latest technological trends by calling their latest baby: Surface.





Multi-touch technology combined with surface computing is radically transforming our relationship with computers. Films like Minority Report, The Matrix: Revolutions and District 9have all included multi touch interfacing in their predictions for the future, a future we are already beginning to experience today. The way business meetings take place, the way doctors perform surgeries, the way pilots fly planes (or the way anyone operates any vehicle for that matter), the way you scope out an exotic destination for your next family trip, all will eventually shift towards a more vivid, more dimensional, more fingertip-friendly experience. Kramer’s going to need to add a new chapter to his book about coffee tables!

Monday, 5 March 2012

CHECK OUT THE NEW PHONES TO BUY


(1)Micromax A73 Dual SIM Android phone now available in India for Rs. 7,490





Micromax A73, new Dual SIM Android phone branded as Superfone Buzz is now available in India from online retailer LetsBuy. It has a 3.5-inch Capacitive Touchscreen display and runs on Android 2.3 (Gingerbread). It is powered by 650 MHz processor and has 2 MP Primary Camera with LED flash, 0.3 MP Secondary Camera. The Micromax A78 Dual SIM phone in the Superfone series popped up last week with similar features but it has a QWERTY keyboard.



Micromax A73 Specifications
3.5-inch (320×480 Pixels) Capacitive Touchscreen display
Dual SIM (GSM + GSM)
Android 2.3 (Gingerbread)
650 MHz processor
2 MP Full Focus Camera with LED flash, 0.3 MP (VGA) secondary video calling camera.
3G (HSDPA 7.2 Mbps and HSUPA 5.76 Mbps),Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 3.0, USB 2.0, GPS
256MB RAM, 512MB ROM, Expandable memory up to 32GB with MicroSD
FM Radio
1300 mAh battery

It also comes with pre-loaded apps such as Facebook, SAAVN, QUIKR, Polaris Office Suite, ZOOMIN, Quikr and WhatsApp.



(2)NOKIA 701


NOKIA 701
Nokia has announced that they plan to offer Nokia Belle Feature Pack 1 update for Nokia 700, 701 and 603 smart phones that came with Nokia Belle pre-installed. Nokia 808 Pure View that was announced earlier this week  already comes with Nokia Belle Feature Pack 1. Nokia started rolling out Nokia Belle update for Anna devices earky last month and for the Nokia 500 mid February. Other than new features this update would offer increase in processor speed from 1GHz to 1.3GHz for Nokia 700 and 701.



Nokia Belle Feature Pack 1 features
  • Dolby Headphone and Dolby Digital Plus for personal surround sound experience
  • 20 new and improved home screen widgets
  • Faster browser with HTML 5 support
  • Latest version of Nokia Maps
  • Microsoft Apps via OTA update Better notifications bar and a refreshed multitasking bar
  • 1GHz to 1.3GHz processor speed boost for Nokia 700 and 701

The Nokia Belle Feature Pack 1 update would available in coming months. There is no exact time frame when this update would be available. We will let you know once the update hits these phones.


(3) Samsung releases the dual-core Galaxy Player 70 Plus for the South Korean market

Following the announcement of the Galaxy WiFi 4.2 at the Mobile World Congress, Samsung is now starting to roll out the a dual-core version of it, dubbed the Galaxy Player 70. And no, it’s not a 7-incher.



For now, the device is only available for Samsung’s domestic market in South Korea, with a wider release highly probable .

The main reason for this is the media player’s DMB TV tuner working only in Korea. But back to the main specification bump at hand, which is the dual-core processor in the Galaxy Player 70. It is clocked at 1GHz and I doubt it’ll face any problems running any of the apps in the Android Market.

The other alteration in the specifications include a bigger 5-inch screen in the front and a 5MP camera at the back. To keep those power hungry parts running, the battery has grown to 2500mAh.

Pricing for the Galaxy Player 70 start at around $356 for the 16GB version and go up to $418 for the 32GB variant.(that is something 17,800 INR for 16 GB and for 32 GB its approx cost is 20,900 INR)
Have view at some