Friday, March 22, 2013

i phone 5


Apple Iphone5 has been launched in this year and there was many rumors that Iphone5 will be changed too much then iphone4 but when its unveiled in markets of USA then people shocked to see its specification that there is no big difference between iphone5 and iphone4.But in this article we only give you a brief overview of technical specification of iphone5.
First time Apple Iphone5 launch in USA but from USA some of piece of Iphone5 import in India by privately but Officially Apple Iphone5 is not launch in India. Apple Iphone5 has thickness of 6mm, 18 percent thinner than iPhone 4S, 20 percent lighter than Iphone4.
Apple Iphone5 has the A6 chip, twice as fast and 22 percent smaller processor so speed increase in this model.
Mostly people still wants to know what is difference between apple Iphone5 and Apple Iphone4 and what are new in Apple Iphone4.Apple Iphone5 has support of 2G GSM , 3G WCDMA and 4G LTE technology.Same like Apple Iphone4 , there is Siri natural language commands and dictation application available in iphone5.



















 

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Smart Technology

                                          Smart technology@Smart Computer
                                                                  for Smart Business...















In 2012, Intel Capital announced a new fund to support startups working on technologies in line
with the company's concept for next generation notebooks. The company set aside a $300 million
fund to be spent over the next three to four years in areas related to Ultrabooks.Intel announced
the Ultrabook concept at Computex in 2011. The Ultrabook would be a thin (less than 0.8 inches
thick notebook that utilized Intel processors and could also incorporate tablet features such
as a touch screen and long battery life.By this marketing initiative and an associated $300 million
fund, Intel hoped to influence the slumping PC market against rising competition from smartphones.




 T-series ThinkPad laptop, and it's an ultrabook.
The ThinkPad T431s Ultrabook is another in a long line of T-series laptops that are the mainstay of Lenovo-equipped office workers.
The new T431s is positioned as a high performance, enterprise-class ultrabook. It's got a new chassis compared to previous models,
and is made with carbon fiber an magnesium for durability in everyday lifeThe T431s isbuilt around third-generation Intel Core i5
and i7 processors with integrated Intel HD 4000 graphics, a 14-inch 1,600-by-900-resolution screen, up to 12GB of memory, and
a selection of storage options including up to a 1TB hard drive, 24GB mSATA cache drive, and up to a 256GB SSD.The chassis is
a smidge smaller than the ThinkPad T430s and is in the same weight class (3.6 pounds). The T431s has a 180-degree hinge, so
the screen can fold flat on your work surface, but doesn't flip over like Lenovo's Yoga designs. The T431s continues the requisite
dual pointing mechanisms, with a TrackPoint and glass TouchPad. The TouchPad supports Windows 8 multi-point gestures, and
also has a central scroll button for use with the TrackPoint.The T431s is very thin, with a 0.82-inch (20.6 mm) thickness, is IT friendly
with Intel vPro technology, and is compatible with ThinkPad Series 3 docking stations. Lenovo claims a 9 hour battery life with a
standard 3-cell 47WHr battery. The ThinkPad T431s will be available in April 2013, with a base price of $949.        and tablet computers such as the iPad, which are typically powered by competing ARM-based processors. At a presentation at the Consumer Electronics Show, an Intel manager stated that market analysis revealed that screen size motivated some of the reluctance to switch to 13" Ultrabooks. As a result, Intel planned to ensure, through cooperation with manufacturers, a 14 or 15-inch screen on 50% of the 75 Ultrabook models that would likely come to market in 2012                                                                                                                                                          















 

Monday, February 4, 2013

Samsung Galaxy Q with foldable display rumoured to launch at MWC

















We already know that Samsung is planning to launch multiple devices this year and the Mobile World Congress sets the perfect stage for the company to showcase some of its devices as part of its 2013 lineup. Here's another one that's added to that list.

Rumour has it that the Korean electronics giant could debut the Galaxy Q, a new smartphone that features a foldable display, reports SlashGear. Samsung unveiled its Youm flexible display technology at CES last month and it is likely to feature on the Galaxy Q.


MobileGeeks.de seems to have been tipped of some GLBenchmark tests of a device with the model number GT-B9150. The results apparently match the Galaxy Q, indicating that the folding phone with dual 1080p displays (earlier sightings revealed 720p displays) is not far away from launch.


The GLBenchmark report seems to be in line with earlier rumours suggesting that the Galaxy Q could feature two 5.3-inch 1080p AMOLED displays, a 1.7GHz dual-core Exynos processor, 2GB of memory, 8-megapixel and 2-megapixel cameras and a 3500 mAh battery, according to SlashGear.


Here's a video from 2008, which reportedly shows an early version of the technology that is used to make the two screens of the Galaxy Q fit together without a divide in between. The concept seems very appealing, though back then, it was in its very initial stages and not really ready for pubic release.


Samsung's bendable OLED Youm technology uses thin plastic instead of glass, thereby making it virtually unbreakable. The company flaunted a curvaceous prototype at CES this year featuring a wrap-around screen that took the display and the content on it, around the edges of the device.


Furthermore, Samsung also announced that it's developing a 10.1-inch LCD panel that will use 25 percent less of the energy in the current iteration without compromising on the resolution.

Samsung had showcased two prototypes with flexible displays at CES 2011 as well. One was a paper-thin 4.5-inch screen with a WVGA (800x480 pixel) resolution that bends like an arc. The other was a transparent qFHD (quad full high definition) AMOLED display that Samsung claimed to be working on for TVs and monitors.

Looks like 2013 will finally witness the advent of flexible displays pioneered by Samsung and spark a new trend for such a technology to feature on smartphones and tablets.

more....



Samsung's flexible 'Youm' OLED display coming to future smartphones and tablets

MOBILES INTERNET GAMING TABLETS LAPTOPS/ PC APPS SOCIAL HOME ENT. TELECOM CAMERAS OTHERSYou are here:Gadgets Home Mobiles News

Samsung's flexible 'Youm' OLED display coming to future smartphones and tablets
KS Sandhya Iyer, January 10, 2013

In some latest news from the Samsung stable at CES in Las Vegas, the company showed off its flexible display technology that it calls Youm at its closing keynote. The bendable OLED lineup uses thin plastic instead of glass, thereby making it unbreakable.


The new screen technology was demoed as a future concept by Stephen Woo, President of Samsung, who was joined by Brian Berkeley, Senior Vice President of Samsung Display. The curvaceous prototype featured a wrap-around screen that took the display and the content on it, around the edges of the device.


Th company also played out a concept video which showed a phone that unfolds to transform into a tablet.


It was interesting to see Microsoft jumping in with Eric Rudder, the company's Chief Technical Strategy officer demonstrating a prototype of a Windows Phone with the Youm display. Images posted by CNET reveal the bendable prototype with a Windows live tile interface. Not just that, Rudder also seemed to mock Apple by saying, "Some companies talk about reality distortion fields -- we built one".


It's unlikely for the Youm tech to reach the masses soon, but it's interesting to know that the company is thinking about implementing it in the future. We'll make sure to update you with all the details as and when they're available.


Furthermore, Samsung also announced that it's developing a 10.1-inch LCD panel that will use 25 percent less of the energy in the current iteration without compromising on the resolution.


Samsung had showcased two prototypes with flexible displays at CES 2011 as well. One was a paper-thin 4.5-inch screen with a WVGA (800x480 pixel) resolution that bends like an arc. The other was a transparent qFHD (quad full high definition) AMOLED display that Samsung claimed to be working on for TVs and monitors.


Wednesday, January 23, 2013

BlackBerry 10 to Manage iPhone & Android



RESEARCH IN Motion has begun its BlackBerry 10 assault by offering enterprises device management software for iPhones and Android devices as well as its own devices.







With the long awaited BlackBerry 10 due to launch on January 31 (AEDT), RIM has announced new enterprise server software that manages fleets of workplace mobile devices, including bring your own devices.



The software, known as BlackBerry Enterprise Service (BES) 10, lets corporations offer staff their work email and access to workplace systems in a secured section of their phone or tablet.

RIM says the new BES offers device management, security, and mobile applications management for BlackBerry smartphones, PlayBook tablets, and new BlackBerry 10 smartphones in a consolidated solution.

In what seems a cheeky move, RIM says its single console managing system also can secure Google Android and Apple iOS devices used by employees.

"BlackBerry Enterprise Service 10 empowers employees to be more productive and better equipped to serve customers while it provides business and IT leaders with the confidence that corporate data is protected and manageable in the same way they have long enjoyed with BlackBerry," said Peter Devenyi, Senior Vice President of RIM’s , Enterprise Software.

RIM in a statement said Enterprise Service 10 offered organisations a highly scalable solution and the flexibility to manage mobile deployment as needed. It supported both corporate-owned and personal-owned “bring your own device” deployments and mixed environments of BlackBerry and other devices.





THE FUTURE OF BLACKBERRY 


Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Mobile Marketing/Technology Trends..2013














With 150,000 attendees and 3,000 vendors getting ready for the start of 2013 International CES, pundits near and far are popping up everywhere to shout out what they deem will be paradigm-bending ‘13 mobile marketing and technology trends.

And there are quite a few of these that could impact both consumers and businesses.

But first, the numbers.

The Consumer Electronics Association (CEA), an Arlington, VA-based trade association that owns/produces CES, recently reported that shipment revenues for smart phones will be about $37 billion next year, with almost 126 million units shipped to dealers, a 16 percent increase from this year. And tablet computers will continue to be immensely popular – unit sales will exceed 105 million (+ 54 percent from ‘12), translating to almost $36 billion in shipment revenue.

To further accentuate just how quickly the mobile connected universe is expanding, check out these numbers from a November ’12 Pew Internet and American Life project:

56 percent of all U.S. mobile phone owners access the Internet.
85 percent of all U.S. adults own a mobile phone.
53 percent of mobile phone owners have smart phones.
88 percent check email on their phones each day.

Forbes reported earlier this month that two areas we’ll see a lot of at CES are digital health and smart cars. The digital health market, encompassing telemedicine, mobile apps, medical records, fitness monitors, and more, is growing more than 40 percent a year.

“As the health industry meets the consumer electronics industry you’re seeing dozens of innovations from mobile personal emergency systems to glucose, blood, heart rate and other monitors that you’ll be able to use at home, to a remote session with your doctor. The tech industry knows how to market to consumers; the medical industry is looking to them for that expertise,” said Forbes.

A few years ago, for example, Nebraska-based telemedicine solution provider AET completed a first of its kind, real-time remote diagnosis of a newborn baby's heart murmur between Faith Regional Health Services and Children's Hospital & Medical Center in Norfolk and Omaha, NE, respectively. The diagnosis used advanced wireless video conferencing technology through a mobile camera device connected to an ultrasound machine.

Forbes added that smart cars and related technologies will also be a popular CES attraction – the Google car, for instance, will be on display featuring its LIDAR (Light Detection and Ranging; an optical remote sensing technology) system. And smart transportation will continue to generate considerable interest, added Alexandru Voica and Simon Forrest of UK-based Imagination Technologies, which designs and licenses multimedia and communications semiconductor cores.

Writing in the September/October issue of Vision, CEA’s flagship publication, the co-authors said “solutions will appear to enable advanced servers to detect immediate dangers, automatically avoid traffic jams and closed roads and monitor surroundings. This will lead to a reduction in fuel consumption and carbon emissions, a decrease in traffic jams and an improvement in the efficiency of existing infrastructure.”

I reckon vehicles will become so intelligent that eventually they won’t need us.

Snarchasm aside, there are a number of other interesting mobile marketing/tech trends that will accelerate in popularity/growth. To wit, yesterday, Tom’s Hardware prognosticated that LTE will ‘build out and up’ in ’13.

Here’s a snapshot quote of where they think things are heading:

“Adoption of LTE is still in the initial stages but consumers will see widespread coverage in 2013. In North America, Verizon should finish its LTE rollout by June 2013, and the Global Mobile Suppliers Association (GSA) forecasts that 209 networks will be commercially launched in 75 countries by the end of 2013. GSA also reports that over 500 LTE devices including tablets, femtocells, smart phones and routers have been introduced this year, a 164 percent increase compared to the number launched in 2011. LTE coverage is clearly seen as a competitive differentiator by carriers, and as network rollouts accelerate worldwide, manufacturers are responding with products for these markets.”

NFC
A wireless communication standard enabling data to be exchanged between devices over a distance of about four centimeters (two inches), NFC is inherently secure since devices must be placed close to each other – this contrasts with long-range protocols like Bluetooth or Wi-Fi which must select and connect with the correct device out of many that might be within range. NFC sets up connections faster than standard Bluetooth and its low-power variant, Bluetooth 3.0.

A mobile phone equipped with NFC technology can be used to carry a portable identity credential and then wirelessly present it to a reader – the phone is simply waved in front of the reader. One of the key features of NFC is the ability for NFC devices to operate in a passive, power-saving mode, while still being able to communicate with active NFC devices. An RF field is generated by the active device powering a passive target without an electricity source. Only one of the devices needs to be powered in order for the communication to occur.

Current uses are largely focused around contactless payments; but one emerging app is micro marketing using intelligent posters. Consumers can use their NFC phone to read a tag on the poster, which takes them to a special web page on their phone with more information.

“Ultimately, NFC smart phones will operate as smartcards in a peer-to-peer environment, taking advantage of the fact that the ‘card’ (smart phone) is actually a fast computer attached to a network in a cloud-computing environment,” said Tam Hulusi, Senior Vice President, HID Global, a security vendor.

Location based payments
Eoin Keenan posted on CustomerThink (a global online community of business leaders) last November that the GPS transmitter which is now standard in just about every device, can track where users are when they post online and willingly share their location. This opens up new horizons for marketers.

“You could create discounts in exchange for check-ins, literally drawing people to your location,” said Keenan. “It also allows for geo-fencing, where you target ads at users who enter specified locations based on a set radius. A real opportunity is a one-off, temporary offers or create really local ads. Finally, it allows you to develop profiles of users based on their travel and location patterns – people that regularly pass your store can be targeted as a potential customer.”

One company, Tabbedout, uses location-based technology to show available merchants in a given area. Users who have turned off their location capabilities are still able to search within the app for available locations by zip code. Tabbedout CEO Paul Fiore said the strength of the Tabbedout solution is found in the ability to transmit payments without being within a specific distance of a location, what he calls ‘Far Field Communication.’ It’s suited, he said, for the hospitality industry where customers may not be in proximity to card readers, scanners or a POS system. The restaurant chain T.G.I. Fridays signed on with Tabbedout in April, the company’s first national partner.

Mobile phones have developed light years since those bulky models of yesteryear – they’re now just about surgically attached to us 24/7 and smart marketers who realize this will benefit most going forward into 2013.

Mark Simmons, reporting in EContent, succinctly summed it up:

“As consumer behavior continues to shift from the web, mobile will no longer be an afterthought but the initial one. Brands will have to enhance the mobile experience whether it is about content, m-commerce or interactivity.”

Monday, December 24, 2012

iPhone 5S tipped for June release, with NFC and more colours


Peter Misek, a Jefferies analyst says that 2013 will see Apple change its release schedule and go back to releasing the iPhone in the summer.


 The iPhone 5S rumours are already starting in earnest now and it is not even Christmas.

The latest is more of a hope than a rumour to be fair, but comes off the back of leaked parts that suggest the design of the phone will stay the same, but the internals will change slightly.

Peter Misek, a Jefferies analyst, in a note this week, says that 2013 will see Apple change up its release schedule and go back to releasing the iPhone in the summer, something those iQueuers will no doubt prefer (summer nights and all that), and one that will stop Apple loading all its major launches in the second half of the year.


But it is not just about the iPhone 5S release date, but that he believes that the iPhone 5S will also embrace yet more new tech including a "super HD camera/screen, a better battery, and NFC," and "possible updates include an IGZO screen for Retina+, 128GB storage." Misek is also predicting it comes in 6-8 colours, similar to the iPod Touch.

Misek's track record is questionable and in reality this is just one analyst have a pop at what he thinks will happen based on reading all the other rumours, some insight of his own, and a general suggestion of what will happen. It is like if team Pocket-lint had a go at it too. Still in May 2011 he predicted that Apple would launch an iPhone 4S rather than an iPhone 5. He's been right before, maybe he will be right again.

For what it is worth, these suggestions are pretty safe bets at some point and Apple probably knows that it's not the hardware that will be an issue in convincing more people to stay with the iPhone rather than go to Android.