Monday, 14 May 2012

Switched On: And smartplayers for all


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A few weeks ago, Switched On noted the challenges that even wildly popular, highly penetrated devices such as MP3 players and portable GPS devices have faced in the era of the converged device. Some of these devices, such as digital cameras, still hold on because of genuine advantages such as better image quality or optical zoom. For others devices, though, such as MP3 players and portable GPS devices, the grim news is that one of the main reasons consumers use them is to save smartphone battery life.
The high adoption of iPads by iPhone users has shown that there's room in people's lives for multiple convergent devices that use the same operating system.
The high adoption of iPads by iPhone users has shown that there's room in people's lives for multiple convergent devices that use the same operating system. The iPod touch -- by far the most popular smartplayer -- has become popular among those who want the features and apps of an iPhone but don't want to pay for a cellular data plan. The similarity of design between the iPhone and iPod touch virtually reduce buying the iPod touch to that of a backup battery for an iPhone user. It is more of an iPhone substitute than complement. And at $200, it may cost as much as an iPhone's subsidized price. In contrast, there may be more opportunity for the smartplayer as a second device among Android users where there is more variation and tradeoffs among handset features. And here, paradoxically, a device with lower-end specifications may be more desirable in that role than, say, theGalaxy Player 5.0 that Samsung released last year.
Take, for example, the Galaxy Player 3.6 that Samsung recently released. Its screen size is about the same as an iPhone's, but it is a more portable alternative to a behemoth such as the Galaxy Nexus or, of course, the Galaxy Note. The device is a suitable alternative to turning to a data-sucking smartphone for activities such as playing games, listening to music that has been sideloaded, downloaded or cached via apps such as TuneIn Pro, Rhapsody or Slacker , catching up on RSS feeds or Instapaper. Listening to Audible audiobooks, creating notes or voice recordings (such as at a lecture or meeting), taking Instagram or Facebook-quality photos (at least outdoors as the device has no flash), or jotting items into an organization app such as Evernote or Wunderlist for later syncing. Indeed, using a device such as the Galaxy Player outside of an area blanketed in Wi-Fi is like a throwback to the sync and go era of PDAs.
Unlike the iPod touch, the Galaxy Player supports GPS, but while it may be a fine alternative to an MP3 player, there are not many offline navigation apps available for Android. One of the few Android third-party alternatives to Google Navigation from Navigon is not compatible with the Galaxy Player. On the other hand, Samsung is also reaching out to owners of its large-screened smartphone by enabling the Galaxy Player to act as a Bluetooth handset. That's right, if putting your Galaxy Note up against your face feels a bit like napping on a glass pillow, you can keep the pen-equipped Note in your (man-)purse and use the Galaxy Note to actually make your calls. Like a Bluetooth headset, this also has the advantage of letting you use the phone's screen as you talk.
At $150, the Galaxy Player is more expensive than most external batteries, but you probably wouldn't worry quite as much about it getting lost, stolen or destroyed as you might for a $300 top-of-the-line smartphone, particularly if you don't have your email or contacts on it because you're using your smartphone for that.

Visualized: 121-megapixel satellite photos show Earth in glorious, psychedelic detail (video)


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We're starting to think the Russians have an inside track on high-resolution space photos. When Nokia's41-megapixel photo of Earth's horizon was just a twinkle in the 808 PureView designers' eyes, the Russian Federal Space Agency had long since finished taking 121-megapixel photos of the whole planet that we're just now seeing in earnest. Unlike NASA photos, which are usually composites of multiple shots, the Elektro-L weather satellite's images display the entire planet in one ridiculously detailed take from 22,369 miles away. Why the trippy colors? Instead of just displaying Earth as-is -- real colors are so passé, dahling -- the satellite layers on near-infrared imagery that paints vegetation in wide swaths of rust-like orange.
You can get a peep of what a day-night cycle looks like for Elektro-L in the video below, and hop over to the sources to get an inkling of just how insanely detailed the images can be. You can also be slightly jealous of the satellite's network connection: at a minimum 2.6Mbps and maximum 16.4Mbps for bandwidth, odds are that it has faster broadband than you do.

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak: I don't have broadband at home

Computing guru stuns business forum in Australia by admitting he doesn't have high-speed internet at his California home



Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak has reportedly let slip an admission that will dumbfound the web generation he helped create – he doesn't havebroadband at home.
Wozniak was talking to a business forum in Australia when he confessed to not having access to cable or high-speed internet at his house in Los Gatos, California.
Stunning his audience, he reiterated: "I, Steve Wozniak, don't have broadband at home," News.com.au reported.
According to the news website, the 61-year-old computer engineer went on to explain that it was a case of living in the wrong part of town, with the worst kind of service.
"I live one kilometere out of the main part of town," he told the Perth-based forum.
News.com.au said he continued: "Broadband is a monopoly in my town. That means you can get it from a cable company – but I don't have cable."
Wozniak added that there are "50 companies" trying to sell him DSL, but they would have to go through the local phone company Horizon's wires.
"I've got one of the two worst Horizons in the country. And so I can't get broadband in my house," he reportedly said.
Wozniak is hailed as a tech hero by fans of all things Apple. Having founded the company alongside Steve Jobs, Wozniak created the Apple I and Apple II computers in the mid 1970s.
Despite leaving full-time employment at the firm in 1987, he is still seen as an ambassador of the brand. Last year he queued overnight to make sure he was the first in line in get the iPhone 4S at his local Apple store.

Samsung and Apple now have more than 50% of phone market, says IDC

Latest figures for first quarter show growing dominance of two manufacturers while competitors such as RIM, Nokia, HTC and Motorola struggle for profitability



Samsung and Apple are eating up the smartphone market – which, in turn, is increasingly eating up the mobile phone market, according to new figures released by the research company IDC.
In the first quarter of 2012, the two companies' joint share of the smartphone market edged past 50% for the first time, to 53.3%, as the smartphone market grew to reach a historic high of 37% of the overall mobile phone market.
Apple-Samsung smartphone shareHow Samsung and Apple's share of the smartphone market has grown. Data: IDC
Overall mobile shipments dipped slightly compared to the previous year, and sequential quarter sales were also down, almost certainly reflecting the difference between Christmas purchases and the new year.
Mobile and smartphone market to 1q12Mobile and smartphone market from 2Q 2010 to 1Q 2012. Data source: IDC.
But the growing dominance of Samsung and Apple points to challenges for other mobile phone manufacturers, which are struggling to make profitable headway in the smartphone market. HTC and BlackBerry-maker RIM, whose portfolios are both completely smartphone-based, both saw falling sales figures on an annual and sequential basis, even as the smartphone market itself grew by 42% year-on-year (though falling by 8% sequentially to 144.9m).
Four-quarter view of share of the smartphone market by vendor. Source: IDC
For mid-tier Android handset makers, the problems are mounting. HTC recently reported profits down 70%, the second quarter in a row that profits fell; it made £95m on sales of £1.4bn, or a margin of less than 7% of revenue, on 6.9m smartphones (by IDC's estimates; HTC has stopped giving handset shipment figures).
Motorola Mobility announced first-quarter figures (PDF) showing that it made another operating loss in mobiles, while shipping 5.1m smartphones (up 1% year-on-year) and an undisclosed number of tablets.
Samsung and Apple in smartphonesHow Samsung and Apple's combined sales relate to the rest of the smartphone market. Data: IDC
Samsung, however, sits atop the smartphone business, with a 29.1% share in the first quarter (42.2m phones by IDC's estimate; the company does not give figures) compared to Apple's 24.2% share (35.1m phones). Samsung's portfolio is shifting towards smartphones, which presently make 45% of its worldwide 93.8m sales – compared to Nokia, pushed down to second place in the overall rankings, where 11.9m of its total 82.7m phones are smarpthones, a 14.4% share.
Nokia's smartphone balance has been declining over the past three quarters following chief executive Stephen Elop's decision to announce that Nokia would adopt Microsoft's Windows Phone software for smartphones. The majority of Nokia's smartphone sales are still Symbian devices.
Nokia and RIM both made operating losses in their mobile phone divisions in the most recent quarter, a signal of problems adapting to the rapid changes in the market.
"The halcyon days of rapid growth in the smartphone market have been good to Samsung," said Kevin Restivo, senior research analyst with IDC's Worldwide Mobile Phone Tracker program. "Samsung has used its established relationships with carriers in a mix of economically diverse markets to gain share organically and at the expense of former high fliers such as Nokia."
Nokia and HTC are expected to come under increasing pressure in China as Chinese companies such as ZTE, which sold 19.1m phones in the first quarter (up from 15m a year ago) and Huawei begin ramping up production of low-cost Android devices and expanding their sales base.
Samsung and Apple are both expected to be able to maintain their sales in that country. The Korean company has powerful distribution, while Apple can rely on the power of its brand despite the iPhone being comparatively expensive.
Mobile phone growthTotal mobile phone growth, smartphone growth and featurephone growth, 1Q 2011-1Q 2012. Data: IDC
Overall, the market for featurephones shrank by 16.7% as the smartphone business continued its rapid growth, which has been above 40% for more than six quarters.
Since the second quarter of 2010 it has gone from 19.6% of the overall market to 37%, a linear growth of about 2.5% per quarter.
That suggests that by mid-2013 smartphones will make up 50% of overall mobile phone sales – although the arrival of those low-cost Android phones could speed up the process markedly.

Saturday, 12 May 2012

Play Popular Game “Angry Birds” on Any Website Using Your Web Browser




Do you love playing "Angry Birds" game on your mobile phone or tablet PC? If you can remember, we shared an interesting news in past about "Angry Birds" game available for Windows and as an online version.
Now its time to share another interesting news about this addictive game. Nokia Argentina has released abookmarklet of this popular game which can be added to your browser's bookmark toolbar. You have to just open any desired webpage and click on the bookmarklet present in bookmark toolbar. That's it. It'll start the game on that webpage.
In this special version, the green pigs hide in the webpage and you have to strike the pigs using your mouse. Its really fun to see how the webpage elements fall when you start playing the game.
Following is a screenshot of playing this special version of game on AskVG website:
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To get started, just drag-n-drop following bookmarklet to your browser's bookmark toolbar:
That's it. Now open any webpage and click on the bookmarklet to start playing the game.

INSTALLING HINDI, MARATHI DEVANAGARI UNICODE FONTS ON ANDROID MOBILE.


Now a days many people are buying android devices. Cheap Android mobile phones are available from Rs 4000. But most of them lack the support for Unicode fonts i.e. Devanagari fonts like Marathi, Hindi, etc. After searching a bit I got many tricks to enable and install the font. So I am sharing one good trick that actually worked on my Samsung Galaxy S GT-I9000 on Android version 2.3.
REMEMBER – This works only on ROOTED ANDROID DEVICES. We need to access (read/write) the Android file system and so it is necessary to have your device rooted. You can root your device using this APK – EasyRoot.apk. Other way, Google for “How to root android mobile” and follow the steps.
Now Let’s come to the main point…
1.     Download and Install ES File Explorer.
2.     After installing the app you will need to enable the Root Explorer. For that purpose Open “ES File Explorer” go to settings –> check “Root Explorer”. Also check “Mount File System” option so that we can write and file system.
3.     Download and save these fonts on your device’s /system/font/ directory. (It will replace the fonts from that directory so be careful)
4.     Reboot the device and enjoy the Marathi, Hindi messages and mails on your android device

Best Free Online Movie & TV Websites


These are the best places online to watch free movie and tv shows. They streaming websites, which means you can watch them from your browser. The best part is, they are all Legal.