Showing posts with label application. Show all posts
Showing posts with label application. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

iPhone 4S - Apple's New Smartphone


Apple iPhone 4S


The wait is over. Apple announced the next incarnation of its smartphone - an iPhone 4S - at an event yesterday at its headquarters.

Apple finally announced the long-awaited iPhone 4S. Looking identical to the previous iPhone 4, it certainly isn't the radically redesigned iPhone 5 many people were expecting.


Apple is trotting out a new iPhone on Oct. 14, but it's not the iPhone 5 some were expecting. Instead, it's a more modest upgrade, the iPhone 4S. Here are some facts to help you decide if it's time to make the plunge.


Apple announced the iPhone 4S, which looks exactly like the iPhone 4—on the outside. On the inside, it’s a whole different story, and that the message Apple tried to get across during its presentation yesterday.
"Don't be fooled. Inside it is all new" Apple's Phil Schiller said during the phone's unveiling. Indeed, while the iPhone 4S looks strikingly similar to the iPhone 4, it's packing some seriously upgraded hardware and promising new software.


iPhone 4S Black


First, and most importantly, the iPhone 4S will be powered by a new A5 processor. The A5 is a dual-core processor which will be up to twice as fast as the current A4, and seven times faster processing graphics. Apple is also claiming faster data speeds (with maximums of 14.4 Mbps download speeds, and 5.8 Mbps upload). The battery life is slightly longer *8 hours talk time versus 7 hours for the iPhone 4), but standby time is much less (200 hours versus 300).


The iPhone 4S is powered by Apple's new dual-core A5 chip, which Apple claims can deliver up to two times more power and seven times faster graphics performance than the iPhone 4. In addition, the iPhone 4S will be available on Sprint, along with AT&T and Verizon Wireless. It is a world phone, meaning it will support both CDMA and GSM networks.


Second, it’s got a dual CDMA/GSM chip for different networks, making it a world phone. The antenna is also redesigned to improve call quality.


Third, the camera is much better. Not only is it an 8-megapixel sensor with 60 percent more pixels than the one in the iPhone 4, but it is also designed to capture 73 percent more light 33 percent faster. The camera includes a high end infrared filter as well as five layered lenses which should improve the sharpness of pictures by up to 30 percent. And since the camera is one of the most used features on the phone, double-tapping the home button now opens the camera. The time it takes to get off your first shot is 1.1 seconds, and half a second for each shot after that. And it shoots 1080p video as well.


Based on the specs it’s probably the best camera system attached to a phone on the market right now, though real-life tests will have to be performed next month to determine image quality and evaluate the veracity of Apple’s speed claims. The changes aren’t superficial, though, and the camera should be on the short list of reasons to consider upgrading.


iPhone 4S White


The iPhone 4S also will ship with iOS 5, and all the iCloud-enabled apps. AirPlay will aslo work on the phone so that you can stream videos wirelessly to your Apple TV.


In addition to these improvements, the iPhone 4S will feature advanced support for voice-recognition and control through Siri.


It's the biggest new piece of software that takes advantage of the A5 chip - the Siri Assistant - a voice-controlled assistant you can call up anytime by holding down the home button for a few seconds. You can ask it the weather, time, directions from Yelp, schedule a meeting on your calendar, reply to messages, play a song from iTunes, or ask any factual question via Wolfram Alpha. All with voice commands.


Despite these improvements, many things remain the same. The physical design, for instance, has remained untouched, and the phone has the same 3.5-inch display found on the iPhone 4.




Apple iPhone 4S - White and Black


Let's see the iPhone 4S features:


- Operating system: Apple iOS 5


- Dimensions: 4.5 inches tall by 2.31 inches wide by 0.37 inch thick; 4.9 ounces


- Display: 3.5-inch, 960x640-pixel Retina Display touch screen


- Processor: 1GHz Dual-core Apple A5


- Storage: 16GB, 32GB, 64GB internal


- Camera: 8-megapixel camera with LED flash, autofocus, 1080p HD video recording, backside-illuminated sensor; front-facing VGA camera


- Connectivity: Bluetooth 4.0; Wi-Fi (802.11b/g/n); dual-mode world phone; GSM/HSPA+ 14.4; CDMA/EV-DO Rev. A


- Battery life: 8 hours talk time on 3G, 8.3 days standby time


- Expansion slot: No


- World phone: Yes


- NFC support: No


- Carriers: AT&T, Verizon, Sprint


- Price (on contract): $199 for 16GB, $299 for 32GB, $399 for 64GB




So, if you travel a lot, it might be worth upgrading from the 4 to the 4S because you'll be able to use it on wireless networks in other countries.




Take a look at the Apple iPhone 4S introduce video:

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Amazon Kindle Fire Tablet

Amazon Kindle Fire Tablet

The Internet giant Amazon announced it's news tablet - Kindle Fire - yesterday morning, at an event. The long-awaited Amazon tablet is finally here, or at least will be when it ships out to consumers in early November.

cnet - Overall, the design and features place it between the traditional Kindle and iPad on the tablet spectrum, more like the Nook Color than anything else. Amazon's main advantage here is tight integration with its outstanding suite of cloud-based digital media services: 11,000 shows and movies streaming for free for Amazon Prime subscribers, 100,000 movies and TV shows to rent or purchase through Amazon Instant, and a full digital music store with cloud storage.

On the other hand, there are still quite a few question marks. It's unclear whether there will be offline support for Amazon's video services, which is important if you, say, want to watch a movie on a plane. Amazon also didn't mention any details about third-party video services like Netfilx, Hulu Plus, and MLB.TV - all of which are available on the iPad.

Kindle Fire Tablet


Here are the Kindle Fire features:

- 7-inch IPS display, 1024x600-pixel resolution at 169 dpi, Gorilla Glass

- Dual-core processor

- 512MB RAM

- 8GB internal memory

- Weights 14.6 ounces (414 grams)

- Built-in Wi-Fi

- Amazon claims "up to 8 hours of continuous reading or 7.5 hours of video playback, with wireless off"

- Tightly integrated with Amazon services like Amazon Instant Video and Cloud Drive

- Features new "cloud-accelerated" browser named Silk

- 30-day free trial of Amazon Prime

- $199, ships November 15, available for preorder today


It's obvious that Amazon is trying to get one of the lead positions in the tablet market.
Apple is going to have one serious opponent in Amazon's face.

Amazon is really trying to differentiate itself, and potentially get a leg up on Apple is by pulling a trick or two from the same playbook.

The new tablet represents a total package of what users can get on other platforms if they were to add all of the company's apps together.

Yet Amazon's also trying to create a custom user experience by including its own application store and Web browser called Silk. The Web browser is one of the key areas where Amazon can differentiate itself from Apple and other rivals, making use of its Elastic Compute Cloud technology to speed up browsing for tablet users by pre-loading some content ahead of when a user visits that page.

For the past several months Apple's begun offering something identical as part of its iCloud service, letting users re-download digital content they've purchased from its stores and sync things up between devices. There again, Amazon's competing with that strategy using its Whispersync technology, which can sync up downloads, bookmarks, notes highlights, and a user's place in books and video content.

Amazon Kindle Fire

Just last week, the company signed a streaming deal with 20th Century Fox to bring its programming to Amazon's streaming video service, one that Fire users will have out of the box. All told, that adds up to 17 million songs, 1 million books, and 100,000 movies and TV shows.
The Fire also represents the first device from Amazon itself offering magazines in full-color.

Where Amazon continues to be different, however, is how it's approaching its presence on other platforms.
While users must buy an Apple product to get Apple's software, Amazon continues to offer its software and experience on other platforms, including other Android tablets.
The Fire is the company's first effort to really make that experience its own.

Watch the Kindle Fire TV Commercial:

Monday, September 19, 2011

Windows 8 Preview


Microsoft Windows 8


Microsoft introduced the first official shots and test new versions of Windows 8. They make clear that Windows 8 is both radically different from previous versions of the platform, but it also carries its spirit. What are the most interesting innovations in Windows 8?



1. Interface. It is double. The first one looks like Windows 7, with only slight differences. The other, however, is made similarly to the Windows Phone 7 and it's called "Tiles". A tile is each icon that gives you access to various applications or functions and it's updated in real time. For instance, the plate for Outlook will display the sender and the title of the newly arrived messages.


2. Touch Optimization. Each element of Windows 8 is optimized for touch screen. Icons and menus are larger, more simple. Even the "Welcome" screen is very simple.


3. Windows Explorer. It is still present but with a completely different interface. Files again are displayed as tiles, but the functions themselves are the same.


4. Programs for Windows 8 will have two modes - a standard interface and Metro interface. Metro is the name of the new interface tiles, which are considered better for tablets. In addition, you will be able to "Snap" in two applications on one screen. For example, you can watch a movie, but leave a small bar off with updates from Twitter and Facebook.


5. The control panel also has undergone changes as well as Windows Task Manager. They are primarily visual.


6. Microsoft ensures that Windows 8 works much more efficiently than Windows 7, without compromising the vision. The company even proved it by presenting Windows 8 at a 3-year-old first-generation netbook. Windows 7 will feel very difficult to operate such a device, but not Windows 8.


7. Windows 8 runs significantly faster than other versions of Windows. The average PC or tablet will be able to boot in less than 10 seconds.


8. At the same time Windows 8 has full compatibility for all other Windows programs and devices.


Here are some of the great interface features:

- Fast launching of apps from a tile-based Start screen, which replaces the Windows Start menu with a customizable, scalable full-screen view of apps.


- Live tiles with notifications, showing always up-to-date information from your apps.


- Fluid, natural switching between running apps.


- Convenient ability to snap and resize an app to the side of the screen, so you can really multitask using the capabilities of Windows.


- Web-connected and Web-powered apps built using HTML5 and JavaScript that have access to the full power of the PC.


- Fully touch-optimized browsing, with all the power of hardware-accelerated Internet Explorer 10.



View the official Windows 8 preview video:

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Facebook Killed Spam!



Facebook CTO Bret Taylor told Fast Company earlier this week that it's just those kind of messages the company focused on while looking to cut down on spam in the system -- way down.

Mission accomplished. Such spam was down 95% in 2010. That's an impressive achievement. But the backstory to how the company accomplished that feat reveals some of the internal thinking that could be key to Facebook's ability to continue to grow efficiently -- and become an all-around ever-stronger product -- in the years to come.

The spam
Facebook was targeting were those annoying messages from the likes of FarmVille or Mafia Wars (about Rich and his corn or whatnot) that used to pollute users' NewsFeeds.
Game companies liked them, because they raised awareness and helped recruit new users. But, said Taylor at the
Inside Social Apps conference on Tuesday, the company soon realized that that was just a bad experience for many Facebook citizens.

That was bad for
Facebook -- it sucked up employee bandwidth -- and it was bad for developers, who felt like Facebook was micromanaging them. 
Interestingly, Facebook decided not to go the law and order route. They didn't start writing out long lists of rules about what kinds of messages would be allowed and what kinds wouldn't.
Instead, Taylor told Fast Company in an interview following the talk, they built an automated system that monitored each individual message -- and then took action, again, automated, against the specific messages that seemed to be bothering users.
Specifically, the system tracks whether recipients hide certain messages or mark them as spam, or whether they click "Like" on the message or comment on it, or whether they actually click through to see the application itself. 
If too many recipients hide a message or mark it as spam, Facebook automatically starts blocking it.

All of which bodes well for Facebook. The better experiences it can create while minimizing the demand on its own resources, the faster it will be able to grow, and the more loyalty it will get from its users and developers.