Showing posts with label iphone 5. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iphone 5. Show all posts

Saturday, April 20, 2013

blackberry z10 vs lumia 920 vs iphone 5 vs rivals


blackberry z10 vs lumia 920 vs Iphone 5 vs rivals

finally here it comes.....

one table to rule them all..features,specs....and much more :)

so go ahead ...watch,buy and enjoy your life

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Sunday, June 17, 2012

apple ios 6 features




here comes the latest apple i os 6 with over 90 new upgraded features for you to enjoy . this is what makes apple stand ahead of its competitors . take a look at the stunning new features which you would be able to go hands on in the latest iphone 5 which is coming this fall.

92 new features in Apple's iOS 6 



go ahead to take a glimse of the apple ios 6 features :)

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

iPhone 6 with 3D Curved AMOLED Plus Display

This iPhone 6 has 3D sound and 3D display (yes, we mean holograms) which enriches the users experience, may it be Skyping or playing games. With Super AMOLED Plus display,the image quality will be more richer with greater pixels.




This device measures 8.49mm and it has a pretty good grip, according to its designer. What’s funny is that it also comes with a 3D TouchWiz UX, that Samsung would NEVER give to anyone, especially Apple.

besides having a good holographic display,eye control, voice control it offers a best battery life and a quad qore processors!!

 is it the correct time ;or we are expecting it to early :)its all about apple:):)lolz

Thursday, January 12, 2012

SanDisk's 128GB SD card



It's flash card season at CES (especially given the shutterbug boost by the conjoined Photo Marketing Association show), and SanDisk has a contribution with high-capacity mid-range SDXC cards.


The two SanDisk Extreme models, 64GB and 128GB, can transfer data at 45MBps. That's less than half the speed of the company's top-end Extreme Pro line of SD cards at 95MBps, but it should be good enough for many photographers and videographers.
The high capacity comes with a price premium--prices for the cards are $200 and $400--but could be useful for those shooting lots of video or traveling away from a computer. And if you're shooting raw photos--my camera's weigh in at 30MB apiece, typically--this card will hold more than 4,000 still images.
The cards are available now, SanDisk said (flying in the face of the CES vaporware trend).
The cards, with the UHS-I interface, are up to the chore of capturing 3D video in high-definition 1080p video, Sandisk said.
Also at CES, SanDisk rival Lexar announced faster but more expensive UHS-I cards, including a 64 gb
model that reaches 90MB/sec and a 128GB model that reaches 60MB/sec.
And on a more ethereal plane, Sony announced the first examples of a new flash card format called XQD. It offered 16GB and 32GB models of the cards, which so far work only in Nikon's new flagship D4 SLR.
The CompactFlash Association developed the new format as a sequel to CF. XQD offers faster data transfer speeds--125MBps in Sony's case--with faster speeds to come.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

BlackBerry Shadow

BlackBerry Shadow Concept Runs WebOS on Top of Dual Core ARM15 CPU

We all know that Research in Motion and its BlackBerry models are in deep, deep trouble, so salvation could come from either getting bought by Microsoft or buying a dying platform such as webOS. The latter was imagined by Bob Freking, who envisions a BlackBerry concept phone called Shadow, that runs HP/Palm’s webOS platform.

BlackBerry Shadow Concept Runs WebOS on Top of Dual Core ARM15 CPU
This model will still include functions from BB OS, BBM included here. BlackBerry Shadow runs on top of an ARM15 dual core processor at 1 GHz and it features an 8 megapixel camera with dual LED Flash. The designer mentions that this handset incorporates glow lines n the back that can read the user’s thoughts, so how cool is that? I guess this is more of a mood sensing feature than actual mind reading… Social networking is also included on the BlackBerry Shadow, as well as a 5 megapixel front camera with flash for video chat.
ackBerry with strong social networking features? I’ll let you decided… Also, notice that the phone comes with an edge to edge display that’s probably around 4 to 4.5 inches in diagonal…

Friday, August 5, 2011

Thunderbolt vs. USB 3.0

Ever since Intel announced Thunderbolt and made it exclusively available to Macs, Windows users have been wondering if they are missing out. The truth is: yes, they are, big time. I've been working with the first Thunderbolt storage device, the Pegasus R6 from Promise, and find it to be the fastest consumer-grade storage device out there, period. (Stay tuned for my full review coming up soon.)

On the other hand, since Macs generally don't support USB 3.0, which has been out for a long time and is becoming more and more popular in the PC world, Mac users have also been missing out quite a bit. Many people are wondering which is better, Thunderbolt or USB 3.0. The answer, in terms of storage applications, is neither. Consumers should really have both. The current separation of the two standards is a lose-lose situation for Windows and Mac users alike.

Here's why

Thunderbolt is slated to offer a speed of 10Gbps (which is about 1.2GBps). Real-world storage products generally offer much less than that, but still boast very fast data throughput. The Pegasus R6, for instance, is much faster than even a SATA 3 solid-state drive. And that's not a surprise, because the top speed of the SATA 3 standard, which is currently the fastest standard for an internal storage controller in a consumer-grade computer, is just 6Gbps (768MBps).

The Pegasus R6 hosts six SATA 3 internal hard drives. The reason it can achieve much faster throughput speeds than the standard (up to 800MBps as claimed by Promise) is because these drives are set up in RAID configurations that aggregate their individual throughput speeds into one combined speed that's much faster than that of each drive.

So for now, there's no point in making a Thunderbolt storage device that's made of just one internal drive. In this case its speed would be just the same as that of the internal drive, which is again 6Gbps or slower. Even in the case of the Pegasus R6, when connected to a Thunderbolt-enabled MacBook Pro, the transfer speed is basically that of the laptop's internal drive--much slower than what the external drive can do.

As it stands, unless you have a bunch of Pegasuses daisy-chained to one another and move data between them, you'll never get to see the drive's top speed when it comes to real-world data transferring. And that would be OK if investing in a Thunderbolt storage device wasn't a big deal, but it is. The cheapest version of the Pegasus R6 costs around $1,500. That raises the question: why should you invest in such an expensive storage device just to have its performance bogged down by your computer? Maybe because you don't have a choice.

Note that currently only the latest versions of the MacBook Pro and the iMac support Thunderbolt. While Thunderbolt is compatible with Apple's Mini DisplayPort (meaning you can host a Mini DisplayPort-compliant LCD via a Thunderbolt port), a Thunderbolt storage device won't work with existing Mini DisplayPorts.

On the other hand, USB 3.0 is slated to offer a speed of 5Gbps (640MBps), slightly slower than SATA 3 (6Gbps). This means you can use it to host just one internal drive without worrying that the drive itself is the bottleneck of the external storage device. And you don't have to worry that your computer's internal storage is the bottleneck, either, unless it runs a SATA 2-based drive.

In real-world testing, the sustained speed of a USB 3.0 external drive tops out at around 110MBps. Though this is for sure slower than a Thunderbolt device, anything that's more than 100MBps is plenty fast for most applications, even demanding ones.

The best thing about a USB 3.0 storage device is that you know for sure you'll get the most out of your investment, which is not much to begin with. A typical USB 3.0 external hard drive costs around $100 and offers terabytes of storage space. USB 3.0 storage devices can also be of any configuration, from portable to multiple volumes, as the device doesn't need RAID configuration to offer the top performance of the USB 3.0 standard.

That said, Apple's current lack of support for USB 3.0 means that Mac users have much more limited storage options and are forced to invest in a storage solution that is currently overkill in terms of performance and is, possibly, overpriced. It also just doesn't make sense that USB 3.0 is left out. After all, Mac computers already come with USB 2.0 ports, which have the same physical shape as USB 3.0, and USB 2.0 and 3.0 devices can be used interchangeably.

The lack of Thunderbolt in the PC world for now, on the other hand, means that PC users don't have access to an external storage technology that for the first time surpasses a computer's internal storage in terms of throughput speed. Hopefully this will change next year. For now, just in case you're wondering, installing Windows on the latest MacBook Pro (and the iMac) via Lion's Boot Camp won't provide support for Thunderbolt, either.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Tech Facts


The first computer company to register for a domain name was Digital Equipment Corporation.

The 'Dilbert Zone' Web site was the first syndicated comic strip site available on the Internet.

Butler Jeeves of the Internet site AskJeeves.com made its debut as a large helium balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade in 2000.

Sun Microsystems sponsors NetDay, an effort to wire American public schools to the Internet, with help from the US government.

In Beijing, the Internet community has coined the word 'Chortal' as a shortened version of 'Chinese portal'.

Telnet is one of the oldest forms of Internet connections. Today, it is used primarily to access online databases.

Domain names can be really sell at high prices! The most expensive domain name was 'business.com', which was bought by eCompanies for $7.5 million in 1999.

The first ever ISP was CompuServe. It still exists, under AOL Time Warner.

On an average, each person receives 26.4 e-mails a day.

Ray Tomlinson, a scientist from Cambrige, introduced electronic mail in 1972. He used the @ to distinguish between the sender's name and network name in the e-mail address.

Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) was designed in 1973.

The Apple iTunes music store was introduced in the spring of 2003. It allows people to download songs for an affordable 99 cents each.

Satyam Online become the first private ISP in December 1998 to offer Internet connections in India.

The number of UK Internet users increase by an estimated 75 percent each year.

The Internet is the third-most used advertising medium in the world, closely catching up with traditional local newspapers and Yellow Pages.

It took 13 years for television to reach 50 million users- it took the Internet less than 4 years.

As of now, there are over 260 million people with Internet access worldwide.

1 out of 6 people used the Internet in North America and Europe, as per a 1999 survey.
The average computer user blinks 7 times a minute.

In 1946, the Merriam Webster Dictionary defined computer as 'a person who tabulates numbers; accountant; actuary; bookkeeper.'

An estimated 2.5 billion hours were wasted online last year as people waited for pages to download, according to a study sponsored by Nortel Networks.

AOL says spam is the number one complaint of its customers, and that it has to block over one billion unsolicited e-mails every day.

In 2002, the average Internet user received 3.7 spam messages per day. The total rose to 6.2 spam messages per day in 2002. By 2007, it is expected to reach 830 messages per day.

A terminology industry research firm called Basex says that unsolicited e-mail cost $ 20 billion in lost time and expenses worldwide in 2000.

In 2003 an Atlanta- base ISP called Earthlink won a lawsuit worth $16.4 million (US) against a spammer in Buffalo NY, and a $25 million (US) lawsuit against a spammer in Tennessee.
A2 Hosting Takeoff With Turbo Sale