A beautiful fusion of style, performance, attitude, the design of the new G Flex 2 perfectly syncs with you. Call it the phone that goes with everything.
In spite of donning comparative name and outline as the organization’s initially bended smarphone – LG G Flex, the successor G Flex 2 is far expelled from the antecedent as far as specs. the newcomer offers a 5.5-inch 1080p presentation, a Qualcomm‘s Snapdragon 810 processor, a 2.0ghz check speed in tow, a 13mp shooter with double Drove streak, a 2.1mp cam is on the front, 2gb of quick Ddr4 RAM, 16 or 32gb of expandable ready for relying upon the variation you have, a 3000 mah battery, 4g/ LTE/ Hspa+ 21/42 Mbps, Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/air conditioning, Bluetooth Shrewd Prepared (Adept X) 4.1, NFC, Slimport, A-GPS/ Glonass, and USB 2.0. The LG G Flex 2will dispatch with Android 5.0 Candy. The measures of the gadget are truly amazing. They are 5.87 x 2.96 x 0.37 inches (149.1 x 75.3 x 9.4 mm), while its weight tips the scale at 152 grams.
Chaton is an overall planned, exhaustive (now cross OS) informing application that even peculiarities an implicit interpreter.
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Bemo smart thermostat |
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collabracam |
Best Mobile Phone inventions of today.
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Images of the Honami were initially published on Esato and re-posted on Phone Arena.
The Honami smartphone is expected to get itsformal debut next month at Berlin’s IFA show. The device is expected to be a premium device that will succeed the current Sony Xperia Z smartphone, a waterproof phone with a slim and elegant design that features a 13-megapixel backside illuminated (BSI) Exmor RS camera sensor from Sony.
The G branding likely refers to the lens system inside the camera of the i1 Honami. Sony uses its G branding for professional grade lenses on its Sony Alpha range of DSLR cameras, though the company also makes Zeiss-branded lenses as well for the range. On smartphones, thus far, Zeiss lenses have primarily been limited to Nokia.
The phone appears to feature a charging connector that may be magnetic. This would allow the phone to be used elegantly in a dark or even a car mount.
In addition to packing more megapixels, the Honami had been rumored in the past to feature a point-and-shoot sized sensor as well. That would give the sensor more surface area for light to hit and the area of the sensor would be larger than that on a smartphone, but would be smaller than on some premium point-and-shoot cameras, like the recently reviewed Sony RX100 MK II.
What’s interesting about the Honami is that it’s rumored to come with a lens attachment that would work with the phone, though you wouldn’t need the lens attachments if you just want to use the Honami’s non-zoom built-in 20-megapixel camera. Sony is rumored to be introducing a zoom lens as well as a premium lens and sensor, like the one on the RX100 MK II, as optional accessories to complement the mobile photographer who uses the Honami.
Rumored lens attachment brings interchangeable lenses to the Sony Honami. Each lens would essentially be self-contained with its own wireless, optical system, camera sensor, and memory card. Images are previewed and transferred to the Honami or another smartphone over an NFC and WiFi link.
With the interchangeable lens camera (ILC) attachment, the Honami essentially becomes the DSLR viewfinder for the lenses and would pair with the lens over WiFi and NFC. The lens themselves are self-contained so they don’t have to screw on or be mounted to the camera on the phone itself. The lens will contain its own camera sensor, optical system, micro SD card for storage, and wireless capabilities.
keep up with the newest technologies and contemplate about how these will be used in the future. On this blog I’ll share my thoughts about the future of technology, based on the high Tech RoadShow inventions of today. Enhanced by Zemanta
Unlike the backup systems of Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android, there is no physical backup method for Windows Phone. Instead, the operating system relies on Microsoft’s SkyDrive cloud service to back up Windows Phone settings. Every Windows Phone user creates a Microsoft Account the moment they create an account on Windows Phone.
Here’s how to turn on these settings and back up most of the contents stored on your device to SkyDrive automatically. This way, all the information you want to keep is still there when you need it.
Backing Up Apps and Settings
Tap Settings.
Scroll down to ‘Backup’ under Settings.
Tap ‘app list + settings’. Tap the ‘on’ switch on the right hand side of the screen. From this moment on, your Windows Phone will automatically back up your Internet Explorer favorites, applications that are installed.
Tap the ‘back up now’ button to immediately back up all that information right now.
Backing Up Text Messages
Tap Settings.
Scroll down to ‘Backup’ under Settings.
Tap ‘text messages’. Tap the ‘on’ switches for text message backup and chat back up on the right.
Backing Up Photos & Videos
Tap Settings.
Scroll down to ‘Backup’ under Settings.
Tap ‘photos’. Under photos choose between ‘Best quality (needs Wi-Fi) or ‘Good quality (may use data plan)’. Tap either option to enable photo backup.
If you’d like to automatically back up videos and settings, choose either ‘Good quality (needs Wi-Fi)’ or ‘Best quality (needs Wi-Fi)’.
Open your web browser. To find all of your messages and pictures, login to Microsoft’sSkyDrive cloud back up service using the Microsoft Account and password that you used to set up your device.
From this moment on the Windows Phone device will automatically check SkyDrive for the latest text messages, app lists and photos on SkyDrive whenever it’s reset. It’s important to note that your contacts are automatically backed up by the operating system.
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Facebook Messenger App transmits calls using your phone’s broadband connection (3G, 4G or Wi-Fi)and it takes megabytes from your data plan instead of your monthly allotted voice minutes from your cellular carrier.
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High Tech RoadShow inventions of today.
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The iWatch – Only a Matter of Time (Photo credit: wmacphail) |
A new Apple patent shows what the iWatch
might look like based on work done at Apple’s R&D labs. The patent
shows a wearable video device that looks a lot like a watch, wrapped
around a user’s hand and explains potential iWatch features and how it
could interact with an iPhone.
Rumors of an iWatch are picking up in 2013, with claims that Apple has over 100 employees working on an iWatch
and a new patent giving a peak into the minds of Apple designers. While
Apple has yet to speak about a wearable computing device or a watch,
many are calling the device an iWatch.
AppleInsider spotted the new Apple patent at the USPTO,
which the agency granted on February 21st. In addition to a
long detailed explanation of potential iWatch design and features are a
large collection of images showing how you users might wear the iWatch
and what an iWatch from Apple might look like.
Apple’s version of an iWatch would connect to an iPhone or iPad with
Bluetooth or WiFi, and the patent points to using WiFi to stream video
to an Apple iWatch. The device could also serve as a second screen,
offering a natural place to keep a map visible while walking.
One example shows the iWatch type device detecting the edge of the
screen to automatically make use of the right amount of the display.
This would allow for a one-size-fits-all style of device that adjusts
how much of the display is used based on where edges of the device are.
The patent suggests that an iWatch would allow users to perform tasks
like existing smartwatches, such as getting email and text alerts,
replying to messages with a small keyboard and checking playlists.
We’ve heard about flexible batteries and flexible displays
for years, but the tech may finally be catching up to the point that a
company like Apple could build it into a watch, which makes more sense
than a roll-up phone.
The iWatch render video below shows one example of what an iWatch
could look like, and some possible features, though Apple’s patent looks
to go further than a watch.
Why is Apple patenting a “wearable video device” instead of a watch you ask?
Well, according to Apple SVP of Industrial Design Jonny Ive, Apple is
very careful about the names it uses when thinking about new products.
The term watch immediately sets size, shape and function limitations
like those we’ve seen in iWatch concepts and iWatch renders.
As Ive explains in the clip below, by keeping the name out of it, Apple
looks beyond the box to solve a problem, which may be how they ended up
with a patent for a flexible video display that connects to your iPhone
and could replace your watch.
While Apple patents new ideas frequently without brining products to
market, but the timing of this patent could be a sign that Apple is
actively pursuing wearable technology to compete with Google Glass
.
keep up with the newest technologies and contemplate about how these will be used in the future. On this blog I’ll share my thoughts about the future of technology, based on the
high Tech RoadShow inventions of today.
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