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Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Latest Nokia 225 dual-SIM version Phone

ProfileFeatures And Full Specifications:

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AlphaMetrics

Weight grams99.8 grams
UnknownWeight (ounces), Dimensions

General Specs

Release year2014
Release month04
Custom GraphicsYes
File formatsWAV, AAC, MP3, MIDI, H.263, H.264/AVC, MPEG-4, M-JPEG, AVI M-JPEG
SpeakerphoneYes
Phone lockYes
Special features
  • Photo sharing over Bluetooth and Slam
  • Sna microblog
Speech RecognitionYes
UnknownWi-Fi

Display

Display TypeLCD
Color Mode262K
Touch-ScreenTransmissive
Display Resolution320 x 240
Display size (inches)2.8 inches
Display's superficy (in square inches)3.76 square inches
Display's superficy (in square mm)95.5 square mm
Estimated dots per inch (DPI)142 dots per inch
Display total pixels76800

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Best UPS Services and Management




Actually, improper power management had ruined the efficient figure of energy loads. Scene was truly revolting and that’s why in-house professionals were not working properly and looking for change. But, within a short span of time, their prospects were changed. You know why? It’s only become possible through UPS’ power protection systems. Their UPS Supervision software can easily centralize UPS management by using network interface (SNMP) communications.  In my review, it will prove to be a best choice for medium to large sized corporates. Data Centre managers can simply ensure standardized UPS management in their working environment via these UPS Software controlled systems. However, cost is a factor for low budget clients, as their products are little bit costly but higher in efficiency.

Now, our UPS software based Monitoring has become an indispensable requirement for my company. It can easily regulate power consumption, energy usage and protection. Under the strict supervision of skilled technocrats, UPS power protection systems from the house of UPS can be easily installed at your desired sites.  Entire processes of Installations are very much accurate, industry-standard and unbeatable. Their on-site services and battery testing ways ensure me the veracity of UPS installation. From commissioning to UPS training and equipment hire, their value-added services enable me to get the best out of my industry. Friendly approach of company’s professionals delivers me an aroma of pleasant working methodology with 100% satisfactory attitude.
Established in 1986, this UPS is reckoned amongst the leading manufacturers, exporters, retailers and suppliers of switching power supplies for numerous information technology applications and uninterruptible power supplies (UPS). In the meantime, the extensive product line was extended to areas of energy, automation and safety. It is considered as one of the four largest manufacturers of uninterruptible power supplies in the globe. Complete assortments of UPS power protection systems are capable to satisfy client’s energy needs in a most satisfactory way. Entire product line is designed as per the latest technological advancements and international standards quality. You can simply install these products at any site where operational continuity is crucial.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Pay with your phone for rewards

New app eliminates the need to carry a bunch of loyalty cards yet helps users earn more rewards


Tired of lugging a stack of prepaid cards, loyalty cards and discount vouchers? Mogi has the solution.
Mogi is a new mobile wallet app created by Singapore company Mobile Media Creations that consolidates the lot.
Available on Apple iOS and Google Android, Mogi allows you to buy and store cards from your favourite retailers in one convenient app. It also allows you to claim instant discounts and redeem gifts when you pay with your smartphone.
Pay with your phone for rewards
Mogi's point-of-sales terminal uses an Android tablet (pictured here) or smartphone to scan a customer's smartphone for payment. Photo: Mobile Media Creations
The concept is similar to coffee chain Starbucks' prepaid card, which lets customers pay with the card's stored value and be rewarded with free drinks if they use the card frequently.
With Mogi, you purchase credits for a retail outlet in the form of a prepaid card and the rewards start flowing the minute you top up.
You get extra value for every top up and the amount varies based on the merchant's reward scheme. So if you top up $100, you might have $110 stored in the card. Topping up can be done via a PayPal account or credit card, but both payment information will not be saved on your handsets.
Ms Kong Shuyun, 29, a manager, welcomes the convenience that Mogi offers. She said: "I do not carry too many cards just the ones I use most frequently. It's quite annoying when I realise I've left these cards at home when I need them."
During payment, a quick recognition code is created on your device. The code, which is valid for only five minutes for security purposes, is scanned by placing your phone on the sales terminal or letting a cashier scan the code with another smartphone. Unlike most daily deal programmes, which usually draw customers with huge discounts, Mogi aims to retain customers by providing extra value and rewards.
"With daily deals, merchants are obliged to give 70 to 90 per cent discounts, only to realise that customers will not go back to them when items go back to the full price. Many merchants will not take up daily deals again because of the lack of loyalty," said Mobile Media Creations chief executive officer Rashad Budeiri.
As of now, you can pay for your purchases with Mogi across 70 retail, health, beauty and dining outlets here. Consumers will have more retail outlets to choose from when the app extends its support to another 150 stores in the following months. Loyalty points can also be collected with every use of the card, which can be used to redeem gifts at your favourite stores.
Mogi also sends notifications to the user, highlighting promotions such as a discount voucher or free items to be redeemed at various retail outlets. Merchants have the freedom to customise the app's top-up amount and discount vouchers for their stores, and even place advertisements into the Mogi app on their own through a Web-based back-end system. -STRAITS TIMES.COM
resource:http://www.herworldplus.com/shopping/updates/pay-your-phone-rewards

24 hours without my iPhone


Imagine running to the toilet in a rush after holding your pee in during a very long meeting, with your very trusty iPhone in hand. As you get to the toilet, you place your phone on the ledge behind the bowl almost too quickly, and before you know it - “plop” and it falls right on target into the bowl.
Well, that was exactly what happened to me with the only saving grace being the fact that it was before I had started peeing.
iPhone.jpg
The next 24 hours (ok not really, it has only been 18 hours, but it sure feels like 36 or more) were, to a smartphone addict, sheer horror.
As someone who used to pride myself for thinking that I could survive without my phone for at least a day or two(obviously not very introspective here) and that I’m not as reliant on my phone as some of my friends and colleagues, I was definitely proven wrong in the last 18 hours.
After my phone committed hara-kiri and refused to be switched on, I was stunned into silence, but foolishly thought that it wasn’t a big deal.
Not until I realised I needed to meet my friends for dinner and had no way of telling them I was going to be late for dinner. Thankfully, my office computer was still on and the only way I could reach them was by dropping them a Facebook message, praying and hoping that someone would check it.
After giving myself a pat on my back for thinking so, I realised, that my iPhone doubled up as my GPS when I drive (with the new awesome Google Maps app), and without it, I really had no chance in making it to this new hole in the wall place that they discovered.
I decided to take the chance, winged it and drove towards the general direction, only to find myself parking almost two streets away and having lost all bearings in the midst of getting a lot. So with no Google Maps, I literally had to go up to someone just to ask for directions … how 1998 of me!
Well, I did make it to dinner in one piece, but no one – and I allude to my many Instagram bosom buddies – knew about the mouthwatering woodfire Cajun Chicken pizza that I devoured . Neither could I show my friends at the table the latest 9Gag meme that left me in stitches.
And with no access to Whatsapp, I was possibly left out of at least 15 group chats where my various groups of friends were busy making plans for drinks, discussing their latest shopping buy or moaning about the latest twist in our favourite TV shows.
I smell the end of my social life in the air.
Even while feeling emo and wallowing in self-stupidity, I could not tweet about this emotional roller-coaster I was going through.
I miss my phone.
iPhone2.JPG

So now, as my poor phone is having a grand ol’ time in its customised rice spa, I am this close to purchasing my next iPhone, just in case the current one decides to never wake from its slumber.
It’s a painful painful time for me, and I hope you guys will never take your phones for granted, treating them with the TLC that they deserve before they bid you adieu prematurely.
Did you ever lose your phone or have it die on you? Did you go through the same trials and tribulations as me? Did you miss it as much as I did? I would love to find out how you coped with it, so do sound off in the comments below!
 Read more:http://www.herworldplus.com/lifestyle/gadgets/24-hours-without-my-iphone

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Nokia's bet on Windows Phone 8: Expert opinions


Nokia Lumia 900 launch Nokia organised a high-profile launch for the Lumia 900 in New York in April, but three months later cut the Windows Phone 7 device's price in half

Nokia and Microsoft co-host a press event in New York this Wednesday where they are expected to unveil devices running the new Windows Phone 8 operating system.

Rumours and reported "leaks" suggest there will be two handsets offered in a range of colours, with at least one featuring Nokia's PureView camera technology and "wireless charging" via a separate base.

It is a critical event for both companies.

Nokia's losses are mounting and in April it surrendered its 14-year position as the world's biggest phone-maker to Samsung, according to researchers at Strategy Analytics.

Likely to include company's first Windows Phone 8 handset

Add that to announcements of 40,000 job cuts, a plan to shift all handset production to Asia, and the acknowledgement that sales of existing Lumia models have been "mixed", and it makes for a rocky start to Stephen Elop's first two years as the firm's chief executive.

Microsoft's finances are in a healthier state but it knows it has yet to crack the smartphone sector.

A recent study by Canalys suggested Windows Phone had only captured about 3% of the global market between April and June.

That compared to Apple iOS's 16% and Google Android's 68%.

Samsung, HTC and Acer have all announced plans to release Windows Phone 8 models.

But Microsoft's decision to co-host this event and the fact that Mr Elop used to work for the firm means that it is heavily invested in Nokia's success.

Ahead of the announcement, the BBC asked four industry watchers for their views of the challenges and potential opportunities facing Nokia.

Gap in the market?

Ben Wood

Ben Wood is chief of research at CCS Insight, a technology consultancy specialising in mobile devices. He thinks Nokia and Microsoft face a struggle if they are to make Windows Phone the market's third dominant operating system.

This is the single most important product launch under the stewardship of Nokia's chief executive, Stephen Elop.

It must deliver the vision he set out in the now infamous "burning platform" memo in February 2011, when he abandoned Nokia's in-house operating systems in favour of Microsoft's Windows Phone.

Following four initial Lumia phones, the new products will be the first to truly benefit from collaboration between the two companies.

But, given the majority of potential customers in markets like the UK are already using a smartphone, the big question is whether there is space for a third platform. Nokia will need network operators and retailers to push its products hard to get consumers to make that jump.

Success for Microsoft is just as important. CCS Insight estimates that 700 million smartphones will be shipped in 2012, making them the most prolific computing devices on the planet, outstripping PCs.

This is an opportunity where Microsoft cannot fail. The challenge is further complicated by the perception of Windows as functional software for PCs.

For many people, Windows is far removed from the mass-market smartphone experience, which was first shaped in 2007, when Apple launched its iPhone, wrong-footing traditional phone makers and ultimately contributing to Nokia's woes.

However, software alone will not be enough. Nokia needs to produce world-beating hardware designs that tempt buyers away from rival devices like the iPhone and Samsung's Android-powered Galaxy S3.

Success depends on a complex blend of hardware, software and services. Getting that recipe right has so far eluded many of the biggest names in consumer electronics. Nokia's future will depend on it.

Camera technology

Mat Gallagher

Mat Gallagher is deputy editor of Amateur Photographer. The magazine praised Nokia's first PureView-enabled device last month, but Mr Gallagher warns the technology faces a new threat.

Nokia has a history of leading camera technology in mobile phones.

Its 7610 model, back in 2004, featured the first 1 megapixel camera and the N93, in 2006, had a three-times optical zoom.

The firm has said its latest advancement, the PureView system, offers "a new benchmark in imaging" thanks to the combination of a high-resolution sensor and a technique called oversampling.

This involves combining the data from several of the sensor's pixels to create what Nokia calls a "super-pixel". In the case of the first handset to feature this, the Symbian-based Nokia 808, a 41MP sensor was used to create a higher quality 8MP or smaller file.

The results demonstrated better low-light performance and colour. PureView has been a long time in development but the results are impressive and actually rival some high-end DSLR (digital single-lens reflex) cameras for detail.

This technology, if refined and used on a Windows 8 platform, could put Nokia out in front again.

However, with the Samsung Galaxy and Nikon S800c now using Android operating systems the competition could come from the camera market. These compact cameras feature wi-fi to upload images straight to social networking sites and benefit from physically larger sensor sizes and optics than cameraphones can offer.

For a cameraphone to be really successful, it needs to be effortless.

The process from selecting the camera mode to uploading the image should be as quick and easy as possible, and should deliver a great image in any light at the touch of a button. Anyone wanting to fiddle with creative control is more likely to reach for a proper camera.

Takeover talk

Colin Gillis

Colin Gillis is technology analyst at BGC Partners, a New York-based financial services company. He dismisses speculation that Nokia's partnership with Microsoft is destined to end with the Finnish firm consumed by its American partner.

As Microsoft pushes to get its fledgling phone ecosystem to grow, we are frequently asked our view on the possibility of a Microsoft acquisition of its major partner Nokia.

While anything is possible, and there is a reasonable argument to be made for such a tie-up, our take is an acquisition is not likely to happen this year for several reasons.

Nokia is already fully committed to building Windows Phones and one can argue that Microsoft is already enjoying the majority of any benefit it would receive from acquiring Nokia.

The recent US ruling for Apple against Samsung on patent violations should serve to renew interest in the Windows Phone platform from other handset vendors. Several Android handset makers already pay a royalty to Microsoft for its intellectual property.

Hardware products from multiple vendors have historically been Microsoft's business model to get traction across market segments. A purchase of Nokia by Microsoft could alienate its other hardware partners, but we do note that Microsoft is getting more aggressive in this area by building its own tablet.

An acquisition is likely to prove costly, take a long time to close, and would be a distraction at a time when Microsoft management is rolling out critical new flagship products such as Windows 8.

Regarding price, we mention that Nokia's current market cap of $10.8bn (£6.8bn) is more than Microsoft's largest acquisition ever - Skype in 2011 for $8.5bn.

We also mention that the 52-week high for Nokia of $7.38 a share is sharply above its current trading price, suggesting a meaningful premium might be required to gain control.

Patent portfolio

Malik Saadi

Malik Saadi is principal analyst with Informa Telecoms & Media, a London-based consultancy. He says the weight of Nokia's huge patent library should not be underestimated, especially after a jury said Samsung should pay Apple $1.05bn following a US lawsuit.

The industry is speculating about the 7.7% jump in Nokia's share price on the same day that Apple won its legal case against Samsung for patent infringements.

In fact, there are a number of reasons why Nokia could benefit from the conflict between Apple and Samsung and why Nokia's adoption of Windows Phone as primary platform could finally start to pay off.

First, it appears from the Samsung-Apple hearings that Microsoft has signed a cross-licensing agreement, whereby the two companies agreed not to file any legal suit against each other as long as the designs of iPhone and Windows Phone devices could be differentiated.

Nokia benefits directly from this agreement as a privileged partner of Microsoft.

Second, Nokia could benefit from the recent change in Microsoft's Windows 8 strategy.

Microsoft is aiming to promote the unified Tiles-based user experience enabled by Windows 8 across all devices, from PCs to smartphones. Practically speaking, this is the first time Microsoft's mobile division will benefit equally from the corporate marketing budget, which will greatly benefit Nokia, and all the supporters of Windows Phone 8.

Third, Nokia has a rich intellectual property portfolio - it has more than 12,000 patents distributed across all the key technology sectors, including wireless communications, terminal software, imaging, navigation, hardware and services.

Informa believes Nokia's patent portfolio is the most balanced across all industry sectors and it will enable Nokia to lead innovation in the converged world as well as making it more immune to legal attacks by its rivals in the industry.


Resource:http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-19479685

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