Author: Shivaank Rana

  • YouTube Moodwall Helps You Find Videos by Vibe

    YouTube Moodwall Helps You Find Videos by Vibe

    YouTube is testing a new feature that lets users select videos based on their mood.

    Dubbed “Moodwall,” the feature shows a series of video thumbnails under different categories on YouTube’s homepage. They range from the classic “funny,” “cool” and “adorable” to the more quirky “fast” and “catchy,” U.K. newspaper The Guardian reported.

    Google has not officially acknowledged the existence of the Moodwall; it’s supposedly being secretly tested on the public, which makes no sense and yet somehow totally works. Since they haven’t acknowledged that the Moodwall exists, they have not revealed how many users have access to it now or if there’s a roll out timetable for the greater YouTubing public.

  • Lomography Diana Baby 110 : Super-Small Camera

    Lomography Diana Baby 110 : Super-Small Camera

    Lomography has had great success with the small Diana F+ and the Diana Mini, and they’ve just added an even smaller camera dubbed the Diana Baby 110 Camera featuring a 24mm lens.

    The Diana Baby 110 fits into the palm of your hand or easily in your pocket using their B/W Orca 110 film and their new Tiger 110 color film to capture your memories on the fly. Baby 110 also comes with the interchangeable 12mm super-wide angle or 24mm standard lens with flash capability to keep you shooting into the night. It is available now at Lomography for $49.

    What do you think about it?

  • Wicked Leak Launches 5″ Smartphone Priced At INR 11,000

    Wicked Leak Launches 5″ Smartphone Priced At INR 11,000

    Wicked Leak has launched a new Android Smartphone in the market, Wammy Note. The Smartphone runs on the Android operating system and features a 5inch large touch screen. The Smartphone is priced at Rs.11000.

    The screen comes with a 800 x 480 pixels resolution. It is powered by a 1GHz processor, and a 2,500mAh battery which gives up to 8 hours of talk time and 260 hours of standby time. It comes with 512 MB of RAM and its memory is expandable up to 32 GB with a microSD card. It has Bluetooth, WiFi and 3G and comes with a USB port. It also features  GPS, Analog TV and FM radio. It has a 8 megapixel  auto focus camera with flash and Burst feature.

    The smartphone measures 144 x 89 x 12mm and comes in black and white both colours.

                           

  • Apple wins $1 billion in Samsung patent case

    Apple wins $1 billion in Samsung patent case

    Apple Inc scored a sweeping legal victory over Samsung on Friday as a U.S. jury found the Korean company had copied critical features of the hugely popular iPhone and iPad and awarded the U.S. company $1.05 billion in damages.

    The verdict — which came after less than three days of jury deliberations — could lead to an outright ban on sales of key Samsung products and will likely solidify Apple’s dominance of the exploding mobile computing market.

    The US lawsuit was one of several cases around the world between California-based Apple and South Korean Samsung over technology rights and innovation in the fast-growing mobile computing sector.

    Apple sued Samsung in April 2011, and Samsung countersued. The companies have also sued each other in Britain, Australia and South Korea. The California case was the first to go to a US jury.

    Apple sought $2.75 billion for its claims that Samsung infringed four design patents and three software patents. Samsung demanded as much as $421.8 million in royalties for claims that Apple infringed five patents.

    For the ’381 patent, which covers the “bounce-back” feature in document scrolling, all applicable Samsung products were found to be infringing for Samsung Electronics Ltd, Samsung Electronics America, and Samsung Telecommunications America, with the exception of the Galaxy Tab under Samsung Telecommunications America. This is a total of 21 smartphones and tablets including the Samsung Nexus S 4G, Galaxy s II (AT&T and i9100), Galaxy Tab, and Galaxy Tab 10.1.

    One bit of good news for Samsung: The jurors found that the Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet did not infringe on any physical iPad design patents, as Apple had claimed.

  • South Korean court bans some Apple, Samsung products

    South Korean court bans some Apple, Samsung products

    Apple and Samsung have been ordered to stop selling some smartphones and tablet computers in South Korea and pay damages after a court ruled they each infringed the other’s patents.

    The South Korean court said that Apple had infringed two of Samsung’s wireless patents, while Samsung had infringed on a fruity firm patent related to a “bounce-back” touchscreen feature, Bloomberg, the Financial Times and others reported.

    The court also awarded damages to both sides, but only enough to cause a momentary fumble in their pockets. Apple only needs to pay 40m won ($35,000, £22,000) and Samsung just has to hand over 25m won ($22,000, £14,000).

    The Seoul Central District Court ruling called for a partial ban on sales of products including iPads and smartphones from both companies, though the verdict did not affect the latest-generation phones — Apple’s iPhone 4S or Samsung’s Galaxy S3.

    The ruling affects only the South Korean market, and is part of a larger, epic struggle over patents and innovation unfolding in nine countries. The biggest stakes are in the U.S., where Apple is suing Samsung for $2.5 billion over allegations it has created illegal knockoffs of iPhones and iPads.

  • Amazon will launch second Kindle Fire tablet on 6 September

    Amazon will launch second Kindle Fire tablet on 6 September

    Amazon.com Inc is having a press conference on 6 September near Los Angeles, said an invitation sent out on Thursday by the world’s largest Internet retailer. Rumours are rife that the company will use the event to unveil its new Kindle Fire tablet, which is expected to see a release in the UK later this year.

    While mooted specifications are still few and far between, there are whispers that the Amazon Kindle Fire could feature a larger 10in screen and run a heavily tweaked version of Android. It is also expected to come with a front-facing video calling camera plus microUSB and microHDMI ports.

    Amazon launched its first tablet, the seven-inch Kindle Fire, in September 2011, its first foray into a market that is still dominated by Apple Inc’s iPad. Since then, Google Inc has launched a seven-inch tablet called Nexus 7, which has been selling well.

  • Facebook updates iOS apps

    Facebook updates iOS apps

     

    Facebook has rolled out new iPhone and iPad apps rebuilt from the bottom up in a drive to boost speeds and give better performance.

    The long-awaited move was part of the social networking giant’s effort to appeal to the growing number of users accessing Facebook from mobile devices.

    It was also an attempt to placate mobile users who for years have complained that the old apps were clunky and sluggish.

    But while Facebook ads are well-established on its website, the company only recently started experimenting with mobile advertisements. That’s been a concern for investors, who’ve sent Facebook’s stock down by nearly half since the company’s initial public offering three months ago.

    The app is available for free from Apple’s App Store.

    Still absent from Facebook’s app is any integration of Instagram. That’s because Facebook hasn’t closed the acquisition of the photo-sharing app. Though it got a step closer Wednesday, when the Federal Trade Commission said it has closed its investigation into Facebook’s planned acquisition.

  • Microsoft Debuts New Logo Before Windows 8

    Microsoft Debuts New Logo Before Windows 8

    In advance of the Windows 8 launch on Oct. 26, Microsoft today unveiled a new logo that’s 25 years in the making.

    The world’s largest software company is introducing a dash of color in its first logo redesign since 1987, using a new multi-colored square next to a plain rendering of its name, replacing its well-worn italic style logo.

    Microsoft is rolling out its new Windows 8 operating system along with new Office and phone software this autumn, and is hoping the new logo unifies customers’ experience of the company, much like rival Apple Inc’s distinctive logo has for its consumers.

    The logo uses the so-called Segoe font, which is used in Microsoft products and marketing materials, and four colored squares that are “intended to express the company’s diverse portfolio of products,” the Redmond, Washington-based company said on its blog.

    “It’s been 25 years since we’ve updated the Microsoft logo and now is the perfect time for a change,” said Jeff Hansen, general manager of Microsoft’s brand strategy, in a blog on Microsoft’s website. “This wave of new releases is not only a reimagining of our most popular products, but also represents a new era for Microsoft, so our logo should evolve to visually accentuate this new beginning.”

    The new design, which resembles the existing logo for Windows, its most important product, is already in use on Microsoft’s website and is being unveiled at its latest store opening in Boston on Thursday.

  • ‘Double’ transforms your iPad into a $1999 telepresence robot

    ‘Double’ transforms your iPad into a $1999 telepresence robot

    For the frequent traveller, it could be the perfect way to attend those urgent meetings while staying at home.

    The Double robot can turn your iPad into a ‘virtual you’ that can be sent anywhere in the world. The $2,000 robot is described as ‘the simplest, most elegant way to be somewhere else in the world without flying there’

    Imagine you’re at your company, seated at your desk, when this iPad perched on a kind of pared-down Segway rolls up beside you. On the screen is the face of one of your co-workers located in another country who today is poking about your office, getting to know the layout, meeting some new people, asking a few questions. After a brief chat, it rolls off to the other side of the office. You look up five minutes later and do a double-take as you notice two of these devices having a conversation with each other by the water cooler.

    Thanks to Double Robotics’ iPad-on-wheels – otherwise known as ‘Double’ – such a scenario could one day become a reality.

    Double, which its maker claims offers the “most elegant way to be somewhere else in the world without flying there,” comprises a pair of wheels, a battery-powered motor, an adjustable pole and an iPad holder.

    The telepresence robot is controlled remotely by someone using Double’s app on another iPad. The app enables the operator to move Double around its location, with its minimalist design helping to ensure it doesn’t get in the way of ‘real’ on-site workers. The length of the pole can also be adjusted using the app, allowing its user to talk face-to-face with co-workers, or peer over partitions to see what others are up to when they think no one’s  looking.

    Weighing a delicate 15 pounds (7 kg), there’s little chance of Double causing any damage to furniture, or humans for that matter, should its operator fail to see upcoming obstacles.

    The California-based firm behind Double believes its creation offers a unique teleconferencing experience, allowing you to move around a location freely, meeting co-workers in any location, although presumably the bathroom will be off-limits.

    Double Robotics suggest its robot could be used by companies who regularly communicate with remote workers, as well as school campuses, “enabling potential students to walk the halls and talk to professors.” Museums and galleries could also use Double, offering tours to those too far away to visit in person.

    While some may consider Double to be an unnecessary luxury, the museum/gallery idea is certainly an appealing one, where anyone on the planet could work their way around such places using simply an iPad and an app.

    Of course, there are already a number of telepresence robots like this in existence, but what makes this one stand out is its reasonable price – $2,499, or just $1,999 if pre-ordered – iPad not included. The firm is set to ship its first batch this December, with orders placed from this week going out early in 2013.

    [Digital Trends]

  • MTS launches three Android smartphones

    MTS launches three Android smartphones

    MTS India has introduced three latest Android-based smartphones to expand its CDMA smartphone portfolio.

     These three smartphone named MTS MTag 351, MTS MTag 352 and MTS MTag 281 are priced in the range of Rs. 5499 to Rs 7499. The MTS smartphone range run on Android 2.3 Gingerbread and come bundled with “˜Unlimited’ data plans. 

    MTS MTag 351 features 8.89cms (3.5″) 320X480 (HVGA) pixel display with capacitive touch. The smartphone is powered by 800 MHz Qualcomm Snapdragon S1 Processor and comes with a 1300 mAh battery. 

    MTag351 features a dual camera with flash (3.0 megapixel back and VGA Front) and will be available for Rs 7499.

    MTS MTag 352 has the same features of MTag 351, however, it comes with a large 1400 mAh battery and priced at Rs 6499.

    MTS MTag 281 is the cheapest smartphone with a price of Rs 5499. MTag 281 features 7.11 Cm (2.8″) 240X320 (QVGA) pixel display and comes with a 1200 mAh battery. 

    [quote] “With the launch of these three smartphones, we have now brought four new Android Smartphones in less than two months. MTS now offers a comprehensive range of Android smartphones for discerning, on the move, tech savvy youth,” SSTL Chief Marketing and Sales Officer Leonid Musatov said in a statement.[/quote]

  • Amazon launches India Kindle Store, Kindle e-reader

    Amazon launches India Kindle Store, Kindle e-reader

    Amazon has launched the Kindle e-reader as well as the Kindle e-book store in India. The device – earlier generation non-touch e-reader – will be available at the Chroma retail outlets across the country at a price of Rs 6,999. 

    That Kindle model is the entry-level, non-touch-screen Kindle, which sells for $79 in the U.S. in a “Special Offers” ad-supported version. The Kindle sold in India will not be ad-supported.

    Amazon says the India Kindle Store offers over one million books — now available for India customers priced in Indian Rupees (INR) — including 70 of 100 Nielsen Bestsellers, and has the “lowest prices of any e-bookstore in India.”

    Along with those Nielsen Bestsellers, Amazon is serving up range of Indian authors, including Chetan Bhagat, Ashwin Sanghi, Ravinder Singh and Amish Tripathi. Additionally, Amazon has also launched Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP) for independent authors and publishers in India. With the country having an estimated population of 1.2 billion people, the store should fill up quickly with self-published titles and Amazon is already offering such Kindle exclusives as “Love, Life and a Beer Can” by Prashant Sharma, and “Reality Bites; a not so innocent Love Story” by Anurag Anand (as well as over one million free classics).

  • Twitter maps track which cities are friendly and which ones are impolite

    Twitter maps track which cities are friendly and which ones are impolite

    Buffalo, New York, is one of the rudest places in America and residents of New York City are far friendlier than folks in the Midwest and the South, according to a series of maps compiled using Twitter comments. 

    The head-scratching revelations are the result of studying the prevalence of two simple phrases — ‘good morning’ and ‘f*** you’ — over the course of several days in June and early July.

    Vertaline, a company that tracks works and phrases on Twitter for paying clients, conducted the study across 462 cities. 

     
    Naughty: Buffalo, New York, is bright red, showing an explosion of the use of 'f*** you' among tweeters in the city

    Naughty: Buffalo, New York, is bright red, showing an explosion of the use of ‘f*** you’ among tweeters in the city

     

     
    Nice: Lubbock, Texas, and Philadelphia wants to wish the world a good morning, as shown on this map

    Nice: Lubbock, Texas, and Philadelphia wants to wish the world a good morning, as shown on this map

    The maps are patterned in the form of heat intensity images, with lighter colors meaning the term is less frequent and darker colors inferring a greater use of the term. 

    The results vary hour-to-hour and day-to-day as the maps unfold, though some conclusions are clear.

    Lubbock seems an awfully friendly place. Without fail, ‘good morning’ blooms around the north Texas city every day of the study.

    About 350 miles southeast in Dallas, Twitter users are significantly less polite and are shown piling on the ‘f*** yous’ more days than not. 

     
    Angels and Demons: Southern California was home to a host of both friendly and furious tweeters

    Angels and Demons: Southern California was home to a host of both friendly and furious tweeters

    Los Angles seems to be both the city of angels and of demons. Users in southern California offer plenty of polite greetings, but also dish out a tremendous amount of curses. 

    It still doesn’t compare to Buffalo. The city in western New York state is surprisingly upset. 

    It’s more vulgar than Philadelphia. Angrier than New York City. More miserable than Detroit and less content than Chicago. 

    That is, if the output of the town’s Twitter users is to be believed. 

    New York City, on the other hand, for all its hard reputation, seems to have a higher prevalence of ‘good mornings’ than any part of the South or the Midwest — both regions known for their hospitality.

    [Daily Mail]

  • Acer Liquid Gallant and Liquid Gallant Duo officially announced, coming in September

    Acer Liquid Gallant and Liquid Gallant Duo officially announced, coming in September

    Acer has spilled the beans on two phones it will be showcasing at IFA later this month. The Acer Liquid Gallant and Acer Liquid Gallant Duo are exactly the same beast apart from the fact that the latter has dual-Sim capability. 

    The following specs apply to both devices: 4.3-inch qHD (540×960) touchscreen, 1 GHz processor, 5 MP camera, 1 GB of RAM, 4 GB of built-in storage space, all the usual connectivity options, and a 1,500 mAh battery. The OS running the show is Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich.

  • Sony Xperia J previewed, official unveiling to come soon

    Sony Xperia J previewed, official unveiling to come soon

    The upcoming Sony Xperia J was given the hands-on treatment for an extensive preview ahead its supposed announcement later this month.

    The Xperia J is one more model in Sony’s onslaught of new devices that it brought forth until now and will continue to until the end of this year. The Xperia J is a lower-midrange offering, with a 4-inch 480×854 touchscreen, 1 GHz single-core processor.

    The battery is said to be a 1700mAh unit, which should provide a decent level of battery life given the reduced screen size and the same entry-level processor as the Xperia Tipo. RAM is set at 512MB. There is also a microSD card slot hiding away under the battery on the Xperia J.

    The rear camera is a 5MP shooter with an LED flash, but apparently only shoots video at a pretty dreary 640×480. There is also a front facing camera, but nothing is said of it’s specs. Given the rear camera, we’re not expecting a lot from it. 

    The Xperia J is at least running Android 4.0 out of the box. 

  • Apple Reaches Record U.S. Market Value on IPhone Expectation

    Apple Reaches Record U.S. Market Value on IPhone Expectation

    Apple Inc. surpassed Microsoft Corp. Monday as the largest U.S. company ever, measured by stock-market value.

    Apple hit the new milestone — $623.52 billion — at a time when its influence on the economy, on the stock market and on popular culture rivals that of some of the most powerful companies in U.S. history: General Motors Co., whose Corvette and Impala typified a confident postwar manufacturing giant; Microsoft, whose technology heralded the arrival of the personal computer and the early Internet age; and International Business Machines Corp., whose buttoned-down rigor inspired rivals to reach for greatness.

    The shares of Cupertino, California-based Apple rose 2.6 percent to $665.15 at the close in New York yesterday, for a market value of $623.5 billion. That overtook Microsoft’s $616.3 billion closing market capitalization on Dec. 27, 1999, according to data compiled by S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC. Apple extended the gains today, advancing as much as 1.5 percent.

    Apple is preparing to introduce the next version of the iPhone on Sept. 12 in what will be a design overhaul of its top- selling product, two people with knowledge of the company’s plans said last month. The next iPhone “could be the most impactful product upgrade in Apple’s history” and the company will probably sell as many as 250 million units over the life of the device, according to analysts at FBR Capital Markets.

     [quote]

    “With the iPhone they have successfully created a strong customer following in an absolutely enormous marketplace,” Toni Sacconaghi, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., said yesterday. “They have captured the hearts and minds of consumers.”

     [/quote]

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