Nokia phone in classical style- Nokia 701

Posted by Unknown On Tuesday, August 30, 2011 6 comments
Hey as we all know that now-a-days competition in mobile phones is increased.
And Samsung has crossed Nokia in this competition but now again Nokia is fighting back.
Nokia has realeased Nokia 701 symbian phone which is fastest phone in Nokia mobiles.
The main thing in this phone is its powerfull hardware.i.e it has A1 GHz processor makes everything run smoothly.




Features of Nokia 701:-

*Super style Smart design
*Home screen designed by you
*Built in NFC
*8Megapixel Camera
*Apps and HD games




Specifications:-

Dimenisons: 
Size: 117.2 x 56.8 x 11 mm
Weight (with battery): 131 g
Volume: 64 cc

Memory:-
Internal memory: 8 GB
Support for up to 32 GB with an external microSD memory card
Use as USB mass memory device for storing photos, documents and more

Available colors:-This phone is available in 3 colors.
Silver Light
Steel Dark
Amethyst Violet

Display:-
Screen size: 3.5"
Resolution: 16:9 nHD (640 x 360 pixels) IPS-LCD
16 million colours; 160° viewing angle
ClearBlack display
Capacitive touch screen
Orientation sensor 
Proximity sensor
Ambient light detector

Personalization:- 
Up to six customisable home screens:
menu
widgets
themes
shortcuts
Customisable profiles
Ringtones: mp3, AAC, eAAC, eAAC+, WMA, AMR-NB, AMR-WB
Video ringtones
Themes
wallpapers
screensavers
audio themes
pre-installed themes
changeable colour themesMore wallpapers, ringtones and themes available from Store

Connectivity:-
Bluetooth 3.0
High-Speed USB 2.0 (micro USB connector)
Micro USB connector and charging
2 mm charging connector
Standard 3.5 mm AV connector with TV-out
NFCW
LAN
A-GPS
FM transmitter

Software platform:-
Symbian Belle
Java MIDP 2.1
Qt 4.7.3, Web Runtime 7.2
HTML 4.1
Software updates over the air (FOTA) and over the internet (FOTI)
Flash Lite 4.0
OMA DM 1.2, OMA Client provisioning 1.1

Internet:-
Full web browsing of real web pages
Web browsing with touch control
Supported markup languages: HTML, XHTML MP, WML, CSS
Supported protocols: HTTP v1.1, WAP
TCP/IP support
Visual history, HTML and JavaScript support
Flash Lite 4 will support a majority of Flash Player 10.1 content
Nokia Mobile Search
RSS reader
Support for streaming video
Unified home screen access to Facebook and Twitter through the Social client
Upload and view photos and videos and see locations via the Social client

Music:-
Stereo music player supporting MP3, M4A, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA
Music Player
Flick scrolling user interface to browse the albums in your music collection
Ovi Music Unlimited service in selected markets
Nokia Music PlayerOvi Music
Audio codecs: MP3, WMA, AAC, eAAC, eAAC+, AMR-NB, AMR-WB
Bit rate up to 320 kbps
DRM support WM DRM, OMA DRM 2.0
Playlist support and playlist editing; 8 channel graphic equaliser
Synchronise music with Nokia Music Player and Microsoft Windows Media Player 11.

Gaming:-
Use the touch interface to play games
Dedicated graphics processor with OpenGL 2.0 enables 3D graphics
Native and Java games
Use the accelerometer to play games
NFC for multiplayer games
Preloaded games:Angry Birds Magic with NFC for unlocking new levels
Asphalt 5 with NFC for multiplayer gaming
More games available for download at Store

Gallery:-









Comment about this Phone..:)

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Author: Srihari Rao Location: Karnataka, India
Srihari Rao is a student currently pursuing his Diploma in Electronics and Communication in Bellary, Karnataka, India.. He is very interested in Electronics and technology based subjects and Blogging. This Blog helps you to know more about the Electronics, Technology and many more..
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NI Multisim PCB software v11.0.2

Posted by Unknown On Sunday, August 28, 2011 7 comments

Hi friends today i am going to introduce you the National Instruments PCB design and Simulation software.










Using this software you can create any circuit designs and simulate them and check out weather the circuit is correct or not.You can learn how to build your own circuits.



There are many software's for designing a circuit but among all of them NI is ultimate one and it has all the features to use.

Recently NI has released a latest version of Multisim and Ultiboard that is v11.0.2 it has all the features for  anyone who wants to design a circuit.The working speed is increased  in this version.

This Multisim has features as many as 20,000+ components.

With more than 2,500 new devices and updates, Multisim 11.0.2 features a major increase in its component database. This latest release equips you with new symbols, SPICE models and footprints so you can design, validate and prototype more in less time.






Here are some of the screen shots of v11.0.2 :-















































With this software you will get some of the sample design circuits which you see them and learn.





Some new features added in this version are:




Easier Capture with New Schematic Net System


Improved Visualization with Grapher Enhancements

Enhanced Analog SPICE Simulation Features


New NI Example Finder

New Programmable Logic Design from Schematic





You can download this software here:





For professionals Click here.





For Educators Click here.





For Students Click here.















Homepage



Author: Srihari Rao Location: Karnataka, India

Srihari Rao is a student currently pursuing his Diploma in Electronics and Communication in Bellary, Karnataka, India.. He is very interested in Electronics and technology based subjects and Blogging. This Blog helps you to know more about the Electronics, Technology and many more..

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BlackBerry PlayBook

Posted by Unknown On Saturday, August 13, 2011 2 comments


Right now, the BlackBerry PlayBook is ideal for a BlackBerry smartphone user looking 

to purchase a tablet.

This is mainly due to the BlackBerry Bridge sync option. However, even then we would 


advise potential buyers to wait it out till there is a respectable apps eco-system.

Current apps in the App World are nothing to write home about. RIM had announced 


that Android apps would soon be ported to the BlackBerry App World, but that has yet 

to happen.

The Wi-Fi data transfer option and ability to edit the Documents To Go app is a big plus point.

Pros



  • Excellent multitasking

  • Brilliant display

  • Flash and Adobe AIR support




Cons



  • Limited number of apps

  • Biased towards BlackBerry smartphone users

  • Poor implementation of the power/sleep button





RIM was one major smartphone player missing from the tablet segment. With the 


PlayBook, BlackBerry has entered the arena of sleek tablets sporting a completely 


new operating system.

Although launched globally in April, it was announced very recently here in India with 


none other than Bollywood actor Salman Khan unveiling it.




The home screen of the PlayBook is divided with the app icon 

tray at the bottom,the card view of opened apps in the middle and 

the status bar on the top




Build and Ergonomics

The PlayBook measures 9-inches diagonally, with an effective screen area of 7-inches - 


there is therefore a prominent bezel around the LCD screen.

The device is rounded at the edges, and the edges and the rear side have a rubberised


finish which gives a very good grip on the device. Build quality is top notch and the thick 


bezel has its ups and downs. The positive aspect of the thicker bezel is that it allows you 


to hold the PlayBook in one hand such that your thumb is on the front portion and does not accidentally activate the touchscreen.

The downside is that the slits on sides, when the tablet is held in the horizontal orientation 


has the speaker section. So if you are watching a movie, you will most likely block the 


speakers.

As mentioned earlier, the 10 mm thick edge on the PlayBook has rounded edges. The 


top central portion has a small round power button, which is a bit too recessed for our 


liking and you will have to depress it at right angles.Considering that is the only way to put the


PlayBook to sleep, you will be using it a lot and it will annoy you. 



Adjacent to it are the volume control and play/pause buttons, which have a metallic body. 


An audio jack is placed on the extreme right hand side. On the other edge there is the 


mini HDMI port, a micro USB charging port and an optional charging dock port.






Bottom edge of the PlayBook houses the mini HDMI port, 


microUSB port and an optional charging dock port









The top edge of the PlayBook showing the volume control buttons 


along with play pause button and the extremely recessed Power 


button on the left hand side



Features

BlackBerry PlayBook houses the 1GHz dual core Texas Instruments OMAP 4430 SoC. 


It runs on the proprietary BlackBerry Tablet OS, based on the QNX Neutrino micro kernel architecture.

QNX Software Systems was bought over by BlackBerry last year. It is speculated that 


the BlackBerry plans to use this QNX OS on its smartphones sometime next year.

BlackBerry Bridge allows you to pair your BlackBerry smartphone with the PlayBook 


and sync apps such as Contacts, Tasks, Calender, Mail, etc. We will discuss it in detail in the 


Performance section. 



It comes with connectivity options such as Bluetooth and Wi-Fi. With the Wi-Fi activated, 


it is also possible to transfer files wirelessly from your tablet to your laptop which is mapped 


to the tablet.

The rear portion has a 5MP camera on top. There is no flash unit along with the camera. 


The front-facing camera is a 3MP one. Multitasking is the most important feature of the PlayBook. 


It supports Adobe AIR applications as well as Flash. Internet tethering is


supported.






BlackBerry AppWorld app showing the featured apps



Getting around the UI

You will notice that there are no buttons on the tablet apart from the ones on the top 


edge i.e., no Home button!

The bezel forms a touch-sensitive frame. If you swipe from top to bottom on the home 


page, a Settings menu will drop down, or, if you are on an active app then its contextual 


menu will drop down. The Settings menu is highly detailed, and you can control all aspects 


of your PlayBook from this drop down menu.

On swiping from bottom upwards, the application menu is slid up. Apps are broadly 


categorised into All, Favourites, Media and Games. At any point you can access the 


virtual keyboard by swiping upwards from the bottom left corner.






Settings tab of the PlayBook is highly detailed and can be

accessed by swiping from top downwards



On activating an app from the application menu, we come back to the home page and 


the app places itself in the blank portion of the home screen and then maximises.

You can open various applications and work on them simultaneously. On coming out of 


the application and onto the homepage, you get a coverflow sort of view of the opened applications. 


This is also known as the card view. You can wake up your PlayBook from 


sleep by swiping across the screen from end to end.

There is a definite learning curve involved for a newbie.

On the whole though, we like the usability aspect of the tablet where everything just works 


on finger swipes. Those used to the Apple iPad will keep searching for a Home button, 


but honestly you do not miss the absence of buttons on the PlayBook.

Performance

User Interface: The BlackBerry Tablet OS is quite snappy with a minor blurring as we 


swap pages. But that is not a deterrent as the page switching is fast. Swiping works 


smoothly and moving from one opened app to another is a breeze.

Also controlling the apps, once you master the swiping gestures is quite easy.

I liked the presentation of the active apps in the card view, so you can have a quick view 


of what all is open and close unnecessary apps by either touching the cross mark or 


touching the open app and swiping it upwards.

Virtual Keypad: The virtual keypad is well laid out with enough spacing between the


buttons. It does not have a haptic feedback, but typing was quite smooth. Although for those with 


small hands, while typing in the landscape mode, you will have to stretch your thumb for alphabets in 


central portion.



In the portrait mode the keypad seems too cramped for use with two thumbs, as it also 


gets uneasy to hold the tablet comfortably while typing.

In the landscape mode, the keypad covers around half the screen area, which may be 


good for login details or typing out documents on Word To Go app.

But, we noticed that if you are on Google Docs, you will be able to see two or three text 


lines at the most, thanks to the top portion being occupied by the address bar, Google 


taskbar and other horizontal panels.






Virtual keypad of the PlayBook covers about half the screen real estate, 


which is good if you are using Word To Go app, but with Google 


Docs it seems really cramped.



Multitasking: This is the USP of BlackBerry PlayBook. Although we have seen 


multi-tasking on the iPad2 and Android tablets, none of those can come close to what BlackBerry 


brings to the table with PlayBook.

Any app that you open if not active, will be present in the blank space between the app 


icon tray and the taskbar on the top. This arrangement is called the card view, as the 


apps arrange themselves in the form of visiting cards.

So for instance while your YouTube HD video is buffering in one card you can play a 


game of NFS at the same time and there is no slowdown. Also when a video is playing 


and you go from the active mode to the card view, it will continue playing till you activate


any other app.

Display: The 1024x600 pixel WSVGA resolution on the 7-inch LCD screen looks quite 


sharp and crispy. The glossy screen makes sure that the colours are vivid and pop out.

Viewing angles are fantastic and we did not notice any unwanted colour cast. In fact on a 


side by side comparison with the iPad 2 we found that the PlayBook had a comparitively brighter screen. 


So in short, full marks for the display.

Apps: This is where we got a big surprise. BlackBerry, renowned for its email facilities 


on the BB devices, does not have any native email client, out of the box! You get apps for 


Gmail, Hotmail, AOL Mail and Yahoo Mail respectively. Also, you will not find any app for Contacts, 


Calender, and Tasks. This brings us to the feature called BlackBerry Bridge.

In essence, what the BlackBerry Bridge does is sync your BlackBerry smartphone with 


the tablet over Bluetooth. Once done and activated, the BlackBerry Bridge will form a 


separate tab housing apps such as BBM, Mail, Contacts, Tasks, Calender, etc. 


Remember, these apps will not be stored on the PlayBook, but will just be shared between 


your BB smartphone and the PlayBook so long as the Bluetooth connection is on. In 


short, all your mails, contacts etc will still be secure as the PlayBook is not storing 


anything.

All this is great for BlackBerry smartphone users but for those using a different 


company's handset it's bad news.

Browser: The BlackBerry PlayBook browser is based on WebKit and looks quite clean. 


It technically supports tabbed browsing, but you will need to slide down the address bar 


for adding more tabs, downloading or making more tweaks in the Options menu.
As it supports Flash 10.2, you will notice some flash-ad heavy websites loading a bit 


slower than that on iPad 2 but that is not such a deterrent.






The native browser in BlackBerry PlayBook supports 


tabbed browsing



Camera Quality: Still images shot from the rear 5MP camera outdoors are decent, but 


indoors you will most likely have some unwanted noise in all of your images. Lack of


flash means the camera is not usable in poorly lit surroundings. Video camera is capable 


of shooting in 480p, 720p and 1080p. While shooting indoors we did notice noise and as


you pan you camera you tend to notice a blurring effect. This is less evident when used outdoors.

Audio: The sound coming out of the speakers was loud. It is ideal if you are watching 


streaming videos. For casual listening the speakers are quite good. We found the bass 


to be lacking, but there is no sound distortion at maximum volumes. Vocals sound quite 


crisp, but instrument separation suffers at higher frequencies.

Video: Video playback was flawless and it supports a variety of formats such as .AVI, 


.MOV, .WMV but does not support .MKV which is a bit sad.

The glossy surface does tend to reflect your background when watching dark scenes.

Quality wise we did not face any issues, there was no framing and rendering and even a 


1080p clip was quite smooth. Seeking did not cause any framing. You can pinch zoom in 


on videos as well, which seems a bit strange as you obviously see pixillation. Overall 


video playback experience is comparable to that of the iPad 2.

Battery Life: The PlayBook lasted a good day and a half on moderate usage. If does 


tend to use a lot of battery while playing back 1080p video or when it is connected to an 


HDTV via a HDMI out option.

It takes quite long to charge however.

Value

At Rs. 27,000 the BlackBerry PlayBook 16 GB W-iFi version is priced at roughly the 


same price as the Apple iPad 2. It makes perfect sense for BlackBerry smartphone users 


who want to consume media on a bigger screen.

Verdict

Right now, the BlackBerry PlayBook is ideal for a BlackBerry smartphone user looking 


to purchase a tablet. This is mainly due to the BlackBerry Bridge sync option.

However, even then I would advise potential buyers to wait it out till there is a respectable


apps eco-system. Current apps in the App World are nothing to write home about. RIM 


had announced that Android apps would soon be ported to the BlackBerry App World, but 


that has yet to happen.

The Wi-Fi data transfer option and ability to edit the Documents To Go app is a big plus 


point.

Ratings


  • Features: 6

  • Performance: 6

  • Build Quality: 7.5

  • Value for money: 6

  • Overall: 6




Price: Rs. 27,000








HomepageAuthor: Malay Akechan Location: Delhi, India

Malay Akechan is from New Delhi, India. He is very interested in Computing, Hacking and Blogging.He is the founder of TGS Forum and administrator at Hindustan Cyber Force. He also actively participates at various other forum and blogs.

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The Nexus S: A Little Bit New, A Little Bit Borrowed

Posted by Unknown On Wednesday, August 10, 2011 2 comments

Google and Samsung drew their electronic heads together and came up with the Nexus S, the next generation in the Nexus line.










Pre-loaded with the latest Android apps, this sleek smartphone features an internal WiFi hotspot generator, Internet Calling and a relatively new technology, Near Field Communications. NFC allows compatible phones to communicate just by briefly touching them together. Loan a friend money, transfer pics—a whole lot of things it can do. Pay for your gourmet coffee by waving the smartphone by the counter scanner, and your purchase is made instantly. If that particular location doesn't have the wave-and-scan capability, no problem: NFC can still work: pull up an item barcode, have them scan it, and it's paid—period. Your credit card info is still secure in the Google Wallet.



Enjoy full web browsing, email, SMS communications, social networking—It's all here in the Nexus S.



The Nexus S runs on the Android 2.3 OS, sports a great 4-inch, curved touch screen with a WVGA resolution of 800x480, and slips easily into virtually any pocket with 123.9 x 63 x 10.88 mm dimensions and a 129-gram weight.



The Lithium Ion battery holds its charge for up to six hours of talk time, and in stand-by mode, the charge can last up to an amazing 428 hours!



The Nexus S boasts a 512MB RAM and a large, internal memory storage capacity of 16,3248MB, which makes uploading your MP3 player extremely easy. It even comes with the 2.0 USB port, too!



Bluetooth-enabled, of course, the smartphone offers a 3.5mm audio/headphone jack that matches the majority of sets in common use.



The three-axle feature enables near-pinpoint location accuracy for easy use of, say, FourSquare for great deals on the go or enabling a navigation app to a destination of your choice.



The Anti-Fingerprinting coating on that 4-inch screen keeps your Nexus S clean and easy to read as you check your Facebook page or send an email or set up your near-area WiFi hotspot or post your group picture on Flickr or compare prices on the boots you've been wanting or text your significant other when you'll be home or … or … or …..



One drawback to the Nexus S is the headset slot is positioned on the heel of the device next to the micro-USB, which can certainly be inconvenient at times. Carrying it while the 'set is plugged in is awkward.



Google seems to have borrowed the case design from an older phone they helped design, but the slight curve to the body seems to have absolutely nothing by marketing impetus behind it; too bad they couldn't come up with a better overall feel to the device than the plastic.



But then again, maybe they're wanting you to buy the case, too.



Either way, you can find the Nexus S at the following suppliers: 3, M1, O2, Orange, SFR, Singtel, Sprint, T-Mobile, Videotron, Virgin Mobile or Vodafone, especially now that the price has dropped.




















Author: Holly Miller

Post contributed by Holly Miller of Coupon Croc; in the market for the latest electronics and gadgets? Use Argos discount vouchers to save on all your online shopping.



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