News Categories
Tuesday, 19 May 2015
Xiaomi will launch Mi store in UK this week
Tuesday, 9 December 2014
Facebook now lets you search for posts
Facebook said in August it was testing the search upgrade and that it would be available this week for users of Apple devices and on the desktop version of Facebook.
Sunday, 7 December 2014
Nokia Lumia 730 vs HTC Desire 816G
The Nokia Lumia 730 Dual SIM has a 1.2GHz Snapdragon 400 quad-core processor and Adreno 305 graphics. The HTC Desire 816G Dual SIM has a 1.3GHz MediaTek MT6582 quad-core processor and Mali-400MP2 GPU.
The Lumia 730 has a 4.7-inch OLED display with resolution of 1280 x 720 and 316 ppi. The Desire 816G has a 5.5-inch display with resolution of 1280 x 720 resulting in 267 ppi.
The Nokia phone has 1GB of RAM and 8GB of internal storage, expandable via microSD to 128GB. The Desire 816G also has 1GB of RAM and 8GB of internal storage, but this time only expandable to 32GB.
The Lumia 730 packs a 6.7-megapixel rear camera with Carl Zeiss optics, autofocus, LED flash, and 1080p video capture, as well as a 5-megapixel front-facing camera. The Desire 816G has a 13-megapixel rear camera with autofocus, LED flash, and 1080p video recording capability, and also a 5-megapixel front-facing unit.
The Lumia 730 has a removable 2200 mAh battery while the Desire 816G has a non-removable 2600 mAh battery.
Both phones support 3G, WiFi 802.11 b/g/n with WiFi hotspot, Bluetooth 4.0, GPRS, EDGE, GPS, and microUSB 2.0. However, the Lumia 730 also has DLNA and NFC.
The Lumia 730 runs Windows Phone 8.1 with Lumia Denim. The Desire 816G runs Android 4.4.2 KitKat skinned with HTC’s Sense 6.0 UI.
The Lumia 730 measures 134.7mm x 68.5mm x 8.7mm and weighs 130g. The Desire 816G measures 156.6mm x 78.7mm x 8mm and weighs 158g.
Pricing obviously varies by region as well as retailer, so it’s difficult to be too specific. Dual SIM handsets are extremely popular in many Asian countries, so as an example we’ll give you approximate pricing for India. The Nokia Lumia 730 Dual SIM launched there at Rs. 15,299 but can be found on sale from around Rs. 14,500. The Desire 816G launched at Rs. 18,890 but can now be found from around Rs. 15,500 bringing the prices much closer together.
New Samsung SM-E700H Spotted With Mid-Range Specifications
Three deputies to the head of Samsung Electronics Co Ltd's (005930.KS) mobile division are leaving, a person with knowledge of the matter said on Thursday, as the world's largest smartphone maker faces a rapid decline in profit.
Monday, 18 August 2014
Xolo Q510s With 4-Inch Display and Android 4.4.2 KitKat Launched at Rs. 6,499
As per its listing on the company website , the Xolo Q510s is powered by a 1.3GHz quad-core MediaTek MT6582M processor coupled with 1GB of RAM, and Mali 400 GPU clocked at 416MHz. It comes with 8GB of inbuilt storage, which is further expandable via microSD card (up to 32GB). It sports a 5-megapixel rear camera with LED flash, while there is a secondary 0.3-megapixel front-facing camera also onboard. The rear camera features scene detection, face recognition, Panorama, geo-tagging, Best shot, Smile shot, and HDR options.
On the connectivity front, the Xolo Q510s offers 3G, GPRS/ EDGE, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, Micro-USB and Bluetooth 4.0 options. The smartphone packs a 1500mAh battery that is rated to deliver up to 15 hours of talk time and up to 390 hours of standby time on 2G network. The Xolo Q510s measures 128x63x8.9mm and is only available in a White colour variant.
Xolo in August introduced three handsets running Android 4.4 KitKat, including the Q510s. The other two KitKat-based handsets are Xolo A1000s and Play 8X-1200. It is worth noting that out of the two aforementioned handsets, the Play 8X-1200 was announced officially last week at Rs. 19,999.
Tuesday, 3 December 2013
Android 4.4 KitKat now on 1.1 percentof Android devices: Google
The latest iteration of Google's mobile operating system, Android 4.4 or KitKat has finally made its presence felt in the monthly OS distribution data, provided by Google. Sharing the distribution data of different versions of Android, Google reported that the most recent version of Android, KitKat or Android 4.4, is now present on 1.1 percent devices.
Notably, the new version of the operating system ships only with the Nexus 5, though Google had also released Android 4.4 updates for the Nexus 4, Google editions of HTC One and Samsung Galaxy S4, and the Motorola Moto X, in addition to the Nexus 7 tablets (both 2012 and 2013 editions).
Different versions of Android Jelly Bean are now running on 54.5 percent of all Android devices with Android 4.1.x on 37.4 percent devices (it was 37.3 percent, last month), Android 4.2.x on 12.9 percent (it was 12.5 percent, last month) and Android 4.3 on 4.2 percent devices (vis a vis 2.3 percent, last month). Last month, Android Jelly Bean's combined share was 52.1 percent. Android 4.0.x or Ice Cream Sandwich, in Google's latest report, registered a share of 18.6 percent, a decline of 1.2 points. Android 2.2 Froyo's device distribution share was 1.6 percent, a dip of 0.1 points while the share of Gingerbread (Android 2.3.x) was 24.1 percent, compared to 26.3 percent last month.
While Gingerbread's share reduced by 2.2 points this month, it still has the second-largest share, making things difficult for developers who've been trying to put Android 4.0 as the threshold. This means that a significant number of Android users don't get access to the latest version of some apps. Beginning April, the distribution data charts are now based on the data collected from each device when the user visits the Google Play store.
Google says this is to make it more accurate and reflect the percentage of users who are actively engaged in the Android and Google Play ecosystem. Prior to this, data was collected when the device simply checked-in to Google servers. Starting September, Google stopped including Android 1.6 Donut and Android 2.1 Eclair in the data as it is gathered from the new version of Google Play store app, which supports Android 2.2 and above. It's worth pointing out that the total sample excludes forked variants of Android (the ones on Amazon's Kindle Fire tablets) and variants in China that don't include Google services.
Saturday, 19 October 2013
Has any phone in 2013 made you switch platforms?
We're in that final stretch of months
before 2013 officially comes to an end,
and it's been a pretty wild year for
mobile all year long.
In the beginning, we saw BlackBerry's
plans and release of BlackBerry 10. In
the following months we saw the
release of two of the most anticipated
Android flagships of the year, the HTC
One and the Samsung Galaxy S4. We
finally found out the dark and
mysterious details of Google's "X"
phone, which turned out to be none
other than the Moto X, which featured
just about none of the things leaks,
rumors and hopes predicted that it
would. Nokia pushed the envelope even
further with their Nokia Lumia line,
famous for its notably good cameras
for a smartphone, by releasing the
Nokia Lumia 1020 with its 41-megapixel
camera. We also have phones like the
iPhone 5s, the Nexus 5, the Galaxy
Note 3 and the LG G2 . Yep, it's been a
pretty good year for mobile.
New phones are released all the time.
But regardless of how many phones
can be produced, each smartphone is
more than likely using one of four of
the most popular mobile platforms that
we have available to us today: iOS,
Android, Windows Phone or BlackBerry.
These platforms are constantly
changing and tweaking in order to
become the best, and I have to say
that this year has had one of the
most interesting combinations of new
hardware and new software I have
seen in a while. If you guys have had
any thoughts like I have, you've
probably considered jumping from
whatever phone it is that you have to
something new - perhaps you even
made the switch.
Did any new phones tickle your fancy
enough to make you switch this year?
One did for me (get it? One ? Ha!)
Actually, I should say two . Initially, I
was more intrigued by the Galaxy S4.
However, just as I had suspected in
previous thoughts mentioned across my
articles, there is such a thing as a
phone that's too big for some people.
It seems that a 5" screen is just too
much for me to be able to hold without
dropping onto the floor, my face, or
whatever else I happen to be holding
my phone over. Aside from that and
some apparent issue with overheating
(as in the phone felt hot - really hot
- but didn't show much adverse
effects from it) the phone would have
been dandy. I really did like the
camera and all of the features. But
the fact that I couldn't even hold the
phone comfortably bothered me more
than anything, and I ended up
switching out for the HTC One.
Switching from iOS back to Android
was a lot easier than I thought it
would be, mostly because I still
remembered Android as being the slow,
buggy OS that it was back in 2010. But
once I decided to make the jump back
to Android from iOS after being mostly
happy with iOS for the better part of
two years, I was honestly surprised at
how well Android had adapted.
Whether
it was the advances that Android made
over the past couple of years, or
perhaps just the fact that I had
lowered my expectations when I
switched to the One and my
expectations were surpassed, I am still
to this day pretty darn happy with my
One. Although I will once again stress
that the purple tint on my camera is
still an issue that wasn't fixed since
updating to the official Android 4.3
build. Aside from that, the phone is
fantastic. Great build, great feel,
great battery life, and runs smooth
like butter.
I even entertained the thought of
switching to BlackBerry or Windows
Phone as well, considering the only
hands-on experience I've had with the
devices are limited to retail store
displays. BlackBerry was intriguing; I
was interested in seeing how
BlackBerry 10 worked on the
traditional BlackBerry form factor of
having a small screen and a full
physical QWERTY keyboard. I was also
intrigued by the Z10, BlackBerry's
first attempt at what might be
considered a more "normal" look for a
modern smartphone. However, the lack
of applications made specifically for
BlackBerry wasn't exactly inviting. I
will admit, it is nice that several what
I would consider "important"
applications that were initially made
for Android can be "sideloaded" onto
BlackBerry 10, but in the end I wasn't
exactly thrilled with the idea. The same
"lack of application" problem stopped
me from Windows Phone, but definitely
to a lesser degree.
I was mostly
interested in the fact that the Lumia,
at the time, had some of the best
cameras that a smartphone could have.
I also dig the minimalistic interface of
Windows Phone.
Overall, I'm happy I switched to the
One. It's not the first time I've
switched, nor will it be the last, but I
am happy that I was able to switch to
a phone that I thought I would like,
and ended up actually liking it, because
I'm not always that lucky.
Readers, did you find a phone this
year that made you switch platforms?
Which platform did you come from, and
which one did you go to? Are you
happy with the decision? Let us know
your thoughts in the comments below!
Thursday, 8 August 2013
Celkon Campus A63 smartphone with Android 4.2 launched for Rs. 4,499
Celkon Mobiles, an Indian mobile
handset maker has launched a new
smartphone, the Campus A63 at a price
point of Rs. 4,499.
The Campus A63 sports a 4-inch WVGA
display with a resolution of 480x800
pixels. It is powered by a 1.2GHz dual-
core processor and comes with 256MB
RAM. The phone features a 3.2-
megapixel rear camera and a front-
facing camera. It runs Android 4.2
Jelly Bean.
The dual-SIM phone (GSM+GSM) comes
with 512MB internal storage capacity
expandable up to 32GB via microSD
card. Connectivity options on the phone
include Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and GPS. The
phone doesn't offer 3G connectivity
and comes with a 1500mAh battery.
The phone will be available starting
Friday coinciding with Eid and will come
with a free back cover.
Celkon had previously launched two
budget Android phones, Celkon
Signature One A107 and Celkon A9+.
The Celkon Signature One A107 comes
with a 5-inch capacitive display with
resolution of 480X800 pixels. It carries
a price tag of Rs. 6,999 and is powered
by a 1GHz dual-core processor along
with 512MB RAM. The internal storage
available on this device is 512MB, but it
can be further expanded by up to 32GB
through a microSD card. The dual-SIM
phone runs Android 4.0 (Ice Cream
Sandwich). Other features include an
8-megapixel primary camera, VGA
front camera and a 2100mAh battery.
Connectivity options include Wi-Fi,
Bluetooth and GPS.
The Celkon A9+ on the other hand
comes with a price tag of Rs. 3,299. It
is also a dual-SIM phone, and features
a 3.5-inch display with a resolution of
320x480 pixels. It also runs Android 4.0
(Ice Cream Sandwich). It is powered by
a 1GHz processor accompanied by
256MB of RAM. It comes with 512MB of
internal storage, which can be
expanded further via microSD card. It
sports a 2-megapixel rear camera and
a VGA front camera. The connectivity
options include Edge, Bluetooth and Wi-
Fi. It has a 1350 mAh battery.
Celkon Campus A63 key specifications
4-inch capacitive touchscreen with
480x800 pixels resolution
1.2GHz dual core processor
256MB RAM
512MB Internal storage
3.2-megapixel rear Camera
Front-facing camera
Dual SIM (GSM + GSM)
1500 mAh battery
Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) OS





