Sunday, December 5, 2010

Technology Trends

The computer sciences professionals are required to be familiar with and stay abreast of current technology trends. Contemporary technology trends are always changing and new developments are constantly improving in data management, data quality, web service applications and software. One of the premier technology trends of 2007 is ensuring high-quality database management. Information on the latest technology trends can be found in this section as a series of tutorials and online training articles geared toward the Information Technology professional.
Spotting new technologies and obtaining immediate experience and knowledge of newly developed technologies can mean the difference between success and failure of a career in computer sciences. When a developer or programmer uses a new technology and becomes familiar with the most recent technology trends, he will have advantage over his colleagues. Technological innovation is at the forefront of career development in computer sciences.
Current technology trends include Software as a Service (SAAS), a mode of software delivery that provides maintenance, daily operation and software support through Web-based servers and browsers. Other hot trends in technology include Java technology trends, service oriented architecture advancements and the promise and foundation within Microsoft Window’s .NET framework for web services.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 Android smartphone

Xperia X10, the name Xperia will probably be familiar to many here but the X10 is in fact Sony Ericsson’s first attempt at an Android phone. With the overwhelming majority of popular Android phones coming from HTC, Motorola and Google themselves, frankly we were quite interested in seeing how well a Sony Ericsson Android phone would perform. So here’s our review of the Xperia X10 after having had a chance to use it for sometime, as always, we’ve taken plenty of pictures to help you visualise its design and features.


Friday, May 14, 2010

Tablet PCs and Smartboo** ‘R Us

Google’s smartphone, theNexus one could be the product of CES much like the iPhone owned the show two years ago and the Palm Pre owned the show last year. (Yes, ironically, the iPhone wasn’t actually at CES, but it took it nevertheless.) Underground reviews have indicated that it outperforms both the iPhone and the Motorola Droid, which has been the hot ticket in the fourth quarter and used heavily in the battle between AT&T and Verizon. This phone will open the door for OLED Smartphones with increasing focus on graphics potential for the next generation of devices. I have a feeling that anyone who just bought a smartphone recently is going to wish that they’d waited.

The invitation-only event will be held two days before the Consumer Electronics Show begins in Las Vegas and just one day before many CES exhibitors have scheduled major press conferences.

It’s a move straight out of the Apple playbook. In January, 2007, Apple famously upstaged CES when it unveiled the first iPhone at an event in San Francisco — even as most technology journalists and executives were huddled in Las Vegas for the trade show.

Google hasn’t commented about Nexus One. But recent online leaks suggest the Nexus One will be a GSM-device with a 3.7-inch AMOLED touchscreen, 5-megapixel camera, Wi-Fi connectivity, accelerometer and compass. It is expected to run the latest version of the Android operating system, Android 2.1.

Where Google could really innovate is how the phone is sold. The Nexus One is likely to be sold unlocked, which means consumers don’t have to be tied into long-term contracts with telecom carriers. T-Mobile, which offered the first Google phone, could provide “billing, coverage, features and rate plans,” says TMONews, a blog that tracks T-Mobile. The Nexus One could also go on sale the morning of Jan. 5, says the site, though there’s no word yet on possible pricing.

Will Google offer expensive unlocked handsets in the United States — a la Nokia — or can it come up with a clever model to subsidize the device cost through mobile advertising or carrier support? Google’s press conference next week should answer that question.


Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 Android smartphone

You may have seen our recent gallery featuring the Sony Ericsson Xperia X10, the name Xperia will probably be familiar to many here but the X10 is in fact Sony Ericsson’s first attempt at an Android phone. With the overwhelming majority of popular Android phones coming from HTC, Motorola and Google themselves, frankly we were quite interested in seeing how well a Sony Ericsson Android phone would perform. So here’s our review of the Xperia X10 after having had a chance to use it for sometime, as always, we’ve taken plenty of pictures to help you visualise its design and features.
If you asked me to describe the Xperia X10 in a few words, I would happily shout out the words elegant, stylish and too simple. You see, we personally think that Sony Ericsson have created a very stylish device, it looks and feels elegant and smart. We like the way the solid keys at the bottom have been laid out, small but still usable and not annoying.

Monday, May 10, 2010

JVC Everio GZ-HM550BUS Bluetooth Enabled Camcorder


JVC has recently unveiled their latest high definition Everio camera dubbed as JVC Everio GZ-HM550BUS .This latest camera contains built-in Bluetooth wireless technology which permits the users to work with a variety of other wireless devices. This camera is said to be the first and only camcorder of JVC to support Bluetooth connectivity. This camera also features Full HD camcorder with dual memory of 32GB internal Flash memory/SD card featuring 10.62MP Back-illuminated CMOS, 16x dynamic zoom , 15FPS burst photgraphy, SDHC card support, and can record up to 3520×2640 digital still images.Its 10.62 megapixel Back-illuminated CMOS sensor enables the users to shoot 1920 x 1080 Full HD videos and real nine(9) megapixel digital stills.

It is also equiped with both LED light and a flash for shooting in dark places and has Advanced Image Stabilizer that ensures the steadiness of the images once you are walking, and it is effective in shooting bright scenes from full wide to 5x zoom.The JVC Everio GZ-HM550BUS also permits the users to record, zoom and play, geo-tag videos and still photos taken via smartphone and you can also use it with a Bluetooth headset.This bluetooth enabled camcorder is now available at a retail price of $799.95.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

iiView’s Latest Electronic Device: Vpad Windows 7 Tablet

Ever since Apple announced its latest device known as iPad, a number of manufacturers have released their own tablets as well. Today a new tablet was introduced in the market called iiView Vpad tablet. This new device features a 10.2 inch touchscreen display with a resolution of 1024 x 600 pixels, an Intel 945 chipset, an Intel Atom N270 1.6GHz processor, three USB 2.0 ports, a VGA port, a 2-in-1 headphone and microphone jack, built in 802.11n WiFi, 10/100 mbps Ethernet, optional 3G and user can choose between 1GB or 2GB of RAM. The iiView Vpad tablet comes with Windows 7 Starter, and cost $499 for the 160GB, 1GB RAM model, and the high end model with 3G and a 320GB hard drive and 2GB of RAM for $699.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Gallery image: toyota-prius-2010

Here’s abit of auto tech for this morning folks, the Toyota Prius is pretty well known for being the top of the class when it comes to hybrid technology. In the new 2010 version, on board technology has been much improved, both under the hood and within the cabinet. I especially fancy that solar panel equipped roof!


About this image (filename: toyota-prius-2010):
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  • Date Taken: 01/01/1970 01:00
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Monday, February 15, 2010

The Latest in Hearing Technology: You Wont Believe Your Ears

Wearing a hearing aid is as much fun as a root canal or at least thats what most people think. Big, clunky things with lots of wires, howling feedback and constant complaints from granddad, right? Sure, you remember. But, right along with other forms of digital technology, hearing aids have gotten smaller, more comfortable, more intuitive and produce a more natural sound. These mighty, little machines have changed the way we hear and you heard it here, first.

The Latest Technology Simply Simple

Lets look at a couple of examples of this leading edge technology and how its improved hearing quality (not to mention quality of life) for millions of people.

Siemens makes some of the best hearing devices in the world and two in particular are going to make you smile if youre in the market for a better hearing experience, i.e. youre tired of asking people Whatd ya say?

Check out Siemens Artis 2 helping people with hearing loss fully appreciate all that life has to offer according to the product literature. The Artis 2 is actually one smart machine. Tiny, but smart.

First, like several other premium-grade hearing devices, the Artis 2 learns the wearers volume preferences. (Thats you.) The longer its worn, the smarter it gets and will adjust automatically. That is less that you have to do. Thats cool. Even better, the Artis 2 actually records and stores hearing aid use data so your hearing health professional can access the data for quick adjustments as needed and theyre not needed often.

Another feature a necessity in todays go-go, stay-connected world is e2e wireless' connectivity. Huh? This technology creates natural, transparent binaural hearing by synchronizing the settings between the left and right hearing aids. Directional microphone systems are synchronized to ensure optimal localization and listening in background noise. e2e also allows for one touch control you make an adjustment on one hearing aid and the other changes too. Effortlessly.

Feedback the awful, painful whistling sound is reduced digitally with feedback cancellation, meaning you can talk on the telephone with ease, usually a common cause of feedback, without having an eardrum blown out just saying Hello. Again, its all done automatically so you can focus on the world around you, not some screeching in your ear.

The Artis 2 can also differentiate between sound and just plain noise. Say youre at a noisy conference. Lots of chatter, lots of give-and-take. The Artis 2 manages speech and noise by upping the volume on speech while reducing background din. So you can hear the speaker even when some guy at your table is telling the same old joke again. The adaptive microphone used in the Artis 2 optimizes hearing settings even when youre surrounded by multiple sources of noise including the stale joke guy.

Finally, the Artis 2 comes with an optional pocket remote so you can make manual setting adjustments without making a big deal about it. You don't have to remove the device and ask your buddy to say Test. Test. while you fiddle with tiny knobs and scrolling wheels. All handled discreetly from your coat pocket no fuss, no bother, and no worries.

Siemens, one of the leaders in hearing technology, introduced one of their most advanced hearing devices.

Meet Artis 2 – “helping people with hearing loss fully appreciate all that life has to offer”. Artis 2 is a smart little device that learns the wearer’s volume preference, so that it adjusts automatically while it is being worn. Artis 2 actually records and stores hearing aid use data so your hearing health professional can access the data for quick adjustments as needed. This tiny little device is so smart, it utilizes wireless technology. Yes, both ear pieces can communicate with each other wirelessly.

The Artis 2 can also differentiate between sound and just plain noise by upping the volume on speech while reducing background din. The screeching feedback problems have also been reduced digitally with feedback cancellation.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Nuclear battery for new technology gadgets


Are you tired of your short laptop battery life with only a few hours? Would you like the charge of your mobile phone to last a couple of months? Well, the answer to your “prayers” might be the nuclear batteries, which are been developed at the University of Missouri. They are designed especially for providing a lasting source of energy. And some people think these batteries could replace the current ones, including those used by the electrical cars. According to the creators, a nuclear battery has a very enormous capacity to generate electricity when compared to a regular one.

The batteries have always been the Achilles’ heel of the mobile devices. Usually, the designers of electronic devices for mass consumption (like laptops or media players) use small displays or screens that are not very bright in order to save the scarce energy resources that are provided from the regular batteries. But the new nuclear battery would bring a solution based on a liquid semiconductor (rather than a solid semiconductor) that will produce a much longer lifetime for the battery. The reason is the solid semiconductors are attacked constantly by some radioactive elements used by other types of batteries, while the liquid semiconductor is quite resistant to these attacks. Although the term “nuclear” can be a little perturbing, the fact is that these batteries are not very different from those batteries used in, for example, medical pacemakers.


The new radioisotope battery has the size of a penny and provides much more power than the traditional ones because, according to the researches, its capacity is very superior. Jae Kwon, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Missouri, said that the radioisotope battery “can provide power density that is six orders of magnitude higher than chemical batteries”. That is to say, it provides no less than a million times more charge than any “normal” battery.

Kwon and his research team have spent enough time working to solve many problems that they have encountered when developing this type of battery. One important thing is the batteries need to be small and thin in order to be practical and useful; this way, they could be used to power watches and small electronic devices. As mentioned before, the prototype (which you can see in the picture below) has the size and thickness of a penny, but the researchers think they can achieve a thinner battery. In order to do this, Kwon has required the collaboration of another professor: J. David Robertson (chemistry professor and associate director of the MU Research Reactor). Together, they hope to maximize the power of the nuclear batteries as well as reduce the size and test other materials to make additional improvements. Kwon thinks that the final battery, which would be used in commercial gadgets, could be thinner than a human hair. For the moment, the research team have required a provisional patent in order to protect the exclusive right to use this invention.


Wednesday, February 10, 2010

iPhone 4G front panel

From the world of Apple rumors and leaks, we have the picture below. What is currently being speculated is that the image below features the front panel of a new iPhone 4G. Compared to the current iPhone’s front panel it appears to be 1/4 of an inch taller. As you can see, there also looks to be a shiny, reflective bit at the top which is something we haven’t seen before. Otherwise, just looking at thefront panel, there doesn’t seem to be any other noticeable new features.

The front panel of the rumored iPhone 4G has been pictured by iResQ, an iPhone repairs site, which of course as you will imagine is picking up all the buzz at the moment. This also makes us wonder if the pics are legit.

iResQ also observes that the front panel has a “reflective, mirror-like surface” near the top of the phone, and speculates that this is a relocated proximity sensor. The current iPhone’s proximity sensor is used to detect when you’re holding the phone up to your ear. If you are, it shuts off the screen to save battery life and to avoid blinding you with light.


If the reflective surface is the proximity sensor, then Apple might be planning to use the sensor for other functions as well.

If this is the real deal, then it is likely that the pictured iPhone 4G will be announced later this year at the WWDC. More pics can be seen if you click on the iResQ source link below, let us know what you think.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

New Inventions

Wind-Powered Highway Lights Disconnect From the Grid

Turning The Tide To A Well Lit Tomorrow on the Highway

As far as practical renewable energy concepts go, these wind-powered highway lights are pretty elegant. And from my layman’s perspective, they seem to be practical and realistic. I like ‘em!


USB Electronic Key Impressioner Could Help You Be Gone In 60 Milliseconds

If you’re stealing a car these days, there’s a good chance you’re not bothering to actually pick the locks, but if you are, your job is about to get a little easier. A device called the Electronic Key Impressioner is inserted into a car door and scans the position of the tumblers inside. ..


Spray-On Liquid Glass Can Protect Almost Any Surface From Damage

The SiO2 coating on a filament of a microfiber. (The fissure was induced in order present an image which shows the characteristics of the coating.)
Spray-on liquid glass is transparent, non-toxic, and can protect virtually any surface against almost any damage from hazards such as water, UV radiation, dirt, heat, and bacterial infections. The coating is [...]


Knife and Fork Lifts – Workout While You Eat

Knife and Fork Lifts
A knife and fork that weigh 1½ pounds each, the better to make you eat more slowly? Seriously?
This is quite serious, according to the Knife and Fork Lift’s inventor, Tom Madden. “Everybody approaches it as a joke,” he said, “but when you think about it, it does require you to eat [...]


Invention of ‘Plastic Water’ Paves Way For Ecologically Clean Plastic Materials

Elastic water
Think Silly Putty, and you’ll probably have a very good idea what the brains at Japan’s Tokyo University have created. The new material, called Elastic Water, retains its Flubber-like consistency by mixing a few grams of clay and organic matter to H20, essentially binding the whole into a jelly-like putty.


Space-Age Plasma Jet ‘Set To Replace Dentist’s Drill’

A futuristic ‘plasma jet’ that eradicates tooth decay without fillings could be replacing the hated dentist’s drill in as little as three years, it was claimed today.
The space-age device fires a beam of electrically-charged oxygen atoms into tooth cavities to obliterate decay-causing bacteria.
Traditionally, the same job is done by drilling holes into the tooth that [...]


Brain-Cooling Motorcycle Helmet Could Save Thousands of Lives

The brain cooling helmet.

An extraordinary new ‘brain-cooling’ motorcycle helmet could save thousands of lives each year.
Called the ThermaHelm, the incredible piece of equipment comes with an inbuilt device that acts like an instant ice pack after a sudden impact.
By cooling the brain it is thought the carbon fibre helmet can reduce the risk of long-term [...]


Anti-Rape Condom Could Help Protect Victims

Rape is not a pretty topic, but it is massive global problem.

A new “anti-rape” condom could protect women in dangerous areas from being attacked. The device is a female condom filled with sharp, microscopic barbs that will attach themselves to flesh. The theory is that while the attacker is stunned and doubled-over with pain, the woman will [...]

Gartner Identifies the Top 10 Strategic Technologies for 2010

Analysts Examine Latest Industry Trends During Gartner Symposium/ITxpo, October 18-22, in Orlando

ORLANDO, Fla., October 20, 2009 — 

Gartner, Inc. analysts today highlighted the top 10 technologies and trends that will be strategic for most organizations in 2010. The analysts presented their findings during Gartner Symposium/ITxpo, being held here through October 22.

Gartner defines a strategic technology as one with the potential for significant impact on the enterprise in the next three years. Factors that denote significant impact include a high potential for disruption to IT or the business, the need for a major dollar investment, or the risk of being late to adopt.

These technologies impact the organization's long-term plans, programs and initiatives. They may be strategic because they have matured to broad market use or because they enable strategic advantage from early adoption.

“Companies should factor the top 10 technologies into their strategic planning process by asking key questions and making deliberate decisions about them during the next two years,” said David Cearley, vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner. “However, this does not necessarily mean adoption and investment in all of the technologies. They should determine which technologies will help and transform their individual business initiatives.”

The top 10 strategic technologies for 2010 include:

Cloud Computing. Cloud computing is a style of computing that characterizes a model in which providers deliver a variety of IT-enabled capabilities to consumers. Cloud-based services can be exploited in a variety of ways to develop an application or a solution. Using cloud resources does not eliminate the costs of IT solutions, but does re-arrange some and reduce others. In addition, consuming cloud services enterprises will increasingly act as cloud providers and deliver application, information or business process services to customers and business partners.

Advanced Analytics. Optimization and simulation is using analytical tools and models to maximize business process and decision effectiveness by examining alternative outcomes and scenarios, before, during and after process implementation and execution. This can be viewed as a third step in supporting operational business decisions. Fixed rules and prepared policies gave way to more informed decisions powered by the right information delivered at the right time, whether through customer relationship management (CRM) or enterprise resource planning (ERP) or other applications. The new step is to provide simulation, prediction, optimization and other analytics, not simply information, to empower even more decision flexibility at the time and place of every business process action. The new step looks into the future, predicting what can or will happen.

Client Computing. Virtualization is bringing new ways of packaging client computing applications and capabilities. As a result, the choice of a particular PC hardware platform, and eventually the OS platform, becomes less critical. Enterprises should proactively build a five to eight year strategic client computing roadmap outlining an approach to device standards, ownership and support; operating system and application selection, deployment and update; and management and security plans to manage diversity.

IT for Green. IT can enable many green initiatives. The use of IT, particularly among the white collar staff, can greatly enhance an enterprise’s green credentials. Common green initiatives include the use of e-documents, reducing travel and teleworking. IT can also provide the analytic tools that others in the enterprise may use to reduce energy consumption in the transportation of goods or other carbon management activities.

Reshaping the Data Center. In the past, design principles for data centers were simple: Figure out what you have, estimate growth for 15 to 20 years, then build to suit. Newly-built data centers often opened with huge areas of white floor space, fully powered and backed by a uninterruptible power supply (UPS), water-and air-cooled and mostly empty. However, costs are actually lower if enterprises adopt a pod-based approach to data center construction and expansion. If 9,000 square feet is expected to be needed during the life of a data center, then design the site to support it, but only build what’s needed for five to seven years. Cutting operating expenses, which are a nontrivial part of the overall IT spend for most clients, frees up money to apply to other projects or investments either in IT or in the business itself.

Social Computing. Workers do not want two distinct environments to support their work – one for their own work products (whether personal or group) and another for accessing “external” information. Enterprises must focus both on use of social software and social media in the enterprise and participation and integration with externally facing enterprise-sponsored and public communities. Do not ignore the role of the social profile to bring communities together.

Security – Activity Monitoring. Traditionally, security has focused on putting up a perimeter fence to keep others out, but it has evolved to monitoring activities and identifying patterns that would have been missed before. Information security professionals face the challenge of detecting malicious activity in a constant stream of discrete events that are usually associated with an authorized user and are generated from multiple network, system and application sources. At the same time, security departments are facing increasing demands for ever-greater log analysis and reporting to support audit requirements. A variety of complimentary (and sometimes overlapping) monitoring and analysis tools help enterprises better detect and investigate suspicious activity – often with real-time alerting or transaction intervention. By understanding the strengths and weaknesses of these tools, enterprises can better understand how to use them to defend the enterprise and meet audit requirements.

Flash Memory. Flash memory is not new, but it is moving up to a new tier in the storage echelon. Flash memory is a semiconductor memory device, familiar from its use in USB memory sticks and digital camera cards. It is much faster than rotating disk, but considerably more expensive, however this differential is shrinking. At the rate of price declines, the technology will enjoy more than a 100 percent compound annual growth rate during the new few years and become strategic in many IT areas including consumer devices, entertainment equipment and other embedded IT systems. In addition, it offers a new layer of the storage hierarchy in servers and client computers that has key advantages including space, heat, performance and ruggedness.

Virtualization for Availability. Virtualization has been on the list of top strategic technologies in previous years. It is on the list this year because Gartner emphases new elements such as live migration for availability that have longer term implications. Live migration is the movement of a running virtual machine (VM), while its operating system and other software continue to execute as if they remained on the original physical server. This takes place by replicating the state of physical memory between the source and destination VMs, then, at some instant in time, one instruction finishes execution on the source machine and the next instruction begins on the destination machine.

However, if replication of memory continues indefinitely, but execution of instructions remains on the source VM, and then the source VM fails the next instruction would now place on the destination machine. If the destination VM were to fail, just pick a new destination to start the indefinite migration, thus making very high availability possible.

The key value proposition is to displace a variety of separate mechanisms with a single “dial” that can be set to any level of availability from baseline to fault tolerance, all using a common mechanism and permitting the settings to be changed rapidly as needed. Expensive high-reliability hardware, with fail-over cluster software and perhaps even fault-tolerant hardware could be dispensed with, but still meet availability needs. This is key to cutting costs, lowering complexity, as well as increasing agility as needs shift.

Mobile Applications. By year-end 2010, 1.2 billion people will carry handsets capable of rich, mobile commerce providing a rich environment for the convergence of mobility and the Web. There are already many thousands of applications for platforms such as the Apple iPhone, in spite of the limited market and need for unique coding. It may take a newer version that is designed to flexibly operate on both full PC and miniature systems, but if the operating system interface and processor architecture were identical, that enabling factor would create a huge turn upwards in mobile application availability.

“This list should be used as a starting point and companies should adjust their list based on their industry, unique business needs and technology adoption mode,” said Carl Claunch, vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner. “When determining what may be right for each company, the decision may not have anything to do with a particular technology. In other cases, it will be to continue investing in the technology at the current rate. In still other cases, the decision may be to test/pilot or more aggressively adopt/deploy the technology.”

Friday, February 5, 2010

Microsoft to patch 26 holes in Windows, Office

Microsoft will patch 26 holes next week, including critical ones in Windows, one affecting the kernel of 32-bit versions, and several holes in Office, the company said Thursday in a preview of its Patch Tuesday.

Five of the 13 bulletins affect vulnerabilities that could lead to remote code execution and they are rated critical. The bulletins affect Windows 2000, XP, Vista, and Windows 7, as well as Server 2003 and 2008, Office XP, Office 2003 and Office 2004 for Mac, according to the advisory.

"The Office-related bulletins are both rated Important and would require user action to be exploited [usually in the form of convincing a user to open a specially crafted file]," Jerry Bryant, a senior security communications manager at Microsoft, wrote in a blog post. "The vulnerabilities only affect older versions of Office so customers on Office 2007 or Office 2008 for Mac will have no actions this month."

Included in the bulletins will be a fix for a hole in the kernel of 32-bit versions of Windows that Microsoft disclosed two weeks ago, Bryant said.

Meanwhile, Microsoft will not have fixes ready by Tuesday for two other issues--a hole in Internet Explorer that could lead to data leakage and which was disclosed on Wednesday, and a hole in the Server Message Block file-sharing protocol that was disclosed in November.

"We are not aware of any attacks on these vulnerabilities and continue to encourage customers to implement the mitigations and workarounds outlined in the advisories," Bryant wrote.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

PSP gets video downloads too with Go!

You can now download tele from the BBC and Sky, along with movies to watch on your PSP with Sony’s new Go! View service. While we still wait for Sony to launch a film and TV download series for PS3, at least we have Go! View for PSP. The Go! View website offers TV shows and films for a free. The current line up includes Lost, Heroes, plenty of comedies and documentaries, along with sporting highlights from Sky Sports and a smattering of recent blockbusters.

Ultimate internet experience with JooJoo


Fusion garage’s JooJoo tablet PC makes conecting to internet qucik and easy. Relaxing on your couch at home or travelling in a train, JooJoo connects you with the world in quickest and simplest way.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Touch phone: Technical data of the HTC Trophy

Recently, a picture of the HTC Trophy was leaked. The picture was also accompanied by a list of technical aspects of this mobile device. They were published on HTCPedia.com, a website for HTC users with news and information about the company HTC, including its smartphones and accessories.

The features of the HTC Trophy include:

* A wide 3-inch capacitive touch screen
* A Qualcomm MSM7227 600MHz processor
* It has 512MB of ROM and 256MB of RAM
* TouchFLO 3D
* It is a very thin device: Only 11mm thickness
* It has a built-in 5-megapixel camera (which is perfect for those who like to take those unexpected pictures at any time)
* It comes with a 3.5mm audio jack
* Slot to insert microSD memory cards
* WiFi and 3G connectivity (although there is no clear indication about what type of 3G will be supported)

Of course, the specs are very decent but not quite impressive. At this point, we don’t see a strong reason to spend money by buying this mobile phone, especially if we keep in mind that some smartphones with Snapdragon processors and 3.7-inch touch screens are starting to appear on the market. But maybe some new features will be announced soon.

Anyway, it is interesting to see that this gadget has a really slim design with a thickness of only 11 mm (so it is thinner than the original Motorola RAZR V3, which has a thickness of 14 mm).

At this time, nothing is known about the launch date. And the price is also a mystery.


Saturday, January 30, 2010

Water Powered Cell Phones by 2010

Yet another cool invention from Samsung. After they did break many European and American markets, they plan to knock out those solar power fanatics, by using water as a power source. Yes, you heard right. They intend to make fuel cell batteries that can power anything you can use in your pocket (cell phone, radio, mp3, etc). In fact, it’s not an invention in the full sense of meaning. It’s merely an innovation, an effort to bring the fuel cell technology to the market.

New inventions for 2010! (aka the future)

Confused? then let me explain. We’re currently in the future that as a child I looked forward to but it’s slightly more disappointing than I expected it to be, for instance the following things are missing:

  • Flying Cars – car’s don’t really seem to have changed at all…
  • Space Bases/Travel/Stuff – 50% of the stuff we send into space explodes :(
  • Robots – OK we have a few things that can [vacuum your carpet], but nothing more really…

Nothing particularly outrageous, but still they’re all wrong :(

So here are my predictions for 2010 (the new future). They’re split into two categories:

  • Concrete predictions – Stuff that totally will happen!
  • Fluffy predictions – fluffy ideas that I can argue I got right – possibly contains humour

As a side note this idea has been totally scraped from the [last Lug Radio podcast] but now that it’s under a [Creative Commons License] it’s all good :D.

Fasten your seatbelts…

Concrete Predictions

  • 1 Terabyte iPod – that’s a lot of songs kids
  • Nuclear Fusion – putting stuff together can create at least as much energy as breaking it apart!
  • Electric Cars – like the [Tesla] but I think that they’re going to become more common as better batteries are invented

Fluffy Predictions

  • iPod connections on everything – most probably your microwave
  • A generation of Adults with massive forearms from playing Wii too much in their childhood
  • Linux kicking ass on the desktop – yeah yeah laugh it up, one day it will come true…
  • Companies becoming more open – more open development, methods, what they’re thinking, what they’re planning etc
  • Maybe a laboratory under the sea….maybe in another 10 or so years… :)

Come on then, what are your predictions for 2010?

Friday, January 29, 2010

Mobile GPS software: Nokia launches a free navigation service


In these days, it doesn’t matter if you don’t have a good sense of orientation when you are driving. It is enough if you have one of those devices known as satellite navigators (aka automotive navigation systems or satnav) at hand.

But those gadgets are not cheap at all. Currently, the most inexpensive satellite navigator costs about $100, and the most sophisticated one costs about $400. Besides, if you need additional services such as traffic reports or suggestions about how to avoid traffic congestions, then you have to pay a monthly subscription.

However, all of this might change soon. Satellite navigation is moving more toward the mobile phones market. And now, Nokia has launched a free satnav service, which is called OVI Maps. This service does not even require an Internet connection in order to operate.

In sharp contrast with other similar services, the OVI Maps users won’t have to update the maps themselves or download several updates from Internet. Instead, Nokia stores those maps directly (and automatically) on mobile phones.

If you want to know more about this service, please click here

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Hands On With the Apple iPad The iPad underwhelms in terms of hardware and software, but there’s a lot of potential for innovative content.

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Hardware: Awkward to handle

While the iPad is super slim at only a half-inch thick, I had some difficulty handling it. At 1.5 pounds, it is too heavy to hold in one hand, which is troublesome if you plan on using it as an e-reader. Other e-readers, like Amazon's Kindle 2 or the COOL-ER e-reader, are much lighter in hand and therefore make for a much more comfortable user experience. Using two hands is much more comfortable, but if you're reading a long novel, that could get quite tiresome.

Compared side-by-side, the iPad's 9.7-inch 1024-by-768-pixel LED-backlit display appeared dimmer than my iPhone 3G's (auto-brightness disabled, brightness set to maximum). Whites, in particular, looked much brighter on my iPhone. Apple had no comment, however, when I inquired about the difference. Although, one Apple spokesperson pointed out that a phone--which we expect to use outdoors as easily as indoors--might need to be brighter.



iPad OS: A giant iPhone interface

One of the biggest rumors leading up to the event was that iPhone OS 4.0 would be released in conjunction with the iPad. Instead, the iPad is running iPhone OS 3.2 (which has not been released for actual iPhones yet).

The lack of a fresh, new interface for the iPad is disappointing. There might be some incremental differences between versions 3.1 and 3.2, but to me on the surface, the iPad's interface looked exactly like a blown-up version of my iPhone 3GS'. And in my opinion, the OS doesn't translate very well from the much smaller iPhone 3G to the iPad. It's not so much about the touch aspect of the interface; in fact, navigating by touch is a huge benefit on this roomy screen, superior to, say, the joystick-based navigation of the comparably sized, non-touch Amazon Kindle DX screen. But images, icons, and text aren't as crisp as expected on the higher-resolution iPad. I found it much like watching standard definition video on an HDTV; Apple doesn't seem to have optimized the operating system's visuals for the iPad's display.

Because of the larger display, pretty much all of the native applications we're used to viewing on the iPhone look and function better on the iPad. Video playback, in particular, is stunning on the iPad, but we're disappointed by the lack of Flash support (though that exclusion wasn't exactly surprising, it remains a grievous omission).
As a photo viewer, the iPad shines. Photos looked superb on the iPad's display, and it uses all of the familiar multitouch gestures (flick, pinch to zoom) found on the iPhone's photo app. The iPad's photo application is much better than the iPhone's, too, with on-the-fly slideshow creation (complete with transitions) and different ways of viewing the images (including sorting by places, people, events, and a mini-thumbnail bar at the bottom of the screen to jump quickly to other photos in the album). Unfortunately, the sorting capabilities will only work if you're using iPhoto--which means that those of who use any number of alternative imaging applications for the PC or the Mac (the majority of potential iPad users) are left in the dark with regard to those features.

Touch keyboard disappoints


Like the rest of the OS, the touch keyboard is a larger version of the iPhone's. But unlike on the iPhone, the keyboard has no letter magnification when you press a key, and I found I missed this visual cue immensely. And unsurprisingly, it lacks haptic feedback (part of Android phones). You get no physical or visual feedback when you press a key and that's frustrating if you're trying to pound out a long e-mail. The experience, oddly, is akin to typing on the native Android OS' touch keyboard.

Apple will be offering a keyboard dock accessory, which gives you an actual physical keyboard to work with ($69). You can also place it in the iPad Case ($39), which allows you to angle it slightly. This feels much more comfortable than just laying the tablet flat and typing. Both of these items are sold separately, though.

iPhone apps don't fly on iPad


One of the big concerns among developers and users before the iPad's announcement was whether iPhone apps would work on the device. Thankfully, they do, but the experience isn't exactly ideal. You can either view an iPhone app as a small window or doubled to fill the display. I demoed the Assassin's Creed and Oregon Trail apps, and was put off by the obvious pixelation. Text in Facebook looked fuzzy, too.

Clearly, this an interim fix until actual apps are developed for the iPad. And I expect many app makers will create versions optimized for iPad. I see a lot of gaming potential for the iPad, but cool 3D graphics game like Assassins Creed just doesn't work on the iPad.

Luckily, the iPad isn't shipping for another 60 days, so hopefully more content will be developed by then. And who knows? Some of the issues I've noticed on this demo unit may be fixed by then.

Right now, I'm not sold on either the hardware or the software. But excellent, optimized content might change my opinion.



Wednesday, January 27, 2010

New Invention Ideas & Cool Gadgets


Exclusive Garia Luxury Golf Car

Golf is often associated with old men who have nothing better to do than fill their time, hitting a small ball across miles of land. But, the game is played by everyone, and a new company have catered for the hardcore golfer, willing to invest heavily into their pasttime. Golf can be relatively expensive at the best of times, with the correct clubs, correct bag, correct balls and a course membership. Well add on top of all that another $17,499 and you will also be able to afford this new...


Computer

Personal computers are now commonplace in most homes throughout the world, and are relied on heavily by both individuals and businesses. The invention of the computer is relatively new, emerging into our lives relatively late in the 20th century. The technology to build such intricate and sophisticated systems was simply not available prior to this, though advancements in microelectronics made the vision of a computer a realistic one. The two innovations in electronics which allowed for...

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Norton Launches New 2010 Products with New Detection Technologies

With cybercrime a constant menace online, Norton's latest 2010 products has a new security model to combat the multitude of malware and phishing threats. Known as Quorum, this new method "tracks files and applications and dozens of their attributes such as their age, download source, digital signature, and prevalence. These attributes are then combined using complex algorithms to determine a reputation. As a file is distributed across the Internet and these attributes change, Quorum updates the reputation of the file. This reputation is especially important when a file is new, likely to be a threat, and traditional defenses are not likely to detect it."



HWM's editor, David Chieng had an opportunity to talk with Mr. David Hall, Regional Consumer Product Marketing Manager for Symantec Asia Pacific recently, with a HWM ViewPoint video as the result.

Norton Launches New 2010 Products with New Detection Technologies
Systems and Software | Just Announced
Fri 23 Oct 2009

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With cybercrime a constant menace online, Norton's latest 2010 products has a new security model to combat the multitude of malware and phishing threats. Known as Quorum, this new method "tracks files and applications and dozens of their attributes such as their age, download source, digital signature, and prevalence. These attributes are then combined using complex algorithms to determine a reputation. As a file is distributed across the Internet and these attributes change, Quorum updates the reputation of the file. This reputation is especially important when a file is new, likely to be a threat, and traditional defenses are not likely to detect it."

HWM's editor, David Chieng had an opportunity to talk with Mr. David Hall, Regional Consumer Product Marketing Manager for Symantec Asia Pacific recently, with a HWM ViewPoint video as the result.





Availability, Compatibility and Pricing

Norton Internet Security 2010 and Norton AntiVirus 2010 are available now for purchase through retailers and the Symantec online store at www.in.symantecstore.com as well as various retail locations and online. Norton 2010 products support Microsoft Windows XP, Windows Vista and Windows 7. All latest versions (2009, 2010) of Norton flagship products including Norton 360, Norton Internet Security and Norton AntiVirus will be Microsoft Windows 7 compatible as of the general availability (GA) of the new operating system. Norton users of these products with a valid subscription will receive the compatibility updates delivered automatically online at no additional cost.

The suggested retail price for Norton Internet Security 2010 is SGD89.00 for a three PC license and SGD59.00 for a single PC license and for Norton AntiVirus 2010 is SGD65.00 for a three PC license and SGD39.00 for a single PC license. The price includes one-year service subscription to use the product and receive Symantec’s protection updates. All Norton Internet Security and Norton AntiVirus users with a valid product subscription are eligible to receive the latest product updates via the subscription service model. For
more information, visit the Norton Update center at http://updatecenter.norton.com.

Monday, January 25, 2010

8 Mobile Technologies to Watch in 2009, 2010


Analyst firm Gartner has just released a report that highlights eight up-and-coming mobile technologies which they predict will impact the mobile industry over the course of the next two years. According to Nick Jones, vice president and analyst at the firm, the technologies they've identified will evolve quickly and will likely pose issues that will have to be addressed by short term strategies.

The eight technologies identified include the following:

Bluetooth 3.0

This is one of the no-brainers on the list. The bluetooth 3.0 specification will be released this year and devices will start to hit the shelves by 2010. At this point, it's expected that the 3.0 spec will include faster speeds, reportedly transferring files at 480 megabits per second in close proximity and 100 megabits per second at 10 meters. It will also feature an ultra-low-power mode that Gartner predicts will enable new peripherals, sensors, and applications, such as health monitoring. The technology will be backwards compatible, allowing old devices to communicate with new ones, so there's no reason for it not take off in the upcoming years

Mobile User Interfaces + Mobile Web/Widgets

Mobile user interfaces and mobile web/widgets were listed separately, accounting for two items on the list, but we think they can be lumped together. They all point to how mobile computing is rapidly becoming a new platform for everything from consumer mobile apps to B2E (business-to-employee) and B2C (business-to-customer). (Gartner did not include B2B on their list.) Modern day smartphones like the iPhone, Android, Blackberry, the upcoming Pre, and others deliver better interfaces for browsing the web, thus making it accessible to more people. Widget-like applications, including those that replicate thin client technology, will become more common especially in B2C strategies. Yet the mobile web still has challenges ahead. For example, there are no standards for browser access to handset services like the camera or GPS, the report notes.


Location Awareness

Location sensing, powered by GPS as well as Wi-Fi and triangulation, opens up new possibilities for mobile social networking and presence applications. Technology's earliest adopters are already familiar with social networks like Brightkite and Loopt which let you reveal your location to a network of friends. But we're still on the tip of this iceberg. Take for example, the iPhone IM client Palringo, they're just now adding location services to their application. This allows users to see how far away their contacts are, introducing a whole new dimension to mobile communication. Over the next year or two, this sort of technology is expected to become more commonplace, but it will also raise questions about privacy. Will you want your network of online friends and acquaintances to really know your exact location? Will turning off location awareness signal that you're up to something sneaky (so asks the suspicious wife, husband, boss, etc.)? As a society, we will have to answer these questions and more in the near future.

Near Field Communication (NFC)


NFC is a technology that provides a way for consumers to use their mobile phones for making payments, among other things. It's something that has taken off in many countries worldwide, but certainly not all, and definitely not in the United States just yet. Unfortunately, Gartner predicts that the move towards mobile payment systems will still not occur this year or the next in mature markets like the U.S. and Western Europe. Instead, NFC is more likely to take off in emerging markets. Other uses of the technology, such as the ability to transfer photos from phone to digital photo frames, will also remain elusive to more developed markets.

802.11n & Cellular Broadband

802.11n, a specification for wireless local area networks (WLANs), initially gave us pause. Although not ratified as an official standard yet, the technology is already commonplace. However, until it "goes gold" so to speak, it won't really infiltrate the mobile world. Even the ubiquitous iPhone only support 802.11 b/g at the moment.

On the flip side, the other internet connection technology, cellular broadband, has the potential to make Wi-Fi almost unnecessary, at least for achieving high speeds. In addition to mobile phones, laptop makers will likely continue to incorporate this technology into their netbooks and notebooks using modern chipsets that provide superior performance to our current crop of add-on cards and dongles.

Display Technologies

Display technologies will also see improvements in the upcoming years. New technologies like active pixel displays, passive displays and pico projectors will have an impact. Pico projectors - the tiny portable projectors we saw being introduced at this year's CES - will enable new mobile use cases. Instant presentations in informal settings could become more common when there isn't large, cumbersome equipment to set up. The different types of display technologies introduced in 2009 and 2010 will become important differentiators between devices and will impact user selection criterion, says Gartner.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Latest Invention: Washing Machine That Doesn't Need Water

British company Xeros looks forward to conquer the American market with its latest invention, a new washing system able to save a lot of water using nylon beads. The beads tumble wash clothes using 90 percent less water than traditional washers.

In addition, the company's latest invention, which is currently in the development stage, requires less detergent. Xeros claims that there would be no need for tumble drying and if the homes in the United States would switch to the new system, the emissions of carbon dioxide would be considerably reduced. The result would be as though 5 million vehicles have been removed from the road. The company also says that the new washing machine will save 1.2 billion tons of water each year, which equals 17 million swimming pools.

The washing machines does its job using small nylon beads that eliminate stains off clothes and lock them into the molecular structure of the nylon. The beads can be used for hundreds of washes and afterwards they can be easily recycled. The technology behind the new washing machine is the result of a research carried out at the University of Leeds. It has been used in a concept washing machine by the Cambridge Consultants.

After carrying out tests for over three years, Xeros, a spinout from the University, managed to achieve an agreement with Kansas City-based GreenEarth Cleaning, which intends to market Xeros' latest invention across North American continent in 2010.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Lockheed Martin IronClad PC-on-a-Stick secures Desktop and Data for Telecommuters


The IronClad shrinks a laptop' hard drive, including the entire operating system, software applications, and files, onto a fully encrypted flash drive - a PC-on a-stick that delivers hardware-level protection against today's most insidious malware threats

For most people the name Lockheed Martin relates to missiles, rockets, simulators, robotics, satellites, aircraft and advanced military systems but look up the company’s “about us” page on the global web site, and you’ll see that the 140,000 LM employees who bring in around US$43 billion in revenues each year, see themselves as working for a security company. Which might serve as some degree of confidence that the company’s new IronClad “PC on a stick” USB drive offers military-strength security for their out-of-office computing. The IronClad shrinks a laptop’s hard drive, including the entire operating system, software applications, and files, onto a fully encrypted flash drive - a “PC on a stick” that delivers hardware-level protection against today’s most insidious malware threats, and it costs way less than a Longbow helicopter, a Cassini satellite, Titan rocket or SR-71 Blackbird.

The IronClad™ is a totally secure “PC on a stick” which users on-the-go can plug into just about any computer or laptop in the world, and have instant, secure access to their own personal desktop and files.

The IronClad technology runs the operating system directly off of the flash drive, meaning the user’s files never touch the hard drive of the borrowed computer, and the device leaves no trace that it was ever there.

“Imagine leaving the office at the end of the day and, instead of slinging a laptop bag on your shoulder, you tuck a flash drive the size of a stick of gum in your pocket,” said Charles Croom, Lockheed Martin’s Vice President of Cyber Security Solutions. “With IronClad drives, employees who need to work at home or on travel, or field operatives who deploy around the country or around the globe, can carry not just their files but their entire computer on a three-inch USB drive. We’ve built a smart network around each drive, so IT managers have round-the-clock control of and visibility into the status and security of every device.”

Steve Ryan, senior vice president at IronKey said, “USB storage devices are rendered relatively useless without the proper authentication and security precautions in place. IronKey is a security company first and foremost, and IronClad drives leverage IronKey’s highly secure architecture design. We are very pleased to be working with Lockheed Martin to deliver this trusted, secure product with hardware-only password checking, secure virtual desktop and remote management capabilities.”

IronClad technology works by integrating advanced features at the hardware, software, and network levels: Rugged, Secure Hardware: Built on IronKey’s proven secure USB drives, each IronClad drive includes at least 8GB of 256-bit encrypted storage, wrapped in a rugged, water- and shock-resistant metal casing.

Patent-Pending Mobile Computing Software: Custom Lockheed Martin technology lets users run their entire desktop – from the operating system to specific applications and files – directly off of the USB drive. Built-in advanced virus protection lets users plug into any shared or public computer with confidence.

Network-Wide Management: Each IronClad drive is a node on a centrally-managed network that lets IT organizations control security policies, keep watch on each drive, and carefully manage the applications that can or cannot be installed on the drive.

Croom noted that IronClad technology is envisioned as a key component of an organization’s cyber security strategy. “Data at the ‘edge’ – carried by your mobile employees on laptops and smart phones – is significantly harder to physically protect than the data inside the walls of your building,” he said. “The enterprise management tools built into each IronClad drive make it significantly easier to monitor, control and manage your cyber security profile. We envision this system as a key component of any IT organization’s smart, layered cyber security architecture.” IronClad technology will be featured at the 13th Annual Congressional Internet Caucus Advisory Committee Kickoff Technology Policy Exhibition, on January 26, 2010.

IronClad drives and enterprise management software are available directly from Lockheed Martin and will soon be available via Lockheed Martin’s GSA schedule purchasing vehicle.