Thursday, April 16, 2015

Frustrated with the battery life of your tablet? Here are 4 tablets that have the longest battery life!

Tablets are the ultimate go to couch companion but having to have this experience short-lived is disappointing to say the least. Hence the necessity of weighing the best options to guide your needs.
Here are 4 tablets with best battery life.


 LG G PAD 10.1





With nearly 14 hours of battery life, the LG G Pad 10.1 most definitely wins the endurance race. But the tablet goodness doesn't stop there. This slate sports a bright 10.1-inch display with 128- x 800-pixel resolution. It comes with 16GB of flash memory, but -- unlike much of the competition -- you can add up to 32GB more via the microSD card slot. Plus, the preloaded QPair app can quickly pair your smartphone with your tablet.



LENOVO YOGA TABLET 10 HD

Uniquely, the Lenovo Yoga Tablet 10 HD+ features an adjustable kickstand and hinge, which allows you to stand the tablet up for better viewing. And you'll be able to stream plenty of Netflix, thanks to the 13:01 of battery life endurance. This Android tablet features a full-HD 1920 x 1200-pixel display and front-facing speakers for an even better cinema experience.





LENOVO YOGA TABLET 2

The 12 hours and 37 minutes of battery life is a good reason to love the Lenovo Yoga Tablet 2, but it's not the only one. This 10-inch Android 4.4 KitKat tablet sports a built-in kickstand and curved edge that allows you to use the tablet in multiple modes. The front-facing speakers positively boom audio at you, Plus, on the software front, Lenovo adds a quick-settings menu called Bottom Switch, which gives you easy access to various settings.




LG G PAD 7

The vivid, 1280 x 800 IPS display and solid audio quality are enough reasons to give the LG G Pad 7 a second look. With a marathon endurance of 11 hours and 18 minutes and you've got a no-brainer holiday gift on your hands. We also love that you can add to the 8GB of onboard storage via a microSD card slot.








Wednesday, April 15, 2015

And did you know dead batteries bounce?




One rumoured and simple test to determine a flat battery from a good one is the dead battery bounce – drop them on the floor, and the flat ones bounce. This has been met with a certain degree of skepticism, with many claiming the technique has no scientific basis at all. However, the matter has now been settled with the results of a peer-reviewed study from researchers at Princeton University published in the Journal of Materials Chemistry.

Monday, April 13, 2015

About Samsung Galaxy S6

One of the top mobile brands are at it again, with the recently released galaxy S6, the mobile technology fanatics have a new study item.
It is being called the best android phone of all time...if that's true, here are some major specifications.
 
 
Body
  Dimensions 143.4 x 70.5 x 6.8 mm (5.65 x 2.78 x 0.27 in)
Weight 138 g (4.87 oz)
Build Corning Gorilla Glass 4 back panel
SIM Nano-SIM
 - Fingerprint sensor (PayPal certified)
- Samsung Pay (Visa, MasterCard certified)
Display Type Super AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
Size 5.1 inches (~70.7% screen-to-body ratio)
Resolution 1440 x 2560 pixels (~577 ppi pixel density)
Multitouch Yes
Protection Corning Gorilla Glass 4
 - TouchWiz UI
Platform OS Android OS, v5.0.2 (Lollipop)
Chipset Exynos 7420
CPU Quad-core 1.5 GHz Cortex-A53 & Quad-core 2.1 GHz Cortex-A57
GPU Mali-T760MP8
Memory Card slot No
Internal 32/64/128 GB, 3 GB RAM
Camera Primary 16 MP, 2988 x 5312 pixels, optical image stabilization, autofocus, LED flash, check quality
Features Geo-tagging, touch focus, face detection, Auto HDR, panorama
Video 2160p@30fps, 1080p@60fps, 720p@120fps, HDR, dual-video rec., check quality
Secondary 5 MP, 1440p@30fps, dual video call, Auto HDR
Sound Alert types Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
Loudspeaker Yes
3.5mm jack Yes
Comms WLAN Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac, dual-band, Wi-Fi Direct, hotspot
Bluetooth v4.1, A2DP, LE, apt-X
GPS Yes, with A-GPS, GLONASS, Beidou
NFC Yes
Infrared port Yes
Radio No
USB microUSB v2.0, USB Host
Features Sensors Accelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass, barometer, heart rate, SpO2
Messaging SMS(threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Mail, IM
Browser HTML5
Java Yes, via Java MIDP emulator
 - Wireless charging (Qi/PMA) - market dependent
- ANT+ support
- S-Voice natural language commands and dictation
- Smart stay
- OneDrive (115 GB cloud storage)
- Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
- MP4/DivX/XviD/WMV/H.264 player
- MP3/WAV/WMA/eAAC+/FLAC player
- Photo/video editor
- Document editor




























































































































































Disclaimer: we cannot guarantee all information on this page is 100% correct













Sunday, April 20, 2014

Iphone 6: Sneak peek


There has been several rumours from different sources claiming the iphone 6 will be out by August or September 2014, well; let's see what apple's got for us this time. 

The new sleek design is going to melt Samsung android phone addicts till they drop to their knees. It offers wide variety of new features running on iOS 7. 

I hope this is going to be More user friendly as is the excuse of the competitions addict.

@heriibk (Webman)

Apple Patents Android-Like Gesture Unlocking Tech For Mobile Devices


Apple has a pair of new patent applications published by the USPTO today (via AppleInsider) which describe a gesture-based unlocking system for iPhone or iPad devices. The system is more sophisticated than existing implementations, however, and includes a number of provisions to make the encryption even harder to frustrate the current methods employed by Android devices.
Apple’s patent describes gesture lock screen user interface elements that can be changed by a user, in terms of both size and position. Changing size makes them easier or harder to hit, and rearranging their position could also frustrate potential hacking attempts by making patterns more unpredictable. The system can also selectively use invisible dots too, which aren’t present on the UI but which work in tandem with visible hit points to track a path.
Other variables that could add to gesture complexity include counting things like the speed of entry, pauses and other timing elements into the code. Entering the same gesture different ways would therefore produce different results, with only one right way to trigger an unlock.
There’s still more, too – the system supports the use of multi-finger input, and has a code strength support meter not unlike those used for text and number based passcodes today. It would rank patterns as high or low based on how long they were, how complex, how random and other factors.
Apple isn’t likely to build this system into any devices in the near future, since it skirts too closely to drawing comparisons to Android, but it does show the Mac maker thinking in-depth about what comes after the alphanumeric password, since conceivably future systems will need much more complex security measures to frustrate hacking attempts.
@drizzled
NICE ONE ANY WAY

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

DriveSafe in-car accessories


Griffin a company specialized in design and manufacture of computer peripherals, consumer electronics, and accessories for smartphones and mobile devices has launched its DriveSafe range of in-car products, a family of docks and adaptors which are all aimed at making smartphone use while driving as safe as possible.
A selection of in-car mounts which starts with the RoadTrip HandsFree, 
A dock that plugs into the cars cigarette power socket and then uses a FM transmitter to then send your music to the cars FM stereo.
For those with an AUX adapter you can also get the WindowSeat HandsFree and the WindowMount Handsfree both which come with an AUX cable and in-line mic for handsfree calling.
There's even a tape adapter for those still rocking the in-car cassette player, by placing the tape adapter into the cassette player an AUX cable then feeds into the devices headphones socket and with an in-line mic handsfree calling is still just as easy.
There's seven products in total with prices ranging from £19.99 (N5,000) for the tape adapter up to £64.99 (N17,000) for the all-in-one RoadTrip HandsFree.

ref:T3

Friday, November 8, 2013

iPhone 6: Sneak Peek


Apples iPhone 6 what to expect
Apple’s next-generation iPhone 6 will finally match up to its key Android rivals and pack a 5-inch, Full HD 1080p display. That’s according to new rumours emerging from Japan, published in Mac Fan magazine.
The move to a larger screen would not be a huge surprise. Apple is said to have been testing larger, phablet-style phones for months, with a slew of stories of 6-inch devices emanating from supply-chain sources throughout the summer.
This new piece of tittle tattle, though, says a 5-inch number is nailed-on. While Mac Fan’s sources' credentials as sources of juicy info remain unclear, it's undoubtedly fair to say that a device of that size wouldn’t be seen as too large by most consumers.
The magazine also claims the iPhone 6 will launch in September 2014. That seems almost a given, what with the iPhone 5s and iPhone 5 arriving in the same timeframe in the past two years.
Expect to hear plenty more gossip about Apple’s next iPhone as 2014 looms into view.