Showing posts with label WINDOWS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WINDOWS. Show all posts

Sunday, October 13, 2013

TOP 20 BEST SMART-PHONES OF THE CENTURY


Mobile phones has taken a new form in the present global market. Everyone is searching for the best phone which he or she can possess. So stop searching for mobile phones here and there as i have made your task easier through this post. The phones which secured their place in the top 20s are listed below:

Friday, June 22, 2012

WINDOWS PHONE 8 Vs. ANDROID 4.0 Vs. iOS






Windows Phone 8 vs Android 4.0 vs iOS







Windows Phone 8 vs Android 4.0 vs iOS 6
What does each OS offer?


When you look at the smartphone market today compared to just a few years ago, you'd be surprised at just how different it is. Today's smartphones are slowly taking on more features of PCs than phones – and none more so than the recent release of Windows Phone 8.
You could put this down to hardware, with high end phones such as the Samsung Galaxy S3 or HTC One X both powered by quad core processors, but the software is also continually evolving to support it.

iOS 6, Android 4.0 and now Windows Phone 8 are moving quicker than ever, constantly trying to out-do the others to gain more customers, but also to stay at the forefront of an ever-changing market.

Interface

Windows Phone 8Windows Phone 8 builds upon the easy to recognise system of "Live Tiles". To those unfamiliar, these are squares placed on the home screen that represent different apps, such as a music player or for messaging, that are interactive.
Whilst remaining fundamentally the same, updates from the Windows Phone 7 interface now bring more customisable tiles, to allow you to squeeze even more onto your screen. Another major update sees the company bringing in data management via DataSmart, which perfect for those on limited contracts.
Android, however, provides interactivity through widgets that can be placed on varying home screens. Standard Android 4.0 defaults to five such screens, but customised overlays can boost this to seven. Android is also highly customisable, with different manufacturers offering their own take with skins atop the standard UI from Google.
Apple uses a tried and trusted formula, based upon simplicity. No widgets, no tiles, just a grid of app icons that you scroll through from the home page. Each iteration has added greater functionality, with iOS 6 strengthening Siri and even locking children out of certain areas.

Maps

Windows Phone 8 surprisingly ditches Microsoft's proprietary Bing Maps. On the other hand, its new system is hardly shocking. Windows Phone 8 now brings in the Nokia mapping system, bringing 3D street navigation, and Nokia's Navteq Traffic Service.


iOS 6

Android, somewhat unsurprisingly, bases its mapping system on the well known Google Maps, bringing Street View, 3D and indoor mapping. It provides the sat-nav experience for both pedestrians and motorists through the Navigation app, as well as details of local restaurants, cafés and attractions.
iOS has traditionally also based their mapping on Google's offering. This all changes with iOS 6, with Apple's new proprietary system providing turn by turn navigation, integration with Yelp for business listings, and Siri for voice control. Like the others, there are also 3D maps, a traffic service and a satellite view.
Traffic data is prevalent through all three, although Apple has taken this one step further by allowing anonymised croud-sourced data at the sites of traffic congestion to help you understand what's going on.

Camera

Microsoft hasn't skimped on Windows Phone 8's Camera app, getting a new simple, clean look, with a small menu button that accesses the camera's various settings. Nokia branded handsets are also set to bring over the PureView technology that was made famous in the Nokia 808 PureView.
Android 4.0's camera system brought in minor yet noticeable changes. It packs in varying scene modes, customisable levels white balance and exposure, all helping you to create your ideal shot. A panoramic mode and photo editing are also thrown in, alongside the impressive zero shutter lag.


Google Android

iOS 6 builds upon the work from iOS 5, debuted on the iPhone 4S. Continuing the simplicity theme, settings are all sorted automatically, including whether the flash is used or not. Focus is also automatic, unless you specify a certain area by touching the screen. For those who require a physical shutter button, iOS also allows the use of the up volume button as well as the on screen option.

NFC

Windows Phone 8 packs in Microsoft Wallet, making use of any NFC technology packed into handsets. This is all set to tie in to varying applications installed on the phone, allowing payment via services such as Paypal. Other applications, such as instant pairing of Bluetooth accessories will also be supported.

Google also seems keen to use NFC, using services such as Android Beam and Google Wallet (currently only available in the US). The premier service allows for the instantaneous sharing of contacts, media and apps between two enabled phones, whilst the latter stores your card details to allow instant payment in stores.


NFC

iOS 6 brings in Passbook. Whilst not entirely a NFC based app, it does provide a lot of the same features, keeping varying tickets to sports, the theatre, airlines or store cards all in one easy to access, and constantly updated place.
We're expecting Apple to announce NFC capabilities in the iPhone 5 – given the fact rivals are all over the contactless technology,

Browser

Windows Phone 8 takes internet browsing very seriously, bringing the latest version of Internet Explorer, IE10. This will help keep WP8 at the forefront of the mobile internet browsing, but also keeps you safe whilst you do. IE10 comes with a phishing filter and SmartScreen service to make it harder for you to be tracked by malicious websites.
Internet browsing on Android is a different affair. The standard browser packs in some very cool security features, as well as the ability to save pages for offline reading and tabbed browsing. Also available is Google Chrome, which ports over many of the desktop features, as well syncing history and bookmarks as well as a slicker experience for Android 4.0 devices.


Android 4.0

Safari on the original iPhone changed the level of acceptability from mobile browsing, and iOS 6 brings over more features such as offline reading and integration to iCloud allowing for tab syncing. Plus there are also Smart App Banners which help sites promote their apps, bringing a richer cohesion to the whole iOS platform.

Media

One area that Windows has suffered from before is microSD card support. Thankfully this is rectified in Windows Phone 8, as now Windows Phone 8 allows for media to be easily stored and accessed via a microSD card, as well as supporting the installation of apps onto it. Elsewhere is the support for 1280 x 768 and 1280 x 720 resolutions on top of the current 800 x 480.
Windows Phone 8
Since Android 2.2, Apps to microSD has been a standard feature, as well as supporting stored media. Android 4.0 also offers a standard, clean-looking music player, and a basic video player that ties in deeply with downloads from the Google Play Store.
Google Music also gives a decent option for storing and accessing your music, and the likes of the Samsung Galaxy S3 build on the OS to support a fantastic range of video and audio formats too.
Believe it or not… the company that brought us the iPod also has media prevalent on its OS. It doesn't provide microSD support, but Apple has a habit of making devices with large internal storage to compensate.
Media is handled via both wired and wireless access via iCloud to the iTunes store, which has long provided music and films.
However, the screen size of the iPhone is still too small for extended movie watching, although the on-board audio support is among the best around for a music marathon on the way to work, be it on the iPad, iPod touch or iPhone.

Tablet support

Microsoft went out of its way to show off the new Microsoft Surface tablet, but this is running Windows 8. Whilst there is no word from Microsoft as to whether we will see a Windows Phone 8 Tablet, we would bet that it ties in strongly to Windows 8, as they are both based upon the same kernel to allow easy development on both.
As mentioned, Windows Phone 8 also now supports the 1280x768 resolution, so seeing a tablet running the mobile OS is not as far-fetched as it might once have been.
Android 4.0 was billed as the operating system that united both smartphone technology with tablet PCs. It took the best of 2.3 (Gingerbread) and combined it with 3.2 (Honeycomb) to provide a seamless experience that has been shown off well on the likes of the Asus Transformer Prime and there are even rumours of a Google Nexus tablet.


Microsoft Surface

iOS also has a tablet…you may have heard of it… the iPad. Taking the world by storm since its release, the iPad has grown in popularity and is boosted by iOS 6 bringing Siri over from the iPhone 4S to the new iPad.
iOS 6 is scalable, but also basic in some people's eyes, as well as being too similar to the iPhone experience – se Windows Phone 8's compatibility with 'big' Windows could be a big selling point for those looking for a genuine, but compatible, difference between their tablet and smartphone.

Verdict

Windows Phone 8 builds upon the impressive foundations that its predecessor laid. Bringing over the much loved Live Tiles system, as well as supporting the next generation software, Microsoft has moved its ecosystem to the next level.
Android 4.0 was also a superb refresh of a now established mobile OS. It brings some impressive features, including the multitasking options prevalent on Android 3.2. However with iOS devices selling in record numbers, it's hard to see that dominance being shaken too dramatically any time soon.
Building Android 4.0 from the ground up means that Google has that chance, especially by targeting the budget end of the market, but one factor key to Apple's success is its business market. Tight integration of Windows Phone 8 with Windows 8 could provide a strong platform for Microsoft to continue to stay competitive in a computing market that has seemingly begun to leave it behind.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

MICROSOFT SURFACE TABLET REVIEW AND SPECIFICATIONS



MICROSOFT SURFACE  (MICROSOFT's TABLET)


MICROSOFT SURFACE TABLET SPECIFICATIONS


Device type:      Tablet
OS:                   Windows (RT)
Weight:              23.81 oz (675 g) the average is 15.8 oz (453 g)

Physical size:     10.60 inches
Resolution:        1280 x 720 pixels
Pixel density:     139 ppi
Touchscreen:    Capacitive, Multi-touch
Features:           Light sensor, Scratch-resistant glass

System chip:     NVIDIA Tegra 3+
Processor:        ARM
Graphics processor:Yes
Built-in storage:64 GB
Slot Type:        micro-SD, microSDHC

Camera:           Yes
Features:          Auto focus
Camcorder:      Yes

Browser:          Internet Explorer 10
Supports:         HTML, HTML5, Flash

Positioning:      GPS, A-GPS
Navigation:      Yes

Organizer:       Calendar, Alarm, To-Do, Document viewer (Office 2007, Office 2003, PDF), Calculator, World clock, Timer, Notepad
E-mail:            IMAP, POP3, SMTP, Microsoft Exchange

Wi-Fi:             Yes
USB:               USB 2.0
Other:             OTA sync

Notifications:   Flight mode, Silent mode, Speakerphone
Sensors:          Accelerometer

Voice recording Availability

Officially announced:  18 Jun 2012


MICROSOFT SURFACE REVIEW

Magnesium chassis, vapour deposition coating, cutaway edges, ClearType HD display; the design credentials and the specs for Microsoft's new Windows RT tablet are impressive and in the flesh this is a delightful piece of hardware that looks good – and is practical too.
It's thin, it's light, it's comfortable to hold, it runs Windows RT as excellently as you'd expect, it makes you want to touch it but it's also designed so you can snap the magnetically attached cover into place – in no way similar to any competitor idea...
  • Hands on: Windows 8 review
However, you won't be able to get the Surface tablet until Windows 8 ships – and we can't get its big brother, the Intel Core i5 Surface for Windows 8 Pro, for another three months after that.

Design

The design of the Surface for Windows RT (and the similar Surface for Windows 8 Pro that we didn't see in as much detail) is understated.


Microsoft Surface tablet review

The front is sleek black glass, precision bonded to the magnesium alloy chassis ("we squeezed all the air out," as Microsoft hardware expert Stevie Battiche told TechRadar), with only a Windows logo visible – the word Microsoft doesn't show up on the case anywhere.
Turn it on and the 10.6" screen fills most of the Surface's front display, but the four edges have half an inch of bezel so you can hold it comfortably.


Microsoft Surface tablet review

The Windows logo isn't just for show; it's a touch button that gives you the Start screen when you tap on it, plus the whole bezel is touch-aware so you can swipe across it to bring up the App bar or the switching pane (spending on which way round it is).


Microsoft Surface tablet review

The Surface is light and comfortable to hold; the edges are sloped to give you a comfortable grip (although the edge with the cover connector isn't quite as ergonomic until you connect the cover).
The magnesium alloy chassis is covered with a soft coating that feels durable and expensive (that's the vapour deposition bit; it's chemically bonded rather than just painted on).


Microsoft Surface tablet review

If you don't want to hold it, there's a built-in stand that's like a large hinge running across the entire back of the Surface, with another Windows logo in a slightly matte finish.
The hinge is usually held in place by an array of magnets so it doesn't fall out if you shake the Surface around; on the left there's a little cutout in the edge of the hinge to make it easier to flip out.


Microsoft Surface tablet review

If you've seen Apple's SmartCover on the new iPad 3, then this method of connection won't be a surprise – it's another move that shows Microsoft is intending to go toe-to-toe with the Cupertino brand in the tablet arena.
The Surface tablet also balances well on the hinge, which has two long rubber feet to stabilise it.
With the Touch Cover on, we were able to balance the Surface on a lap for typing like a notebook without it falling forward or tipping over backwards; compare this to the Asus Transformer Prime which always wants to fall backwards, and you'll appreciate this weighting.


Microsoft Surface tablet review

Microsoft has included the fewest ports it could get away with; the bottom edge is filled with the magnetic keyboard connector, the top has the power button and the sides have two speakers, dual microphones, microSD, one USB 2.0 port (USB 3.0 for the Surface Pro) and Micro HDMI (on the surface Pro that's mini DisplayPort), plus a magnetic power connector.


Microsoft Surface tablet review

The magnesium alloy chassis and the precision design give the Surface RT a sturdy feel. Lift it by the corners and twist and there's no flexing at all; we tried the same thing with the frame of a chassis that hadn't been assembled and even without the glass and back it barely moved.
The Microsoft team showing off the tablets weren't cradling them protectively; at one point Battiche tossed a tablet to a colleague. Even without the cover, the Surface should stand up to some punishment.