Wednesday, September 30, 2009

BlackBerry Storm 2 will bee release in October

BlackBerry 8800 (Cingular VersionImage via Wikipedia
This could be it folks, the day quite a few of us (including me!) have been waiting for. Yes, a chance for RIM to make up for its errors and hopefully right the touch-screen smartphone ship.
Indeed, a possible release date, or at the very least, a day around when RIM will be releasing the BlackBerry Storm 2, its new incarnation that has captured the hearts and minds of BlackBerry lovers everywhere.
Ok, that was a little cheesy.
Boy Genius Report has apparently caught wind of a Best Buy inventory listing that shows the store receiving dummy units of the new touch-screen phone on October 25th. What that means is that the actual retail phone will be hitting the store and Verizon, a little bit before or after that date.
While this certainly is far from confirmed, it gives a glimmer of closure to a phone that has been revealed in video multiple times and was rumored to have an imminent release.
Of course, hopefully once released, it doesn’t disappoint like the last one.
Circle that date and apparently you should have $599 ready for it.
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Sunday, September 27, 2009

Top 3 Free Download BlackBerry Themes

bee-movie_blackberry-tehmeNow you can free download most attractive BlackBerry theme from this website. We make it possible for BlackBerry user to free download by simply just one click. This facility of free download is not provided at all, but we work in the best interest of our user. These themes attract you and you feel comfort by using these themes. Now you can download BlackBerry theme by clicking above.







Black Vista Theme (Free download)
black-vista-themetheme1 This is the theme just like the window vista. The most popular them of blackberry now a  days. This theme contain jad file which is just OTA supported mean that you can directly install over the air. When this theme is first lunched there is 2000 download in first day.









Butterfly  Theme (Free download)
butterfilestheme3 Butterfly theme is for all blackberry devices. Mostly woman like this kind of theme which is  more attractive and also romantic one. I am sure you like these themes.

Most used software for Nokia N97 with free download links

Nokia most famous and latest phone for these days because of their smart attractive 3.5 inch touch screen display. Other specifications are screen resolution of 360×640 pixels, and sliding QWERTY keyboard , integrated GPS, the UMTS network, HSDPA, the internal memory of 32 GB, radio The reader,  Bluetooth and Wi-Fi connectivity. One more thing which attracts me that having 5 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics. This can record the DVD quality movie at support 9 formats. With these specifications you can compare with iPhone. Some cool software’s are preinstalled in it. However list of some most used software of Nokia N97 are listed below with download link.

n97-software-image
Mobbler
DOWNLOAD Mobbler
Mobbler stream music into your handset. This is helps you to create the favorite list and also search new artist a great way to organize your music on shelf.
Battery timer for nokia n97 application
This Wight shows the battery charging level.
DOWNLOAD LINK
N97Compass FREE DOWNLOAD LINK
Qik FREE DOWNLOAD LINK
Fring FREE DOWNLOAD LINK
Windows 7 themes for N97
This is free Windows 7 themes work on Nokia n97 and n5800.  FREE DOWNLOAD LINK
Google Maps
DOWNLOAD: Google Maps
Google Maps are also available for mobile. All the functionality  of the desktop application is merge in Mobile software.
source

after a long time AT&T give the MMS facility for iPhone 3GS

AT&T MMS requires iPhone OS 3.1 and a carrier settings update.
Here's what it looks like on a Mac







Unlike other iPhone updates I've installed via iTunes, this one is actually very quick. Very quick. On the other hand, you do have to hard reset the iPhone to enable it. Once it's rebooted, which takes more time than booting a PC, you can use the standard Messages app to send one or more photos with a text message. You'll see the following new toolbar above the virtual keyboard:

Photos have to be added one at a time, which is no big deal. (But I wish Apple would drop the awful iChat-like "thought bubble" UI in this SMS/MMS app. It's just childish looking.)
Needless to say, this being Apple and AT&T, the complaints have already begun rolling in. I'm sure they'll get it right eventually.
source

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Demostration of Surface Technology

This is awesome technology where you can find great work you can say unbelievable work. here is demonstration  watch out and enjoy.








Fast Flip, Google's hardly secret visual news search product, just made its debut today

Fast Flip, Google's hardly secret visual news search product, just made its debut today. It's a premiere that tells us lots about the swirling winds in which the company now finds itself. It also marks two important milestones, one about the slow replacement of news search 1.0 and one about Google's willingness to share its ad revenues with news publishers.

First off, Google search, web search and news search, has been good enough to become and remain the standard for almost a decade. That decade's almost over, though, and we can see news search 1.0 about to fade into history. Cooler than cool was the ability to bring together 4300 or so global news sources into a single interface, with reasonable relevance. The 1.0 experience though has been so list-like, so redundant and duplicative and so lacking clarity as to original source. It's ready to pass on, but needs a few pushes. Bing with its mouse-over capabilities provides on push. The news visualization of Newser provides another.  Politico's mobile app operates smartly on the same principle. Overall, give credit to Apple's cover-flow presentation, which is now flowing from music to the rest of the online world, as Apple itself made it part of the new Safari.

We're visual creatures and we like to use the web to scan, not just read lists, and text.

So Fast Flip as a product, as an experience, does that. As Google will tell you, Sergey Brin has long complained about how long it takes news pages too load. Fast Flip -- on a reader level -- is one attempt to deal with that issue. The news reading experience online, we've all known, isn't what it could be. 

What Fast Flip does then is give us a quick view of the news -- by individual title, by topics, by recommendations -- so that we can scan and zone in on what we want, then click off to it. That's very Google News search-like, but with pictures. So far, more than three dozen publishers are signed up. Google went to top newspapers (the New York Times, the Washington Post), top magazines (Business Week, Elle, Popular Mechanics), top broadcasters (BBC News, Frontline), top web-only sites (Techcrunch, Slate, Salon, Daily Beast) and intriguingly three of top independent investigative sites (Center for Investigative Reporting, Pro Publica, Center for Public Integrity). All the companies represented have opted to be part of the program -- they are essentially licensing content to Google.

For publishers, it's a test, one of many at this point.

"We're trying to find out how users relate to a visual interface," Martin Nisenholtz, senior vice president of digital operations at the New York Times told me, when I asked what was most important about the Fast Flip. "It's purely a research project." Maybe, just maybe, visual search can take readers beyond the news search 1.0 world that Martin describes, "where everything seems to be generic and the algorithm rules." Visual search allows for a "brand presence," something that high-quality news producers have been seeking to reclaim in the digital wilderness.

The company plans to add more, but within the bounds of "keeping it manageable."    

It's a smart list, a good mix of older and newer media.

Scan the screenshots, which Google picks up both by RSS feeds and by the use of its crawler, and you can see pages or parts of then. You can't click on any "link" within the screenshot, of course; clicking takes you to that publisher's page, their own url. It's just another way to browse/search, accessed through Google Labs to search with a link planned from Google News itself, but not yet in place. Fast Flip is available for mobile as well, but only for the iPhone and Android-powered phones. No app through any store; access it through the mobile browser.

Coming, if Fast Flip is a hit: Google will license the technology for use by publishers on their own websites.

What the visual test may be cool, it is the business model that may have greater impact.

Google is providing participating publishers with majority of ad revenues earned on the Fast Flip pages. Those are pages hosted on Google.com. Sure, we may say, Google had to do that. In using screenshots of the pages, it is using the intellectual property of the publishers, beyond any reasonable "fair use" argument. That's true, but it's also the first time in a current news product (News Archive possibly) that I can think of that individual publishers -- unlike the wires of AP, AFP, CP and PA -- got ad revenue shares from the use of their content on Google itself. (It's worth noting that because of those pre-existing wire licensing relationships, Google users clicking on AP and AFP screenshots will land on a Google.com hosted page with that content).

Some of us have been making the argument (Content Bridges: Google and Newspapers: Fairplay, Fair Share and "Fair Use") that a "Fair Share" rationalizing of the Google/newspaper relationship is needed. That new deal would involve Google sharing ad revenue -- earned on Google News and Google.com more generally -- when news content spurred Google usage. 

My sense: Though this is an experiment -- a six-month one, according to Nisenholtz -- in visual news search, it's also a step forward in Google and the news industry coming to a new financial relationship on text as well.

The financial impact of Fast Flip won't be great -- remember it is still in Labs and much of the public may not happen on it for awhile. Still, the principle is one worth marking.

Back, lastly, to Google in the larger landscape.

Take the business landscape. With half the newspaper industry allied with Yahoo (and thus arch-enemy, Microsoft) through the Newspaper Consortium, it needs to redouble efforts to play well and become a better partner with news companies.

Further, it needs to find the kind of success it has found with search and paid search -- dominant #1 player in both -- in news search. Check out the latest Nielsen news numbers for August, and we find Google able to say, "We're #9!" Hardly a grade it is used to getting. In uniques, Google has moved up 22% year over year. That has plugged it into the ninth spot, moving up from the teens.

Still it is way behind Yahoo News, MSNBC, and AOL. It needs a better news mousetrap.

On the political landscape, it needs to continue making nice. Christine Varney has revitalized the Justice Department's Anti-Trust Division. Google's books deal and general search/paid search dominance have put a big target on its back. At times like these, it is good to have friends, and who could ask for better friends than those with printing presses?