Friday, August 28, 2009

Samsung LN52A650 LCD HDTV

With the winning-award technologies and the Touch of Color design Samsung LN52A650 LCD HDTV bring amazing picture quality and enhanced connectivity capabilities that affect a true entertainment for anybody home.
The Samsung LN52A650 52-Inch 1080p 120Hz LCD HDTV with Red Touch of Color is one of the hottest and most wanted High-definition TV on the market today. It is consistently a best seller, due to it’s screen clarity, usability, large and elegance screen reference.
Login by the Samsung LN52A650 LCD tv remote controller in menu navigation is a breeze, as it will take you to any option you want to go to. The Samsung LN52A650 52 is second to none, as it’s 52-inch widescreen is very pleasure while you’re watching, making it the most convenient choice for any TV product. So please check out our Samsung LN52a650 review for more details on this top-level device.
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Apple iPod Touch 8GB

The Apple iPod Touch 8GB MP3 Player with 3,5 inch LCD display is one of the hottest and best selling multymedia devices on the market these days.
Because of its properties, Apple iPod Touch 8GB player, and more than deserves the first place among young people and especially enthusiastic people.
Using Apple iPod Touch 2th generation screen is extreme fun and all to the desired destination can be reached very easily.
Listening music or watching movies, especially playing video games is a special indescribable experience. So feel free to view our Apple iPod Touch review to personally see what you can expected from this beautiful little touch screen device.
This makes it an ideal gift for loved one or friends of the moment when you decide to buy Apple iPod Touch 8GB second generation player. But think quickly in order to run out of copies of your Apple iPod Touch 8GB for the limited supplies of this device and we are not sure that we will soon have enough the iPod Touch available for sale.
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Nokia said: Symbian is not dead

Nokia has denied that its Symbian operating system is being sidelined, despite the launch of a new high-end smartphone tablet based on Linux.
The new Nokia N900 is the first of the company's phones to run on Maemo Linux. Although the company has produced larger Linux-based tablets before, this is the first tablet device to include 3G connectivity.
Nokia says the move to Maemo in its high-end devices doesn't jeopardise Symbian, which the company bought outright only last year. "This is in no way putting Symbian in jeopardy," Anssi Vanjoki, head of sales at Nokia, told Reuters.
"Open-source Symbian is going to be our main platform, and we are expanding and growing it the best we can, both in terms of functionality as well as distribution... populating more and more of our product line with Symbian."
The 3.5in touchscreen device offers "PC-like multitasking" according to Nokia, allowing users to run several apps simultaneously. It also includes Mozilla's 'Fennec' mobile browser, offering full web browsing and support for Adobe Flash.
The device sports a "panoramic homescreen" which can be "personalised with favourite shortcuts, widgets and applications", according to Nokia.

Microsoft cuts Xbox price by 25 percent

By Gabriel Madway and Franklin Paul, reuters
Microsoft Corp plans to slash the price of its high-end Xbox 360 video game console by $100, or 25 percent, stepping up the price war in the video game console market.
Effective Friday, Microsoft will drop the price of the Xbox 360 Elite to $299.99 in the United States, just days after Sony Corp cut the rival PlayStation 3 to $299 from $399. Analysts have said the cuts will pressure Nintendo Co Ltd to lower the price of its best-selling Wii console, which retails for $249, but for now the company is standing firm. "We don't have such a plan," Nintendo spokesman Yasuhiro Minagawa said when asked about a price cut. Among this generation of game consoles, the Xbox is No. 2 in the United States behind the Wii. But U.S. sales of the Xbox are up 17 percent this year, the only console to show growth. The price on the entry-level Xbox Arcade model will stay at $199.99, and Microsoft will phase out its mid-range Xbox Pro model, leaving it with two models. The Pro will sell for $249.99 until supplies run out.
Since PS3, Xbox and Wii are increasingly centerpieces of home entertainment, their sales can spur purchases of software, accessories and other media, and boost traffic at retailers like Wal-Mart Stores and GameStop. And while the unit that runs Xbox is a small part of Microsoft's overall sales -- at about 11 percent -- it is the company's biggest weapon in the battle to control entertainment in the living room. Microsoft spokesman David Dennis said the price cut was in the works for some time and was not a response to Sony's cut. Rather, he said, the price reduction will attract new buyers and help simplify Microsoft's product mix for manufacturers and retailers as well as customers. "It really makes the decision for consumers a lot easier," he said. "They're either price conscious and they gravitate toward the Arcade, or they want the full Xbox 360 experience."
In Europe, the Elite price will shrink by 50 euros ($71) to 249.99 euros, or 199.99 pounds ($324) in Britain. Chris Lewis, head of Xbox Europe, said the cut would help Microsoft match or beat its 2008 performance, when it increased unit sales of Xboxes more than 80 percent in Europe.
Beyond console sales, the cuts by Microsoft and Sony should provide a lift to a broader gaming industry has been stuck in a slump brought on by a lack of big-name releases and a recession that has pinched consumer spending.
Indeed, game publishers like Activision Blizzard have clamored for price cuts, which often boost sales of software. "Software makers should be quite happy about it," KBC Securities analyst Hiroshi Kamide said. "The industry should stage a bit of a recovery in the second half of this year."

First Look: Facebook 3.0 for iPhone

By Daniel Ionescu, PC World
Facebook updated its popular iPhone app, delivering lots of improved features for the official iPhone Facebook 3.0 rev. But sadly, Facebook fails to deliver everything a mobile Facebook warrior could want.
Apple approved version 3.0 of the Facebook app for iPhone Thursday, and it is now available for download from the App Store. Besides the features announced previously, a few other nice touches made it into this version as well.
What's New in Facebook 3.0 for iPhone
The first thing you will notice in the 3.0 Facebook app is the redesigned home screen, which displays the main Facebook functions on a 3-by-3 grid. Unlike in the screenshots in the App store, the grid lines on the home screen are not present in the final version. The app's main screen actually behaves like the iPhone's home screen. You can swipe left/right for another page where you can add news feeds of your friends and Facebook pages you administer. The icons in the grid can also be arranged, in the same way as with the iPhone home screen, by holding your finger on an icon until it starts shaking. Facebook 3.0 for iPhone also adds support for events, and you can now see your upcoming events and RSVP. You can write and read notes from your friends and change your profile picture. The app also gives you complete control over your Facebook photos, so you can create/delete albums, delete photos and photo tags.
The news feed section sees many improvements in Facebook 3.0 for iPhone as well. You can now view the Facebook news feed on your iPhone just as you would on a desktop browser and "Like" statues, posts, or photos. Notifications will be displayed at the bottom of the home screen. A great feature is the addition of landscape viewing of the news feed and you can also visit links without leaving the app, via a built-in browser.

Bing Coming to IPhone Apps

By Nancy Gohring, IDG News Service
Microsoft is targeting the iPhone as another avenue for boosting usage of its Bing search engine.
On Thursday, Microsoft released a software developer kit designed to make it easier for iPhone developers to build access to Bing into their applications. Using the SDK, a developer can build an iPhone application that searches Bing for Web information, images, videos, news and phonebook results.
Developers can only query Bing from applications built on Cocoa or Cocoa Touch, APIs (application programming interfaces) for building applications on the iPhone.
Google is the default search engine in the iPhone's Safari browser, and users can decide to switch that to Yahoo. Otherwise, if iPhone users want to access Bing today they have to type in the URL.
The SDK will also let developers incorporate Bing searches into applications for Macintosh computers.
While Microsoft and Apple compete in the mobile-phone market, other Microsoft services and applications are already available on the iPhone. For instance, the iPhone supports Microsoft's ActiveSync to let people access their Exchange e-mail. In addition, Microsoft's Live Labs group released an iPhone application for Seadragon, the technology that lets users browse through potentially very large images.

The Smartest Non-Smartphones

by Jamie Lendino, pcmag
Smartphones are an expensive proposition. It has little to do with the upfront cost, though, in an age of $49 Ozones and $99 iPhone 3Gs. Instead, the killer is the required unlimited data and Web plans. They're tailored specifically for smartphones and can easily send your monthly bill over $100 if you're not careful.
Not everyone can afford that kind of cash these days. So instead, given the recent introduction of some seriously powerful feature phones, I thought I'd step through the ones that give you as much power as possible while still using lower-cost data plans. (You don't even have to sign up for any data plan, technically, although you'll want one if you're going to access the Web or check e-mail.)
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