Showing posts with label shows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shows. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 February 2012

Nokia 800 Sea Ray Shows Up On Alleged Airtel India Poster

Just a couple of days ago we've seen the first ads starring the Nokia 800 (believed to be the Sea Ray) Windows Phone and now the device has surfaced in a leaked Airtel India poster.

Nokia India's managing director D Shivakumar recently told the Economic Times that "work for the Windows phone is on track and it would be launched in the first quarter of next (calendar) year." Shortly after this the image above popped up showing a Nokia N9-like device (known as the Sea Ray) with the Nokia 800 branding at the bottom.

You will say that the Windows Phone logo is the old one (and even that appears to be using the incorrect unofficial font) and that the screen on the device is showing a very old (pre-official) Start Screen and you will be right, but it's what we've got at the moment. Oh, did we mention that the space between the top Tile and the Nokia logo is too small to naturally fit the signal meter and clock (the bottom seems ok though)?

Source: SymbianTweet, Economic Times
Via: GSMArena


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Sunday, 25 September 2011

HTC Runnymede Shows Off Piano White and Beats Audio on Video

You are in an Android Post

The Runnymede is expected to have a 1.5GHz single-core processor, 4.7-inch WVGA display, 768MB of RAM, 16GB of storage, eight-megapixel main camera, and 1.3-megapixel webcam. Will probably run Android 2.3.4 Gingerbread with HTC Sense 3.5 on top of it and it is rumored to be launched as the HTC Bass.

Check out the video below to see how the device looks! So far, the piano shining white caught our attention on the front of the phone and we have to admit it appeals more than the matte one on the HTC ChaCha or Radar. Of course, as you'd expect from a Beats-phone, it sports the Beats Audio logo on the back, pretty much like the Sensation XE. Let us know if you like what you see!


Source: YouTube
Via: AndroidCentral Previous Page Next Page

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LG LU6200 Spotted In The Wild, Shows Off 720p HD Display

You are in an Android Post

The LG LU6200 we've been hearing about last week, with its 1.5GHz dual-core Snapdragon CPU and LTE support has been spotted in the wild, showing off that 720p HD display it has.

As you can see, the pictures are not very telling about the images the screen reproduces. On paper though, the display is an AH-IPS LCD one with HD resolution of 720 x 1280. With its 4.5-inches in diagonal, it accounts for a 329ppi density, adding to the other high-end internals, such as an eight-megapixel main camera, a 1.3-megapixel front-facer, 1GB of RAM, 4GB of internal storage, plus the usual suspects like DLNA, MHL, and WiFi Direct.

Source: MT
Via: GSMArena

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Wednesday, 7 September 2011

Verizon's Motorola Droid Bionic Shows Up Again On Video

You are in an Android Post

You can literally count the hours until Verizon and Motorola will finally launch the Droid Bionic, after it was introduced at the beginning of this year at CES, so it's just normal that more and more pictures and videos of the phone pop up.

In the video below you will not find anything out of the ordinary. It's the Droid Bionic filmed in what appears to be a Verizon store. There's also a comparison with the Droid X2 but what makes the Droid Bionic unique is that it will be the carrier's first dual-core phone with LTE support. With hours until its launch, will you buy the Droid Bionic or will you wait just a little bit more for that Droid Prime?


Source: AndroidCentral Forums
Via: PhoneArena Previous Page Next Page

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Saturday, 30 July 2011

BSkyB shows how streaming could be the future of pay TV


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Friday, 22 July 2011

CX funding shows cloud storage startups are still hot

Judging by the latest news out of startup cloud-storage provider CX, heavyweight investors are still bullish about newcomers to the space. CX announced on Thursday that it has closed on a Series B funding round worth $5 million led by Eric Schmidt’s venture capital firm TomorrowVentures, bringing its total VC investment to $10 million.

Also on Thursday, CX said it has acquired its competitor FileDen for an undisclosed sum. The deal brings CX’s user base to more than 3.5 million, the company said.

CX, which stands for “Cloud Experience,” bills itself as an open storage platform that platform overlays users’ social graphs to enable collaboration with anyone on any Internet-connected device. The company is most often compared to storage services like Dropbox and Box.net. CX claims it is differentiated from its peers by having better searching and sharing capabilities along with data visualization features.

CX is currently free, but it plans to launch paid product plans later this summer that will charge consumers about $10 per month and developers $40 per month.

It has been clear for years now that cloud storage technology is hot — tech industry giants such as Amazon, Google and, most recently, Apple have made big moves into the area — and CX is looking to ride that wave. According to CEO Brad Robertson, CX is currently in discussions to close on $50 million in series C funding early this fall.

Along with TomorrowVentures, CX is backed by Hanna Capital, Clarington Capital, and Clearwater Capital.

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Square what? Dwolla shows the power of cash networks

While tech darling Square has been growing its mobile payments business at a rapid pace, it’s far from the only success story in the business. Over in Des Moines, IA, mobile payments start-up Dwolla is enjoying its own impressive growth and just hit $1 million in daily transactions, putting it on a faster initial pace than Square.

Dwolla launched its product in December and differentiated itself not only with its midwest roots but also its cash-based network approach that allows users to pay directly from their bank accounts. By combining this with location-based technology and social networking tools, Dwolla has been able to build a next-generation payment system that bypasses the current credit and debit networks and offers some attractive benefits.

Square, which does utilize existing credit networks, took 10 months to hit $1 million in daily transactions and is now up to $4 million in transactions a day. Dwolla was able to reach the $1 million mark in about seven months. It has about 30,000 users on its network.

CEO and co-founder Ben Milne said Dwolla’s growth validates the power of tapping cash networks and applying new technology and APIs to help build a modern payment network.

“When you talk about cash, it’s not represented in the marketplace electronically. If you’re paying with a phone or on a website, what is the cash equivalent? There is more money moving through system through cash than credit. It’s an underserved market and it’s massive,” Milne said.

Dwolla transactions fees are capped at 25 cents per transaction, which is lower than PayPal. And users are able to send money to their social networking contacts on Twitter and Facebook. Merchants are able to accept payments without adding extra hardware and using Dwolla’s system, they don’t have to store credit information, which limits fraud. And with Dwolla’s Spots mobile payment service, users can pay for offline goods without using credit or physical cash. Dwolla also enables banks to offer users instant access to their bank accounts from mobile devices using its FiSync service. So far, 15 banks are signed on to use FiSync.

Dwolla still faces challenges in replicating Square’s success, however. It has less name recognition and it seems to have less traction with merchants by comparison. But Milne believes that as more financial institutions sign-up and give their consumers access to mobile payments from their bank accounts, usage will rise. Users are also learning about the service through word of mouth, he said.

Dwolla is showing that this cash-based approach is viable and it’s something that shouldn’t be overlooked in the mobile payments race. EWise, another payment provider, uses what it calls secure vault payments, a form of online banking epayments, to help users pay for things online and through their mobile phone. Users can log-in to their SVP at the time of check-out and quickly fund a purchase from their bank account at cheaper rates than credit card transactions.

EWise CEO Alex Grinburg recently told me that tapping bank accounts for payments offers users and merchants an important choice that can reduce the cost of fees and drive up transactions. He said it’s also something that can be tapped now while others are waiting for near field communication payments to emerge.

“There is no reason to separately fund a wallet or a separate PayPal balance. That’s not where the money is. If you have a bank account you’re good to go, that’s all you need,” he said.

This is still early days in mobile payments, but we’re often hearing most about specific approaches like NFC, carrier billing or services like Square. But there is a lot of room for innovation and as Dwolla and eWise are showing, there’s a big opportunity in tapping cash accounts to fund payments online and offline.

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Tuesday, 12 July 2011

What Sheryl Sandberg shows us about the future of work

The New Yorker‘s recent profile of Sheryl Sandberg purports to be a piece about women in technology and doubles as a fine executive profile. But it’s also a glimpse into the evolving state of the workplace in an entrepreneurial and highly connected world — what I think of as the future of work for the professional class.

The New Yorker profile hints at these topics, rather than exploring them directly, but within the nine pages of the article, Sandberg’s decisions about going to Facebook, her leadership style, the life she has created in order to be the COO of a hot startup and the reaction she gets from women and her employees all paint a certain picture. Here’s a good example of how Sandberg views her work, from when she was evaluating moving from Google to Facebook:

“It was like dating,” says Dave Goldberg, Sandberg’s husband and the C.E.O. of the online company SurveyMonkey. Sandberg says they asked each other, “What do you believe? What do you care about? What’s the mission? It was very philosophical.”

It was philosophical, because the professional class today doesn’t join a company with a nine-to-five work ethic anymore. They are also joining a group of people that they will spend long hours with either at the office or online. They’re entering a relationship with these people, so those people better mesh with their values and ideals.

This isn’t just at Facebook. Many workers have been forced by an uncertain economy and an overall shift in employment to become more entrepreneurial, which means there are more people setting their own agendas and hours. But as Generation X and the millennials rise in the workforce, there also more people who are motivated and driven by their own goals, rather than a company’s goals.

So we have a shift in why people work and how they choose their jobs. How do you build a company and a culture that works with this shift instead of against it? Clearly forcing people to work from nine to five in a cube seems like it would be destined for failure, especially since self-motivated employees generally work best when left to follow their own ideas and projects. So options such as telecommuting, Google’s famed 20 percent time or Facebook’s Hackamonth are good for providing outlets for entrepreneurial people.

But I don’t think that goes far enough. I believe work is changing to be more like a family. Just like in families, where there is an ethos around everyone pitching in and working toward a common goal, a company needs to have people who are all dedicated toward a company goal. I’m not talking about some hokey mission statement, but rather a tangible result that everyone agrees with. At GigaOM, it’s delivering good analysis on major stories. We’re all pulling for the same thing, together. This also means people are more willing to work longer or odd hours when needed, because they believe they’ll get time off when they need it. Employees have a loyalty to the company that is rewarded with loyalty back to the employee.

And if something falls apart, just like your home-family, your colleagues will support you. In startups and entrepreneurial workplaces, there’s very little blaming and throwing people under a bus because of their “family values.” It may seem idealistic, but smart, creative people don’t have to hang around in bad environments, and they often won’t. In the Sandberg profile, plenty of people mentioned her ability to push junior staff members forward and encourage people to succeed. That’s the style of leadership required for creating these workplaces.

Today’s professional class are driven by their own goals, so like Sandberg did with Zuckerberg, they look for a deeper connection with their workplaces. They are looking for a good fit — in lifestyle and culture besides merely previous experience and career goals — not just a job. This change is seen as a good — especially within the tech community.

But there’s a darn good reason most people don’t want two families. It divides your loyalties, and it’s hard to prioritize when you have divided loyalties. To accommodate this, there needs to be a corresponding cultural shift in the home, something the Sandberg profile also illustrates.

She said, “The No. 1 impediment to women succeeding in the workforce is now in the home. . . . Most people assume that women are responsible for households and child care. Most couples operate that way — not all. That fundamental assumption holds women back.” The second impediment is guilt, she said. “I feel guilty working because of my kids. I do. I feel guilty. In my TED talk, I’m talking to myself, too. I’m not just talking to other people. I have faced every one of those things myself.”

As women play a greater role in the professional world, they also tend to expect more from their partners at home. So when Sandberg talks about her husband sharing the workload, that’s not an idle comment — it’s essential to her success. But it also allows her husband to achieve a level of participation in his home life that many of today’s younger men say they want. And when both partners are trying to have it all instead of just women, the social dynamic changes, ideally in a way that allows more women to take on leadership roles without being stigmatized for having a family.

That works on a macro level. But it’s the day-to-day — or sometimes, minute-by-minute — conflicts that put the true pressure on both work- and home-families, making me (and I’m sure other people like me) wonder why we even bother trying to balance both. Something as simple as a huge story breaking on weekend when your husband is out of town creates instant conflict. But when it works, it’s the most satisfying feeling in the world, and as a skilled worker, I can’t imagine going back to some nine-to-five existence where my projects and priorities are dictated by others instead of something I care deeply about.

Image courtesy of the World Economic Forum.

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