Tuesday, 30 July 2013

ElectroShopWorld's Choice: “Play-Droid” – 7 Inch Android Gaming Console Tablet

Relive the past on this modern and stylish 7 inch gaming console tablet known as the “Play-Droid”. ElectroShopWorld has expanded its product range and have chosen the “Play-Droid” console due to its ability to play the classic games via an emulator as well as having a fantastic lay-out making a great handheld device.

Key Features
Android Gaming Console Tablet – A tablet with game controlling buttons located on either side of the screen to make this the ultimate media playing device.
7 Inch Screen – A large screen to enjoy watching movies that you have downloaded or to view streamed YouTube clips and of course to play classic video games.
1GHz CPU – A powerful CPU is more than enough of running media without any problems as well as giving the user a great platform to work on.
Emulator – In my opinion this is the selling point of this handheld device because it allows the user to relive the old school games of yester-year and provides you that second chance of completing classics such as Goldeneye, Super Mario and Star Fox.
8GB Internal Memory – Plenty of storage space to save all your data and media, however you can always give it an extra boost via the built-in SD card slot.

Install Chrome Extensions in Opera and Conversely

If you’re an avid Opera user but at the same time you like Chrome extensions – with the latest versions of these browsers, you can have the best of both worlds! Opera Next is great so far! Vimium, LastPass, Adblock, and RSS Subscription Extension (with the Feedly tweak) from the Chrome extensions store, and you can enjoy a snappy, beautiful, and very useable browser! For this to work, you’ll need Opera Next 15 or higher, and Chrome 28 or higher (this also works in dev and beta builds, along with Canary).
chrome-opera
Installing Chrome extensions in Opera 15 is easy: First, install the Chrome Extension Installer for Opera Next 15. Then go to the Chrome Web Store and install whatever you want. The Web Store won’t complain that you need a supported browser or anything—it’ll just work. The extension you want will download and install, and it’ll work normally.
To install Opera Next extensions in Chrome, you’ll need to download the Opera extension file, rename it, and install it in Chrome:
  • First, make sure Opera Next is installed.
  • Then, go to the new Opera add-ons page. You have to visit this specific page in Opera Next—this is important because the page auto-detects which version you’re using, and will only show you compatible extensions for that version of Opera. To get the extensions that’ll also work in Chrome, you have to use Opera 15 to browse the store..
  • When you find one, instead of clicking “Add to Opera,” right-click the button and select “Save Linked Content As…” and save the .nex extension file somewhere you can get to it.
  • Grab the .nex file and rename it to end in .crx.
  • Open Chrome, and drag and drop the .crx file onto Chrome. You’ll be prompted to review the permissions before installing it, but that should be all.
That’s all there is to it. The process works pretty quickly, and the downside of going from Opera to Chrome is that you need both installed. Still, it’s worth noting that the Opera add-ons page is pretty sparse when it comes to Opera Next add-ons right now, mostly because Opera 15 is still in active development. It’ll fill up pretty quickly, and with time you’ll be able to find extensions there you may not find for Chrome. Even so, right now this is a bit more useful for getting your favorite Chrome extensions into Opera if you want to give the new engine a whirl.
VIA | Lifehacker
 
 

Sunday, 28 July 2013

Google’s Instant Translators Could Become The Universal Tongue

Google likes to create things that gather data, which can be used to determine intent and for all kinds of profitable purposes. Basically all Google services collect some data about us. But there’s no bigger fish in that pond than the Babel fish – that invention of Douglas Adams’ in his Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy series that instantly translates one language to another to make communication seamless. This way Google would be processing literally everything a person says to another (at least while travelling), which adds up to a lot of valuable data.
google-translate
Google is working on exactly that kind of invention, according to a report from The Times today. Hugo Barra, Google’s VP of Android Product Management, told The Times that Google plans to make real-time translation devices that will translate language for simple conversation across language barriers. Already the system is “near-perfect” between some languages, Barra says, especially in environments where there is no background noise to confuse the input detection.
Google already offers Google Translate, which offers text translation, as well as entire webpage translation on the web. The goal now is to make instant back-and-forth conversation translation a practical, usable reality that can make it possible for someone to accomplish everything they need to in an unfamiliar language without learning a lick of it. As with most sci-fi staples, however, Google says this is likely still several years away from becoming a shipping product.
via TechCrunch

www.electroshopworld.com

Friday, 26 July 2013

Create Responsive Embed Codes For YouTube, Google Maps, Vimeo…

While services like Twitter and SoundCloud have chosen to make their embeds responsive, videos from YouTube and Vimeo, Maps from Google and photos from Instagram have received no such treatment. There have been ways around this oversight, but now a site has emerged to fulfill a simple mission: make the above services embed responsively. It’s a web app dedicated to providing you with responsive embed codes for content on services like YouTube, Vimeo, Google Maps, and Instagram.
embedresponsively
Using Embed Responsively is simple enough. You will first need to find what you’re embedding, be it a location on Google Maps, a video on YouTube or Vimeo, or a photo or short video on Instagram. You need not copy the embed code from the service’s own feature; simply copy the URL for its page. Next, visit Embed Responsively and select the same service there from the options available. Paste the URL that you copied from the service, and click the ‘Embed’ button. You will see a preview of the video, map, or image that you’re embedding, and its responsive embed code below it. Now all you have to do is paste the embed code on your website like you would with any other auto-generated embed code, and it will work responsively, resizing itself as per the screen size! Pretty cool, huh?
VIA | TheNextWeb

www.electroshopworld.com

Android 4.3 Jelly Bean: New Features and Improvements

Months later than initially expected, Google finally took the wraps off the next version of its Android operating system at an event on Wednesday in San Francisco. The barely changed Android 4.3 isn’t the giant leap that was expected, but it is noteworthy, particularly for its performance improvements and new Restricted Profiles feature. Officially, Android 4.3 is still a version of Jelly Bean, which makes sense, considering the minor nature of its changes. But of course, this may disappoint Android fans whose mouths have been watering for Key Lime Pie since Google I/O in May.


Android-4.3-Jelly-Bean
 
 

Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Canonical Seeks $32M To Build A Ubuntu Smartphone

Ubuntu Mobile isn’t new; Canonical has already done much to promote its efforts to break into the smartphone mobile software space. But today the company is launching an Indiegogo campaign to fund the development of its first own-branded Ubuntu mobile hardware, the Ubuntu edge. The Edge is a smartphone that hopes to be more than that, by replacing a desktop PC as well.
edge-1-large
The $32 million campaign to fund the Edge’s creation is a fixed funding project, which means it’s all or nothing, and it has to achieve its goal within the next 31 days in order to be successful.
The Edge is an experiment in truly converged computing, turning the smartphone into the central nervous system of a full desktop PC, resulting in a self-described “superphone.” The Edge will have the “fastest available” multi-core mobile processor, 4GB of RAM and 128GB of storage, with a battery designed to push life to the limits.
On the software side, the Edge combines Ubuntu Mobile with full Ubuntu desktop, and can even boot to Android for a truly converged computing experience. It sounds pretty amazing, and mobile nerds everywhere are no doubt already drooling about this right now, or will begin salivating as soon as they find out this thing is real.
Of course, it’s not real yet, and needs $32 million to become a reality, which is a tall order. But Canonical is a company with a solid track record, and this is an exciting project that’s sure to excite the early adopter community.

 
 

Tuesday, 23 July 2013

TabZolo Hides All Inactive Tabs and Keeps You Focused

Chrome: TabZolo helps you prevent tab overload by keeping your browsing focused to only one tab at a time. When you enable the extension, every tab except the one currently selected will disappear, and it will even prevent you from opening any new ones. When you need to use tabs again, just disable the extension, and all of the tabs that it previously closed will reappear right where you left them. It’s a simple concept, but if you tend to bury yourself in a pile of webpages throughout the day, forcing yourself to only use one at a time can be a big help. VIA | Lifehacker


Turn Chrome New Tab Page Into An RSS & Social Feed Reader

Onefeed is a Google Chrome app that turns your New Tab page into a place for combining your social media accounts including Facebook, Google+, Twitter and Instagram with RSS in order to let you keep a tab on all your important content in one place. In short, the extension provides you a seamless way to access RSS and social networks from Google Chrome.

Onefeed_Dashboard

Onefeed is incredibly easy to setup; you simply need to head to the website (via the link at the end of the post) and click ‘Get Onefeed’ to install the extension from the Chrome Web Store. Once ready, open new tab and you will see Onefeed has taken over it and turned it into a stylish dashboard. You’ll be asked to log into your desired social media accounts right from the starting page
VIA | addictivetips.com
download
 
 

Monday, 22 July 2013

Google May Be Working On Traditional TV Service Over Internet

google-logo-640-80-630x354
According to a recent report, Google might be working on a service offering traditional TV programming service over internet, competing against traditional cable or satellite companies. Unlike Hulu or Amazon.com, Google’s new service would let users scan through TV channels via any device connected to internet. The big challenge for Google will be licensing content form media distributers since they might be hesitant to undermine existing agreements with cable and satellite companies.
If Google or any other company succeeds in delivering an internet based TV service, this could change the whole television model. Will we soon be watching TV on or PC? Would you op in for internet TV by Google? Let us know in the comments below!
To read the whole story, head over to The Wall Street Journal.

www.electroshopworld.com

Chrome for Android Introduced Video Chat

Chrome beta for Android has been updated today, and while there are the standard performance improvements on-board, there’s also a slick new feature or two — support for WebRTC. Meaning, support for live video and audio without installing any software comes with today’s update. WebRTC is a free, open project that enables web browsers with Real-Time Communications capabilities via some simple Javascript APIs. It’s been supported on the desktop in Chrome for a few versions, and is a joint project between Google, Mozilla and Opera.

chrome-video-chat

What it can do for you is easy — it let’s you use the camera and microphone on your phone or tablet to video chat without installing any software. You’re warned when you visit a site that requests the permission, and while using it a persistent notification is present. This way, there won’t be any funny business or snooping involved. Is it useful? Not yet, but when developers implement WebRTC on their site, it very well could be. In the meantime, it’s very, very cool. You can play around with this one yourself. Fire up Google Play and update Chrome beta, or hit the Google Play link above, then visit this link.
VIA | androidcentral.com

www.electroshopworld.com

How to Check If Your Flight Has Wi-Fi

Nowadays many planes come with internet access for an arguably small fee. Some airlines offer Wi-Fi across their entire fleet while others only on certain types of planes and flights. If you want to find out if you can stay connected during your flight, you only need to know where to look.
wifionboard
You can find out if your flight has Wi-Fi a variety of ways, but we like to use flight searches to uncover the data. Certain sites provide this information. While not accurate 100% of the time, they’re as close as you’ll get without official word from the airline. Use these tools to search for your flight and they’ll tell you if you’ll have Wi-Fi:
  • SeatGuru: Designed for finding the best seat on a plane, but offers information about Wi-Fi and other amenities as a natural extension of the service.
  • Hipmunk: Designed for finding flights but will identify those with Wi-Fi.
  • Routehappy: Designed for finding flights but will identify those with Wi-Fi.
Use any of those tools and you can figure out if your flight has Wi-Fi before you book it or depart.
via | lifehacker

www.electroshopworld.com

Sunday, 21 July 2013

Rumor: HTC to Launch ONE MAX in September

On July 18, according to German website Mobile Geeks reports that HTC will also join the ranks to build a large screen mobile phone, which will be launched in September with 6-inch 1080p screen- One Max.
One Max’s configuration will be very different from the current HTC One; it will use the 2.3GHz quad-core Snapdragon 800 chip, with 2GB memory and up to 64GB storage space, as well as 3200 mAh battery capacity.
Samsung Galaxy Note is the very successful series that has spawned a variety of competitive products, including LG Optimus Vu and Sony’s upcoming Xperia Z Ultra.
If really launched in September, then One Max will directly face its strong rival Galaxy Note which will be released in September also. Given that Samsung has maintained the tradition to release a new Galaxy Note on annual Consumer Electronics Show in Berlin (IFA), then Galaxy Note 3 should be unveiled in early September this year.
It is still unclear that whether One Max will support handwriting input or not. However, this function has become one of the major highlights of Samsung Galaxy Note, as well as the main feature of Sony Xperia Z Ultra. Therefore it is believed that HTC should also seek to provide such a wide range of handwriting input function. Last time when the function was provided should be traced back to 2011 on the 7-inch Flyer tablet.

Android App for Quickly Downloading Facebook Photos

At times, we come across some great photos while browsing our Facebook News Feed on mobile, and feel like saving a copy. Unfortunately, the official Facebook mobile apps don’t allow that. Though, if you are on Android, Facebook Photo Downloader provides an excellent solution. The app is available for free at Google Play Store.
facebook_photo_downloader_for_android
The app lets you download photos from any Facebook profile as long as their privacy settings make them accessible to you. It works in conjunction with the official Facebook app and provides a 1-click download solution without leaving the interface of the official Facebook app, and that’s exactly its defining feature. The photo is saved to your device without losing any quality. To get started, download and install the app on your device and open the Facebook app. Now open any photo that you want to download. The app allows you to download photos associated to your own and other people’s profiles. Next, tap the Share button from the menu followed by tapping ‘1Click Save’ and voila! The image will be downloaded and saved to the internal storage of your device in a folder labelled Facebook Pics.
 
 

TeamViewer QuickSupport Comes To iOS & Android

TeamViewer is a very famous app for remotely controlling and troubleshooting PCs, with client apps available for Android and iOS platforms as well, allowing you to control your your computers from your phones, but not the other way round. In addition to that, the company has had its QuickSupport app available for Android for a while (initially only for Samsung devices) that allows you to remotely access, control or troubleshoot your device from a PC or another device running the TeamViewer client. The company has just brought QuickSupport to iOS and made the Android variant available for all devices.

teamviewer-mobile

To use QuickSupport, you must have TeamViewer installed on your system. The free, non-commercial use version will work just fine. Launch QuickSupport on your iPhone and it will give you an ID number. You can enter it manually or email it to anyone by tapping the ‘Send ID’ button. Enter this key on the system you want to control your phone from and a request to connect will pop up on your device.

Being the closed system that it is, iOS won’t give you complete control over the phone; however, you’ll be able to grab screenshots from your phone, transfer files, copy anything to your phone’s clipboard, send and receive messages from it, add email accounts, import iOS configuration profiles, and push WLAN settings to it. Apps can’t be launched or controlled, and neither can any of the settings, but you can get a good look at the apps and processes that are running.
Read more at addictivetips.com
 
 

Saturday, 20 July 2013

Google Is Searching For A Fine In Europe?

Google is being accused of failing to satisfy its competitors when searches are being concerned, according to the EU. Unfair behavior when regarding searches of various things that have Google related sites appearing always at the top. A proposed fine of around $5.5 billion US could be heading its way to Google’s front door if they cannot correct it.
To read more please click here.

www.electroshopworld.com

Whether You’re iPhone Or Android, VLC Is Here For Both

VLC was once described by a friend of mine in university, “If you put a slice of bread into your computer then VLC will play it”. VLC is, in my opinions and others as the best media playing system. Now iPhone users and Android-a-holics can now download VLC and probably never have to worry playing any videos in the future. VLC was removed from the Google Play store but now it is back with certain features.
To read more please click here.

www.electroshopworld.com

How to Get a Free and Legal Version of Photoshop

photoshop-3-650x0
Photoshop has been around for over 10 years now and is acclaimed as one of the champions in the image editing software world. Allowing users to carry out simple functions such as cropping and resizing while also offering a hefty selection of more advanced features, Photoshop has been installed on millions of PCs, and not always in a legal way.
But since Adobe shut down its activation servers for CS2 in January, Photoshop CS2 is now essentially available for free and legitimate download to everyone. All you’ll need is an Adobe account and a stable internet connection. CS2 may be ancient by today’s standards but you’ll still be able to do some editing without paying a dime.
Digitaltrends put together a guide on how to set up an Adobe account (in case you don’t have one) and how to download the CS2 version of Photoshop. Click HERE to hop to the guide!

www.electroshopworld.com
 

Too long didn’t read? Let TLDR shorten it.

TLDR (Too Long Didn’t Read) Plugin is a free extension for Chrome that creates a summary of any web article without leaving the original page. This plugin provides a streamlined way to get a condensed synopsis view of news, blog posts, and other articles online for quick and easy reading.


Powered by Liquid Helium, the plugin analyzes the content and creates summarized versions in four different lengths on any web page, including web applications such as web mail, ZenDesk, SalesForce, SugarCRM, and many more. Highlight text to be TLDR’ed for use with comments and FaceBook statuses. By reading articles faster you will have more time for playing Angry Birds, and planning for the post 2012 apocalypse.

Tuesday, 16 July 2013

Windows OS: Install a Unix-Style Menu Bar

Nucleus is a desktop application that brings a Unix-style menu bar to the Windows operating system. The product is provided as an alpha version right now which is feature limited. It is however interesting enough to take a closer look regardless of that, to find out what it has to offer right now, and for comparison once the final version gets released in the future.

Nucleus

Once you have installed Nucleus on your Windows system and started it up for the first time, you will notice that it has added a small menu bar to the top of the screen. It is about 2/3 of the size of the Windows Taskbar and empty for the most part.
It displays four menus to you:
  • Main menu that links to the settings, shut down options, options to reset the layout and to exit Nucleus.
  • The user name of the user who is logged in and the title of the active window, with options to close that program.
  • Links to system libraries.
  • A terminal window.
There is not a lot that you can do right now, but some functionality is already here. Two main features that Nucleaus supports right now are notifications and the terminal. The Settings window of Nucleus doesn’t carry a lot of options, other than allowing you to select the language, specify the app’s startup behavior, and configure your Gmail account. You just need to provide your email address and password, and save the preferences.
VIA | ghacks.net

www.electroshopworld.com

Sunday, 14 July 2013

eBay Exact for iOS Lets You Buy 3D-printed Products

eBay has announced a new iOS app called eBay Exact that lets you buy customizable 3D-printed merchandise on the go. You can download the new addition now directly from Apple’s App Store.

ebay_exact_ios

The products in question are available from three leading 3D printing companies, according to eBay: Brooklyn-based MakerBot, France-basedSculpteo, and Toronto, Canada-based Hot Pop Factory. Currently, customers can choose from only about 20 items, ranging from technology accessories to jewelry, but that number is likely to grow fairly quickly. eBay Exact allows users to order products directly from its partners, pay with PayPal (items cost anywhere from $9 for a plastic iPhone case to $350 for a metal ring), and receive the item within seven to 14 business days. Each and every product is shipped directly from the 3D printer’s facilities.
In its announcement, eBay calls Exact an iPhone app, but the App Store clearly states it works on the iPod touch and iPad as well. Using the app is fairly straightforward: select a product, choose a design, and add your own personal customizations.
The app’s feature list is as follows:
  • Bring your style to life. Choose from a variety of materials, including plastics, wood and metals. Use the engraving feature to further customize your product.
  • Be the first to use new technology to create one-of-a-kind iPhone cases, jewelry, and figurines based on self-portraits.
  • Build your collection. Whether you love jewelry or figurines, eBay Exact allows you to create as many unique products, exactly as you like, based on your personal desires and preferences.
“Shoppers today not only want to buy items anytime, anywhere through mobile devices, but they also want to be able to personalize their purchases,” Steve Yankovich, Vice President of Innovation and New Ventures for eBay, said in a statement. “eBay Exact brings these two desires into one shopping experience.”
VIA | TheNextWeb

www.electroshopworld.com

Saturday, 13 July 2013

Do You Really Need a Registry Cleaner?

Advertisements for registry cleaners are all over the Web. There’s an entire industry out there bent on convincing inexperienced computer users that their registry needs fixing, and that, for ten easy payments of $29.95, their computers will be much faster. That isn’t true. The Windows registry is a massive database containing hundreds of thousands of entries, and a registry cleaner might remove a few hundred at most. This is great if you’re obsessively compulsive about removing useless database entries, but you won’t see any difference in performance. What you might see is a new problem because the registry cleaner swept away something important.

What’s the Registry?

The Windows registry is a database that Windows and its applications store their settings in. It contains hundreds of thousands of entries. Some of the entries may be slightly outdated — maybe you’ve uninstalled a program and it left a key or two behind, or maybe a there’s a file extension with no associated application.

registry


What Registry Cleaners Do

Registry cleaners scan your registry for these outdated entries and offer to remove them. Because there are so many registry entries to go through, they’ll sometimes also remove useful registry entries, causing you problems. The Web is full of stories from people who have run a registry cleaner and encountered problems.
In a best case scenario, a registry cleaner will remove a few hundred unnecessary entries and reduce the size of your registry by a few kilobytes. This makes no different in perceptible performance. But you’ll still see shady advertisements like this one all over the Web:

registry cleaner ad
A registry cleaner that claims to improve performance by removing a few hundred registry entries is like a file system cleaner that offers to improve performance by removing a handful of small configuration files.

Using a Registry Cleaner

If you must use a registry cleaner, you don’t have to pay anything. Using a free registry cleaner, such as the registry cleaner included with the respected CCleaner utility (which we’ve covered in the past), is good enough. In fact, you’ll probably have better results with CCleaner than many of these fly-by-night companies. And by “have better results,” I mean that CCleaner is less likely to break things. Any performance increases will still be unnoticeable.

ccleaner

“Optimizing” the Registry

Registry cleaners also claim to optimize your registry, defragmenting it for faster file access. At first, this sounds great — your registry is constantly being used, so surely defragmenting it will offer improvements in speed, right?
Wrong. Or, at least, not really. The registry is loaded into your computer’s RAM when it starts, so you won’t see faster registry performance as a result of this.
If you really want to defragment your registry, you don’t need a registry cleaner. Microsoft offers an official PageDefrag utility for Windows XP. Windows 7 or Vista users will need an unofficial utility like Auslogics Registry Defrag. Auslogics Registry Defrag dramatically overpromises the imperceptible performance boosts you’ll get from running it, but at least it doesn’t tamper with your registry. And at least it’s free.
Use one of these utilities if you want. But I’ll warn you now: You won’t see a difference in performance.

Where Are the Performance Tests?

Here’s the thing: We computer geeks love squeezing every drop of performance out of our systems. People benchmark all sorts of software tweaks and hardware overclocks and create performance graphs that show adjusting one setting makes a certain game 1% faster.
If registry cleaners really worked, there would be serious, independent performance tests that showed the performance increase after running a registry cleaner. But there aren’t. If you find a test, it was likely produced by a registry cleaner company or an affiliate site that gets paid when you buy a registry cleaner. If you disagree with this post, let’s see some reputable performance benchmarks.

test

Above: Not an actual scientific test. But I bet you can’t find a better chart.

The Verdict

Here’s what it comes down to:
  • Registry cleaners offer no perceptible increase in performance.
  • Registry cleaners can break things.
  • Even if registry cleaners don’t break anything, using one wastes your valuable time and (perhaps) money.
If you’re looking to increase your PC’s performance, there are real steps you can take instead of buying the snake oil on offer. In fact, we’ve got an entire free guide to speeding up your computer, and registry cleaning isn’t involved.

Source: makeuseof.com

www.electroshopworld.com
 

BullGuard – A Free Online Malware Detection

BullGuard Virus Scan – a new cloud based antivirus tool – certainly doesn’t disappoint in this regard. The free web service is designed to perform a brief scan of your computer to detect malware, which is a good start before commencing a thorough troubleshooting process, in order to save time.

bullguard

The service makes use of a specially designed plugin that’s automatically installed to your web browser, so you may run the scan at any time with just a single click. Almost all major web browsers including Firefox, Chrome and Internet Explorer are supported by BullGuard. Better still, you can always try it on any other web browser to find whether it works for you or not. Getting started with BullGuard Virus Scan is fairly easy; you just need to visit the webpage via the link provided at the end of this article and click ‘Start Scan’.
BullGuard then automatically detects and installs the appropriate extension/add-on for your web browser. For instance, if you use Google Chrome, you’ll be prompted to install the appropriate extension for it – simply click the Add button when prompted to install it. BullGuard then begins its scan on your PC, analyzing key system areas of your computer such as system files and folders, and showing its progress in a bar so you may keep a tab on the scan process, which is generally quite fast.
Once the scan is completed, BullGuard shows you the results. It should be noted that BullGuard doesn’t really remove any viruses or malware it finds, but merely detects their presence on your machine. On the bright side, you can click the ‘Download Free’ button after the scan to download 60-day free trial of BullGuard Internet Security 2013 suite to remove any threats found, or simply use an alternative antivirus solution for the purpose.
VIA | addictivetips.com

www.electroshopworld.com

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Smartphones Are Getting Smarter With HUD

When the mobile first came out you could basically call other people with a phone and that was it, then you could send a message using SMS. Gradually mobiles phones develop to host many features, so many in fact that it has helped reduce the purposely of buying separate products. A smartphone can call, take pictures, access the internet, listen to MP3s, take pictures, record videos, play games, watch movies, read ebooks and much more all on a handheld device. Now the next stage of smartphone evolution is coming…

A satnav company called Garmin have designed and created a portable HUD (Head UP Display) that works with your smartphone and an installed application. The final result is that you can watch a projection on your windscreen that will inform you distances, current speed and speed limits as well as project directional arrows. This function takes full of effect of your smartphone by using the phone’s built-in speakers or even the car’s speakers if your phone is paired via Bluetooth to broadcast voice prompts.

Benefits of this device is that it will increase safety as you can remove it when you are not in the vehicle and also it is seen as less distracting than having to look down on previous GPS and navigation devices. Also HUD is no longer being limited to top of the line luxury motors but instead have become increasingly common in mod range vehicles. This type of technology is essential for fighter pilots to use.

To read more please click here.

www.electroshopworld.com

Rovio Stars’ New Game Tiny Thief Coming To Android Store

tiny_thief_screen
Rovio Stars, a new app developer under the wings of Rovio, announced that they would be releasing their first game, Tiny Thief, on July 11th. Following this announcement, a teaser video was released today that gives us a glimpse of the gameplay. 5Ants, the developer has brought a real Rovio look and feel to the game, though it does not appear you’ll be flinging of flipping objects on-screen. Instead, users will have to use some brain muscle to solve puzzles and find hidden objects as they work their way through thirty different stages. Watch the teaser video below.
We surely will be downloading this promising and fun looking game! 11th of July is the date to write down.

 
 

How to Manage All Your Email Accounts with Windows 8 Mail

 
With the Windows 8 Mail app, Microsoft introduced an application that actually makes managing emails very easy and convenient. The interface is visually pleasing, simplistic, intuitive, and yet the app is surprisingly comprehensive. When was the last time you heard so many good things about a Microsoft product? For those of you using Windows 8 and looking for an application to manage multiple email accounts, give the native Mail app a try and consider the following tips&tricks to save time wile managing your emails.

Windows-8-Mail-App-Overview


Managing multiple accounts from one app saves time because you have everything in one central location. Switching between email accounts in Windows 8 Mail is very convenient and more pleasant than jumping back and forth between browser tabs. To add accounts, go to the Mail app, bring up the Charms bar on the right, go to Settings, open Accounts, and Add an account. Select the account and proceed with setting it up. Repeat these steps for any additional accounts.

Add-Account-To-Windows-8-Mail

When you have added several email accounts to the Windows 8 Mail app, it makes sense to individually pin them to the start screen. Each tile will show the number of read emails for the respective account. A large tile will also display sender, subject, and an excerpt of unread emails. The advantage of having separate tiles for each account is that you can go straight to each mailbox from the start screen. To pin a mailbox to your start screen, open the Mail app and look for the list of your email accounts in the bottom left. Select the account you want to add to the start screen, right-click or press & hold to bring up the menu, and pick Pin to Start.

Pin-Mailbox-to-Start-Menu

When you use the Mail app on a desktop without a touch interface, there are three keyboard shortcuts you must know to work more efficiently.
  • [CTRL] + N to compose a new email
  • [CTRL] + R to respond to an email
  • [CTRL] + D to trash an email
As you are composing an email, you might want to save the draft, add an attachment, or format the text. You can quickly bring up the Options bar at the bottom of the screen by clicking the [Menu] key — that’s the often neglected key between [ALT GR] and [CTRL] on the right-hand side of your keyboard. The Options bar also comes up when you highlight text. Use the [TAB] key to switch between items.
VIA | makeuseof.com

www.electroshopworld.com

Hemlis – Fully Encrypted Messaging App

Peter Sunde, co-founder of The Pirate Bay, is planning to create an encrypted messaging app that’s so secure that even its creators won’t be able to read the messages that get sent.
Called Hemlis — which means “secret” in Swedish — it’s described as a messaging app along the lines of WhatsApp or iMessage. The difference is that the intention is to use end-to-end encryption to protect your privacy.
hemlis_ui_mocks
In-keeping with the Pirate Bay philosophy, the app won’t use advertising or sell user data-=-so it’s planning to fund itself through an initial donation scheme and subsequent charge-for services. In the first instance, it’s looking to gather $100,000 to develop an app for iOS and Android.
The core app will—so the devs claim—then be free to download, but certain features, like sending images, will be pay-for. People who make donations of $5 and up, though, will receive a codes for the full, unlocked version of the app.
The team behind Helmis say that if the entire funding pool isn’t raised you’ll get your money back—but given they’ve already racked up $24,571 that seems unlikely. You can read more about the project over on the Helmis site.
VIA | Lifehacker
 
 

How to Bring Offline Mode Back To The New Google Maps App

The new Google Maps for Android just started shipping late last night, but folks are already bein’ all grumpy about the sudden disappearance of one of Maps’ old features: offline map mode. In previous releases of Maps, users could save chunks of the map for later use (like when you’re traveling abroad on a roaming plan and downloading a few megabytes of data would cost you somewhere between seven and eight billion dollars.) In new Maps, you can’t.
Google says the feature just wasn’t totally ready for the new version yet. But wait! There’s an easter egg that kinda-sorta brings it back.
egged
When you want to cache a map for later perusal, here’s all you’ve got to do:
  • Zoom the map view to the region you want to cache
  • Tap the search bar
  • Type “Okay maps” (an homage to the “Okay, Glass” voice-command used on Google Glass)
  • Hit the search button
It’s not quite as easy as the old “Make available offline” button used to make it and it might freak out every once in a while (hence it being an easter egg), but it seems to get the job done.
*Note: You’ll obviously need to be on the newest, just-released version of Maps [the one without offline map mode built right in] for this to work. Also, just like with the old Maps app, navigation and directions won’t work offline. Those sorts of things are churned out on Google’s servers.
via TechCrunch

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Facebook’s Graph Search Is Here – Check Your Privacy Settings

Graph Search is rolling it out to everyone over the next couple of weeks. So if you were waiting for the right time to go through your privacy settings and hide the embarrassing stuff before the whole world sees it, you can stop waiting. It’s the right time to do it.
The tool allows people using natural-language searches to find nearly anything indexed on Facebook just like: “photographs of friends before 1999? or “restaurants in San Francisco”, “single women who live nearby”, etc.
facebook-graph-search
Here are three key things you should check to protect your information:
Photos: Depending on your friends’ privacy settings and whether they use tags, unflattering photos may be available to unintended audiences. Before graph search, people would have to go to an individual’s profile and look through the photos section to find pictures that a person was tagged in. Now, your photos are one query away and can show up through search variables such as location, time and other people.
To review your photos, click on your profile (you can get there by clicking your own name on either the top left or right side of the main homepage), and then click on “Activity Log.” On the left side of the screen, click on “Photos” and then “Photos of You.” A stream of your photos should show up in chronological order. On the top bar, under the “Shared with” option, select to see what photos are exposed to certain audiences, such as “public,” “friends” or “friends of friends.” For example, if you click on public, you can see every photo exposed to Facebook’s members, such as Instagram photos you shared with Facebook and a friend’s public photos you are tagged in. Go through the list to make sure you are comfortable with the content. If a friend tagged you in a photo you don’t want to be tagged on, untag yourself so that it isn’t searchable. While you can’t remove your friends’ photos from Facebook, you can ask them to take the photos down. And you can enable “Tag Review” under your activity log to review any tags friends place on your content.
Profile: You can show up on graph-search results based on interests, location, gender and other information in your profile. Click on your profile and then click on “About.” You can go through each section by clicking the “edit” button in each box and then selecting the audience that you want to share that information with, such as “public” or “only me.” If you scroll beyond the basic profile info, you’ll see different interest buckets such as movies and books. On the top right corner of each box is a pencil button that reveals an “edit privacy” option. Click that and select which audiences get to see what stuff you’ve liked.
Future posts: Facebook provides a shortcut to set default privacy settings for future posts. On the top of the page you should see a small security padlock icon. Click that, and then click “Who can see my stuff.” The first option is to select the audience for “Who can see my future posts.”
via The Wall Street Journal

Monday, 8 July 2013

Official MEGA App For Android

MEGA - the rebranded file sharing service by the infamous Kim Dotcom that gives you 50GB of storage space for your files – now has a smartphone app for Android. MEGA has actually acquired an existing app and modified it to match its web interface. While it’s no match for the file manager offered by MEGA’s web interface, it can do just about everything that can be done from the web interface. You can view a complete list of files you’ve uploaded to your account, select and download any of them, upload files from your device, and organize them into folders. The app has a search feature and files can be downloaded directly from a link as well. The app can also automatically back up photos from your device’s camera to your MEGA account. With the 50GB of space you get, this beats backing them up to Dropbox or Google Drive.
mega
Sign in to the app with your MEGA account and wait for it to fetch a list of files you’ve uploaded. The files themselves aren’t automatically downloaded to your device, so the list will load fairly quickly depending on how many files you’ve uploaded. From left to right, the buttons at the bottom allow you to upload a file, update files list, create a new folder, download a file from a link, and visit your profile.
Read more at addictivetips.com

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Make Professional-Looking Resumes with Resume Designer

Resume Designer let’s you create, edit and email full, beautiful resumes, entirely on your phone. Both pre-made templates and blank pages act as possible starting points, and you can customise the various sections as you see fit (using both suggested headers and your own). And without ever having to open Word, you can adjust spacing, font, size and anything else you might want to change, such as adding a photo of yourself.

resume-designer
Depending on the current state of your job or your current career in general, this app is going to apply those of a more freelance, transient variety. But if you’re the type who constantly has to market yourself to new clients or employees, this app could prove invaluable for chance, off-the-cuff meetings and opportunities. You have plenty of convenient options for sharing your life’s work: AirPrint, email or converting to PDF. Plus, iCloud sync makes it super easy to pick up where you left off. Plus, there’s even support for cover letters.
Download this app for: iOS ($1.99)
 
 

Friday, 5 July 2013

The “FIRST” Mobile Phone In The World

Since 1973 we got the first mobile phone in the world, it has become a crucial part of our daily life nowadays. Mobile phones have changed vastly, both in design and function. Today, let’s take a ride back to the past and look at the different “first” mobile phones in the world, particularly in their features.
1973 – The first mobile phone
On April 3, 1973 Martin Cooper, a senior engineer at Motorola used the first mobile phone in the world to call to his rival company and informed them, that he was speaking via a mobile phone. The first phone weighed 1.1 Kg and measured at 228.6X127X44.4mm. It could be used 30 minutes and took around 10 hours to charge.
1983 – The first commercial mobile phone
Motorola DynaTAC 8000X was the first commercial phone which offered 30 minutes of talk-time, 6 hours standby time and could store 30 phone numbers, but it cost $3995 at that time.
1992 – The first GSM digital mobile phone
Nokia launched the world’s first commercially available GSM digital mobile phone. Nokia 1011 has strengthened consumer interest in the world of mobile connectivity.
1996 – The first mobile phone with customizable ring tones
Japanese NTT DoCoMo Digital Mova N103 was released in May 1996 as the first commercial mobile phone with customizable ring tones.
1998 – The first phone has internal antenna
Nokia 8810 is a slider style mobile phone and most notable as being the first one to have internal antenna.
1999 – The first watch mobile phone
A watch phone is a smartwatch that doubles as a mobile phone. The first watch phone was a 1999 Samsung SPH-WP10. The newer watch phones are made by companies including LG, Samsung, Swap and Phenom.
2000 – The first mobile phone with touchscreen
In 2000, the world’s first touchscreen phone came out. Although it didn’t have advanced touchscreen technology like those available today, but at that time it was a huge craze and the introduction of a promising technology. The image shows a Motorola phone which has a simple black and white touchscreen, allowing easier access to various features than before.
2000 – The first mobile phone with MP3 Player
In the year 2000, Samsung had launched SPH-M100, the first cell phone to have MP3 music capabilities.
2000 – The first mobile phone with a built-in camera
Samsung had released a mobile phone, called Samsung SCH-V200. It is the first mobile phone with built-in camera and is just several months earlier launched in South Korea than J-SH04, which was Japan’s first ever phone with a built-in camera (110,000-pixel CMOS) and color display (256-color display).
2001 – The first mobile phone with Bluetooth
According to Ericsson, the Sony Ericsson T36 was the first mobile phone to have built-in Bluetooth wireless technology. When it was first introduced Bluetooth essentially meant the free sending of picture messages and ringtones to other Bluetooth phones but since then Bluetooth has become an important tool for most business men and women.
2006 – The first mobile phone with GPS
In 2006, Benefon launched a new line of mobile phones with inbuilt GPS navigation under the “Twig” brand, including the “Twig Discovery”, the “Twig Discovery Pro” and the “Twig Locator”.
2008 – The first Smartphoone with Android OS
The HTC Dream was the first commercially released device to use the Linux-based Android operation system, which was purchased and further developed by Google and the Open Handset Alliance to create an open competitor to other major smartphone platforms of the time, such as Symbian, BlackBerry, and the iPhones.
2011 – The first smartphone with a dual-core processor
The LG Optimus 2X is a smartphone designed and it is the first one with dual core processor and it is Optimus-android series.
2012 – The first smartphone with Quad core processor
The Optimus 4X HD was the world’s first smartphone announced with a quad-core processor along with the HTC One X and the Samsung Galaxy S III and the fourth phone in the LG Optimus-Android series.

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