February 26th, 2010
admin
A leaked video allegedly shows the upcoming HTC Incredible smartphone. The device is believed to pair Android 2.1 with HTC’s own Sense UI, while matching the Nexus One with a Snapdragon CPU and 3.7-inch WVGA touchscreen. Other unconfirmed specs include an optical trackpad, 5-megapixel camera with dual-LED flash, and 256MB of RAM.
The Incredible was recently spotted in Verizon’s inventory system, pointing to an imminent launch, although HTC has yet to announce official details.
LG early this morning launched one of its smallest-ever touchscreen phones in the form of the GD880, or Mini. It has a unique waste-nothing design where the 3.2-inch display runs almost directly to the very edge, avoiding some of the bulk of other phones. At the same time, it’s relatively thin and minimalist yet should be relatively sturdy with metal accents and an overall solid body.
Inside, it echoes much of what LG has done before and uses LG’s conventional but customized OS, with the S-Class UI on top. It supports the company’s increasingly common feature set and brings 7.2Mbps 3G, a 5-megapixel camera, GPS and Wi-Fi. LG ships the Mini first to Europe, in March, and will send it elsewhere at a later date with prices to come as each region goes live.
Slacker on Thursday launched the promised Slacker Radio Mobile app for Palm handsets that run on webOS. This includes the Pre, Pre Plus, Pixi and Pixi Plus. Users in the US and Canada can download the free app either by visiting the App Catalog or Slacker’s website from their webOS smartphone. Palm phone users will then be able to customize each station based on their personal likes based on artists.
Owners will have access to the same 120-plus stations of different genres, and more than 10,000 artist stations. Listeners can also view artist biographies, album art and reviews, as well as look what is coming up on their playlists. Songs can be tagged as favorites or banned altogether.
Users who download the app have a limited number of skips per hour. Slacker Premium removes the restriction for a $5 per month fee.
What Are Budget Cameras?
These easy-to-use shooters cost less that $200 but often lack the megapixels and fancy features–like high zoom or a big and bright LCD–of their more expensive counterparts. While they may take a decent photo, they often have trouble in low light, or have a cheap, flimsy feel. You’ll take most of your photos in an automated scene mode since there are few manual controls.
What Are Digital SLRs?
Digital SLRs (single lens reflex) operate much like film cameras.Unlike point-and-shoot digital cameras, what you see when you look through the viewfinder is what you’ll shoot.
Users can change lenses, add accessories, control depth of field, apeature, shutter speed, ISO, and almost every other setting. They are sold in kits that include body, lens (usually 18-35mm), battery, charger and software, or the body alone.
Oh boy, I hope this is true. I’m shooting with an XSi, and it’s a great camera, but damn would I like to have me some movie-shooting ability. The T1i was a bad bet for that because it shot at 20FPS, which is ridiculous, but this new T2i allegedly has selectable frame rate modes. 1080p/24? Oh pleeeeeease!
According to Canon Rumors, the T2i is on its way next week and has, in addition to better movie-shooting, the following features:
- Higher-resolution LCD
- Revised body
- New battery and battery grip
When Apple in the conference in San Francisco announced a flat-panel machine iPad , Adobe responded that it does not support the iPad on official web of Flash , saying it would add a Flash Pro CS5 technology, developers can use Flash to develop applications for Apple iPad . Apple CEO Steve Jobs over the weekend (Steve Jobs) in Cupertino, California headquarters, Apple’s internal conference accepted the staff’s questions, among them referred to the Adobe.
Jobs said, Adobe is too lazy, and they would have had the potential to do more meaningful things, but they are not willing to do. there is a problem in Adobe thinking ,as they never act like Apple’s (such as treatment of Carbon).
As to why Apple’s products do not want to support Flash, Jobs also made the following answer: “Apple did not support Flash, because it is too buggy. If the Mac has encountered a crash, then probably caused due to Flash.” Jobs also pointed out that no one is willing to use Flash, the world has begun to age into HTML5.