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Thursday, October 22, 2009

Nokia X6 Key Features


* It’s all about your music - the Nokia X6 has a superb quality music player and built-in FM radio. Listen over Bluetooth stereo audio with a compatible headset like the new Nokia Bluetooth Headset BH-505 with its cool, sporty headband. Or plug your choice of headphones into the standard 3.5mm headphone jack.
* Nokia Music Store is all yours - As a Comes With Music device, the Nokia X6 gives direct access to millions of tracks online. Download for free and yours to keep forever*. Stores thousands of tracks with 32GB out-of-the-box memory.
* 5 megapixel camera with Carl-Zeiss optics autofocus and dual LED flash for truly fantastic image quality.
* Customisable homescreen - add up to 20 shortcuts for one-touch access to Facebook, Nokia Music Store, Email, Contacts, Maps, and Games - whatever you choose!
* Stroke-sensitive touch-screen interface - Nokia’s smoothest, slickest interface ever - with a 16:9 widescreen made specially to give the best photo and video viewing experience.
* Social networking - supports easy access to Facebook, Ovi, Windows Live!, Yahoo IM, YouTube, MySpace and more.
* Brilliant web browsing - built-in Flash player and auto-landscape orientation means you really get the best out of online video and movies.
* 3 premium games on-board - Nokia X6 ships with Asphalt4 and DJ Mix Tour by Gameloft and Spore by EA.
* Nokia Maps - The Nokia X6 comes with A-GPS with compass and integrated Maps so you can find your way to friends and venues quickly and easily with turn-by-turn, voice-guided navigation. Geo-tag your photos with Ovi to remember and share those great moments.
* Other Ovi services include push-email and IM with Nokia Messaging, N-gage games, downloadable Java applications and widgets, Ovi Contacts and Ovi Files for keeping your personal stuff safe and sound.
* Easy email - simple steps to set-up your email and combine multiple accounts into one inbox. Supports popular email clients such as Yahoo! Mail, Gmail, Windows Live Hotmail and most other POP3/IMAP email - plus a lifetime license for Nokia Messaging, Nokia’s mobile email and IM service.
* Video editing and sharing - includes video center and video editing plus support for online-share and TV-out. So, you can make your clips perfect, then upload them to your social network page or play to friends and family at home.

Product Specification

* Size: 111 x 51 x 13.8 mm
* Display: 3.2 inch 16:widescreen nHD, 231 ppi
* Camera: 5 megapixels with Carl-Zeiss optics and dual LED flash
* Music player supports MP3, SpMidi, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA, MTP formats
* Video: Recording and playback with TV-out support, video editing and online-share
* Full web browser (OSS) v7.0 with Macromedia Flash Lite 3.0
* Email support including Nokia Messaging
* Built-in GPS with Assisted GPS (A-GPS) support, compass and Nokia Maps
* 3D stereo ringing tones and video ringing tones
* Memory: 32GB internal memory
* 3.5mm AV connector for stereo headphone jack
* Data Connectivity: High speed MicroUSB connector, WLAN (China WAPI), Bluetooth 2.0, WCDMA, GPRS/EDGE, HSDPA
* Talk time: Up to 8 hours
* Standby time: Up to 406 hours
* Music playback: up to 35 hours
* Video playback: up to 4 hours

‘Comes With Music’ Device,The Nokia X6


The Nokia X6 is a ‘Comes With Music’ device, so it provides unlimited access to the Nokia Music Store. With ample on-board storage you can discover, download and keep all the music you could ever ask for.Also perfect for people who like to snap, tag and share photos and videos. Superb image quality comes from a 5 mega-pixel camera with Carl-Zeiss optics. With its built-in features to edit videos, show them on TV or online, sharing your memories has never been easier. The large 3.2-inch display enables you to fit 20 shortcuts onto a personalized home screen - offering one-touch access to the web, your photos, videos and music library - and favorite social networks such as Facebook, Flickr, MySpace and more. The Nokia X6 is no slouch in the beauty stakes either, with its slim, curved-edge profile and a 16:9 widescreen interface providing a slick, finger-sensitive touch operation, optimized to give a great viewing experience. It all adds up to a coolly powerful, stylish and entertaining device to express yourself with.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Future Of Computer Technology

Computer Technology is expanding faster and faster and the future seems limitless for such an important sector, which has many wondering what the future holds for the industry. Currently there are technically advanced developments in the field of computer hardware, computer software and even the Internet that will change the way we work.
The way computer hardware is made and its function will soon be changing. Right now, there are a couple of new developments in this area of the future of computer technology

Next-Gen Interfaces

Many of these next-gen interfaces will not have the user control the computer through commands, but will have the computer adapt the dialogue to the user's needs based on its inferences from observing the user. Most current user interfaces are fairly similar and belong to one of two common types: Either the traditional alphanumeric full screen terminals with a keyboard and function keys, or the more modern WIMP workstations with windows, icons, menus, and a pointing device.
An alternative model is emerging in object-oriented operating systems where the basic object of interest is the user's document. Any given document can contain sub objects of many different types, and the system will take care of activating the appropriate code to display, print, edit, or email these data types as required. The main difference is that the user no longer needs to think in terms of running applications, since the data knows how to integrate the available functionality in the system

Nano Computers

According to a group of researchers calling themselves the Nanocomputer Dream Team, November 1st, 2011 is the day they'll unveil a revolutionary kind of computer, the most powerful ever seen. Their nanocomputer will be made out of atoms. Moving individual atoms around at will sounds like fantasy, but it's already been demonstrated in the lab. In 1989, scientists at IBM used an electron microscope to shuffle 35 xenon atoms into the shape of their company's logo. Since then a team at IBM's Zurich labs has achieved the incredible feat of creating a working abacus on the atomic scale. Nanocomputers, if they ever appear, will be extraordinary things. But if, like most computer systems, they have bugs, they could also be very nasty, as well. Of all the future technologies, Nanotechnology is the most exciting. By 2011, Nanocomputers can become a reality as a team claims to be working on it. A nanocomputer basically means atomic computer whose dimensions will be microscopic. Scientists and researchers have been working on suggestions for electronic, chemical, biochemical and quantum nanocomputers

Data Hiding

A major concern for creators of digital content, whether it's Web content, music, or movies on digital disc, is to protect their work from unauthorised copying and distribution. DataHiding is a technology that allows owners of content to embed data invisibly or inaudibly into other digital media, such as video, audio data, or still images. When the data is embedded, it is not written as part of the data header, but rather embedded directly into the digital media itself. This process changes the original digital data, but the change is so slight that it cannot be visually detected, and has no impact on the performance of the original data.
The beauty of DataHiding is that it gives content creators a powerful means of marking their digital creations without affecting the end user's appreciation of it. The embedded information does not change the size of the original data, and it survives normal image processes such as compression and format transformation

Protonic Memory

One of the biggest horrors of the computer age is to be working on a document not yet saved to the hard drive and lose everything because of a power outage or a system crash that forces the operator to shut down the computer. Attempts to create circuits that store the information when the power is interrupted have used high voltages, which quickly wear down computer electronic components, and have been expensive. Some scientists have applied for a patent on a prototype memory retention device that is inexpensive, low-powered, and simple to fabricate that may be the future of protecting vital data when suddenly lost without being save. To transmit data, the device uses embedded protons, which remain where they are when the power turns off, thus preserving the information. In devices such as DRAM's (dynamic random access memory), typically based on electron flow, the information is lost when the power is turned off.