Tuesday 14 April 2015

Elephone P6i

Elephone P6i Android 4.4.2 13MP Cam 5"QHD Screen,1GB RAM Mobile










Specifications



Type:Touch
Model:P6iOperating System:Android
Sim Type:Dual Sim(GSM + WCDMA)Brand:Elephone
Features:3G, Bluetooth, Dual Core, Email, GSM, HD Recording, Internet BrowserCamera:13.0 MP
Warranty:Manufacturer WarrantyCapacity:4 GB
Duration:1 year

Detailed item info


Product Identifiers
BrandElephone
ModelP6i
ColourWhite
Capacity4 GB

Key Features
TypeSmartphone
Cellular BandGSM 850/900/1800/1900 HSDPA 850/2100
StyleTouch
Screen Size5 in.
Operating SystemAndroid
Display TechnologyIPS

Digital Camera
Camera13.0 MP

Display
Display Size540 x 960

Features
FeaturesDual Sim

Dimensions
Height14.4 cm
Width7.23 cm
Depth0.76 cm
Weight158 g


NEC VE281 Mobile Projector



NEC’s VE281 mobile projector is designed to provide high brightness for small-to-medium-sized businesses, education environments, corporate conference rooms and mobility applications where heavy ambient light is present but the space requires a small projector. This lightweight model includes 3D-ready technology, high-contrast images and a powerful 7W speaker. Its automated technologies — from Auto Power On and quick startup/shutdown to a lamp life up to 6000 hours — make it an eco-friendly choice. The VE281 offers the Intelligent Driving Scheme (IDS2) for increased lamp life and contrast.

Cost: $339

Photo iPad Scanning Dock



This is the scanner that saves treasured photos directly to an iPad while it docks and charges the device. Controlled by a free app, the sheet-fed scanner makes it simple to preserve and share heirloom photos and documents as digital files. In as little as 12 seconds, a photo is converted to a crisp 300- or 600-dpi color JPEG image that is displayed on screen in real time and saved to the iPad’s camera roll. The integrated dock holds the iPad upright and has a built-in Lightning connector that recharges its battery in five hours. Scans sheets up to 8 1/2" x 14". Plugs into AC with your iPad’s USB power adapter. For iPad 4, iPad Mini, and iPhone 5/s/c running iOS 6.0 or later. 4 1/2" H x 13" W x 4" D. (1 3/4 lbs.)

Cost: $169.95

WOWee One Slim



The WOWee One Slim is a compact portable speaker unit which provides a full range frequency response. It is intended for use as both a fixed and portable solution for all iPod, iPad, mp3, mp4, mobile phone and computer applications. It uses the same hybrid technology as the WOWee ONE and produces an incredible bass sound with a 40Hz - 20kHz sound range.

The unit is powered by an internal rechargeable battery and can deliver up to 10 hours of playtime per charge. It can be recharged via computer USB or a 5V USB power adapter using a plug. There is also a built in LED low battery indicator.

Cost: $39.95

iFusion



The iFusion is an integrated communications docking station for the Apple iPhone. Combining the capabilities of many top-selling iPhone accessories into a single device, the iFusion utilizes built-in Bluetooth technology, a full duplex speaker phone and a patented ergonomic design to deliver superior voice quality that meets the requirements of today's home and business consumer.

The cradle design of the iFusion supports the iPhone 3G, 3GS and 4, providing a means to securely dock the phone while supplying power, battery charging and data synchronization via an integrated USB cable. With support for A2DP Bluetooth streaming, users are able to enjoy their favorite iPhone music over the internal speakerphone.

Cost: $169

LaCie RuggedKey




The LaCie RuggedKey is built to withstand accidental drops from heights far above what you'd encounter on your way to the office. Its rubber construction is 100-meter drop-resistant. That means ultimate protection for your key – and your data – for all of life's little stumbles. The RuggedKey has a USB 3.0 interface and file transfer speed of up to 150 MB/s, but it's also backward compatible with USB 2.0. The USB also comes with AES 256-bit encryption for data security.

Cost: Starts at $39.99

SyrenPro



The SyrenPro is a wireless weather-resistant outdoor Bluetooth speaker with TrueWireless Stereo pairing, which lets you create your own stereo system wirelessly using two speakers. The speakers can be plugged into an electrical outlet or run by rechargeable battery for up to four hours, so you can enjoy your music anywhere. The speakers provide 360-degree sound, are weather/UV resistant, and work with most Bluetooth devices.

Cost: $129.99

The Livescribe Echo Smartpen



The Livescribe Echo Smartpen allows you to record audio while you’re taking notes, and then play them back later. You can save and share interactive notes to your computer, iPad or iPhone via a micro-USB connector that also allows you to recharge your pen. The memory storage holds 400 or 800 hours of recorded audio, depending on the model, and includes an OLED display that makes it easy to navigate smartpen apps.

Cost: Starting at $169.95

Logitech Type-S


The Logitech Type-S is a thin and light protective keyboard case for the Samsung Galaxy Tab S 10.5 and protects both sides of your Galaxy Tab S from accidental bumps, scratches and spills. Its built-in Bluetooth® keyboard and well-spaced keys provide a fast and comfortable typing experience. The dual-view stand caters to different activities from typing to reading to chatting online, and includes an auto-wake auto-sleep feature so that the tablet wakes when you open the case. The Logitech Type-S is also now available in bright red.

Cost: $99.99

G-DRIVE ev SSD


With a need for speed - take the power of the G-DRIVE ev SSD with you. With extreme solid-state performance connected with USB 3.0, you’ll get transfer rates up to 400MB/s. The drive comes with 512GB of storage capacity and is compatible with Mac OS 10.6, Windows 7, 8 and Vista. It comes with a three-year warranty. Use it alone or with the G-DOCK ev with Thunderbolt and experience up to 480MB/s for the ultimate flexibility and expandability that today’s creative professionals demand.

Cost: $499.95

Logitech Bluetooth Multi-Device Keyboard



Logitech Bluetooth Multi-Device Keyboard

The Logitech® Bluetooth® Multi-Device Keyboard K480 is designed for use with up to three devices, regardless of computing platform. Now, you can work on a report on your computer, and with the flick of the Easy-Switch dial, respond to a message on your smartphone or type a tweet on your tablet – all from the Logitech Bluetooth Multi-Device Keyboard K480.

Cost: $49.99

Monday 13 April 2015

Lasers quickly load thousands of cells with nano-sized cargo



Doctors dream of injecting cells with large nanoscopic cargo to treat or study illnesses. The existing approach to this is extremely slow, however. At one cell per minute, it would take ages to get a meaningful payload. That won't be a problem if UCLA scientists have their way, though -- they've developed a technique that uses lasers to inject legions of cells at a time. The concentrated light heats up the titanium coating on a chip until it boils water surrounding the target cells, creating fissures that let the cargo inside. It only takes 10 seconds for the laser to process an entire chip's worth of cells, and researchers estimate that they could fill a whopping 100,000 cells per minute.

US nuclear fears block Intel China supercomputer update



The US government has refused to let Intel help China update the world's biggest supercomputer.
Intel applied for a licence to export tens of thousands of chips to update the Tianhe-2 computer.
The Department of Commerce refused, saying it was concerned about nuclear research being done with the machine.
Separately, Intel has signed a $200m (£136m) deal with the US government to build a massive supercomputer at one of its national laboratories.
The Tianhe-2 uses 80,000 Intel Xeon chips to generate a computational capacity of more than 33 petaflops. A petaflop is equal to about one quadrillion calculations per second.
According to the Top 500, an organisation that monitors supercomputers, the Tianhe-2 has been the world's most powerful machine for the past 18 months.
This year the Chinese machine was due to undergo a series of upgrades to boost its number-crunching abilities past 110 petaflops. The upgrades would depend largely on new Intel Xeon chips. The chipmaker informed US authorities of its involvement with the upgrade programme and was told to apply for an export licence.

'In compliance'

In a notice published online the US Department of Commerce said it refused Intel's application to export the chips for Tianhe-2 and three other Chinese supercomputers because the machines were being used for "nuclear explosive activities". The relevant section of US export regulations reveals that this covers technologies used in the "design, development or fabrication" of nuclear weapons.
The notice added that the four institutions where the supercomputers would be located were deemed to be "acting contrary to the national security or foreign policy interests of the United States".
In a statement given to the IDG news wire, the chipmaker said: "Intel complied with the notification and applied for the licence, which was denied. We are in compliance with the US law."
China is now believed to be accelerating its own home-grown chipmaking efforts to boost the power of the four supercomputers and complete the upgrade programme.
Although Intel has been denied the chance to sell its Xeon chips to China, the company has signed a large deal to build the Aurora supercomputer at the Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois. When finished that machine is expected to have a peak performance of 180 petaflops.

The quest for running headphones that don't fall out is over



I'm guessing that you're here to learn about the latest running technology to help make you that little bit faster - that's pretty much the reason I've been putting together this weekly guide.
But the time has come to extend things a little bit - as part of T3's new 'Man vs Tech' feature I'm going to be taking part in a triathlon for the first time in my life.
It's in 8 weeks.
I've not been in the pool for about 5 years (apart from messing around in Dubai with a beachball for an hour) and my cycling regime consists of a leisurely pedal for a mile each morning to the train station.
But there will be one secret weapon in my arsenal: technology. I'll be given every tool possible to get me tri-ready - so whether it's the latest wetsuit, power meter or mat (apparently I'll even need one of them for changing my kit) I'll be putting it through its paces here.
I'm frightened.



Thursday 9 April 2015

Flexible Aluminum-Ion Battery Recharges in 60 Seconds




Stanford University researchers on Tuesday revealed they had stumbled onto a breakthrough that could lead to the adoption of fast-charging, long-lasting batteries in the near future.
"An ultra-fast rechargeable aluminum-ion battery," which details the team's findings, was published in the April 6 edition of Nature.
The turning point occurred when the researchers were trying out materials to serve as a cathode, and they began experimenting with graphite.


Using one of the aluminum-ion prototypes, they were able to charge a battery comparable to one used in a smartphone, in roughly 1 minute. That's about 60 times faster than a lithium-ion battery would charge

Stanford's aluminum-ion concept promises unprecedented durability, standing up to about 7,500 charge-discharge cycles before losing any of its capacity. To put that into perspective: Lithium-ion batteries endure about 1,000 cycles before declining in capacity, and previous aluminum-ion prototypes could withstand only about 100.
Other benefits of the aluminum-ion prototype include safety and flexibility.
The researchers could safely bore into an aluminum-ion battery without causing a fire, though that wouldn't be possible with lithium-ion cells. Aluminum-ion batteries are pliable, to a degree, which could have huge implications for just about any device that runs on battery power.

Facebook Messenger Gets Standalone Web Version With Messenger.com


Facebook on Wednesday unveiled a standalone Web version of its Messenger, with the launch of the Messenger.com website.
The social networking giant had previously separated Messenger on AndroidiOS andWindows Phone devices from the main Facebook app, and made it mandatory for all users to download the Messenger app to continue to enjoy messaging services on mobile.
With the new Messenger Web interface, users now have a dedicated Web page to chat with their Facebook friends just like on Facebook.com. Similar to its move on the mobile front, the company has effectively separated Facebook Messenger from Facebook, but speaking with Re/code, a Facebook spokesperson has confirmed there are no plans to remove access to messaging services from its core Facebook.com Web service as of now.
The Web version is currently available in English only and support for more languages will come in future. It is also being speculated that the company could soon launch a desktop client as well.
To get started, users can log onto Messenger.com with their Facebook account, and all the existing chats will appear. Users can also make audio and video calls from the top right menu bar.
Meanwhile, OS X users now have a third-party app called Messenger for Mac that can make Messenger.com work like a desktop app on OS X. The app is not official from Facebook, but instead is a "free and open-source project created by fans of Messenger."
The third-party Messenger for Mac app lets users sign into Facebook with Messenger.com and makes it look like a native application for desktop. The app can also add desktop notifications, which can be enabled via the "gear" icon in the top-right corner of the main window.

Nasa's Ambitious Solar Probe Plus Mission Begins to Take Shape





Nasa's ambitious Solar Probe Plus mission came a step closer to reality when it successfully completed its Critical Design Review (CDR) recently.
An independent Nasa review board met at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Maryland to review the mission plan.
APL has designed and will build and operate the spacecraft - that will fly closer to the sun than any other spacecraft has done before - for Nasa.
The main goals for the Solar Probe Plus mission are to trace the flow of energy and understand the heating of the solar corona and to explore the physical mechanisms that accelerate the solar wind and energetic particles.
The CDR certified that the Solar Probe Plus mission design is at an advanced stage and that fabrication, assembly, integration and testing of the many elements of the mission may proceed.
Solar Probe Plus is scheduled to launch aboard a United Launch Alliance Delta 4-Heavy rocket with an upper stage from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida, in 2018.
Over 24 orbits, the mission will use seven flybys of Venus to reduce its distance from the sun. The closest flyby will be just about 6.1 million kilometres from the surface of the star.
Scientists have long wanted to send a probe through the sun's outer atmosphere, or corona, to better understand the solar wind and the material it carries into our solar system.
Solar Probe Plus will carry four instrument suites to study magnetic fields, plasma, and energetic particles, and will image the solar wind.
The spacecraft and instruments will be protected from the sun's heat by a 4.5-inch-thick carbon-composite shield.
During the closest passes around the sun, temperatures outside the spacecraft will reach nearly 1370 degrees Celsius.

Sunday 5 April 2015

Microsoft browsers to disable 'Do Not Track' by default

WASHINGTON: Microsoft has announced its decision to not turn on the 'Do Not Track' feature in the upcoming versions of Internet Explorer and Spartan browsers by default.

Microsoft chief privacy officer Brendon Lynch said that the decision was taken in order to abide by the latest draft of the official W3C standard for 'Do Not Track,' which stated clearly that the signal must represent the user's preference and not the choice of some vendor or institution outside the user's control, reported Tech Crunch.

The 'Do Not Track' feature in many popular browsers tells websites and their advertisers that you want to opt out of third-party tracking for advertising purposes.

All major browser vendors like, Google, Mozilla, Opera, Apple and Microsoft support this feature but the user's request to not be followed is not necessarily honoured by advertisers as it is no more than a request sent by the browser.

Microsoft started enabling the 'Do not Track' feature as the default setting with the rolling out of Internet Explorer 10.

Humans may soon download their personalities on computers

PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA: The world has only touched the surface of technological progress and computers may soon be able to transmit the complexities of human personalities, a prominent inventor says.

Sebastian Thrun, who founded the Google X laboratory where the internet search giant has developed Google Glass and driverless cars, said it was often difficult to grasp concepts before they come to fruition.

But he said that, much like data is now routinely transmitted via computers, the same may soon be true for full personalities.

"Perhaps we can get to the point where we can outsource our own personal experiences entirely into a computer -- and possibly our own personality. Maybe we're going to have a demo at some point where the computer runs 'Sebastian,'" he told a symposium at Stanford University.

"It's maybe unimaginable but it's not as far off as people think. It's very doable," said the German-born computer scientist, who remains a fellow at Google.

"I do believe that in all these technologies we have just scratched the surface. Almost everything interesting hasn't been invented yet," he said.

Other upcoming inventions predicted by Thrun include flying cars, computers that are implantable into the human body, and medical treatments that will drastically curb unnatural deaths.

Thrun was speaking as part of events to mark the premiere of "The Demo," an experimental opera about the 1968 data transmission test by scientist Doug Engelbart that helped pave the way for the creation of the internet.

But Jaron Lanier, a virtual reality pioneer known for his books on the philosophy of computers, doubted that scientists could ascertain how to share personalities.

"You are a moving target, and the way you change yourself in response to the presence of that technology would undo any ability to measure whether it has succeeded," he said.

Lanier warned that Silicon Valley put too much faith in technology's progress.

"I think we are going to have a real struggle to define ourselves in a humane and sweet way as we go through a lot of changes," he said.

He warned that technological innovations risked worsening inequality, saying: "I don't think the interests of entrepreneurs and everyone else are always aligned."

He gave the example of Egypt, saying that Silicon Valley was too congratulatory about the role of social media in the 2011 revolution that brought down strongman Hosni Mubarak.

"When it starts to go wrong, we don't take responsibility for that. There is a way in which we are being a little selective in tallying our victories," he said.
                                                                                                                                                                     Article from TOI - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/tech-news/Humans-may-soon-download-their-personalities-on-computers/articleshow/46805544.cms