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Nokia's Concept Phones

When you think of concept phones, you think technological prowess, ungainly good looks and a generous helping of awesomeness. This is the perfect excuse to pull together what we consider to be the top 5 Nokia concept phones in the world.


5. Nokia Aeon
In at number 5 is the Nokia Aeon. Back in 2006 the Nokia Aeon was one of the earlier concept phones to realise a full surface touchscreen. Its futuristic looks were ahead of their time and it certainly wouldn’t look out of place in today’s market.


4. Windows Phone Concept
 
Bright, bold and beautiful, the Windows Phone Concepts are a first snapshot of what we can expect from the Nokia and Microsoft tie-in. Exciting times ahead!


3. Nokia 888


Dubbed the Nokia 888, this concept phone is ultra-lightweight, wafer thin and incredibly flexible. It is powered by liquid battery and has a touch screen display. What more could you want?


2. Nokia E-Cu


Scaling the dizzy heights at number 2, is a concept phone that uses your body heat to charge itself! We’ve all been there, our mobile phone is about to die and we can’t get to a charger in time. Well the Nokia E-Cu would solve this problem. Built with a thermo generator, it could convert heat into energy. The idea is that by putting the phone in your pocket, you will get a charge, so by our logic, putting it next to a radiator would give you a turbo-charge it! 


1. Nokia Morph



Thunderbolt Port Added in Apple's new Laptop


Apple fans are holding their breath as we speak as they are waiting for the unraveling of the new 13 inch MacBook Pro. While some pictures have been leaked, thanks to Apple Insider, we managed to get our hands on a list of specs that will help you get an idea what this new Apple device is all about.
For this new laptop model, Apple has chosen a 2.3 GHz Core i5 processor and 4 GB of DDR3 that should go perfectly hand-in-hand in order to bring multi-tasking to a whole new level. The 320 GB of DD should provide enough storage memory for those interested in saving a lot of data on their hard disks. The 13.3 inch display will be capable of rendering a resolution of 1280 x 800 pixels but the video card is not exactly something to die for with the Intel HD Graphics 3000 and their 384 MB of shared video memory. With the FaceTime high-def camera, you can benefit from high quality images when video calling someone over the web.
People that mention this new Apple laptop also speak of a Thunderbolt connector which is capable of supporting High-Speed-E/A and MiniDisplay-Port devices. There is also an included FireWire port and also 2 USB slots (Apple’s laptops have never really been too keen on USB ports). As usual, the backlit keyboard is a feature also present on this new laptop as well.
Tomorrow, Apple is expected to launch its new line of MacBook Pros that are supposed to come with Intel’s high-speed Light Peak data connections and the famous Sandy Bridge processors. As the picture above suggests it, the presence of the „Thunderbolt” is certain and it will be a unique characteristics that Apple laptops have never used up until today. Let’s wait for the release of the new line and find out even more!

Android Honeycomb Interesting Facts


Since we first caught a glimpse of Google's Android Honeycomb OS back in December, we've been full of questions. Honeycomb is the first Android edition to be optimized for tablets -- and it's a whole new beast from the operating system we've come to know.
This week, Google showed off some of Honeycomb's features at a media event in Mountain View. The Android team also offered up the first hands-on demos of the Motorola Xoom, the soon-to-launch inaugural Honeycomb device. But there's still plenty left to learn.

1. Honeycomb is now "feature-complete."
Tech companies are known for occasionally working up to the last minute on devices, especially ones with software as intricate as smartphones and tablets. Honeycomb, however, has now reached a "feature-complete" state, a member of the Android team tells me -- meaning there may be a few random tweaks made here and there, but for the most part, what we saw this week is pretty much what we're going to see on store shelves. And from what I was told, we'll be seeing those Xoom tablets on store shelves "very soon."
No big surprise on the timing, of course; that jives with everything we've heard about the Xoom's launch in recent weeks. Moto Mobility CEO Sanjay Jha has said the device will likely ship in late February. Unofficial rumors have pointed to the 17th as the date to watch. The fact that the software is now considered more or less finished -- a sharp contrast to the last time we saw it, at CES in January -- certainly makes an imminent debut seem plausible.
2. Honeycomb could reach smartphones; it's still up in the air.
One thing I was hoping to learn at Wednesday's Google event was what the roadmap for Android looked like -- in other words, where do we go from here? Will phones eventually get Honeycomb, or will we now have two separate paths of Android -- one for smartphones, and one for tablets?
During Google's official presentation on Wednesday, the Android team didn't say much. After the session, however, Google reps told me why they're staying so quiet: They aren't completely sure how things will shake out.
Indeed, Android chief Andy Rubin has been very careful with his wording when talking about Honeycomb's future. Though Google has described Honeycomb as an OS that was "designed from the ground up for devices with larger screen sizes," Rubin has dropped hints about how Honeycomb's new features could work on phones, too.
Specifics aside, Rubin has said very explicitly that what we see in Honeycomb is definitely the direction all of Android will be heading -- and I heard similar sentiments from Google reps this week. When or how Honeycomb will reach smartphones is still to-be-determined, I'm told, but the visual components of the new OS will almost certainly land on all types of devices sooner or later.
Ultimately, then, the question appears to be whether Honeycomb itself ends up having multiple "profiles" -- one for tablets, one for smartphones -- or whether some of Honeycomb's visual features end up being ported over to a separate phone-specific edition of the Android OS. One way or another, though, the new look and feel introduced in Honeycomb will eventually become universal.
(For more thoughts and analysis on this, see my previous story: "Will Android Honeycomb come to smartphones?")
3. Android apps will now be able to detect whether they're running on a tablet or a phone and respond accordingly.
With all these Honeycomb-specific features now available to Android apps, one has to wonder whether developers will soon start offering multiple versions of their programs -- one for Honeycomb-running tablets, and one for non-Honeycomb phones. Even some of the developers at Wednesday's event weren't sure what to expect. I asked Google, and the simple answer: That won't be necessary.
An Android team member tells me the same APK -- the compressed file format used by Android applications -- will work on both a Honeycomb tablet and an Android phone, even if the app has Honeycomb-exclusive features built in. The app will be able to recognize which form it's on, I'm told, and then load the appropriate version and features for the device; there'll be no need for multiple tablet/smartphone versions to exist.
Now, with that said, some Honeycomb apps may still be tablet-only. If a developer creates an app exclusively for Honeycomb, then it'll work only for Honeycomb. But if a developer wants to offer tablet-specific enhancements while still providing a smartphone-compatible version, he'll be able to do it within a single application.
4. Honeycomb tablets will automatically sync apps and settings with your phone and stay in sync as time moves on.
The first time you use a Honeycomb tablet like the Xoom, the device will be able to automatically import the settings and preferences from your existing Android phone (provided that both devices are set up with the same Google account). The tablet will even be able to download and install all of the apps you've put on your smartphone in one big swoop.
Android Power TwitterThe phone-tablet syncing won't stop at that initial setup, either. As a Google rep explained it to me, when you download a new Android app on one device, it'll automatically show up on the other device, too. You can opt to delete an app individually from either device, of course, if you so choose. You can also see all of your collective apps at a glance and move apps manually from one device to another via the "My Market Account" section of Google's new Web-based Android Market.
Craving even more Honeycomb nuggets? Check out "Getting to know Android Honeycomb" for my hands-on impressions of Android 3.0 and the Motorola Xoom.

Honeycomb shows off it's graphical power!!


Honeycomb shows off it's graphical power in it's launch. It's a new revolution in the 3D games and graphics. Game lovers, it's your era that's gonna come.


Pomegranate Phone : The Ultimate Smart Phone

Pomegranate phone, a wonder device ,besides having the standard features of currently leading mobile phone, is an ultimate smart phone and device having features like

Projector
Global voice translator with over 150 languages
Harmonica
Coffee maker
Shaver

Projector

In the projector mode its screen can turn into a 72 inch projector. You can give your presentations anytime anywhere, and also it can play HD resolution video, giving you a theater in your hand

Global voice translator

Pomegranate comes with a live global voice translator with about 150 languages. Just speak at the front and your speech will be converted to desired language speech by pomegranate.

Harmonica

Pomegranate has an entertainment mode with a harmonica. You can play it yourself or play the built in notes

Coffee maker

Pomegranate comes with an ultimate mobile coffee maker. You just need to put a coffee disk in it, it sucks up the water, Brew’s it for 30 second and sends out the hot coffee.

Shaver

This wonder phone comes with a built in shaver allowing you to attend the phone and shave at the same time.

Nokia Microsoft Partnership

Nokia and Microsoft today announced plans to form a broad strategic partnership that would use their complementary strengths and expertise to create a new global mobile ecosystem.

Nokia and Microsoft intend to jointly create market-leading mobile products and services designed to offer consumers, operators and developers unrivalled choice and opportunity. As each company would focus on its core competencies, the partnership would create the opportunity for rapid time to market execution. Additionally, Nokia and Microsoft plan to work together to integrate key assets and create completely new service offerings, while extending established products and services to new markets.

Under the proposed partnership:


Nokia would adopt Windows Phone as its principal smartphone strategy, innovating on top of the platform in areas such as imaging, where Nokia is a market leader.

Nokia would help drive the future of Windows Phone. Nokia would contribute its expertise on hardware design, language support, and help bring Windows Phone to a larger range of price points, market segments and geographies.

Nokia and Microsoft would closely collaborate on joint marketing initiatives and a shared development roadmap to align on the future evolution of mobile products.

Bing would power Nokia’s search services across Nokia devices and services, giving customers access to Bing’s next generation search capabilities. Microsoft adCenter would provide search advertising services on Nokia’s line of devices and services.

Nokia Maps would be a core part of Microsoft’s mapping services. For example, Maps would be integrated with Microsoft’s Bing search engine and adCenter advertising platform to form a unique local search and advertising experience

Nokia’s extensive operator billing agreements would make it easier for consumers to purchase Nokia Windows Phone services in countries where credit-card use is low.

Microsoft development tools would be used to create applications to run on Nokia Windows Phones, allowing developers to easily leverage the ecosystem’s global reach.

Nokia’s content and application store would be integrated with Microsoft Marketplace for a more compelling consumer experience.
“Today, developers, operators and consumers want compelling mobile products, which include not only the device, but the software, services, applications and customer support that make a great experience,” Stephen Elop, Nokia President and CEO, said at a joint news conference in London. “Nokia and Microsoft will combine our strengths to deliver an ecosystem with unrivalled global reach and scale. It’s now a three-horse race.”

“I am excited about this partnership with Nokia,” said Steven A. Ballmer, Microsoft CEO. “Ecosystems thrive when fueled by speed, innovation and scale.The partnership announced today provides incredible scale, vast expertise in hardware and software innovation and a proven ability to execute.”

H2O launches its waterproof earbuds called Audio Flex Earbuds


If you love to enjoy your favourite music no matter whether you are at home or at beach for your holidays then the latest Audio Flex Earbuds from H2O will prove to be your great companion. Majority of earphones are available in the market, but H2O Audio Flex Earbuds is different from them as it features the waterproof and sweat proof technology so that you are close to your music while swimming, boating or any other kind of interesting excursion.

These latest earphones are capable of working up to 3 feet under water and offers excellent sound quality along with great durability. The earphones are available in various interesting colours among which you can select the one as per your choice and preference. Moreover the H2O Audio Flex Earbuds are available in different sizes as well so as to suit your ears and provide comfortable wearing.

So just get your waterproof handset or a case for the same and enjoy your favourite tracks through H2O Audio Flex Earbuds.

HP announces its latest TouchPad Tablet


HP has recently made an announcement about its latest TouchPad Tablet which the company expects will give a tough competition to the existing Apple iPad and Samsung Galaxy Tab. HP TouchPad Tablet resembles very much like the iPad and comes loaded with wide array of impressive specifications.

This tablet runs on webOS 3.0 OS and is powered by 1.2 GHz of dual core Snapdragon processor. There is 9.7 inches of multi touch display in the tablet that supports resolution of 1024 X 768 pixels for bright and clear contents.

The connectivity features of this tablet include options like WiFi, microUSB connector and Bluetooth 2.1+ EDR. The front facing 1. 3MP webcam in the tablet facilitates video calling.

HP TouchPad Tablet is capable of supporting multiple audio as well as video formats. Additional features of this tablet which makes it an impressive device include browser with full flash support, gyroscope, accelerometer, compass, light sensor , VPN support, Google docs, QuickOffice, memory options of 16GB and 32GB, stereo speakers, 3.5mm audio jack, 6300 mAh battery and others.

Facebook Phone: It's Real, and Official


Rumors that Facebook is working with phone manufacturers to create an Android-based Facebook phone have come true. British-based phone manufacturer INQ revealed two Android phones featuring tight integration with Facebook, while HTC, which owns INQ, is also said to work on a more high-end Facebook phone, too.
The INQ Cloud Touch runs on Android 2.2 with a highly customized interface based on Facebook features. You can sign in with your Facebook account, pull all your contacts in, and integrate home screen shortcuts to Facebook Chat, Friends, Messages and Wall. The Cloud Touch has a 3.5-inch display, while a smaller version of the phone, the Cloud Q, has a QWERTY keyboard and a 2.6-inch screen. There is no Facebook branding on the device.
The INQ Cloud phones are expected to arrive in the United States later this year. Pricing has not been announced. But INQ said that the Cloud Touch, which runs on a (sluggish by today's standards) 600MHz processor and has a 5-megapixel camera, too, should be available in the U.K. in April. The phone is tightly integrated with Spotify's cloud music service. The Cloud Touch's default media player is Spotify (including a dedicated key), a service that is expected to arrive in the U.S. soon. TechCrunch has a video demo of the INQ Cloud Touch.
HTC, who owns INQ, is also expected to bring on the market a Facebook phone, according to a Financial Times report. It will not be branded with Facebook's name or logo, but rather have a dedicated hardware key for Facebook. Other details on HTC's Facebook phone are sketchy, though presumably it will run a customized version of Android, too.

Kyocera Echo Dual-screen Android Phone


Sprint and Kyocera Communications have proudly introduced the first dual-touchscreen Android smartphone, the Kyocera Echo. This Android-powered smartphone features two high-resolution 3.5-inch WVGA touchscreen displays connected by a patent-pending “pivot hinge” that enables the two displays to operate independently, side-by-side or combined to form an oversized 4.7-inch (diagonally) integrated display. In its closed position, the Kyocera Echo is a pocket-friendly, single-display smartphone. When opened, the Echo reveals a revolutionary new platform for wireless multitasking and provides users a new level of versatility in Android. The Kyocera Echo also has a 1GHz processor, the Google Android 2.2 OS, a 5MP camera with 720p video capabilities and 3G. Folks in the US will be able to purchase this smartphone for around $199.

LG Triptych Folding Phone Turns Into a Tablet


Designer Edward Hale recently showed us his interesting LG Concept Phone, called Triptych. This folding phone can turn into a tablet and it features a main screen and two auxiliary displays that are able to fold out, in order to provide more reading, playback and typing space.

Considering that LG is yet to reveal its first tablet, we’ll wait and see if they will use any ideas from concepts like the one you can see here.

Hex Sport Watch Band for iPod nano


Hex today introduced its new Sport Watch Band for the sixth-generation iPod nano. Made of perforated silicone for added breathability, the Hex Sport Watch Band is designed to be used with the Nike+ Sport Kit, and features open access to the Dock Connector, screen, headphone port and the power and volume buttons. The Hex Sport Watch Band for the iPod nano 6G is priced at $29.95.

Airtel Money lets you pay through your mobile phone

A mobile phone payment service called Airtel Money is out and running from the Indian telecom giant, Airtel. A service offering from Airtel Mcommerce Services Limited (AMSL), Airtel Money lets you load cash into your mobile phone and then use it to pay while you shop for groceries at a mall or eat at a restaurant.

Like a credit or debit card, using Airtel Money eradicates the necessity of carrying paper money with you at all times. Instead your phone acts as a digital money wallet, when enabled with an Airtel Money SIM.

Register for Airtel Money

You need to exchange your existing SIM for a new 64K Airtel Money SIM, according to Airtel Money's website. After Airtel Money is activated and you exchange your existing SIM with the new Airtel Money SIM, you can load money in your Airtel Money account to start using at merchant shops.

How does Airtel Money work?

You need to deposit cash in your Airtel Money account first by going to your nearest Airtel retail outlet. After you have some money sitting in your Airtel Money account, you can pay at various shops by clicking on the Airtel Money application on your SIM card and selecting the merchant you want to make the payment.

Using Airtel Money, you need to authorize all payment transactions by a unique 4-digit mPIN password. Payment confirmations on Airtel Money are received via SMS -- for over the counter payments to merchants, even the merchant receives SMS receipt their phone, said Airtel.

Where to use Airtel Money?

You can use Airtel Money at merchant shops that accept Airtel Money payments. These range from paying your phone, electricity, gas, insurance, DTH, etc., bills. You can even pay at restaurants, buy movie tickets and recharge your phone using Airtel Money. Currently the Airtel Money service is only being offered in Delhi and Haryana with a select base of vendors and merchant shops.

Nokia Morph - Flexible phone


Launched alongside The Museum of Modern Art “Design and The Elastic Mind” exhibition, the Morph concept device is a bridge between highly advanced technologies and their potential benefits to end-users. This device concept showcases some revolutionary leaps being explored by Nokia Research Center (NRC) in collaboration with the Cambridge Nanoscience Centre (United Kingdom) – nanoscale technologies that will potentially create a world of radically different devices that open up an entirely new spectrum of possibilities.

Morph concept technologies might create fantastic opportunities for mobile devices:

Newly-enabled flexible and transparent materials blend more seamlessly with the way we live
Devices become self-cleaning and self-preserving
Transparent electronics offering an entirely new aesthetic dimension
Built-in solar absorption might charge a device, whilst batteries become smaller, longer lasting and faster to charge
Integrated sensors might allow us to learn more about the environment around us, empowering us to make better choices
In addition to the advances above, the integrated electronics shown in the Morph concept could cost less and include more functionality in a much smaller space, even as interfaces are simplified and usability is enhanced. All of these new capabilities will unleash new applications and services that will allow us to communicate and interact in unprecedented ways.

Will.i.am Launches Will.i.apps With First 360-Degree Music Video For The Black Eyed Peas


Every major music artist these days seems to have their own iPhone app, but the latest app from the Black Eyed Peas is like nothing you’ve ever seen before. The app (iTunes link, $2.99) lets you follow each band member’s Twitter feed with photos, pose the band members in a 3D photo shoot, and even does an augmented-reality trick (when you point the iPhone camera at the Black Eyed Peas’ latest album cover, a character representing one of the band members pops out and shows his latest Tweet in a speech balloon). But what is really original about the app, is the 360-degree music video.

The video for the song “The Time: The Dirty Bit,” puts you in the center of a dance party with the Black Eyed Peas and a bunch of fans. (An iPhone 4 is recommended to get the full effect with no jitters). As you turn around while looking at the screen, you are surrounded by dancers and the band members. You can pan left or right, all while the video is playing. It’s like Google Street View filled with hot dancers, but in video.

“You are submerged and engulfed in a party,” says will.i.am, who spoke with me recently about the app. “You as a director can focus on things behind you.” He thinks 360-degree music videos will become part of many entertainment apps. In fact, he is forming a new company called—what else?—will.i.apps with Edo Segal of Futurity Ventures to create a platform for other artists to create their own 360-degree video apps. (Another Futurity Ventures company called 3d360 developed the 3D video technology). Segal believes that apps in general will become the center of media consumption.

But don’t try to call it just video. “It is so not video” says will.i.am, “that is so 2008. You cannot even compare it to yesterday. It is something brand new.” Adds Segal: “When you think about what a good app should do is put you closer to the artists.”

For will.i.am, these apps represent the future of music: “The concept of an album is dead. What the hell is an album nowadays? This allows artists to add more layers onto that 4-minute song that is audio only. Songwriting changes.” To illustrate this to me, he starts to sing, “as she was walking down the hallway and she seen that little girl and I told her to turn left—you can do all that and turn left—and I look up to the sky and saw the rainbow—you can look up at the sky in the app. You couldn’t do that yesterday, it was linear. Now it is directional. If I knew we were going to do this app when I wrote the song, I would have wrote the song totally different.”

Now he can put his fans in the music videos right alongside him, putting them in the center of his world. Here is a promotional video showing the app in action, and below are screenshots.

Finger-Powered Batteries




A dying battery on your mobile phone can be a worst-case scenario for those of us that cannot be away from our mobiles for even a second. The Swing Your Energy Charger is a quick and easy solution for dying mobile batteries. Designed by Song Teaho and Hyejin Lee, the Swing Your Energy Charger just needs to be twirled around your finger to power back up.

However, the Swing Your Energy Charger will only give your mobile phone enough juice to last you through your next conversation or until you get to your electrical charger.

Facebook is not closing on 15 March


If you spend a better part of your life living out of Facebook, rejoice. Facebook won't be closing on March 15 after all. Surprised? Read on ...

More than one million people have already fallen for a hoax that claims that the popular social networking site will be shutting down on March 15.

According to IT security firm Sophos, a bogus news story published by the "Weekly World News", said Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg had told reporters that "managing [Facebook] has ruined my life. I need to put an end to all the madness."

Some panic-stricken Facebook users and mischief-mongers spread the story far and wide across the internet in no time. Although Facebook debunked the hoax via its Twitter account late on Sunday, users still continue to pass the bogus messages onto their online friends.

The "Weekly World News" article went on to quote another company official, Avrat Humarthi, vice-president of technical affairs at Facebook, as saying "After March 15th the whole website shuts down. So if you ever want to see your pictures again, I recommend you take them off the internet. You won't be able to get them back once Facebook goes out of business."

Sophos said that many people would not believe the report, which comes from a newspaper that has previously reported George Clooney is running for president and that alien spacecrafts will visit earth in 2011. However, it only takes only a small number of people to think it might be possible to turn a joke of a news story into an internet hoax as has been proved many a times in the past few years.

"I certainly wouldn't disagree that users would be wise to have their own backup of their photographs, rather than rely on Facebook -- but it's nothing more than a scare to suggest to people that they have to do it before March15th because Facebook is going to close down," explained Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos.

"There's an important lesson here -- don't believe everything you read on the internet, and think twice before you pass a story on to your friends."


Read more: Facebook is not closing down on March 15 - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/news/internet/Facebook-is-not-closing-down-on-March-15/articleshow/7258265.cms#ixzz1DBY4EMeo

IPv4 address exhaustion

Growth of Internet-enabled phones like the iPhone and web use in Asia has seen a rapid depletion of IP addresses, which are going to run out in the next 24 hours.
Every device, which connects to the Internet, is assigned a "number" but with millions of web enabled phones now online they are fast running out.
IP addresses act as "phone numbers" to ensure that surfers reach websites and e-mails find their destination.
The system, which had been set up in the 1980s, with a maximum of 4.1 billion addresses was supposed to never run out.
But it does not mean the Internet will come to a halt once the addresses have finished, as a system called Internet Protocol version 6, or IPv6 has been created to replace version 4.
"It will just be 'business as usual' if everyone gets their job done," the Daily Mail quoted John Curran, Chief Executive of the American Registry for Internet Numbers, one of five regional groups that dole out such addresses, as saying.
Curran said only about 2 percent of websites support the new Internet Protocol version 6.
The "end game", the distribution of the last five blocks, was triggered by the distribution of two of the last seven blocks on February 1.
They went to the Asia Pacific Network Information Centre, the regional registry for East Asia (including India), Australia and the Pacific islands. (ANI)