Showing posts with label Microsoft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Microsoft. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Microsoft Surface For $19.99 At Amazon Mistakenly

                           Amazon had the price of the Microsoft Surface Touch at $19.99 on Friday! Actually.the  online retailer had a listing for the Microsoft Surface Touch Cover. This is the 3mm thick cover for Microsoft's new slate that also doubles as a touch sensitive QWERTY keyboard. Normally listed on sale for $119.99, Amazon had posted a price of $19.99 for the Touch Cover. The product was out of stock, but Amazon was still accepting orders for those who don't mind waiting for the retailer's inventory to be replenished. With the $19.99 price believed to be a typo, it is unclear whether or not Amazon will honor the orders placed at the lower price.
Amazon mistakenly lists Microsoft Surface Touch Cover on sale for only $19.99


                  The Microsoft Surface has a virtual QWERT keyboard, but the Touch Cover and the Type Cover are both available as accessories. Both connect to the tablet with the use of a magnetic dock. Even though most people are used to the style of the keyboard on the Type Cover, many are saying that the typing experience is superior on the cheaper Touch Cover.

                   
Later on Friday, Amazon took down the price of the listing, replacing it with a message that it would notify those who leave their email address when the cover is back in stock.

Monday, November 2, 2015

Notification Center To Land In Windows Phone Soon

                        Yeah,I know that at this moment ,WP 8 doesn't have a notification center but that doesn't mean that it will never have a notification center.


At the BUILD conference yesterday, Microsoft’s program manager Thomas Fennel said:

“Because we ran out of time. It’s very very important to me… we get tons of feedback from developers that they want something like that as well. I promise we’re thinking very very hard on that one.”

As we know that it was Android who first introduced the notification center,and iOS soon after that basically copied that whole that thing , bringing a few modifications.I just hope that the WP edition doesn't become a copycat.Well,let's hope for the best!



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Saturday, October 31, 2015

Microsoft Sued For Its Live Tiles

The patent breakage lawsuit originates from SurfCast, an OS development company based in Portland, which owns a patent granted in 2004 pertaining to a “System and method for simultaneous display of multiple information sources.” Just from that title alone, it would sound like SurfCast could sue over just about anything from Google News to Hootsuite. Of course, the patent itself isn't quite as broad, but still not great. It details a GUI that ”organizes content from a variety of information sources into grid of tiles each of which can refresh its content independently of the others.”

It reminds me of the Live Tiles, though doesn't really look all that much like Live Tiles. But, don't get disheartened Micrsoft fans. Microsoft also holds a patent for Live Tiles, which covers “systems and methods for providing a user interface mobile devices enable data and services available through mobile device to be represented as a set of tiles maintained a display space.” Microsoft's patent was filed back in 2006, but it was rejected in 2009 specifically because of the prior art existing in SurfCast's patent. Microsoft reapplied and the patent was granted in 2011.

               SurfCast names “Windows Phone, Microsoft Surface with the Windows RT Operating System, Microsoft Windows RT, Microsoft Windows 8, Microsoft Windows 8 Pro, and Microsoft Windows 8 Enterprise Operating System” in its suit, but surprisingly leaves out Windows Phone 7/7.5, which has been using this same system for 2 years now, going back to before Microsoft held a patent for the system. The same couldalso be applied to any of the now 120,000 apps that have been submitted to the Windows and Windows Phone Stores, because Microsoft details ways for developers to create Live Tiles, which means each app would be infringing when it is submitted to the store.

In return Microsoft will go to court in order to prove that its method for displaying information in boxes is "unique" compared to the method of displaying information in boxes that was patented by SurfCast.
 

 You can go over to http://www.surfcast.com/ and have a look at their website.
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Top Best Finance And Management Apps For Windows Phone


                        After Windows 8 has released and Windows Market has 125,000+ apps,Microsoft is promising a huge boost for its app ecosystem, as more and more people equip themselves with those phones.

Best personal expenses and finance apps for Windows PhoneSo I decided to look into the apps that are available in the Store regarding business and money management.

            There are a few WP-specific apps, while most popular names are also there,which are pretty well made.







1.Pageonce Personal Finance(Free)

          This app automatically organizes your accounts and collect your transactions, help manage your bills and send you real-time notifications – all this from the convenience of your Windows Phone .
Features:
• Bill management on the go
• Monitor credit card transactions
• Check bank account status
• View detailed bill statements
• Review investment portfolios
• Receive account activity alerts and push notifications
• Safe and secure
• Remote data destruct in case you lose your phone

2.Stocks Tile($0.99)

             This app  provides a quick overview of stock quotes and realtime change. It can show charts for different periods as well as detailed stock information and news. Supports live tile updates with push notifications on 5min intervals or more. Up to 4 stocks can be displayed on tile. All stock information is retrieved from Yahoo! Finance.

Stocks Tile screenshot      Stocks Tile screenshot     Stocks Tile screenshot


3.Stocks(Free)

       This app helps you to track your favorite stocks and indices right on your Windows Phone. Keep a list or use the "quick search" feature to easily find today's hottest trade. See the latest quotes at a glance, or dive into the details for price/earnings ratio, market cap, volume and more. Want the full picture? Get up-to-the-minute market news with direct feeds from Bing.

4.My Budget($0.99)

         My Budget is an easy solution to balance your accounts, track your expenditure, and manage your money and more. As a personal finance application one can enter receipts, assign each transaction to a category and to an account.
My Budget V2 is rewritten completely to do the following
1. Support multiple accounts.
2. View balances at a glance.
3. Checkbook Registration.
4. Schedule Bills and Transactions with recurrence
5. Track expenses with spending limit
6. Transaction history.
7. Passcode protect

5.Toshi Finance(Free)

          You know Toshl, tight? It is available on almost every major platform, so if you have been already using it, you can just log onto your account from your Windows Phone, and sync your prior info.

The apps offers a great and simple interface, and all bells and whistles for managing a budget with income and expenses. If you want to manage more than one budget, or need more export formats, you'd have to dole out for ToshlPro, though, and that's $20 annually. 


6.Expensify(Free)

          Best things in life are free, and, as users on other platforms know, Expensify is one of the best options to manage your expense reports, complete with receipt scanning, creating a report and emailing it for you. Road warriors will appreciate it.


7.Finance Helper(Free)

           All-in-one income/expenses tracker, including recurring items like bill payments, which can be displayed on a Live Tile as "due soon" or "past due", for example. In addition to loan payments calculator, you also get numerous export options and syncing with Windows 8.


8.myMoney Book($2.99)

         With a great Modern UI interface, and all the necessary options to manage a balanced budget, including backup, myMoney Book should be on the top of every Windows Phone owner's list for a personal finance app. It has an edge in terms of versatile Live Tile display of your content, but one caveat, too - it is paid, to the tune of $2.99.


Friday, October 30, 2015

Samsung Brings Out Ativ Ads


                                       Only a day has passed since Windows phone 8 was launched and today we’re seeing Samsung push out its entire ATIV-branded product family in its latest ad.

               
                     That’s the ATIV Smart PC Pro tablet running full Windows 8, ATIV S Windows Phone launched at IFA and rarely seen ever since, and the ATIV TAB running the stripped-down version of Windows 8 for ARM-CPU-powered tablets, Windows RT.



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Adding Favourites In Internet Explorer 10


                             Internet Explorer is the default browser of Microsoft surface and the one thing that was odd  was the lack of a way to save a website as a favorite.  
Pin button on Surface IE 10
                  However,as i found out that the process is rather simple. Just tap on the "pin" button and you'll find two options. First to pin the site to your Start Screen for easy access and second, to add the site as a favorite.
To access your favorites, just tap on the URL field to pull up a tile list listing of frequently visited sites as well as your favorites.

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Can Windows 8 Make A Difference?


                   This morning in San Francisco, Microsoft unveiled infront of us the latest iteration of its mobile OS- Windows Phone 8.  The new OS features the same minimalistic tile-based user interface we’ve come to know and love from Windows Phone 7, with some tweaks to tile sizes, layout, and animations. Especially once version 7.8 starts rolling out to the masses, it’s not going to be terribly easy to tell Windows Phone builds apart from a distance,since that resizing tiles are gonna come in 7.8

                     Windows Phone market share was still stuck below 4% at the top of October, according to ComScore. The reasons behind Microsoft’s struggle to gain place in the mobile world are many and varied, but a bad user experience isn’t one of them: Windows Phone 7 has garnered more critical praise than almost any mobile platform in memory.

                But another wave of glowing press won’t be enough to force Windows Phone into relevance. Does version 8 bring enough features to cement its position in the mobile world .Lets find out!

                I am gonna break this article into two parts -first why and how WP 8 can make a difference and second -why it can't.So lets get started.

Positive Thinking

                      Microsoft didn’t just demo family-centric features like the earlier versions of Windows. It also gave us some solid figures to get excited about. Figures like app counts: 125,000 in the Windows Marketplace. That’s 25,000 more than the company reported in June. And Microsoft is putting its focus on apps that people need the most. Windows Phone Manager Joe Belfiore’s quote might not be the event’s most elegant, but it’s ambitious and exciting: “We will be at a point where we will have 46 of the top 50 of the most heavily used apps on other platforms.”
             Moreover, big names like Pandora, are coming,which is offering a free one-year premium subscription for buyers of WP8 devices.

            Promotional deals like that put us in mind of marketing, and Microsoft has some big talk in that department. As Windows Phone continues to lag behind other platforms in mind share, Microsoft’s renewed commitment to advertising is heartening, and inspires confidence that it knows where it needs to bring the heat. 

There are many more variables at play in the Windows Phone-vs-the-world equation, and a lot of room in the market for things to go disastrously wrong -or incredibly right- for Microsoft. Whether you believe the most “beautifully different” platform in mobile will succeed or fail in version 8 will of course depend on your own choices, conceptions, and other thoughts .Fortunately, the speculation period won’t last long, because the first Windows Phone 8 devices will launch in Europe this coming weekend. 

Not so positive thinking

               

               Crucial to understanding this argument is to look at where Microsoft put its focus in this morning’s announcement. There was precious little time devoted to blockbuster, competition-crushing features; instead what we got was in-depth explorations of a few new capabilities catering to niche markets. We got to see Jessica Alba tell us all about how Kids Corner lets her rest easy knowing her four-year-old can’t bang out a nonsense-tweet to four million people. Then there is  Data Sense, a (carrier-dependent) collection of utilities devoted to saving money on data costs through smart network use and traffic compression(for those with a modest data plan). Needed,but not something new There was more talk about keeping your contacts synced across all of your devices with SkyDrive.

               Truly speaking,WP 8 is still lagging behind Android.It doesn't support the highest resolution screens,nor does it support full multitasking(which I desperately need).Infact,I was astonished that even in WP 8 they didn't add an option to close an app,the only way was to press the back button continuously until you are out of the app.Also,seriously speaking not many new and important features were added.So yeah it was a bit of gloomy at the end of the day.
                 However,it depends upon you people completely how you welcome this OS.So will you buy a WP 8 phone?


No 7" Windows 8 Tablets In Recent Future

Image representing Windows as depicted in Crun...
Windows
There will be no 7

Microsoft and its partners are currently focusing on the 10" tablet space.And that means that the future of 7" Windows 8 tablets is bleak.

It is not entirely sure if the statement goes for Windows 8 and Windows RT tablets alike, but it is believed so... which is really not right because 7" or 7+" Windows RT tablets really make sense. With a smaller screen (and lower price), people are less likely to use such a tablet for productivity purposes and more likely to be OK with using it as a consumer device - mainly for web browsing, reading, music, a bit of gaming, etc.

What do you have to say about Microsoft's decision?Comment below.

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Fastest Way To Close All Programs In Windows

Windows Task Manager
Windows Task Manager
Well,everyone knows how to shut down programs in Windows,right?But if you are in a hurry and want to close all open programs then there are shortcuts.

Close all open programs

               A little-known set of keystrokes will shut down all active programs at once .
Press Ctrl-Alt-Delete and then Alt-T to open Task Manager's Applications tab. Press the down arrow, and then Shift-down arrow to select all the programs listed in the window. When they're all selected, press Alt-E, then Alt-F, and finally x to close Task Manager.
If you measure it,that's seven steps that can be accomplished in less than 10 seconds.
If you're concerned about having to remember these or other shortcut keys, press the Alt key to show the underline beneath the letter to press to activate each option.


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Is Windows 8 A Gamble?

Windows the main source of money for Microsoft for so many years.But completely redesigning that Windows and building Windows 8-is it a gamble on Microsoft's part?


             Windows is the money tree of Microsoft's empire. Without a significant design overhaul since 1995, the operating system has been essentially printing money for Microsoft. Last year, Windows brought in more than $18 billion in sales and $11.5 billion in profit. On its own, Windows would be big enough to place among the largest 150 U.S. companies by revenue, and its 62% profit margin would rank among the highest in the world.

                              But there is a problem.Microsoft PC sales are declining. Windows revenue has fallen for two years, and Microsoft is missing out on a rapidly growing tablet market that has begun to replace traditional computer demand. Just a few years ago, Windows ran about 90% of the world's Internet-connected computing devices, according to Net Applications. Now, with the rise of smartphones and tablets, Microsoft's share has fallen to about two-thirds.
                     Apple alone has sold more than 100 million iPads in just two and a half years. At an event held Tuesday unveiling a new line of iPads, Apple CEO Tim Cook noted that his company shipped more iPads in the second quarter of 2015 than any single PC manufacturer shipped PCs.At this position,Microsoft had two choices: Do something radically different to win the future or risk a slow death by cleaving to its past.
Microsoft picked the first option and created Windows 8. The touch-based operating system works both as a desktop PC and a tablet platform, and it's not hard to imagine Windows 8 running on a dizzying array of other devices, including table tops, wall screens, kitchen monitors and whatever new touchscreen gadgets we will be using in the future.
                           "This is an absolutely critical product," said Bill Gates, Microsoft's chairman, on a company video blog. "It's key to where personal computing is going."

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Reasons To Buy A Surface Tablet

 
 
 
The Microsoft made Windows Surface RT has already started shipping out to customers.So why should you buy a Surface Tablet?Well,there are many reasons but out of them,I have shortlisted a few:
 

1.Its Microsoft

            Microsoft has always been known for making software for other hardware manufacturers, however when they do make hardware, they do it really well. You’d know this if you’ve ever owned a Zune, or any of the Microsoft-made keyboards and mouse options out there.  The Surface RT hardware is sure to be very impressive, high quality, and 'handsome'.

2.Battery Life

          The Surface RT is running on an ARM processor as opposed to the usual x86/x64 processors that Windows PCs usually use.  ARM processors are primarily designed for mobile devices with low power requirements.  That can mean only one thing-more efficient processing and better battery life.

3.Xbox Smartglass

         Agreed, any Windows  8 tablet will work with Smart Glass on the Xbox 360 and there will be versions of this software for other platforms like Windows Phone, iOS and Android, but the Windows 8 will surely have better support and more features in their Smart Glass offering, and the Surface RT will have the added benefit . Being able to control your web browser on a large TV screen connected to an Xbox 360 while you pinch and gesture your way around a touch screen tablet could finally make large-screen web browsing usable.

 4.Touch Keyboard

               Though I haven't yet checked it out or seen any videos,it definitely looks like some significant innovation went into making it so thin.  I kind of want to buy one just to try out that keyboard.

5.Microsoft Ecosystem   

                   Microsoft will be putting a lot of effort into adding interesting apps, services, and functionality to their new Windows tablets.  The free music streaming part of Xbox Music is only going to be available on Windows 8 and Windows RT, so that will be pretty nice to have.  Plus there will be the cloud sync capability so that you can play music from your other PCs.  You’ll also see some great apps for Bing related content including custom news feeds, sports, Bing search, travel information, finance, etc.  Xbox integration will be a great advantage as well.

          So have you pre-ordered  Surface ?What are your reasons?


Windows RT Almost Identical To Windows 8

The Microsoft Surface  Windows RT has already started shipping out and, reports are generating a lot of controversy related to Windows RT and its capabilities. Furthermore, there also happens to be a lot of confusion regarding Windows RT and Windows 8.
        Regardless, the folks at PhoneArena apparently went down to a to check the tablets out and one rep there was trying to reportedly convince them that “Windows RT is nearly identical to Windows 8″. While this might be the case at a first, layman look at the tiles on the Home screen, it definitely is not when it comes down to the operating system itself.
                  Windows 8 can run all of  applications out there. Windows RT on the other hand can only run the pre-installed apps plus those available in the Windows Store. That’s a major difference,right? Whether the store rep was also confused about this or this is what Microsoft is using in order to drive sales is yet unknown.
Windows Surface RT

Windows 8 Review : Feeling Touchy

As you read this, the world is starting to have its first brush with Windows  8,Microsoft's big bet on a unified PC and tablet experience. I had a chance of meeting the new OS at one of my friend's house.Here's what I came away with...                                                                                          

    It's clear from the word go that Microsoft designed Windows 8 as a"touch only  environment",which basially  means that to fully understand and appreciate the new user interface you require a touchscreen device.Only then will everything start to make sense ;the password login options,large touch friendly live tiles,
& the bright touch screen ,the different gestures for bringing up the multitasking swithcher view.
                Of course this isn't much use to you if you are upgrading to Windows 8 on a desktop PC or a laptop or non touch notebook (even if hardware requirements are satisfied)

               It’s important to realize that the Start screen is no more Windows 8 than the Start menu was Windows 7 or Windows XP. The screen exists as a launchpad for applications, not as a desktop replacement. That concept is easy to forget, since the Start screen occupies the entire display. Even so, Windows 8 apps consume the entire screen, whereas desktop applications can still run in a window on the desktop.

However, not all desktop applications appear on the Start screen by default. Some accessory apps, such as Paint, live in the Apps screen. You can force these programs to appear in the Start screen by right-clicking them to select them and then clicking Pin to Start at the bottom of the screen. Nevertheless, getting to the Apps screen is simple: Right-click a blank area in the Start screen and then click the All apps icon at the lower right.

All applications show up as tiles on the Windows 8 Start screen.
Live Tiles of windows 8
   Navigating the Start screen is easy. If you’re using a mouse with a wheel, moving the wheel scrolls left and right. If you’re using a touchpad, swiping left and right (with one finger) scrolls the tile list. You can drag individual tiles to any location.

               I went to one of my friend's house who has installed windows 8 .What I found was that he was constantly bypassing the Start menu and once there,he was flooking for the Start button but Alas!it is no longer there.
The desktop offers familiar shortcuts and pinned icons.
Start button gone
Here is the thing-muscle memory or (in layman terms habit)-the way you use your PC by sheer force of habit-will probably be your worst enemy on a Windows 8 desktop.
            Windows 8 is a different experience with a touch-enabled display, even if you're using such a display with a stock desktop system. At first, you don't think you'll use the touch capabilities. But then your kids come up and start touching the screen—after all, these days young users are growing up expecting displays to be touch-enabled. I've been running Windows 8 on a desktop PC equipped with an Acer T232HL touchscreen display, and although I use the mouse some of the time, I find myself reaching out to use gestures on the screen at other times.

As for other desktop-PC options, look to the emerging generation of all-in-one PCs, such as Sony's 20-inch Tap 20 and the updated version of Lenovo's A720, which are shipping with Windows 8. The Tap 20 is unusual in that it has a built-in battery, which allows you to move it around the home easily and use it as an oversize tablet.




Late to the game, Microsoft is adding a store to Windows, much like the marketplaces for Mac OS X, iOS, and Android. If you want to buy apps from the Microsoft Store, you need to create a Microsoft account.

Perhaps I should say stores, since you’ll find more than one store within Windows 8. You buy Windows 8 apps by clicking the Store tile—but you purchase music by launching the Music app, and you buy videos by launching the Video app.

In addition to playing tunes, the Xbox Music app sells songs.
Store



Nearly all of the desktop and Start-screen functionality now relies on acceleration from your machine’s graphics processing unit. Many of Windows 8’s windows subsystems use the DirectX API. HTML5 and SVG (scalable vector graphics) also depend on GPU acceleration, in the form of enhanced 2D geometry rendering. Applications tell Direct2D what to draw in the form of 2D objects, such as circles and rectangles, plus additional features such as color and style. The API converts the instructions into a format suitable for Direct3D, which passes the instructions to the GPU. As a result, normal desktop windows will likely see substantial performance increases.

On top of that, Microsoft has added a new programming interface, DirectText, which offloads text rendering to the GPU. Text-rendering performance in desktop programs and in Windows 8 apps is double that of Windows 7—often better than double.
Office 2013 is closely tied with both Windows 8 and SkyDrive.
Office 2013 is closely tied with both Windows 8 and SkyDrive.

  Verdict

                   Finally,I would like to say this OS may prove to be quite a challenge for upgraders as well as many old time Windows users(including me).Surely,I also expect that in the future,you will see a lot of hardware and a whole lot of apps that can truly help make sense of the new UI and showcase Windows 8 as  a productive,usable,environment despite the massively disruptive nature of its UI.Either that or Microsoft will see a backlash far worse than what happened to Vista.For the sake of innovation and the entire PC industry,I hope that its the former. 

Microsoft Surface Experience Centers In Australia and Europe


Microsoft plans on opening a large number of Microsoft Surface Experience Centers so that  visitors can get a hands-on experience with the Microsoft Surface tablet. They have opened in Australia, Germany, the U.K. and France and centers will open in the U.S. later. A visitor to one of the many Experience Centers in Berlin snapped some pictures and discussed his experience at the place.
Microsoft opens Microsoft Surface Experience Centers in Australia and Europe

The unnamed visitor went to the Experience Center at the Motel One in the Kant Strasse 10, near the Zoological Garden Berlin station. He noticed that there were only two units out in the open for people to use. Guests staying at the Motel One do have the option to rent a Microsoft Surface tablet.
 
The visitor liked the Microsoft Surface tablet, noting that it was heavier than it looked, although not more so than the competition. He also was pleased to see that the staff knew the difference between the Intel-powered Microsoft Surface 8 Pro and the Apple iPad/Android tablet feel of the Microsoft Surface RT.

"Since today in some German cities Microsoft's new tablet computer, the surface is presented. Here in Berlin, there are several places where you can take a look. I was at the Motel One in the Kant Strasse 10, right near the Zoological Garden Berlin station. The Experience Center is located in the entrance hall. Only 2 units to try out were available. Guests at the Motel One can also rent a surface and try to rest. Therefore, additional devices.
Two Microsoft Surface tablets were available for visitors to test
Two Microsoft Surface tablets were available for visitors to test
The tablet looks good and great is processed. The format may be a little getting used to. The weight is slightly larger than expected .

If you can live with Windows RT course everyone must decide for themselves, after all, you can only install programs from the store on it. The staff knew at least the difference between Windows 8 and RT, so that potential customers will be advised at least not wrong. You can buy the surface unfortunately only in the online store."-unnamed visitor to Microsoft Surface Experience Center

To get a list of open centres,click here.

1080 p Screens,What Next?


Almost a year has passed since we first started seeing smartphones with 720p displays. Since then, they’ve rapidly become the norm for smartphone screens, such that it’s hard to accept even a qHD display on an upper-tier handset. Now, 1080p displays are about to arrive, with the first-such Android models already announced. Will we be seeing these super-high-res screens migrate to the other major platforms, or is 1080p going to end up like 3D displays, and quickly fizzle out?

1080 p manufacturing process

The Rise Of 720p

LG premiered its Optimus LTE last season, with a 4.5-inch 720p display. That may have gotten the ball rolling, but Google really helped move things along with the announcement of the Galaxy Nexus and its 4.65-inch 720p screen. Seeing Google accept the technology like that signaled to OEMs that this was more than just a fad.

Now, we’re about to see the first 720p screens come to Windows Phone devices, and RIM will be introducing 720p models for the full-touch offerings in its BlackBerry 10 lineup next year. Even Apple’s sort of gotten on board, with the iPhone 5′s 1136 x 640 screen inching-up closer to 720p (though it’s still got 20-some-percent fewer pixels).

1080p Comes To Android

           We recently saw the announcement of the HTC J Butterfly for Japan, featuring the company’s first five-inch 1080p display.There are plenty of rumors that other Android manufacturers will follow with similarly-equipped models. We know that LG has been working on phones with 1080p screens, and have seen rumors that manufacturers like Samsung and Pantech could also be getting ready to join the gang.

Already, 1080p sounds like it’s going to make a bigger splash than 3D displays ever did; if what we’re hearing is true, there appears to be some strong support from major manufacturers (Samsung never jumped on the 3D craze), and 1080p could, like 720p before it, quickly become something consumers look for in their high-end smartphones.

It Doesn’t Matter That 1080p Won’t Look Better

I recently wrote an article ,pointing out all the reason why we just don’t need them. Sure, as we move into tablets that’s not so true anymore, but for the moment I’m just concerned with 1080p on phones.

                       The problem is, as I see it, that 1080p displays are simply going to look awesome. Even if they’re battery hogs, and even if we can’t even see the difference between one pixel and the next, they’re going to look just as good as 720p screens, if not slightly better.

                            The idea of 1080p being superior to 720p is firmly ingrained in the minds of consumers by this point. Anyone who’s shopped for an HDTV in recent years has seen how great 1080p can look on a big screen, where the difference between 720p and 1080p is more easily appreciated. This isn’t like 3D, where no one knew quite what to make of it; the superiority of 1080p has already been well established.

               So, whether it’s a significant improvement or not, 1080p on smartphones is already set up to succeed. The only thing I can see standing in its way is if some of those other problems Michael mentioned, like power consumption, end up substantially detracting from the user experience; in essence, smartphone manufacturers would have to really botch things – and in a big enough way that the public takes notice – in order to convince customers that 1080p isn’t something they should desire from a new phone.

Ultimately, I expect to see 1080p screens on Android devices start claiming a substantial share of the market for new, high-end phones by next summer.

After Android ,Who Next?

 
            Apple has the potential to be the wild card here. It loves “wow”ing its fans, and its Retina Displays have really drawn attention to what’s possible with screens featuring very high pixel densities. That said, it hates to be seen playing catch-up, and has a history of dismissing otherwise-accepted technology (like NFC) when that just doesn’t suit its own vision for its platform. If anyone’s going to be able to stand up and say “you guys don’t really want 1080p; here, let us show you what you’ll actually like”, it’s going to be Apple. Combined with its distaste for jumbo-sized smartphones, making the small improvements 1080p offers even less apparent, I’d say we can probably count Apple out of the 1080p race.

                       Microsoft’s attitude towards new technology has shades of Apple’s, but I think that’s less a matter of wanting to dance to its own tune, and more about taking a slow approach to introducing change. If Microsoft sees Android users flocking to 1080p phones, it’s going to have to consider giving its own users the same option. Considering the pace it moves at, though, it might not even get around to evaluating such a thing until well into next year. Maybe we’d see some Windows Phone 9 handsets arrive with 1080p screens in 2014, but I can’t see it bringing 1080p to its platform anytime soon.

                          As for RIM, it clearly wants to be seen as a manufacturer with current, desirable hardware, but 1080p might be biting off more than it can chew. For one, it’s still too early to say whether or not BlackBerry 10 will be a hit. Follow that road long enough, and I’m left wondering if RIM will even still be making smartphones by the time it has to seriously think about 1080p. On the other hand, if it gets the sense early-on that 1080p is here to stay, it might want to take the initiative and beat Microsoft to the punch. If it can squeeze ahead of its competition in even that one area, that could go a long way towards making BlackBerry still seem relevant.

                             In the end, I’d have to put my money on Microsoft. Of all the companies running major platforms, I don’t see it having a fundamental issue with 1080p (like Apple might), and regardless of how Windows Phone 8 fares, it’s still going to be around and kicking a couple years from now.


1080 P ,what next?
      

                  Well,after 720 p,came 1080 p whats next?Personally I  don't think that there should be anything else.Mainly because between 1080 p and 720 p,the difference is not really that much noticeable on a mobile screen.Anything more than 1080 p the difference will be negligible.
        

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Xbox SmartGlass For Android


Gamers have been looking forward to Microsoft’s SmartGlass for the Xbox 360 for months now, with the company announcing the project in the summer. With a SmartGlass app on your smartphone, you’ll be able to interact with your game console in all new ways, acting like a wireless gamepad, an extra screen, or even a virtual keyboard.
First of all, you’ll need an Android smartphone running Ice Cream Sandwich or better; sorry, those of you still waiting patiently for your Android 4.0 update to arrive. There’s also a requirement for at least a WVGA resolution.

With the app installed, and your 360 updated to the latest dashboard, you can start navigating the console’s UI with a touch of your smartphone’s screen. SmartGlass apps will also be arriving for Windows Phone and iOS devices.



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