Sony Rolly
















Experience a revolutionary new breakthrough in music enjoyment from Sony. After years of development, the Rolly Sound Entertainment Player takes MP3s to a new dimension of fun.
The Rolly Sound Entertainment Player is truly multi faceted. It plays music. It dances. It's an expression of your personality and how you hear your music. At its core, the Rolly Sound Entertainment Player is a robotic device that plays back music and can be programmed to dance to any of the music uploaded to it. In addition, it is a fun device to discover. Rather than looking at a screen to play music, there are different motions that you use to change the song, raise the volume and make it dance. With its Bluetooth capability you can play music wirelessly from other devices such as your mobile phone or PC.

Features:

Bluetooth Audio Streaming.
Up to 5 Hours Music Playback.
MP3 and AAC Playback and Support.
2GB Built-in Memory.
Motion Share.
Shuffle Play.
Customized Motion.
Auto Motion.
Self Motion.
Digital Amplifier.
180 Degree Horizontal Opposed/Baffle Effect.
Soft Dome Speaker with Neodymium Magnet.

Apple Ipod Touch


Apple Ipod Touch:

IPod touch has an all-new design that makes it the thinnest, lightest, most amazing iPod touch ever. Holding one is all the proof you need. With its curved design, iPod touch is now a mere 7.2 millimeters thin. Its engineered glass front and stainless steel back feel sleek and smooth in your hand. Turn it on, and you're instantly blown away by the brilliant Retina display. iPod touch is the perfect combination of stunning design and revolutionary technology — brilliant from the outside in.There are lots of reasons you won’t want to take your eyes off the new iPod touch. The 960-by-640 backlit LCD display, for one. It packs 326 pixels per inch, making it the highest-resolution iPod screen ever. To achieve this, Apple engineers developed pixels so small — a mere 78 micrometers across — that the human eye can’t distinguish individual pixels. Even though you can’t see them, you’ll definitely notice the difference. Text is remarkably sharp and graphics are incredibly vivid. The Apple A4 chip is behind, or rather underneath, all the fun you can have on iPod touch. Apple engineers designed the A4 chip to be a remarkably powerful yet remarkably power-efficient mobile processor. With it, iPod touch can easily perform complex jobs such as multitasking, editing video, and placing FaceTime calls. All while maximizing battery life. And fun. iPod touch just learned some new moves. It now includes a built-in three-axis gyroscope. When paired with the accelerometer, the gyro makes iPod touch capable of advanced motion sensing such as user acceleration, full 3D attitude, and rotation rate. Translation: More motion gestures and greater precision for an even better gaming experience. iPod touch captures video with two built-in cameras. It shoots amazing HD 720p video from the back camera. And with its advanced backside illumination sensor, it captures beautiful footage even in low-light settings. All while the built-in microphone records conversations, music, or any audio at the same time. And on the front of iPod touch, the built-in camera is perfect for making FaceTime calls1 and shooting self-portraits. It’s surprising how much fun can fit into something so small. When you put your finger on iPod touch, how does it just start doing what you want it to do? It’s a chain reaction, really. The Multi-Touch display layers a protective shield over a capacitive panel that senses your touch using electrical fields. It then transmits that information to the Retina display below it. So you can glide through albums with Cover Flow, flick through photos and enlarge them with a pinch, zoom in and out on a section of a web page, and control game elements precise.

Specifications:
Size and weight:
Height :4.4 inches (111.0 mm)
Width :2.3 inches (58.9 mm)
Depth :0.28 inch (7.2 mm)
Weight :3.56 ounces (101 grams)

Display:
3.5-inch (diagonal) widescreen
Multi-Touch display
960-by-640-pixel resolution at 326 pixels per inch

Capacity:
8GB, 32GB or 64GB flash drive

Audio:
Frequency response: 20Hz to 20,000Hz
Audio formats supported: AAC (8 to 320 Kbps), Protected AAC (from iTunes Store), HE-AAC, MP3 (8 to 320 Kbps), MP3 VBR, Audible (formats 2, 3, 4, Audible Enhanced Audio, AAX, and AAX+), Apple Lossless, AIFF, and WAV
User-configurable maximum volume limit

Wireless:
802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi (802.11n 2.4GHz only)
Bluetooth® 2.1 + EDR
Maps-location based service4
Nike + iPod support built in

Headphones:
Earphones Frequency response : 20Hz to 20,000Hz
Impedance : 32 ohms

Apple Ipod Nano


















Apple Ipod Nano:

Apple launched the third generation iPod and its probably a bit late for a review, but were publishing ours anyways. Apple CEO, Steve Jobs, first unveiled the original iPod Nano about two years ago by sliding it out of his famous pair of blue jeans. A year later (2006) Jobs announced the 2nd generation aluminum-encased iPod Mini looking version. And last month Apple announced the 3rd generation Nano which has an entire newly designed body and for the first time, can play videos. At first I wondered why anyone would want to bother watching videos on such a small screen. After a few weeks with the iPod Nano, the reason became clear. I actually found myself watching some video podcasts and unwatched TV shows when I was on the go. It was pretty nice to be able to carry around video content in such a small device. Also if you were like me and felt the device look pretty fat and ugly, that all changes once you actually hold a 3rd generation iPod Nano. It is thinner and smaller than you would have imagined. I would have to say this iPod was a very needed and an impressive upgrade, it can not be considered Apple's best work. They were done better before.

Apple iPod Nano (3G) Specs:

Type : Portable Flash-Based Video Player
Capacities : 4GB and 8GB
Screen : 2-inches 320x240 pixel LCD
Music Formats : AAC, MP3, & WAV
Video Formats : H.264 and MP4
Special Functions : Video Output
Colors : Silver, Blue, Red, Green & Black
Connection : USB to Dock Connector
Price Range : $149 to $199

Poken The social business card




























Poken The social business card


Poken is a technology that utilizes a proprietary Near Field Communication (NFC) technology to allow the exchange of online social networking data between two keychain accessories. Each person involved in the exchange must have his or her own poken. The primary information exchanged via the poken is a “social business card”, a digital replacement for a physical business card. By touching two devices together, a unique ID is exchanged that links to contact information on the Poken website. Contact information acquired by use of the poken can be uploaded to the poken website using a built-in usb connector.


In addition to the contact information found on a typical business card, links to users” social networks can also be added. Examples include Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and 40+ other social networks. Users of the Poken website can use a “social dashboard” to manage, and interact with their contacts.Pokens are used for social networking, personal identification and as a device for loyalty programs. Bloggers and social media addicts have taken it up for networking event such as tweet-ups. Corporations such as BMW and IBM use pokens at their conferences to enhance interaction with the conference attendees and to facilitate business networking.

Poken is sold through a network of resellers and web shops in over 40 countries.

You can buy your poken on online shoping.




Sixth Sense Technology



Sixth Sense Technology


Sixth Sense is a wearable gestural interface that augments the physical world around us with digital information and lets us use natural hand gestures to interact with that information.

We've evolved over millions of years to sense the world around us. When we encounter something, someone or some place, we use our five natural senses to perceive information about it; that information helps us make decisions and chose the right actions to take. But arguably the most useful information that can help us make the right decision is not naturally perceivable with our five senses, namely the data, information and knowledge that mankind has accumulated about everything and which is increasingly all available online. Although the miniaturization of computing devices allows us to carry computers in our pockets, keeping us continually connected to the digital world, there is no link between our digital devices and our interactions with the physical world. Information is confined traditionally on paper or digitally on a screen. SixthSense bridges this gap, bringing intangible, digital information out into the tangible world, and allowing us to interact with this information via natural hand gestures. ‘SixthSense’ frees information from its confines by seamlessly integrating it with reality, and thus making the entire world your computer.

The SixthSense prototype is comprised of a pocket projector, a mirror and a camera. The hardware components are coupled in a pendant like mobile wearable device. Both the projector and the camera are connected to the mobile computing device in the user’s pocket. The projector projects visual information enabling surfaces, walls and physical objects around us to be used as interfaces; while the camera recognizes and tracks user's hand gestures and physical objects using computer-vision based techniques. The software program processes the video stream data captured by the camera and tracks the locations of the colored markers (visual tracking fiducials) at the tip of the user’s fingers using simple computer-vision techniques. The movements and arrangements of these fiducials are interpreted into gestures that act as interaction instructions for the projected application interfaces. The maximum number of tracked fingers is only constrained by the number of unique fiducials, thus SixthSense also supports multi-touch and multi-user interaction.

The SixthSense prototype implements several applications that demonstrate the usefulness, viability and flexibility of the system. The map application lets the user navigate a map displayed on a nearby surface using hand gestures, similar to gestures supported by Multi-Touch based systems, letting the user zoom in, zoom out or pan using intuitive hand movements. The drawing application lets the user draw on any surface by tracking the fingertip movements of the user’s index finger. SixthSense also recognizes user’s freehand gestures (postures). For example, the SixthSense system implements a gestural camera that takes photos of the scene the user is looking at by detecting the ‘framing’ gesture. The user can stop by any surface or wall and flick through the photos he/she has taken. SixthSense also lets the user draw icons or symbols in the air using the movement of the index finger and recognizes those symbols as interaction instructions. For example, drawing a magnifying glass symbol takes the user to the map application or drawing an ‘@’ symbol lets the user check his mail. The SixthSense system also augments physical objects the user is interacting with by projecting more information about these objects projected on them. For example, a newspaper can show live video news or dynamic information can be provided on a regular piece of paper. The gesture of drawing a circle on the user’s wrist projects an analog watch.

Microsoft Surface Computer



Microsoft Surface Computer

After five years of keeping the project shrouded in secrecy, Microsoft today revealed its plans for Microsoft Surface, the first product in a category the company calls surface computing. The technology, formerly code-named Milan, lets Microsoft turn a seemingly ordinary surface, such as a tabletop or a wall, into a computer. Introduced today at the D All Things Digital conference in Carlsbad, California, Microsoft Surface is a multi-touch tabletop computer that interacts with users through touch on multiple points on the screen.

The concept is simple Users interact with the computer completely by touch, on a surface other than a standard screen. It will feel like Minority Report, promises Pete Thompson, general manager of Microsoft's surface computing group. Very futuristic but it will be here this year.

We see it as the first of its kind in a new category of computing device. It's very approachable for users; the learning curve should be very instinctual, says Thompson.

Mark Bolger, director of marketing for Microsoft's consumer productivity experiences group, adds, This is a NUI-a natural user interface. It's a natural way for people to interact with digital content using their hands. Users can control information with the flick of a hand.

The product unveiled today will be Microsoft branded and available to the company's four partners Harrah's Entertainment, International Game Technologies, Starwood Hotels, and T-Mobile in November. Starwood Hotels plans to put Microsoft Surface devices in common areas, to provide functions such as a virtual concierge; T-Mobile will use them to enhance the cell phone shopping experience. Microsoft expects to deploy dozens of units with each of its partners by year's end.

Never mind today's buzz about social networking with Surface and its multi-touch technology, Microsoft envisions a new era of social computing. Certainly, the horizontal, tabletop configuration of Surface raises a variety of possibilities, such as friends gathering for drinks in a hotel lounge and sharing photos and videos.

Bolger notes four attributes that comprise Microsoft's definition of surface computing direct interaction (for example, you might "dip" your finger on an on-screen paint palette, and then use your finger to draw on the screen); multi-touch contact, so the screen can react to multiple fingers and inputs simultaneously; multi-user experience, so multiple people can gather around and interact with the screen simultaneously; and object recognition, so the surface can recognize tagged objects and interact with them.

To see a video about surface computer click the below link

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ttgx9ygMXz8

MT-50 Multi Touch Table



MT-50 Multi Touch Table

Ideum has introduced the MT-50 multi-touch table, an updated version of the earlier MT2 model. The table offers an improved PC system, with NVIDIA's GeForce GTX 285 graphics card. To enhance the experience for multiple users, especially locations such as musems, the company has expanded the input support to 60 simultaneous control points.

The 50-inch haptic glass is coated underneath with a projection material illuminated by a 1280x720 DLP projector. Ideum demonstrates the durability of the tempered glass by dropping a 12-pound bowling ball from a height of two feet.

Ideum works with customers to develop custom exhibits, or other specialized interfaces, using technology such as Flash and GestureWorks. Pricing and availability information can be obtained by contacting the company.

To watch a video about MT-50 Multi Touch Table click the below link


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfqePvT78qc&feature=player_embedded

Touch Sensitive Faucet





Touch Sensitive Faucet

This gadget may not be particularly ground-breaking but it certainly does offer a very valuable benefit to those in the kitchen. We've all been in the scenario of having our hands full, and needing to contort ourselves just to turn on the tap, to wash our hands.

Well, let me introduce to you the touch sensitive faucet. Both the spout and handle are touch sensitive, so one small touch on either part will cause the water to fall. The faucet comes in two different styles, the chrome finished faucet and the stainless steel version, which will cost slightly more. The faucet can clevery differentiate between a touch and a grab, so temeperature levels are not going to constantly fluctuate.

The chrome faucet will cost you $495, whilst the stainless steel version will cost you $547. Both available from Delta Faucet.

The Installation

It's a little bit of a hassle to install, because you actually have to follow a series of instructions that has you removing your old faucet and installing this one (with the electronics that controls the touch-sensitivity). You actually need two people at one point, when you want to make sure you align the faucet correctly above the sink while the person below tightens.

It's not completely undoable if you have a spare hand and you're somewhat knowledgeable with tools, but I had a Delta professional install it to ensure optimum performance, and it didn't take too much longer than an hour.

Performance

The touch sensitivity, if installed correctly, is good, but not overly sensitive. The faucet and water handle, on the right, are both smart enough to detect the difference between a grasp—when you're moving the thing around—and a tap—when you're turning it on and off.

You turn on the faucet like any other faucet, by using the handle and switching it left for hot and right for cold. Once it's "on", you can tap anywhere on the body or the handle to turn it off. Tap it again to turn it back on. When you're completely done with washing, pull the handle down to the off position to ensure that a cat or a jumping baby brushing past it doesn't activate the water flow. It's also got a 4-minute timeout, so even if you do forget to turn the thing off, an accidental activation won't flood your house.

It's pretty great as an actual faucet too. The head has a pull-down for spray flexibility, and you can adjust the type of spray (like a shower) in one of two modes.

Warnings and Usage

If you install it yourself, make sure you install the base plate insulation unit, because if you don't, you're going to get finicky performance from the touch-sensitivity part. I had to have the installer revisit a couple times because it's not so clear in the instructions that many sinks need it, so even if you think you don't, put it in. Not doing so will make the touch only work 1 out of 3 or 4 times, which is a painful grey zone between not working at all, which is fine, and working all the time. If something like this happens to you, you can luckily disable the touch portion and just use it as a regular faucet until you get around to repairing it.

Also, be aware that you're going to get false positives occasionally when you're reaching over and grabbing something off your sink and you brush against the faucet. This is much less frustrating than the alternative of the thing NOT working when you want it to.

Honda Bicycle Simulator





Honda Bicycle Simulator

TOKYO, Japan, October 15, 2009 - Honda Motor Co., Ltd. announced plans to begin Japan-wide sales starting February 2010, of the Honda Bicycle Simulator developed for the purpose of traffic safety education. By safely experiencing the possible risks bicycle riders may face, users will improve their ability to predict risks and increase safety awareness. In addition, rider evaluation session which will follow the riding simulation will help users learn traffic rules and manners in an enjoyable way. Honda will aim for widespread use of this simulator by a range of customers including public offices, law-enforcement organizations, driving schools and educational institutions which conduct bicycle safety education programs primarily for school children and senior citizens. Honda will begin accepting pre-sale orders in November of this year.

In recent years, the total number of fatalities from traffic accidents has declined in Japan. However, the ratio of fatalities in accidents involving bicycles has increased. Bicycle riders aged 10 – 19 in and above the age of 50 have the highest chance to get involved in an accident, and approximately 70 percent of bicycle accidents are caused by violation of traffic rules.

Leveraging the know-how accumulated through its activities to promote traffic safety since 1964, Honda has been developing and selling motorcycle and automobile simulators since 1996 and 2001, respectively, as traffic safety educational devices which enable users to safely experience the risks based on real-world traffic situations. By offering these simulators, Honda’s goal is to improve people’s ability to predict risks and increase safety awareness. Striving to realize a richer mobility society in the future, Honda developed the Honda Bicycle Simulator as an educational tool for a wider range of people.


Key features of the Honda Bicycle Simulator


Hardware

1.Compact design (length 2,270mm × height 1,400mm × width 990mm, weight 88kg)
2.Equipped with monitors to check right/left and behind.
3.Equipped with a “walking sensor” which recognizes the user’s action of walking the bicycle.

Software

1.Contains different courses such as going to school, going to the grocery store, going to cram school and going to a local shopping street to offer realistic experiences for user groups of different ages.
2.Contains a course for the user to learn traffic laws and manners to ride a bicycle in mixed traffic.
3.After the simulation, the rider’s path can be reviewed from multiple vantage points – above/below and right/left – and the riding situation and evaluation will be displayed on the monitor.

Transcend Goggles



Transcend Goggles

Not even Bono can pull off wearing huge glasses to use a HUD through life. But ski goggles? They're practically designed to look ludicrous. These Zeal Recon Transcend Ski Goggles display GPS, speed, altitude and more in real time.

Available this fall for between $350 and $450, Transcend goggles are a partnership between two companies: Zeal Optics and Recon Instruments. The result is a pair of goggles that contain hardware to measure speed, altitude, time, temperature and GPS coordinates—a slew of information that's displayed through a HUD. Charging and data transfer occurs over USB.

Buttons on the side of the goggles will allow you to scan through information on the ski lift, which will be especially useful as Transcend gains additional promised functions, including trail maps, cellphone display integration and video recording.


There's no doubt about it—the Transcend goggles sound a bit too good to be true. But we're childishly refusing to temper expectations while waiting impatiently for fall. If these things actually worked, I'd wear them just, like, on the street. No snowboard required.

Sony Bravia 3D TV




Sony Bravia 3D TV

Sony announced today at IFA 2009 it is to bring out a 3D series of its Bravia TVs in 2010, marking the first time the company has brought 3D technology to its TV range.

While the company was remaining tight-lipped about specifics and about just how the 3D tech would work on a Bravia LCD TV, it did show off some demos of the technology. And TechRadar was lucky enough to be among the first bunch of journalists in the world to try out the televisions.

What is the verdict on the future of TV technology? Read on to find out!
using Real D active shutter glasses, we were first told we had to 'activate' the glasses by pointing at a sensor the was situated above the TV. Once done, the glasses were turned on.

First impressions of the 3D technology from Sony is really immediately about how impressive it all looks. Unlike the demo we were shown in the press conference using normal stereoscopic glasses, the active shutter tech means the images are crisp and clear and the images jump right out at you.

We were shown demos of Killzone 2 in 3D (awesome) and even managed to have a play with Gran Turismo in another dimension.

This is definitely technology which will boost the playability of the PS3 for some years to come.

Yes, there is no word how much the LCD 3D TVs will be, but with Sony at the helm, it does mean that you will, very soon (should you have the 'readies') be able to watch movies and play PS3 games in 3D. Which is, of course, ace.

Other demos we were given were of Pixar's UP, which looked stunning, and an (unnamed) baseball game shot in 3D.

While 3D may not be the future for home entertainment, as of yet, Sony's announcement today does herald something of a tipping point for the technology. Now all the company has to do is persuade the Blu-ray Disc Association to pick a 3D BD format that's friendly to Sony's TV technology and we could see 3D finally take off in the living room.

Nokia Morph Cellphone



Nokia Morph Concept

Nokia's new Morph concept phone would use nanotechnology to give it a flexible body with a transparent display that could be re-shaped depending on the user's needs, a far cry from today's solid and chunky devices. Even the electronics inside it would be transparent and flexible, so the whole phone may be twisted and stretched into bracelet shapes or tablet form, and nanotech cleverness means it would even clean itself. Developed in cooperation with Cambridge University, this glimpse of a distant future is now on display at the MoMA in New York. Jump for video and yadda-yadda press release.

Nokia and University of Cambridge launch the Morph - a nanotechnology concept device

New York, US and Espoo, Finland — Morph, a joint nanotechnology concept, developed by Nokia Research Center (NRC) and the University of Cambridge (UK) - was launched today alongside the "Design and the Elastic Mind" exhibition, on view from February 24 to May 12, 2008, at The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York. Morph features in both the exhibition catalog and on MoMA's official website.

Morph is a concept that demonstrates how future mobile devices might be stretchable and flexible, allowing the user to transform their mobile device into radically different shapes. It demonstrates the ultimate functionality that nanotechnology might be capable of delivering: flexible materials, transparent electronics and self-cleaning surfaces.

Dr. Tapani Ryhanen, Head of the NRC Cambridge UK laboratory, Nokia, commented: "We hope that this combination of art and science will showcase the potential of nanoscience to a wider audience. The techniques we are developing might one day mean new possibilities in terms of the design and function of mobile devices. The research we are carrying out is fundamental to this as we seek a safe and controlled way to develop and use new materials."

Professor Mark Welland, Head of the Department of Engineering's Nanoscience Group at the University of Cambridge and University Director of Nokia-Cambridge collaboration added "Developing the Morph concept with Nokia has provided us with a focus that is both artistically inspirational but, more importantly, sets the technology agenda for our joint nanoscience research that will stimulate our future work together."

The partnership between Nokia and the University of Cambridge was announced in March, 2007 - an agreement to work together on an extensive and long term programme of joint research projects. NRC has established a research facility at the University's West Cambridge site and collaborates with several departments - initially the Nanoscience Center and Electrical Division of the Engineering Department - on projects that, to begin with, are centered on nanotechnology.

Elements of Morph might be available to integrate into handheld devices within 7 years, though initially only at the high-end. However, nanotechnology may one day lead to low cost manufacturing solutions, and offers the possibility of integrating complex functionality at a low price.

To see a video click this link

Nokia BMW Video Phone



Nokia BMW Video Phone

Don’t expect a Nokia BMW phone to land in the shops too soon, as it usually takes some time for two tech giants to cooperate, specially after the Bochum scandal, that left many German workers jobless.

As for the beautiful design you can check out below, it pertains to Evgen Designer and it features GPS navigation and a powerful camera.

Nokia BMW Concept Phone Features GPS and Superior Video Shooting

The Nokia BMW comes with an interesting “push to open” mechanism that makes its display rotate 90 degrees turning the whole device into a handycam. Notice the original camera placement? Sony would probably love to invent something like this…

Canova Dual Touch Screen Laptop In 2010



Canova Dual Touch Screen Laptop In 2010

Back in July we stumbled upon Italian firm V12 Design and its Canova dual touchscreen laptop model. When we then chatted with Valerio Cometti, the founder and managing director of the design agency, about the dual LCD laptop he mentioned that he had been working on a second-generation version of the dual-screen laptop along with a U.S. manufacturer.

It seems V12 and their client Estari are ready to show off the second generation all-touch laptop. See the plethora of pictures of the new design below.

According to Cometti, V12 has reworked its orginal design, “improving the versatility and the potential of our original concept.” The design has been improved for increased movement between the two screens. Both the screens measure 15.4 inches.

v12_12But it is not V12 that will bring the Canova to market, that would be Pennsylvania-based Estari’s job. President and CEO of Estari Peter Thomas has been interested in developing a dual screen laptop for quite awhile and owns the intellectual property rights to the second generation Canova design.

“We are going to finish up the engineering of the arm and the hinge system which is intergal to how it all moves,” Thomas says.

As for timing, Thomas didn’t promise an exact date, but says, “we are hoping as quickly as possible – much less than a few years. We have been involved in developing dual touch screen technology and we have produced products in the past where you have that center hinge with screens locked together.”

The internal technology is currently under wraps, according to Thomas. The company will have a second launch revealing more about the software and hardware it uses to run.

The Canova was originally designed by V12 for use in creative professions. However , Thomas sees dual screen computing appealing to all. “We see it being used across any application, even in a portrait mode with two screens side-by-side and right down to having Internet on one side and e-mail on the other.”

Mobile wireless router for 3G access: Vodafone MiFi 2352



Mobile wireless router for 3G access Vodafone MiFi 2352

These days, Vodafone is launching and promoting some interesting products in the field of Internet access through a 3G connection. One of those marketed products is the new MiFi 2352 (an intelligent Mobile Hotspot for European HSPA Networks). So, this is now an additional option Vodafone users can pick if they need an Internet 3G connection.

The MiFi 2352 is a small device (it weighs hardly 100 grams) that can works as WiFi router as well as 3G modem to access Internet through mobile networks by using a computer or even any device with Internet connection like a smartphone, a video game console, a media player, etc.

It can be configured to operate in two different modes:

1. To work as a WiFi router: This MiFi is able to act as a conventional WiFi router (just like those used in many residential and corporate environments). In this case, the 3G data connection can be shared with up to five computers or other devices.

2. To work as a USB modem: It also works as a conventional 3G USB modem. So, you can connect it to a USB port of your computer in order to have Internet access wherever you want. Of course, you need an adequate mobile Internet plan, and in this case, only your computer will have Internet access through the MiFi.

Gigabit ethernet switch: AT-x600




Gigabit ethernet switch AT-x600

Currently, Allied Telesis is selling a line of switches denominated as the AT-x600 series. Those switches offer several advantages and are perfect as aggregation switches or as an access controller for any network. This family of products with stackable Layer 3 Gigabit Ethernet switches has both 24 and 48 Gigabit port versions with optional 10GbE uplinks.

The wide variety of security functionalities and the easy integration with several NAC solutions, including Microsoft NAP and Symantec SNAC, make these products a good choice for systems where intelligence and security at the network periphery are crucial factors. Besides, all the x600 switches can be stacked by using uplink ports that were specifically designed to enable a 4-unit stack to have a massive 160 Gigabits of uplink bandwidth with no reduction in stacking backplane throughput. This way, this range of products provides a great flexibility and reliability.

The Allied Telesis AT-x600 switches family is available in four versions: Two versions comes with 24 ports (the AT-x600-24Ts and the AT-x600-24Ts/XP, although there is an additional PoE version too), and other two versions with 48 ports (the AT-x600-48Ts and the AT-x600-48Ts/XP). More specifically, the 24-port versions feature 24 Gigabit copper ports along with 4 Gigabit SFP (small form-factor pluggable) ports; on the other hand, the 48-port devices have 44 Gigabit copper ports and also 4 Gigabit SFP ports. In addition, the XP models come with 2 additional XFP ports for 10GbE connectivity. And one more thing: This x600 series uses the excellent operating system AlliedWare Plus, which is the same operating system that is used by other Allied Telesis families such as the x900 series and the SwitchBlade x908.

The new family AT-x600 is already available in the market.

RCA product Airnergy An ingenious gadgets charger or a deceitful device




RCA product Airnergy An ingenious gadgets charger or a deceitful device:


Anyone who uses a mobile phone, media player, or other similar things knows nothing is more frustrating than needing to use a gadget whose battery is going dead at the most inopportune time. Well, some makers of electronic accessories are perfectly aware of this problem; for that reason, nowadays there are many available devices designed to charge gadgets by using different methods… and sometimes some very unconventional methods.

One of those devices is the RCA Airnergy. According to the maker (which by now has nothing to do with the former RCA Corporation), the RCA Airnergy is able to transform WiFi signals into electricity that is used to charge its internal battery, and this in turn can be used to charge any gadget of an user. Pretty ingenious, heh? Well, let’s see.

The fact of charging a gadget by using an internal battery is not a big deal and, in fact, there are a wide variety of products to do that. There is no mystery. However, the previous process of transforming WiFi signals into the power source of a device might sound less than fully convincing for some people.

Anyway, at the CES show, there was public demonstrations where a battery of a Blackberry was supposed to be charged from an initial level of 30% to a full-charge state by using WiFi signals. But, according to some calculations that are appearing on several websites, this situation might seem like a far-fetched thing under normal circumstances and even in a place full of WiFi signals, just like the CES pavilions. Apparently, the Airnergy only could get minimal and infinitesimal energy that would be very difficult to transform into effective electricity. So, is there any trick here? Or are those people underestimating the current technology

Samsung cell phone B5722 Duos



Samsung cell phone B5722 Duos

Dual Stand-by

You will be able to access 2 different SIM cards with just one convenient and compact touch screen handset. Whether you want to take advantage of different calling plans, or want to keep your business and personal calls separate, the B5722 provides the convenience of two cell phones with a one-mobile solution.


Touch Experience


The B5722’s touch experience elevates the mobile experience, bringing everything the mobile has to offer right to your fingertips. The 3-page extended menu means that you can have easy and instant access to all your apps. Commands are obeyed with a tap of the finger, even when switching SIM card use.

Easily Switch SIM Cards

Switch between SIM cards easily and without needing to reboot the mobile. Switching-SIM-card commands are obeyed with a tap of the finger, the use of dual SIM cards has never been easier or more intuitive.

Features

2.8”large QVGA screen
Touch screen
Easily Switch SIM Cards
Samsung Communities
Palringo Messenger
3.2 MP Camera
Music Player

Sony smartphone with PSP gaming capabilities




Sony smartphone with PSP gaming capabilities:


Sony is working on a smartphone that leverages the company's entertainment assets, such as the PlayStation Portable. The device would combine other features of the smartphone genre with the addition of being able to download and play PSP games, according to The Wall Street Journal.

There is an interesting nonofficial announcement coming from Japan: Several journalist have made public that Sony is planning to develop a smartphone where users will be able to play PSP games. In addition, apparently, Sony would be creating a device with a wide range of features, so it would not be easy to define it as a netbook, or an e-reader, or a handheld console (like PSP); actually, it would be a combination of all of them.

These projects are the reaction of Sony to Apple strategies, particularly regarding the iPad and iPhone. So, this is an interesting competition that, hopefully, will benefit the end users. But, at the same time, it could be interpreted as an obvious and meaningful evolution of the PSP, a console that has had strong competitors since it was launched commercially.

As you can imagine, the new smartphone that would be able to play PSP games won’t include slots to insert game cartridges. Instead, they could be connected to the online shop “PlayStation Store” (which is currently accessible by using a PlayStation 3 or PSP console) to download games developed for PSP. Sony Ericsson is working on this smartphone and, most likely, it will impact the mobile market in a strong way. However, it is not clear yet whether the whole PSP catalog will be supported, or only a reduced number of games. Apparently, the original games developed by Sony will be totally supported, but maybe third-party games could have some limitations, at least initially.

For the moment, the only thing we can do is to wait for official announcements and watch for the way how these projects move forward, since Sony is constantly surprising us with innovations and unexpected products. After the launch of the PSPGo, which has had very little success, the company needs a new product with a “wow” factor: That would be an opportunity to recover fans and increase earnings.

Dell Adamo XPS



Dell Adamo XPS


Ever since the MacBook Air was pulled out of a manila envelope, other laptop manufacturers have attempted to dethrone it as the world's thinnest laptop.

Dell's first effort, the Dell Adamo, certainly invited comparisons to the MacBook Air, with its aluminum "Unibody" enclosure, thin profile, and non-removable battery. Unfortunately, its $2,000 price tag was deemed way too expensive. Now, Dell is poised to take a second shot at the crown with the Dell Adamo XPS, which continues the luxury theme of its predecessor, adds a couple of "wow" features to its arsenal, and brings the price down to $1,799.

Features

The laptop's WLED screen measures 13.4 inches (diagonal) and has a 1,366-by-768 resolution with a 16:9 aspect ratio. The Adamo XPS also comes with a DisplayPort connector on the left side, and a headphone jack on the right side. Interestingly, the Adamo XPS drops one of the three USB 2.0 ports of its predecessor (it now has only 2 USB 2.0 ports, one on either side) and moves all the ports from the back of the system to the sides.

Unlike the original Adamo, the battery on the Adamo XPS is user-removable. The standard battery is a 4-cell, 20-WHr lithium-ion battery, with an option for a 40-WHr battery. Dell claims a battery life of up to 2 hours 36 minutes for the standard battery and 5 hours 17 minutes for the optional battery, as measured by its own labs testing. Based on those claims, I have to say that bundling a battery that lasts only about 2.5 hours on an ultraportable laptop that will no doubt spend very little time tethered to a wall outlet is somewhat questionable. Yes, customers will have the option to upgrade to the longer-lasting battery, but why not just bundle that one from the get-go?

The Adamo XPS comes with 802.11a/g/n Wi-Fi as standard, with an option for a Dell Bluetooth 2.1 adapter. Curiously, this iteration drops the mobile broadband used by the original Adamo, as well as the Ethernet port (though 10/100 Ethernet and DVI are available via a dongle).


Components

With the buzz surrounding the Adamo XPS, no one had really known what components would be inside. Until now, that is. The Adamo XPS has an Ultra Low Voltage 1.4-GHz Intel Core 2 Duo SU9400 CPU and 4 Gbytes of DDR3 memory. Like the original Adamo, the Adamo XPS comes with a 128-GB solid state drive (SSD). Users can opt for 250-GB and 500-GB spinning drives, but they are both external. There is no built-in optical drive available, a nod to keeping the Adamo XPS thin; however, there are optional external DVD and Blu-ray burners. These options will cost you (how much isn't known – exact prices aren't available as of this writing), and may add considerably to the final price of the system. The Adamo will ship with Windows 7 Premium 64-bit, which one might have surmised since the ultraportable was featured at the recent Windows 7 launch.

All in all, I was certainly impressed by the look and feel of Dell's newest Adamo. It's definitely made to appeal to those for whom design and portability are a big factor in their buying decisions, and it's heartening to note that Dell has managed to bring the price of the Adamo XPS down without skimping for the most part on luxurious touches. It remains to be seen if the outer eye candy will be matched by the system's performance.

To see more images click this link

Sony Ericsson Vivaz U5


Sony Ericsson Vivaz U5

The latest Sony Ericsson’s Vivaz mobile phone is approved by FCC, this new phone is also known as Sony Ericsson Kurara U5 and it will be also known as Sony Ericsson Vivaz U5a. The Sony Ericsson Vivaz U5a supports V bands (850MHz & 1900MHz) and UMTS II, which means those people who subscribing to Rogers and AT&T are able to use Vivaz U5a on 3G networks.

Let we talk about its another features like it running on Symbian S60 5th Edition OS, 3.2-inch touchscreen display with 360 x 640 resolution, Wi-Fi and HSPA connectivity, Google Maps, built-in accelerometer, GPS navigation system, Twitter integration and Facebook, 720MHz processor, 3.5mm headset jack, 8-megapixel Auto Focus camera, HD video recording, LED flash and 8GB memory card. This lovely smartphone offers you a greatrunning experience.


To know about this click the below link
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eAG2Wif7iJY

Lenovo notebooks


Lenovo notebooks

The Lenovo Think Pad going to add three more notebooks in its T series notebook such as T510i, T410si & T410i. They all notebooks are equipped with Intel Core i3-330M processor.

Its T510i is equipped with 8GB DDR3 RAM, it has 250GB or 320GB SATA 3.0Gb/s Internal Hard Drive, Mobile Intel QM57 Express Chipset, 15-inch wide HD with LED-backlit display, it offers resolution, 2 megapixel camera and Windows 7 and also Windows XP Professional pre-installation option.

Features and Specifications

Its T410si has 8GB DDR3 RAM of 2 or 3 standards, 14-inch wide WXGA LED-backlit display screen with 1440 x900 resolutions, 250GB SATA, 2 megapixel camera and Windows 7.

The T410i featuring with up to 8GB DDR3 RAM and it also offers 250GB or 320GB HDD, Mobile Intel QM57 Express Chipset, 2MP camera, 14-inch wide WXGA LED-backlit display with 1280 x800 resolution and its also comes with Windows 7.


Toughbook


Panasonic Toughbook

Panasonic Computer Solutions Company, manufacturer of durable, reliable Panasonic Toughbook(R) mobile computers, today introduced the Panasonic Toughbook H1 Field, the world's most rugged handheld tablet computer. The new device enables extreme mobility and productivity for field sales personnel, first responders, supervisors, inspectors, maintenance workers and other highly mobile professionals. Certified to meet IP65* and MIL-STD-810G* -- with a six foot drop rating -- the Toughbook H1 Field offers the durability expected of Toughbook mobile computers, so users have the confidence to work in the most demanding conditions. With optional SmartCard, RFID, and barcode readers, camera, GPS and Qualcomm's new Gobi2000(TM) mobile broadband technology, the device helps to maximize mobile worker productivity.

By leveraging Panasonic's advanced battery technology and a 1.86 GHz Intel(R) Atom(TM) processor, the Toughbook H1 Field offers a category-leading six hours of battery life, complemented by twin hot-swappable batteries that allow for limitless use, virtually eliminating down time and maximizing return on investment.

"As workforces become more mobile, it's critical to empower them with the right tools," said Kyp Walls, director of product management, Panasonic Computer Solutions Company. "The Toughbook H1 Field was designed based on extensive customer input to ensure it had the right mix of form factor, features and durability to maximize worker productivity and value. With so many features that exceed the performance capabilities of competitive products, we believe the Toughbook H1 Field is best positioned to meet the computing needs of highly mobile workers, along with their IT administrators."

The Panasonic Toughbook H1 Field includes a 500 nit, 10.4" dual-touch display that offers both tablet and touchscreen functionality. The display also includes a circular polarizer, plus anti-glare and anti-reflective screen treatments, making it easily viewable in direct sunlight. Weighing only 3.4 lbs, this mobile computing platform features 2GB of RAM and a 64GB reinforced flex-connect solid state drive.

The Toughbook H1 Field offers exceptional ergonomics, including a Panasonic designed system that comfortably cradles the hand between the device and its molded hand strap. Other ergonomic features include a well-balanced center of gravity, integrated handle, thoughtful placement of integrated features and lack of hotspots, making the device safe and easy to use for long periods of time.

The Toughbook H1 Field offers a range of embedded wireless connectivity options including 802.11a/b/g/n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth(R) 2.1 and Qualcomm's new Gobi2000(TM) technology which simplifies complex multi-carrier wireless deployments for IT departments. The H1 Field will be certified on the Sprint and Verizon Wireless networks, allowing workers to stay connected at all times. Other wireless carrier certifications will be announced soon.

The Toughbook H1 Field includes multiple security features, including options for a contactless or insertable SmartCard reader and a fingerprint reader, helping to ensure that critical data is kept secure.

The Toughbook H1 Field is available with a variety of productivity enhancing accessories such as carrying cases, shoulder straps, charging devices, and Toughbook tested vehicle mounting solutions. The handheld tablet can also be equipped with next generation GPS technology allowing for location-based services with improved accuracy, faster satellite acquisition time and lower power consumption.

Panasonic Toughbook : Features and Specifications

-- Genuine Windows 7(R) (with XP Tablet downgrade option)

-- Intel(R) Atom(TM) processor Z540 (1.86GHz)

-- 2GB RAM

-- 64 GB reinforced flex-connect Solid State Drive SSD

-- 10.4" XGA sunlight-viewable 500 nit dual-touch LCD

-- Circular polarizer with anti-glare and anti-reflective screen treatments

-- 6 hour battery life

-- Twin hot-swappable batteries

-- 3.4 lbs (with both batteries)

-- Fully-Rugged -- MIL-STD-810G certified (6 foot drop)*

-- Magnesium alloy chassis -- encased in polycarbonate

-- IP65 certified sealed all-weather design*

-- Reinforced flex-connect Solid State Drive (SSD)

-- Wide operating temperature range (-20C ~ 60C or -4F ~ 140F)

-- Embedded Connectivity -- Optional integrated WWAN / Gobi2000(TM) mobile broadband (EV-DO and HSPA)

-- Intel(R) WiFi Link 5100 802.11a/b/g/n

-- Bluetooth(R) v2.1 + EDR

-- Integrated Options -- Global positioning system (GPS) receiver

-- 2D barcode reader (also 1D capable)

-- 2.0 megapixel auto-focus camera with dual LED lights

-- RFID reader

-- Optional Security Features -- Fingerprint reader

-- Contactless SmartCard reader

-- Insertable SmartCard reader

-- Integrated docking connector

-- 10.4" (L) x 10.6" (W) x 1.3" - 2.3" (H)* Tested by a national independent third party test lab following MIL-STD-810G Method 516.6 Procedure IV for transit drop test and IEC 60529 Sections 13.4, 13.6.2, 14.2.5 and 14.3 for IP65.

* Tested by a national independent third party test lab following MIL-STD-810G Method 516.6 Procedure IV for transit drop test and IEC 60529 Sections 13.4, 13.6.2, 14.2.5 and 14.3 for IP65.

Pricing and Availability

The Panasonic Toughbook H1 Field will be available worldwide in March 2010. In the United States, the base Toughbook H1 Field model is expected to be available at an estimated street price of $3,379 from authorized Panasonic resellers and distributors.

The Toughbook H1 Field is backed with a 3-year standard warranty and lifetime technical support.

Panasonic is focused on delivering the industry's most reliable mobile solutions, ensuring that organizations and their mobile workforces can depend on their technology. The company's commitment to quality results in a total of more than 500 checks and tests before, during and after production, on every Toughbook unit built.

Toughbook H1 Field Images & Video

A video of the Toughbook H1 Field can be found on the Toughbook brand's YouTube channel:

-- Toughbook H1 Field Product Overview Video

Images of the Toughbook H1 Field can be found on the Toughbook brand's Flickr page:

-- Toughbook H1 Field Product and Application Images

Follow the Toughbook Brand

The Panasonic Toughbook brand can be followed on various social media channels, including Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr and Toughbloggers.com.

About Panasonic Computer Solutions Company

Panasonic Computer Solutions Company empowers the mobile workforce. The company is a unit of Panasonic Corporation of North America, which is the principal North American subsidiary of Panasonic Corporation /quotes/comstock/13*!pc/quotes/nls/pc (PC 14.58, 0.00, 0.00%) . Panasonic has delivered reliable, durable mobile solutions through its Toughbook(R) line of notebook computers since1993 and has expanded the boundaries of wireless communications technology through a broad portfolio of products, ranging from fully rugged, industrial strength notebook computers and tablet PCs to business-rugged thin-and-light and ultraportable notebooks. A core manufacturer, Panasonic controls the entire process of design, manufacture, quality assurance, service and support. As a result, Panasonic Toughbook computers are known for having the lowest failure rates in the industry. Government, industrial, and commercial users--from Fortune 1,000 companies to small businesses--rely on solutions from Panasonic, wherever their work takes them.

All brand and company/product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of the respective companies. All specifications are subject to change without notice. Information on Panasonic's full line of notebook PCs for the mobile professional can be obtained by calling 800-662-3537


To see video click this link
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YClt8Pq_rjs

Apple Tablet


Apple Tablet

The moment the tech world has been waiting on for possibly decades, maybe years and definitely months has finally culminated into today… The official launch of Apple’s highly anticipated tablet device: the iPad. Tablet computers have had a rowdy history. Developed as pen computers in the early nineties to Tablet PC is the noughties and culminating into the iPad


Slated to arrive at the end of March, the iPad will start at $499 for a Wi-Fi-equipped 16GB model. Apple will also sell 32GB and 64GB versions of the iPad for $599 and $699, respectively.

You’ll be able to add 3G connectivity to each of them for $130 more, with the 3G models arriving roughly a month after the iPad arrives in stores.


A slate that looks much like a larger iPhone, the iPad features a home button, a MacBook-like aluminum bezel and a glass screen. It’s a half-inch thick, weighs 1.5 pounds, and has a 9.7-inch LCD screen (with 1024 by 768 resolution). It will use a custom-made 1GHz CPU and flash storage and, Jobs claimed, will get up to 10 straight hours of battery life or a month of life on standby.

The iPad runs on a 1GHz Apple A4 chip. That’s an Apple-built processor resulting from the company’s April 2008 , which specialized in low-power processors.

For connectivity, in addition to the optional 3G, it has 802.11n, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth 2.1; it syncs to a Mac via USB. To feed those 3G connections, Jobs also announced two new cellular data plans from AT&T: $14.99 a month for 250MB of data, $29.99 a month for unlimited data; both are prepaid, meaning neither requires a contract like the two-year commitment that iPhone users must make.

The interface

Apple touts the iPad as a third category of device, positioned between a smartphone and a laptop. During Wednesday’s presentation, Jobs drew a pointed contrast between the iPad and netbooks—lower-cost PCs that have sold well in the mobile market. But Jobs characterized netbooks as slow, burdened with low-quality displays and running PC programs. “They’re not better than a laptop at anything,” Jobs said. “They’re just cheaper.”

Apple thinks the iPad fills the gap between phones and laptops by making it easier to browse through e-mail, photos, music, and videos. Apple also used demos Wednesday to showcase the iPad’s ability to display e-books and play games. Jobs spent parts of Wednesday’s demo seated in an armchair to show off the ease of using the tablet’s on screen controls.

The interface seems a blend of what you’d see on a Mac and an iPhone, though it clearly draws its primary inspiration from Apple's iPhone OS, featuring the same home screen application launcher and dock, and many of the same built-in applications. There are some more Mac-like touches in some of the applications, such as the iPod program and the Photos application.

The iPad features touch-screen controls and an on-screen keyboard (though an optional Keyboard Dock provides a full-size keyboard for when you’re charging the tablet). Unlike the iPhone, the iPad features panes, floating windows, and tabs—taking advantage of its larger screen space. But Jobs made a point of saying during his presentation that the more than 75 million people who have already bought an iPhone or iPod touch will be perfectly at home using the iPad's interface.

As with the iPhone and iPod touch, videos on the iPad display in landscape mode and be switched between widescreen or fullscreen aspect ratios.

The software

The iPad includes a dozen apps that Apple says have been designed specifically for the tablet. Specifically, Apple senior vice president Phil Schiller showed off a new version of IWork that has been customized for the tablet. None of the three iWork apps will be on the iPad by default, however; you’ll have to pay $10 each for to download iPad-specific versions of Numbers, Pages, and Keynote from the App Store.

Also included on the iPad is iBook a free application which will manage e-books on the tablet. While crediting Amazon for its pioneering efforts with the Kindle, Jobs announced that Apple was opening its own iBookstore where iPad users will be able to download electronic books from the likes of Penguin, Harper-Collins, Hachette, Simon & Schuster, and other publishers were already signed up to supply titles. Those titles will use the ePub format—an open e-book standard.

Other apps featured on the iPad include a calendar, notepad, Web browser, photo viewer, separate music and video playing apps, and YouTube.


Gameloft demos Nova, a game designed specifically for the iPad.
The iPad will also run third-party software, in the form of mobile apps already available to iPod touch and iPhone users. Apple senior vice president Scott Forstall said that the tablet will run most of the existing 140,000 apps, which can run at their existing size surround by a bezel or doubled to run in full-screen mode. Demos during Wednesday’s presentation should even graphics-heavy performing admirably when run in full-screen mode on the iPad.

Apple iPad specifications

Finally, let’s look at the numbers and data. Here’s the Apple iPad specs.

  • Display:
    • 9.7″ widescreen LED-backlit glossy multi-touch capacitive display (with IPS technology)
    • 1024-by-768-pixel resolution @ 132 pixels-per-inch (ppi)
    • Fingerprint-resistant oleophobic coating
  • Processor: Apple A4 1 GHz (by PA Semiconductor)
  • Memory: DDR2 RAM
  • Video: Apple A4 1 Ghz (see above)
  • Storage: 16 GB to 64 GB flash drive
  • Wireless data:
    • Integrated Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n
    • Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR
    • 3G version: UMTS/HSDPA (through AT&T, no contract required)
    • 3G version: GSM/EDGE (through AT&T, no contract required)
  • Extra devices:
    • Digital compass
    • A-GPS (assisted GPS)
    • Microphone
    • Speaker
  • Sensors:
    • Accelerometer
    • Proximity sensor
    • Ambient light sensor
  • Inputs:
    • Dock connector (typical Apple port)
    • 3.5 mm stereo headphone jack
    • SIM card
    • No USB port (!!!)
  • Battery: Built-in 25 Whr rechargeable lithium-polymer battery (by DynaPak)
  • Usage time:
    • Internet: up to 5 hours on 3G
    • Internet: up to 10 hours on Wi-Fi
    • Video playback: up to 10 hours
  • Colors:
    • black with silver or
  • Software:
    • iPhone OS (for iPad)
    • All iPhone applications are supported on the iPad
    • In addition, iPad has its own App Store
Click the link to watch video:

Windows 8 themes

This is the latest theme for your computer to make your PC look very stylish and give a new look for your PC.



To download this theme click here:


http://www.ziddu.com/download/8030797/windows8.rar.html

Alcohol Virtual Drive

Alcohol Virtual Drive:
Need a utility to create and burn backups of your CDs and DVDs? Alcohol 120% can handle just about all of them. Popular for its ripping speeds, it only lacks in the options department--they're a bit thin.

Its wizard-based interface is handy for managing CD images and virtual drives. The program handles most disc image formats, including ISO, Nero, CloneCD, and CDRWIN. Profiles let you save copy settings for audio, game, data, discs. Beyond the wizard, the interface is sparse. Still, the functionality of the application, which should satisfy all users.


To download click this link:

http://www.ziddu.com/download/8105948/Alcohol120.rar.html

Nokia phone models

This are the models of mobiles which are launched by Nokia mobile company all over the world. This phones are very beautiful with low cost.




To see Nokia phone models click this link:



http://www.ziddu.com/download/8105767/Nokiaphonemodels.rar.html

C++ Project

Some C++ projects source codes to develop your skills in C,C++ language.






To download click this link:



http://www.ziddu.com/download/8051202/CCgameCodes.rar.html

Mobile Pics

Some Mobile wallpapers for your mobiles Nokia, Sony Ericson, Motorola, Samsung, etc. to make your phone display very beautiful.





To download click this link
:


http://www.ziddu.com/download/8051322/Walkman.rar.html/Walkman.rar.html