Posts Tagged Sweet Spot

BlackBerry Curve 9380 hits the FCC, talking the T-Mobile talk

Posted by on Thursday, 24 November, 2011

RIM’s first all-screen Curve has sashayed over to the FCC. Two models of the BlackBerry Curve 9380, the REA70UW and REB70UW, are included in the latest filing, which goes into typical laborious detail on radio frequencies and the like. Thankfully, those myriad charts and graphs reveal support for WCDMA band IV, meaning that the phone plays nice with T-Mobile’s 3G network. Let’s just hope that, if given the chance to strut its stuff in the US market, it follows the Curve family tradition of arriving keenly priced. We’ll have to wait and see if it hits our wallet’s sweet spot, but for those more interested in the phone’s internals, the source link beckons below.

BlackBerry Curve 9380 hits the FCC, talking the T-Mobile talk originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 24 Nov 2011 17:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kindle Fire: Meet the new boss, same as the old boss

Posted by on Thursday, 29 September, 2011

Unless you chose today to get marooned on a deserted island, you’ve probably heard that Amazon has announced a series of new devices, including one called the Kindle Fire which has an iPad-style touchscreen and is powered by the Android operating system. On the content side, meanwhile, Amazon has also signed deals with some leading publishers to provide one-click access to their magazines and newspapers. But while it’s nice for media companies to have a strong competitor in the tablet market, dealing with Amazon puts them in the same boat they’re in with Apple: They provide the content, but the platform owner controls the relationship. And in some ways, Amazon might be worse.

The impetus for Amazon’s interest in new tablets is fairly obvious: Apple’s iPad has shown that there is a relatively huge and growing market of users interested in the convenience of a small form-factor mobile device for reading and playing games. So far, no one has come along that shows signs of playing a strong second fiddle to Apple in that market, so why not Amazon? The company has deep pockets — although not quite as deep as Apple’s — and it also has something that Apple doesn’t when it comes to the content side: an existing relationship with many users that’s based around subscribing to magazines, buying books, etc.

The need for the Kindle Fire was obvious: As soon as the first version of the iPad arrived, the Kindle looked more than a little antiquated, with its black-and-white screen, no touch interface, etc. That’s not to say there isn’t still a market for dedicated reading devices, for people who don’t like the distractions or the reflective screen of the iPad — and Amazon will no doubt continue to sell plenty of Kindles with touchscreens and other features added. But the sweet spot of the market is a device that can do many different things: stream video, stream audio, display magazines and newspapers and books in full color, and so on.

Amazon sees devices as a way to sell content

In some ways, Amazon and Apple are polar opposites, at least when it comes to the way they are approaching the tablet market. As my colleague Erica Ogg has pointed out, Apple’s main interest is in selling hardware, and it uses content as a way of doing that. It arguably had no real interest in becoming a music powerhouse, except that controlling access to those songs would give it a powerful lever with which to sell more iPods. Amazon, however, sees devices like the Kindle Fire as a way to sell more content, and that makes it simultaneously more appealing as a partner for media companies and at the same time a potentially more dangerous one as well.

The benefit for content publishers and media companies like Conde Nast and News Corp. is more or less the same as it is with Apple: They get access to the users who choose that device as a way to consume media, and Amazon handles the logistics of the relationship — the billing, the processing, and to a certain extent the marketing and promotions as well. They also get to put their content on a device that (in some cases, at least) seems to make users more likely to pay for things, which is something media companies have been wrestling with virtually since the Internet was invented — although they have to give the platform owner 30 percent of the proceeds, of course.

But the downsides of this relationship are also a mirror image of the relationship many media outlets have with Apple: The platform owner is in the driver’s seat, both in terms of what apps are allowed or not allowed, and also what information about the end user or subscriber is provided to the content creator — an issue that was a sticking point for many when Apple started trying to sign up publishers for the iPad. In the end, the platform owner is the gatekeeper of a media company’s relationship with its customers, which is the same kind of tradeoff media companies make by creating Facebook apps.

Amazon likes to compete with content partners

At least in Apple’s case, however, the hardware maker appears to have no real interest in becoming a media or content producer, since all it wants is content that makes people want more devices. In theory at least, it doesn’t particularly care where that content comes from, as long as it gets its 30 percent. Amazon is in a different boat; it has already indicated it’s happy to compete with its former publishing partners when it comes to books (its core business) by pressuring them to accept lower prices and also by signing up authors like Tim Ferriss — in effect, becoming a publisher.

Is Amazon suddenly going to get into the magazine business or the newspaper business? No. But its Kindle Singles program is appealing to more and more authors who are using that avenue as an alternative to both publishing traditional books and to magazine articles or newspaper features. Some newspapers and other publications have been using e-books and the Kindle as a tool to extend the life of their content, and that is smart — but Amazon has a clear interest in that business as well.

There’s no question that working with Amazon and a new platform like the Kindle Fire makes a lot of sense for publishers and media companies — it’s a win-win for both sides. And so long as Amazon’s interests align with those of its media partners, then everything should go swimmingly. But what about when they diverge?

Post and thumbnail photos courtesy of Flickr user Umberto Salvagnin

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Sony XNV-770BT To Your Excellent Automobile

Posted by on Friday, 5 August, 2011

Sony XNV-770BT is a GPS unit that has a good navigation capabilities. The GPS programs provide correct area of the road map, as well as traffic details. With the XNV-770BT, you get the quickest route, so your trip is a lot more effective and productive.

There also does not seem to be any voice manage element for Sony XNV-770BT. You can get voice guidance from the device, and acquire turn-by-turn directions as you push, but it does not look as if you can give basic instructions to the technique. This is disappointing due to the fact voice commands help you retain your eyes on the street and let you concentrate on driving.

The XNV-770BT capabilities built-in Bluetooth, so you can synchronize up your cell phone or Bluetooth-enabled media player and play the sound through your car or truck stereo. It has a regular AM/FM tuner, and you can get High Definition radio and Satellite Radio if you have the further adapters and tuners.

The XNV-770BT GPS receiver provides fantastic GPS advice, excellent sound, and hassle-free attributes, all controlled by a large, brilliant 7″ touch display. The GPS arrives with four totally free map updates you can use for the duration of the first year. It is simple to update the nav system, just take the TomTom navigation module out of your car and plug it into your home computer or laptop for software and map updates.

The Sony XNV-770BT also guides you to the proper lane for an upcoming turn, which is a wonderful assist in active interchanges. In addition, TomTom’s unique IQ Route feature calculates travel time primarily based on real traffic speeds.

Sophisticated Sound Engine adds a great set of sound-shaping instruments to the XNV-770BT, starting up with the EQ7 7-band equalizer to tailor the sound of your songs to your taste. You can dial in the best stereo “sweet spot” with the Listening Position feature, while Sony’s DM+ Superior circuitry can make your digital songs sound its finest by restoring the specifics that are lost in compressed MP3, WMA, or AAC files.

This GPS technique is leaps and bounds over and above the regular moveable GPS unit. In addition to the GPS, the Sony XNV-770BT can play DVDs, CDs and MP3s, plus it has built-in Bluetooth abilities. The interface is easy to use and presents you complete handle above what you listen to and view throughout your trip. Sony XNV-770BT Bluetooth Integrated Navigation functions an amazing array of multimedia capabilities that are discovered in quite a few in-dash receivers currently.


The sweet spot for mobile apps

Posted by on Thursday, 28 July, 2011

It’s often said that the rise of mobile devices means that many people are now “always on.” But it turns out there are definite times when people are more plugged in than others. And if you’re a mobile app advertiser, the more information you have about when people are really paying attention to their mobile content, the better.

To that end, real-time bidding mobile ad exchange company Mobclix has assembled all the behavioral data it saw on  iOS and Android users across multiple devices during the month of June. A couple of the study’s findings were pretty interesting:

  • The late afternoon (between 4pm and 6pm) and the evening (9pm to 11pm) are the most popular times for people to use mobile apps. But they’re actually most engaged with ads within those apps at a completely different time, during the morning hours from 8am to 11am.
  • Weekends are far and away the most popular time for users to tool around on their mobile devices, with Saturday and Sunday accounting for 38 percent of the total time spent on mobile apps.
  • Although many advertisers tend to focus their efforts toward Apple devices such as the iPhone, the Android platform actually holds the highest market share in the U.S., the U.K. and Japan.

Mobclix has put together all the research into a nifty series of infographics, which I’ve embedded here (click to enlarge):

       

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Wireless Surround Sound Brings the Sweet Spot to You

Posted by on Thursday, 28 July, 2011

The Aperion Intimus 4T Summit Wireless system scores high marks, thanks to audiophile-friendly uncompressed streaming and ingenious sweet-spot tech.



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Beginner Cowboy Chords Are All You Will Need To Acquire Started Out With Country Style Guitar Playing

Posted by on Sunday, 1 May, 2011

What do you consider of if you consider country music? Do you consider pick-up trucks, lost relationships and mans greatest buddy, his dog? Effectively that’s one part of country, but what about country guitar? If you hear a country song do you pay any attention to the guitar, what chords they are playing along with the strumming pattern?

One thing about country guitar that has usually amazed me is how straightforward it really is and but most common country songs are so catchy and singable. The majority of most country songs use what some guitar players will call cow boy chords (aka Beginner chords). These chords are the basic shapes you find out when your 1st begin guitar in the open position.

The primary CowBoy Chords

Probably the most common cowboy chords you’ll use when understanding to play common country songs are: E, A, C, D, G and F. You are going to also find out some minor chords such as: Am, Em, Fm, Dm. Although the chords in the open position aren’t restricted to these they’re the much more common chords you’ll need.

Why so few Chords?

The chords you may need to play a song comes back to what crucial the song is in and most common country songs are in the crucial of G, C or D typically. Every crucial has three chords that just function properly with each other. Some may call it the sweet spot. How do you understand which of these chords fit with each other? Thankfully it really is straightforward and it really is all based around the major scale for that distinct crucial.

Let’s take a look at the Crucial of C 1st.

The C major scale consists of C – D – E – F – G – A – B – C

There are no sharps or flats, every one of the notes are organic. The notes that fit with each other are the initial, fourth and fifth degrees of the scale. Uh Oh you might be saying, what the heck is often a degree of a scale. No worries that’s just fancy name for the note number in the scale exactly where C is number one and it counts upwards from there. So the initial, fourth and fifth in the crucial of C is C, F and G.

Although I will not go by means of all the scales (there is plenty of information available on-line) this can be the basic notion of it.

Your 1st Cowboy Chords

So what in case you don’t know any of these chords I mentioned above? No dilemma I’m going to take you by means of your 1st 3 chords at the moment.

C Major Chord

To play the C major chord you press down 3 frets. If you happen to be familiar with tab or chord blocks I’ve placed it beneath. You are going to spot your 1st finger on the 1st fret of the B string, your second finger on the 2nd fret of the D string and your third finger on the 3rd fret of the A string. Strum all six strings at once and that’s a C chord.

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F Major Chord

There are two distinct methods you can play an F chord, and for beginners this way I’m going to share with you could be the less complicated of the two. Place your 1st finger on the 1st fret of the high e string, your second finger on the 2nd fret of the B string, your fourth finger on the 3rd fret of the G string and your third finger on the 3rd fret of the D string. To play the F chord strum only the initial 5 strings, don’t hit the low E or sixth string.

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G Major Chord

Alright, our final cowboy guitar chord we’re going to look at could be the G major chord. For beginners this chord can be a little uncomfortable at 1st but just give it some time and your fingers will begin to obtain utilised to the position. To play the G chord spot your second finger on the third fret of the low E string, your 1st finger on the second fret of the A string and your 3rd finger on the 3rd fret of the high E string. Strum all 6 strings and once and there you might have it a G chord.

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Wish to find out much more about country guitar? Pay a visit to learncountryguitartoday.com exactly where you can study reviews and comparisons of the greatest country guitar lesson services on-line. It is possible to find out country guitar for less money and in less time on-line then from a private instructor.