Posts Tagged Video Recording

The Motorola DROID 3 Worldwide Android Telephone – Simply Amazing!

Posted by on Thursday, 20 October, 2011

The Motorola DROID 3 Worldwide Android Phone comes with an incredible Standard keyboard, a twin core processing unit and the famous Android 2.3 OS. There is a five row Standard keyboard enables you to quickly enter replies to Twitter, Facebook, Myspace, email, and blogs.

There's also a super fast connectivity available from Verizon Network. You are going to be able to enjoy wireless data services and voice services in over two hundred states. More the one hundred-and-twenty-five of these countries now have 3G speed available. You are going to be able to use the 3G Hotspot function among mp3 players, other cellular telephones and computers.

Benefits

The Motorola DROID 3 World Android Telephone includes an wonderful selection of benefits and features. There are a ton of benefits and here's a partial list:

GPS feature that also can include Google Maps, so that you can simply navigate to any destination across the U. S..

Skype compatible, permitting you to make calls to other skype users at no extra charge. In reality the Skype-to-Skype calls are unlimited. Now you can reach all your friends and family and friends.

HDMI support that comes with mirror mode output, so that you can watch your movies on the big-screen.

Video recording resolution is HD 720p 30fps for amazing video quality. Make home pictures of the family or vacations.

WIFI capability (802.11b/g / n) so you can simply access the Web.

Android 2.3 OS, for fast and efficient multimedia experiences.

Built-in memory that is 16GB so you have plenty of room to store all of your info.

Complete HTML Browser that also has support for Flash 10.1 so that you can navigate almost any web site online.

Why The Motorola DROID 3 Worldwide Android Telephone

One great feature about the product is that there's a full HTML browser. Many phones have plenty of great features on them, including glorious cameras, camcorders, GPS, Video players, and more.

One thing they lack is the facility to be sufficiently flexible to drag up all the websites. Actually unless the website is mobile prepared, most telephones still have trouble pulling them up absolutely. The Motorola DROID 3 World Android Telephone has eliminated that difficulty.

The Motorola DROID 3 Global Android Phone Beware Of Swindles

As with anything good, there are generally very confused people who will attempt to swindle you with the guarantee of getting this cell telephone. The precise schemes are too countless to name, and quite candidly there's always some brilliant genius that has decided to use their talents to hurt others.

One thing all the stings have in common though, is working on your feelings, specifically your greediness glands and your discomfort/pleasure centres. By prompting you to decide fast and by promising you something for nothing (or very little money), the scammer pulls your strings. It's better to be pleased to pay whatever the Motorola DROID 3 World Android Telephone is worth from a credible retailer, than to try and get it in a slick way.

Maximilian Haida is often a gifted and prosperous freelance writer for hire supplying pointers and recommendations for shoppers about cheap cell phones, cell telephone plans and cellular accessories. Her several articles give beneficial expertise and educational perspectives on a lot of various subjects.Looking for the newest Nokia phone models like the Nokia N8 unlocked ? Pay a visit to our website nowadays to know much more about the finest deals on your favorite mobile phones!


With iPhone 4S, it’s the little things that count

Posted by on Tuesday, 4 October, 2011

So there was no iPhone 5. But there will be a new iPhone 4S, which Apple announced Tuesday. And yes, it looks physically just like the iPhone 4, which might be disappointing for some, but there are several useful new features, most of them not visible at first glance. While there was no big reveal, no “one more thing,” it’s important to remember that these incremental upgrades could add up to a lot.

I say “could” because we didn’t get to play with the iPhone 4S. But what CEO Tim Cook and others showed the press during the 95-minute presentation this morning is very symbolic of what Apple is trying to do to keep standing out: pay excruciatingly close attention to the little things, which help make a product great.

The iPhone 4 is a great phone–and people continue to buy it in droves more than a year later–so it’s not like Apple had to go back to the drawing board or do a major overhaul. So what they did do to the new iPhone 4S was largely internal and incremental: a faster processor (the A5 chip, which is Apple-designed and already in use in the iPad 2), an improved camera (up to 8 megapixels from 5, wider aperture, better sensor for low-light photos, 1080p video recording, video image stabilization), updated software (the previously announced iOS 5, iCloud, iTunes Match), the ability to run on both GSM and CDMA networks, a new U.S. carrier (Sprint), redesigned antenna technology, aggressive pricing on older model iPhones (3GS now free on contract, iPhone 4 now ) and Siri, the personal assistant app. All of it is relatively minor, but at the same time all of it adds up to features that are designed to make the smartphone faster, its battery last longer with quicker downloads, uploads and streaming. And overall, the improvements are designed to make the iPhone 4S easier to use, which is what most people want from a smartphone anyway.

Siri got a lot of “oohs” and “aahs” from the crowd Tuesday. It may not be useful to everyone–it seems largely designed for situations where you can’t look at or pick up your iPhone, like driving. You can ask (in a phrase humans would use)”What time is it in Philadelphia right now?”, “What will the weather be like when I get there?”, respond and send text messages, make calendar appointments, search for restaurants (with Yelp integration), look up something online, set reminders and more. In other words, it’s designed to help you get stuff done.

Siri is a great example of Apple doing something that other hardware makers it competes with are not. Siri isn’t something you need any technical know how to use or understand and it’s seamlessly integrated with the entire device. (Microsoft and Android have voice assistance technology, but don’t go this far in integration.) It’s not even a new technology, but Apple sunk resources into the Siri acquisition to make it an integral function of this and probably future iPhones. Like iTunes Match and AirPlay, they’re not sexy, they’re relatively small but useful features that are supposed to quietly just work.

Apple doesn’t jump on every new technology that comes along (Blu-ray, 4G, NFC, etc.). That’s not how it competes, so it’s not going to make a huge splash with every single new announcement every year. If you think about what Cook emphasized during his introduction Tuesday, you’ll see the things that Apple knows set it apart from other device makers that can slap together hardware that looks really good: Apple’s retail stores, customer satisfaction ratings, the overall iOS ecosystem and the tight integration of devices and software. It’s not super juicy stuff talking about how many new stores you’ve opened or how you redesigned the phone’s antenna instead of new design or the extreme thinness and lightness of a phone. But those small, sometimes unnoticed advances are the ones matter when it comes to acquiring–and keeping–customers.

Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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RIM launches new BlackBerry Curve (video)

Posted by on Tuesday, 23 August, 2011

Want to get your BBM on in style without spending a fortune on RIM’s latest trio? Say hello to the new 11mm (0.43 inch) thin BlackBerry Curve, now official in 3 variants — the dual-mode GSM / CDMA 9370, the GSM / UMTS 9360 and the CDMA-only 9350. These long rumored handsets feature an 800MHz CPU, 512MB RAM, a tiny 2.44-inch HVGA+ (480×360 pixel) display, a five megapixel EDoF camera (with LED flash and VGA video recording), Bluetooth, WiFi b/g/n with UMA, GPS / aGPS and NFC. While there’s no sign of that new-fangled touch screen technology, you’ll find BlackBerry 7 under the hood, along with a 1000mAh battery to keep it ticking all day long, 512MB of built-in storage (1GB on the 9370) and microSD card support (up to 32GB). RIM is still mum on pricing, but the new BlackBerry Curve is “expected to be available from carriers in Canada this month and from other carriers around the world beginning in September” — including Vodafone, based on the video (and PR) after the break. We’ll have a hands-on later today so stay tuned for more.

Gallery: BlackBerry Curve 9350/9360/9370

Continue reading RIM launches new BlackBerry Curve (video)

RIM launches new BlackBerry Curve (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Aug 2011 02:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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StreakDroid 2.0.0 gives the gift of Gingerbread to Streak hackers

Posted by on Wednesday, 25 May, 2011

If you’ve been following along, you know that a phone enthusiast named DJ_Steve has kept the Dell Streak fresh, thanks to a series of hacked ROMs, dubbed StreakDroid. The latest version, 2.0.0 (or GingerStreak, if you’re feeling cute) brings Gingerbread to the 5-inch smartphone — expanding on the last ROM, which gave hackers the option of selecting Gingerbread’s app launcher. As always, though, dear Steve has noted a handful of bugs in the ROM’s early stages, including issues with the Superuser app, less-than-stellar graphics performance, and the fact that both GPS and 720p video recording require an engineering baseband and DSP to be flashed. As of this writing, all of the comments are from Streak owners eager to download this for themselves. We assume you are, too, so let us know how the new ROM works out for ya.

StreakDroid 2.0.0 gives the gift of Gingerbread to Streak hackers originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 May 2011 01:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kogeto Dot brings bite-size panoramic video recording to iPhone 4 (hands-on)

Posted by on Monday, 23 May, 2011

We’ve seen panorama add-ons for the iPhone before, but Kogeto’s offering is quite a bit more pocketable than other crowd-funded solutions. The Kogeto Dot snaps onto an iPhone 4 in your choice of pastel colors, and catches 360-degree video when placed face down. It’s got an accompanying iOS app that will un-distort the video for sharing, or even broadcast it on the net in real time. We got to check out a prototype, and though there’s still some residual distortion at this point in time, we’re assured that it’ll all get straightened out if and when the project meets its funding goal. Interestingly (and annoyingly), this implementation requires your iPhone be held perpendicular rather than upright, making previewing a capture virtually impossible until after you’ve stopped the recording, which seems unnatural to us. Combine that with a minimum Kickstarter pledge of to secure one of your own, and suddenly the less-portable and lower-degree alternatives start sounding a little more attractive. If you’re still interested, hit the source link below and get in on the action. Promo video after the break.

Gallery: Kogeto Dot iPhone 4 panoramic camera hands-on

Continue reading Kogeto Dot brings bite-size panoramic video recording to iPhone 4 (hands-on)

Kogeto Dot brings bite-size panoramic video recording to iPhone 4 (hands-on) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 May 2011 13:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motorola Droid X2 official at $200: launching online May 19th, in stores May 26th

Posted by on Wednesday, 18 May, 2011

Motorola and Verizon have finally stopped teasing us and have made the Droid X2 official. This is a 4.3-inch Android (2.2, to be upgraded to 2.3) smartphone with a qHD screen resolution and a dual-core 1GHz processor. An 8 megapixel camera with continuous autofocus and HD video recording graces the back. The X2 will cost the usual 0 on contract and will be available to buy online tomorrow, May 19th, before making its way out to stores a week later, on May 26th. Leap past the break for the full PR.

Interestingly, we’ve also spotted the close proximity of the USB and HDMI ports on the side of the new X2. That arrangement is reminiscent of the one on Motorola’s Atrix, where the two connectors served to hook that handset up to its laptop and multimedia docks. We don’t know whether the Droid X2 will fit into the accessories designed for the Atrix, but it looks sure to be strapping itself into a dock of some description in the near future.

Continue reading Motorola Droid X2 official at 0: launching online May 19th, in stores May 26th

Motorola Droid X2 official at 0: launching online May 19th, in stores May 26th originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 18 May 2011 08:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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