Christmas Calls To Mom in the Philippines

Ok, so this blog appears to have taken a vacation over the Christmas week. Either that or I was being lazy or even maybe I ran out of things to talk about in my uninteresting and boring life. This is probably the month in the past couple of years that I have posted the least.
Would you believe that I talked to my mom in the Philippines two days in a row? On Christmas Eve and Christmas day there (they are 16 hours ahead of the U.S.), I was able to get in touch with her on the phone which is a Christmas miracle in itself, because all the Filipinos in the U.S. seems to be calling there at the same time the whole day. It’s not a surprise if you get a busy signal or the call doesn’t connect at all on Christmas day. So the first time on Christmas Eve, we talked about our holiday plans – any party invitations or going to church. She said her only plan was to go to mass and have a quiet Christmas at home, which didn’t turn out that way (I’ll tell you more about that later). During the call, it occurred to me to ask her how she and my father met. During elementary school before World War 2, they were schoolmates but other than that, they didn’t really talk to each other, she said. After surviving the war and finishing high school, my mother started working in the box office of a movie theater in Jolo, Sulu, Philippines, with my dad’s mother. That’s when they really started talking and the courtship began. My dad would often go the theater to pick up my grandmother and when he drove his passengers (my dad was a jeepney driver at the time) in the part of town where mom lived, he would stop by and visit. I wish we were able to get into more details but the long distance call was getting lengthy. I hope I would be able to explore that part of mom’s life at a later date and ask her about things we never knew while growing up.
The next day, Christmas Eve here and Christmas day there, I tried calling my mom again while I was at a family party at my uncle’s house. The first three tries, nobody answered maybe because mom was still in church or the call didn’t go through. When she finally answered, she said she had gone to church and was invited to lunch by very close family friends (that's her in the red dress, with the Pabellon Family and their Christmas at KFC - photo courtesy of Jing :-)) , after which she went home to prepare to go to another party. I tell you, my mom has a more active social life than I do despite her osteoporosis and osteoarthritis J. During the call, I passed around my cell phone to my relatives to talk to mom, not caring about minutes because it was Christmas after all and it’s not often that they talk to her. Since she rarely gets to talk to them, I’m sure she was pretty happy about that. Soon we had to say our goodbyes again so she could rest before her next party (she is 79 after all), while we continued our festivities here. The dinner feast consisted of kulma (a native Tausug dish related to curry), potato/macaroni salad, ham, turkey ham, lumpia shanghai, bistek, kilawin shrimp, poached salmon, fruit salad, pecan pie, ube, lemon cheesecake, and cream puffs, plus others that I don’t remember anymore. It was a gustatory and calorie ridden delight!
          As I end this post, let me ask you: how did you spend your Christmas and have you ever asked your parents how they met and got married?

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Skype video calling hitting iPhone 4 and other platforms next year?

When the iPhone 4 was released and a front-facing camera was announced, I became excited for Skype video calls. Unfortunately, video calling was limited to FaceTime only. And even that was limited to Wi-Fi, too. Of course, there are other apps that allow you to make video calls over 3G, but they’re totally craptastic. Even FaceTime sucks over 3G when you do a little jailbreaking to get that to work. Will Skype be any different?

It’s hard to say whether the popular messaging and telephony service will be an improvement, but I do know that it will be huge in a way that FaceTime could never be. After all, you’ll be able to chat with your family and friends across other devices and possibly platforms.

Skype has also been making a big deal about what it will be showing off at CES, so we can expect some major announcements from the company in just a few days. Also, according to Engadget:

Oh, and here’s a little trivia fact for you: the Nokia N900 was actually the first device to get official video calling support from Skype, so this isn’t a first for these guys — but it’ll certainly be the first time they’ve taken it to a mass market. Seems like they’ll probably have the MeeGo build ready to go, at least.

It seems like it’s only a matter of time before we find Skype video calling on the iPhone 4 and perhaps even Android devices, too. Hopefully we’ll soon find out!

[Via: Engadget]

HTC 7 Pro appears on O2 Germany’s website with January launch date


The HTC 7 Pro was spotted on O2 Germany’s website with a tentative availability date of January. This January launch date fits in nicely with previous information that pointed to an early 2011 European launch. With its wide landscape keyboard and sleek design, the 7 Pro should be a big hit in Europe . Under the hood, the Windows Phone handset includes a 1 GHz processor, 3.6-inch WVGA display, a 5-megapixel camera, 16 GB of onboard storage and all the bells whistles found on a high-end smartphone. The 7 Pro is the second Windows Phone-powered handset to include a keyboard. The first is the Dell Venue Pro which debuted on November with T-Mobile USA, but had a very rocky start.

The HTC 7 Pro is also expected to land on Sprint in early 2011. The CDMA variant of the handset was introduced as part of Microsoft’s big Windows Phone kick-off, but soon after launch, Microsoft confirmed its CDMA handsets were being pushed off until 2011 for release. This setback was attributed to a lack of time. Microsoft was pushed to the wire to release Windows Phone and decided to focus on core features instead CDMA support. This 7 Pro will compete head to head with the HTC 7 Trophy which is expected to roll out sometime in the 1st half of next year.

[Via Engadget and O2 Germany]

NEC Will Launch Dual-LCD Android Tablet and LifeTouch at CES 2011

NEC Corporation will be participating at Pepcom Digital Experience and CES 2011 on January 5-9 in Las Vegas. Here is a quick glimse at what NEC will be launching at CES.

* NEC Dual Screen Cloud Communicator Tablet
o Android powered tablet with two 7-inch touch screens
o Wifi/3G/Bluetooth enabled
o Multi-tasking, with the ability to run different programs on each LCD screen
o Stylus pen for easy input

* NEC Single Screen Cloud Communicator Tablet
o Android powered, single touch screen
o Wifi/3G/Bluetooth enabled
o Camera and SD-card equipped
o Slim, lightweight design
o Stylus pen for easy input

* NEC Personal Products’ Mobile Notebook
o Android powered

* NEC Home Gateway Solution
o ADSL+/802.11n/USB2.0/DECT enabled
o IGMPv2 Proxy & Snooping/VOIP
o Media Control & Serving/Printing & File Sharing
o TR069 and OSGi enable services & configurations to be carried out remotely

* NEC BIGLOBE’s “andronavi”
o Android application marketplace
o Japanese content including Manga, Japan related photography

All of these products will be exibited at both Pepcom Digital Experience and CES 2011.

XIM3 Is The Next Generation Of Xbox 360 Keyboard & Mouse Adapters

By Andrew Liszewski

It’s not the first keyboard & mouse adapter for the Xbox 360, not even from this company. But XIM Technologies’ new XIM3 adapter looks like the penultimate solution for those who prefer a PC-like FPS experience on their consoles. The most obvious wow factor is a built-in LCD display which lets you customize settings, and select a specific setup for a given title.

Since different games on the 360 each have their own unique feel and control mechanics when it comes to playing, accurately translating the movements from a keyboard and mouse have to be adapted on a game-by-game basis. So the XIM3 uses ‘Smart Translators’ to ensure there’s always 1-to-1 movement between the mouse and your target reticule on-screen, as long as you specify what game you’re playing. The list of supported titles is continually expanding, but it’s safe to assume that more popular titles like Halo and Call of Duty will work perfectly with the XIM3 when it’s finally available for purchase.

[ XIM3 ] VIA [ Kotaku ]

Sherif Hashim Confirms iPhone 4 Unlock Coming Before Mid-January

I have just received a tip via Twitter informing us that Sherif Hashim, the well-known iPhone baseband hacker replied someone asking him (in Arabic) about if the unlock would be ready before 16th January. Hashim has confirmed that the unlock will be available before that date.

[Translated] Gerges2001: @sherif_hashim My military service will start on January 16, will I be able to unlock my iPhone 4 before that date?

Sherif_Hashim: @Gerges2001 sure
We'll have more updates as they come ! Stay tuned for that !

P.S. We're from Egypt and my mother language is Arabic so I could translate this tweet to English.

Wimp Out Due To Rain? Or Rational Decision?


Saturday morning’s scheduled AREC run was 10 miles for one group and a longer 18 miles for those training for a marathon. All that to be done in the forecasted rain. Based on my injuries earlier this year, 10 miles appears to be the breaking point of my leg joints and muscles so I wasn’t sure what to expect. I set all my running rain gear out Friday evening: shoes, socks, shorts, long sleeved shirt, Goretex jacket, hat, gloves, GPS watch, ID, cell phone, hard candy, MRE’s. Oh, wait, not the last one. Should I run very easy like last week? Do the 4:1 Galloway method? Wimp out because of the rain and run on the treadmill instead? In the end, my final decision was not made because of the distance or the weather but because my ankles were still aching from last Thursday’s unplanned fartlek workout.
 Let me explain. It was supposed to be a GPSless slow and easy run, but 15 minutes into it, I decided to pick up the pace for the length of a block then recovered on the next turn. Well, instead of continuing in an easy pace, I kept doing the block-long pickups and recoveries until I finished an hour of what I considered an impromptu fartlek workout. It felt really good picking up the pace but the downside is that increases my pounding against the ground so much nowadays that it overstretches my already tender ankle joints. I was hoping that they would recover on Friday so I could join AREC on Saturday morning, but it was not to be. My ankles were hurting too much and I didn’t want them to get worst. Instead, I just repeated Friday’s recumbent bike workout plus 5 more minutes. This was the workout for Friday and Saturday: 4 minutes fast cadence on easy gear, 3 minutes on medium gear while trying to keep the cadence up, 3 minutes on heavy gear = 1 set. Repeat to finish 4 to 5 sets. Not the same feeling as running but it was gentler to my ankles while keeping my pulse rate up and my breathing heavy. Good enough. I might not try to run again until next Tuesday. In the meantime, ice, ice, baby.

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Random Thoughts for December 2010

          
            Ever since I injured my left index finger due to the garage door accident, touch typing on the computer keyboard has been a hit and miss exercise. I can’t feel the bump of the F key and I keep hitting the R and T keys together when I type one of those letters.
            When you blog and share it on social networking sites, are you considered a bloggart?
Last week, before I did my gift card shopping, I wrote notes, addressed and stamped Christmas cards while watching a TV program called The Sing Off (acapella competition between singing groups). After I bought the gift cards days later, I stuffed them with the Christmas cards in envelopes, ran to the post office, dropped everything in the mailbox then continued my run. Another one of my errand runs. On a similar note, I ran to a friend’s apartment to update her computer then ran back home, achieving another negative split in the process.
Last weekend I watched what I consider a powerful movie called For Colored Girls. I’m just wondering why it had a poor box office result and a low IMDB rating.
                 You’ve heard of the Clydesdales division in road races? If I remember correctly, if you are a runner who is 200 pounds or more, you are considered a Clydesdale (like the Budweiser horses). Even though I’m almost half that weight I run like a Clydesdale because my stride is so heavy. A lot of those heavy runners are probably much lighter on their feet than I am.
My netbook battery is not holding a full 9 hour charge any more. At best it gives me 6 hours, and even lesser if I’m connected to the internet. The hospital I work in now has Wi-Fi in the main building. Unfortunately not in the building I work in. How can they give us Wi-Fi and we are not supposed to surf the internet at work? Go figure. I guess the restriction only goes for direct patient care staff, while office personnel and visitors are allowed to do it.
I love pumpkin pie because it reminds me of when my mother used to bake them at home in the Philippines. I had four store-bought pies in the fridge and I overdosed on one of them one night because I didn’t want it to spoil. I was hoping that the pumpkin had a good dose of fiber but it was only 1 percent per serving. Oh, well. 

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PlayStation App For iPhone, iPod Touch and Android Coming Soon

The official PlayStation blog has just announced that the official PlayStation App will see the light very soon. PlayStation app will be available to download for iPhone and iPod touch running iOS 4.x and Android compatible handsets running OS 1.6 or above.

In version 1.0 you’ll be able to:
  • Check out your PlayStation Network trophies and keep up to date with your friends’ games and online status.
  • Discover all the latest games, news and hardware for your PlayStation 3, PSP and PlayStation 2.
  • Read all the announcements on the European PlayStation.Blog.
  • Share your favorite products or news with your friends on Facebook, Twitter or via e-mail.
The first version of PlayStation app will be available in the following countries: UK, France, Germany, Spain, Italy, and The Netherlands, but don't worry it will be available on the most of other countries in the next version.

You will be able to download this app for free. Stay tuned on ZoOMwAP for further announcements about PlayStation app 

Top list iPhone, iPad , iPod Apps 2010


Top 10 Paid Apps for iPhone and iPod touch

1. Angry Birds
2. Doodle Jump
3. Skee-Ball
4. Bejeweled 2 + Blitz
5. Fruit Ninja
6. Cut the Rope
7. ALL-IN-1 GAMEBOX
8. The Moron Test
9. Plants vs. Zombies
10. Pocket God

Top 10 Free Apps for iPhone and iPod touch

1. Facebook
2. Angry Birds Lite
3. Words With Friends Free
4. Skype
5. Tap Tap Revenge 3
6. The Weather Channel
7. Paper Toss
8. Bing
9. ROCK BAND FREE
10. Talking Tom Cat

Top 10 Grossing Apps for iPhone and iPod touch

1. MLB.com At Bat 2010
2. Angry Birds
3. Call of Duty: Zombies
4. Bejeweled 2 + Blitz
5. FriendCaller 3 Pro
6. Zombie Farm
7. TomTom U.S.A.
8. TETRIS
9. Plants vs. Zombies
10. Doodle Jump

Top 10 Paid Apps for iPad

1. Pages
2. GoodReader for iPad
3. Numbers
4. Angry Birds HD
5. Keynote
6. Glee Karaoke
7. WolframAlpha
8. Pinball HD
9. Friendly for Facebook
10. Star Walk for iPad

Top 10 Free Apps for iPad

1. iBooks
2. Pandora Radio
3. Netflix
4. Google Mobile App
5. Solitaire
6. Movies by Flixster
7. IMDb Movies & TV
8. Kindle
9. Google Earth
10. Virtuoso Piano Free 2 HD

Top 10 Grossing Apps for iPad (Year: 2010)

1. Pages
2. Numbers
3. Keynote
4. LogMeIn Ignition
5. SCRABBLE for iPad
6. Documents To Go Premium
7. Angry Birds HD
8. Real Racing HD
9. Plants vs. Zombies HD
10. Proloquo2Go

Easily Upload Desktop Folders to Google Docs

Dropbox offers a great solution for cloud storage since it retains your folder structure, easily accessible later via PC, Mac, iPhone or Android. But the problem with dropbox is that they are much more expensive.
For 50GB, they charge $10/month equaling $120 per year. Compare this with Google Docs GDrive: $5/year for 20GB (and same price for all multiples of 20GB). The price difference huge, plus Google docs’ storage is shared among all Google applications: Gmail, Picasa, Docs, you name it. And coz Google is all about goodness, if you stop paying yearly thing, you can still retain uploaded data FOREVER, free for lifetime, but not upload new data. Which is NOT offered by any of the competitors.
Here’s proof from Google’s Terms & conditions:
No matter when you cancel your storage subscription, your extra storage will be available for the entire year you’ve purchased. After your plan expires, your storage will be limited to each individual product’s free storage quota. Under our current policy, any content over the free storage quota will still be accessible, however you will not be able to add new content until your storage balance falls below the free storage limit.
So you are already convinced by now that Google Docs is a more viable Cloud storage, except for the fact that it doesn’t retain your folder structure (unless you create it manually).
How to Upload Folders to Google Docs
Try an Open-source program for Windows called Cyberduck that lets you transfer files and folders from the computer to Google Docs (and vice-versa), just like a FTP.
  1. Simply create a new connection in Cyberduck and choose “Google Docs” from the list of service providers.
  2. Fill in your Google Account credentials and connect. It will get a list of your Google Docs files and folders.
  3. To upload a local folder to Google Docs, simply select the files to upload or Drag-drop them.
Note: The application handles duplicates quiet well. You cannot upload MP3, EXE via this app, they can only be done via browser unless you’ve a Google Apps for Business account. The restriction is essentially set by Google Upload API.

New translation app Word Lens will blow your mind

Picture
The new auto-translation app is taking over the App Store and impressing users with its speed, not to mention its technology's potential.
Word Lens, a new app from Quest Visual, is taking things to a whole new level. It analyzes text within an image it is viewing and instantly translates English to Spanish, or vice versa. The app itself is free, but each translation option costs $4.99 – meaning the Spanish to English and English to Spanish options are sold separately (you pay once, though, not each time you want to use it). And sorry – it’s only available to iOS 4.0 or later, and there’s no Android version as of yet.

While the app works extremely quickly – remarkably quickly – some are saying the translations can be a little too literal, and you cannot save any translated images to the phone to access later. But other than that, the app works like magic. It took developers Otavio Good and John DeWeese over two years of development to perfect Word Lens’ use of optical character recognition, a technology we’re certainly going to be seeing more of. Tech Crunch describes the process, saying “It tries to find out what the letters are and then looks in the dictionary. Then it draws the words back on the screen in translation.”

The site also claims that the developers are working on adding major European languages, and specifically mention French, Italian, Brazilian, and Portuguese. Good also admits that “The translation isn’t perfect, but it get the point across.” So foreign language majors out there won’t be able to use Word Lens for deciphering novels, but international travelers will appreciate the ease with which they can read street signs and menus.

Ars Technica is reporting that at the end of the year, Word Lens will increase to $10 per translation package. In that case, we sincerely hope they add more languages – enough people speak decent Spanish and English, and $10 for a short and very literal translation might not be worth it.

If you haven’t downloaded and tried the app out for yourself, check out this preview.

Apple and Sharp Building $1.2 Billion Facility for iPhone Displays?

In what seems like a rerun of Monday's news, a report has surfaced in the Japanese newspaper Nikkei claiming that Apple and Sharp are partnering to build a 100 billion yen ($1.2 billion) plant in China to produce LCD displays for the iPhone.

Sharp Corp (6753.T) will spend about 100 billion yen to build production lines for small and midsize LCDs, with Apple Inc (AAPL.O) slated to purchase bulk of the output for its iPhone, the Nikkei business daily said.

Apple will shoulder a large portion of the 100 billion yen investment and buy most of the panels produced by Sharp, which has supplied LCD panels for Apple's iPod touch music player, the paper reported.
Mass production at the factory would not begin until the second half of 2012.

Monday's report in the same newspaper had claimed that Apple and Toshiba were partnering on a $1.2 billion plant to produce iPhone LCDs and set to come online in the second half of 2011. Toshiba responded to the report, denying any investment by Apple or even a commitment to build a new plant.

With the new report being remarkably similar to the one from earlier this week, it is unclear whether the newspaper is claiming that both companies are pursuing $1.2 billion plants to produce iPhone LCDs with the assistance of Apple or if perhaps the original report pointed to the wrong company, which would obviously represent a significant error.

Apple's iOS Engineering Jobs Emphasize Navigation Software Experience


AppleInsider notes that four identical job postings for iOS software engineers were posted on Apple's site yesterday, with each one noting "experience developing navigation software" as one of the "valuable knowledge" criteria by which Apple is looking to judge applicants.

Apple is hiring outstanding engineers to deliver the next generation of Apple products. Seize this ground floor opportunity to help us build the world's best hosted platforms at massive scale.

Requirements
* +3 years' experience with developing high quality, robust software systems
* Expert knowledge of C++
* Excellent problem solving and analytical skills
* Outstanding understanding of data structures and algorithms
* Fully comfortable with base technologies like networking, TCP/IP, HTTP, Sockets, Threads, STL and templates.
* Good interpersonal and communication skills

Valuable knowledge:
* Deep knowledge of Computational Geometry or Graph Theory
* Experience with Linux server-side development of distributed systems
* Experience developing navigation software
While the note is only one among a number of requirements and recommended attributes for job applicants and Apple has previously posted job listings soliciting expertise in maps and other geo-focused skills, the fact the company is hiring four core iOS engineers preferred to have experience specifically in navigation suggests that the company may be looking to make a push into the competitive field of turn-by-turn navigation.

Google introduced free turn-by-turn navigation for Android smartphones in late 2009 and at the time noted that it was working with Apple to bring the functionality to the iPhone. Google later backpedaled from those claims, noting that it has never confirmed that it will bring navigation to the iPhone.

Apple has increasingly looked to beef up its own mapping and geolocation services in an attempt to distance itself from Google, which has provided the core Maps application for the iPhone since the device's 2007 debut. Apple acquired mapping company Placebase in July 2009 and followed that up by purchasing small Canadian mapping firm Poly9 one year later. Apple also moved its location services for iOS in-house with the release of iOS 3.2 on the iPad in April of this year, separating itself from Google-owned Skyhook Wireless for such services.

Apple Prepping for iWork '11 Mac App Store Launch?


According to a report from 9to5Mac, stock of iWork '09 is running low at retail Apple Stores. Meanwhile, Apple's online store auto-completes "iWork 11" as a possibility when searching for "iWork". While none of these findings are particularly conclusive, we have heard that Apple is planning on launching iWork '11 alongside the Mac App Store.

Apple has since given the date of January 6th, 2011 as the launch date for the Mac App Store. Last we heard, Apple was still debating whether or not they would also offer a retail box version of their productivity suite or keep it a Mac App Store exclusive.

Promotional materials for the Mac App Store have shown the three iWork applications, Pages, Keynote, and Numbers, available on an individual basis for $19.99 each, below Apple's current $79 price for the complete retail box suite.

Stomach Expansion


Ever experienced this problem? You overeat at a party (in this case, Thanksgiving),so much so that it distends your stomach and during the next several days, your stomach seems to have gained extra capacity, and you tend to eat more before you feel full. Well this happened to me this past couple of weeks and I’ve been trying to fight off the lack of satiety, and not too successfully at times. The food was so tasty at the party that I overate beyond the point of fullness, which was an uncomfortable feeling in itself. Sometimes it’s hard to stop what your tongue wants to taste even though you are uncomfortably full already. Maybe I should blame my cousin for being such a good cook and preparing all those culinary delights that my eyes, tongue and stomach couldn’t resist. Perhaps I should lie and say that she put a gun to my head and forced me to eat.
I have a similar experience when carbo loading. In an effort to bump up the glycogen levels in the muscles, there is a tendency to overeat with the excuse that I’m going to burn off those calories in the marathon anyway. The trouble is that I continue to eat more than usual in the days after a marathon because my stomach capacity had expanded and it takes several weeks for the eating to normalize to pre-marathon levels. For those non-exercisers who read this, even some endurance sports participants also have to deal with diet matters.
                By the way, here is something I was wondering about: In your experience, has it been more difficult to shed weight during the winter than the summer? Is it nature’s way of protecting the body from the winter cold by storing more fat?

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2011 BMW X3 gets M Sports Package and New Inline-Six Petrol and Diesel Engines


The lightly refreshed Coupe and Convertible versions of the 1-Series aren't the only new BMW models unveiled today as the Bavarian automaker also announced the introduction of an M Sports Package and two new engines for the latest X3 crossover, which was first shown in July.
Beginning from Spring 2011, buyers of the new X3 will be able to order an M Sports package that adds some sporty aesthetic touches inside and out, and revised suspension tuning. In detail, the kit consists of an aerodynamics package with unique front and rear bumpers, side skirts and a roof spoiler. Other exterior amenities include the high-gloss shadow line trim for the side window surrounds and roof rails, chrome tailpipes and 19-inch or optionally, 20-inch alloy wheels. As an exclusive option in conjunction with the M Sports package, buyers can opt for a Carbon Black metallic paintwork.
Inside, there are sports seats with exclusive Pearlpoint fabric/leather upholstery, an M leather-trimmed steering wheel with multifunction buttons including a Cruise Control button, door sills with the M logo and an M footrest.
The roof lining in anthracite, brushed aluminium interior trim, an M shift lever (only for the X3 xDrive 20d with manual transmission) and a stainless steel insert in the loading sill, round off the interior upgrades.
Performance improvements are limited to the sports suspension calibration across the range and on the X3 xDrive35i, a Sports automatic transmission, steering wheel shift paddles and variable sports steering, including Servotronic.
The M Sports package will be available for all engine versions of the new X3.
In addition to the sport kit, BMW also announced the presentation of two new powerplants for the European market X3. These are the 3.0-liter naturally aspirated inline-six petrol with 258HP and 310 Nm (228 lb-ft) for the X3 xDrive28i (the North American xDrive28i is powered by a 240HP unit), and 3.0-liter straight-six turbo diesel with 258HP and 560 Nm (413 lb-ft) of peak torque.
The petrol model completes the standard sprint in 6.9 seconds and hits a top speed of 230 km/h (143 mph). Its average fuel consumption is 9.0 lt/100 km (26.1 mpg US) in the EU test cycle with CO2 emissions of 210 g/km.
The new X3 xDrive30d goes from standstill to 100 km/h (62 mph) in 6.2 seconds en route to a top speed of 230 km/h (143 mph), while returning 6.0 lt/100 km (39.2 mpg US) and 159 g/km.
Both engine variants of the X3 will go on sale in Europe next Spring.



_______________________________GALLERY_______________________________

O2 confirms Android 2.2 for Dell Streak

As O2 promised earlier this week, the Android 2.2 (or Froyo) update for the Dell Streak has now been pushed out. Against all expectations – well, our expectations anyway – although there is a caveat. Some Streak owners still appear unable to get the upgrade. Yesterday on Twitter, O2 posted: “The update’s out today but
The rest is here:

O2 confirms Android 2.2 for Dell Streak

LG Launches Optimus 2X, World's First Dual-Core Mobile Phone

LG announced today the first smartphone with a dual-core chip, the Optimus 2X. Dual-core phones, which pack more processing power than the current single-core models, are expected to be a major trend for cell phones in 2011.

The Optimus 2X's 1GHz processor, Nvidia's Tegra 2 chip, enables features like HDMI mirroring, which lets you duplicate whatever's on the phone's 4-inch WVGA display, including games, at full HD resolution on an external screen. It's also said to provide smoother Web browsing and allow multitasking of applications with virtually no screen lag.

"Dual-core technology is the next leap forward in mobile technology so this is no small achievement to be the first to offer a smartphone utilizing this technology," Jong-seok Park, CEO LG Electronics Mobile, said in a statement. "With unique features such as HDMI mirroring and exceptional graphics performance, the LG Optimus 2X is proof of LG's commitment to high-end smartphones in 2011."

LG's dual-core announcement is the first in what will probably be the first in a long-line of dual-core mobile devices from several manufacturers. Earlier this month Texas Instruments released detailed specs about its 1.5GHz dual-core chip, the OMAP4440. In addition, the CEO of RIM said last week that its PlayBook tablet would be the first in what would likely be a line of multi-core devices, including smartphones.

The Optimus 2X has onboard memory of 8GB, though a microSD card slot will let you add up to 32GB more. A forward-facing camera makes the phone friendly to video calls, and the rear camera will capture images up to 8 megapixels. Like the iPhone 4, the Optimus is equipped with an accelerometer and gyroscope for motion-controlled gaming. he phone will ship with Android 2.2 ("Froyo"), upgradeable to 2.3 ("Gingerbread").

The phone will launch in Korea in January, with Europe and other parts of Asia "to follow." It's unknown whether the phone will ever be released in the U.S.

Apple Takes Applications to the PC With New Mac Software Store

Dec. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Apple Inc. will open a digital storefront next month that will try to do for computer software what it did for music and mobile applications.

The Mac App Store is scheduled to open on Jan. 6, the Cupertino, California-based company said in a statement today. The aim is to let Mac owners purchase programs for their desktops and laptops with a single click, much as they can buy songs on iTunes and games in the App Store for the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch.

Apple said at an Oct. 20 event that there are about 50 million Macs now in use.

The digital distribution method is a challenge to Microsoft Corp. and Adobe Systems Inc., which rely on networks of corporate consultants, retailers and online merchants to distribute their programs, often in the form of CDs costing more than $20.

“You’re not going to be able to sell a $39 shrink-wrapped box if people can get a competing product just by dragging a mouse, using a credit card that’s already on file and paying $5.99,” said Jason Izatt, a developer who makes a popular mileage-tracking iPhone application called Milebug.

The Mac App Store will be available in 90 countries and will feature paid and free applications in education, games and design, Apple said today in the statement.

“The App Store revolutionized mobile apps,” Steve Jobs, Apple’s chief executive officer, said in the statement. “We hope to do the same for PC apps with the Mac App Store by making finding and buying PC apps easy and fun.”

Adobe declined to comment about whether it will make software available in the store. “Adobe’s millions of customers can already download our Mac software from the Adobe Store,” Jodi Sorensen, a spokeswoman, said.

Microsoft also declined to comment. “We’re working to understand the impact of the new app store to the Office for Mac business,” Amanda Lefebvre, a Microsoft spokeswoman, said.

--Editors: Margot Slade, John Lear

Source: businessweek

Unlock 3.10.01 Baseband on iPhone 4 Running iOS 4.2.1 on Progress

Couple of days ago, we reported you about the capability of downgrading iPhone 4 baseband 2.10.04 to 1.59.00 which can be unlocked with ultrasn0w, which may be perfect solution to unlock iPhone 4. Few minutes ago, Sherif Hashim the well-known iPhone hacker has replied someone via his twitter account confirming that work on 3.10.01 baseband is in progress.


Prostat_Pukis asking: that unlock will be for BB 03.10 as well?
sherif_hashim replying: yes
Don't ask about the timing as till now there's now estimate to arrival, but my own expectations that we will see something by the Xmas, stay tuned.

Tales of Spinning and Running

Other than the errand runs I’ve been doing lately, here are a couple of workouts that happened in the past week. In terms of energy expenditure, calorie burn, and sweat rate, my back up workout to running in recent weeks has been the spinning bike. Because it has a heavy flywheel, you can feel yourself working even when you don’t increase the tension. Let me tell you about the self propelled workout I had last week. I pedaled on an easy tension for 10 minutes as a warm up, then for one minute I increased the tension slightly and pedaled while sitting, another minute I increased the tension more to do stand up pedaling, then one minute on easy tension for recovery. I kept repeating those intervals until I reached an hour. To say the least, it was an exhausting workout. Some days I would do two minutes of stand ups with one minute recovery. All that while reading the newspaper. Since my watch has an interval timer, I change positions or increase/decrease the tension of the pedals when I hear the warning beeps.
Last Saturday morning I was back running with the AREC winter group. I was slightly concerned of having tired legs because of the spinning workout I mentioned above which I did the day before. That concern faded into the background when I was able to run alongside Rich S. from start to finish on an 8 miler. He told me about his and wife Colleen’s recent trip to Machu Picchu in Peru, and I had a lot of questions for him about the place. So for the first half of the run, Rich told me about how to get there, where they stayed, the hiking and climbing they did, the tourist season, and people who lived on reed islands on a river. It was very enlightening to learn about another culture. The second half of the run was spent talking about plans for retirement. We are both the same age and he had planned on retiring when he reached 55 (as did I when the stock market was soaring in the 90’s and mid 2000’s). He remains on track with his plan which is very admirable. In my case, I will have to wait a little longer. I told him my emergency plan was to retire in the Philippines if my nest egg will not suffice if I stay in the U.S.
With everything that we talked about, the 8 miles passed rather quickly and almost effortlessly. Rich - my lungs, legs, and ankles thank you and your stories for a nice leisurely run. The 8 miles would have been much harder without your company.

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A Delayed Christmas Shopping With Certain Advantages


My co-worker asked me last week if I was ready for Christmas and I told her I was not. I already knew I was going to be slightly delayed this year and all having to do with money (or lack thereof) management. Although I’ve already purchased my Christmas cards, gifts were another matter altogether. The only gift buying I do is in the form of cards. Did you know that thieves can copy the serial numbers of those cards, then check them online frequently if they are activated then do their stealing/shopping? When your recipients try to use the cards that you gave them, they find out that the funds have already been spent. What’s this, a public service announcement??? Anyway, I hope none of the ones I’m buying has that problem.
So I’ve been taking a glance at the gift cards when I shop at the grocery store to get an idea on the choices available and what do I see but Farmville gift cards. Really?! What will they think of next? No, I didn’t plan on buying one of those. Anyway regarding the money management aspect, here is the explanation. It has something to do with the next billing period of my credit card. Having had to charge the insurance co-pay for my emergency room visit 3 weeks ago to my credit card placed a slight crimp on my budget, so I had to wait for the next billing period before I wanted to use it again.
This past week, Albertson’s grocery store had a special offer. When you buy $100.00 worth of gift cards, they give you a $20 coupon good for your next shopping visit (with certain restrictions). You can receive as many as five of those coupons if your heart and wallet desire to buy $500 worth of gift cards. This offer was supposed to expire on December 12th. The new billing period for my credit card also started on the 12th so off to Albertson’s I went for my Christmas gift shopping. After picking out some choices for the kids and a few others for adults, my shopping was done for the year, while also getting two of the $20 coupons to boot. Payment for the credit card will be due February of next year. Now I’m ready for Christmas.

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ANDY RUBIN SAYS 300,000 ANDROID ACTIVATIONS PER DAY

it is say that  ANDY RUBIN SAYS 300,000 ANDROID ACTIVATIONS PER DAY .Google Vice President (engineering), Andy Rubin, posted on Twitter about the number of Android phones activated each day the world over. The tweet read, "There are over 300,000 Android phones activated each day." This spike in growth has been remarkable since just last month, the same number was pegged at 200,000 activations per day.
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GOOGLE RELEASES ZEITGEIST 2010

Around late November and early December and published Bing Yahoo lists summary top searches of 2010. Well, a little closer to the end of the year from Google, AOS costume, and there, AOS a wealth of information for people who are interested in this kind of thing, followed.GOOGLE RELEASES ZEITGEIST 2010
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MOTOROLA TABLET PROTOTYPE POWERED ANDROID 3.0

MOTOROLA TABLET PROTOTYPE POWERED ANDROID 3.0
If the launch of Nexus S, Android 2.3, eBook Store and Google is not enough, here's another look at Google's goodie bag for Christmas. At All Things Digital: Dive Into Mobile conference, Andy Rubin showed the company by a board of a Motorola prototype, apparently called motopad. Ran Google Android 3.0 or honeycomb, is better known as we know, the next version of its mobile operating system, causing a great need for optimizing tablets.
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2010 New FUTUREMARK 3DMARK 11 V1.0.0

computer performance is determined by interactions between the various hardware, operating system and the type and amount of software to run. Benchmark provides a series of tests that can be reconstructed with high precision performance over a wide range of hardware.2010 New FUTUREMARK 3DMARK 11 V1.0.0
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GADGETS 11 Predictions for 2011

Every December since 1990, I have published a list of predictions for the New Year. If you've followed my predictions over the years, you know that I have had a lot of hits and some spectacular misses, such as my prediction two years ago that Microsoft would buy RIM and its BlackBerry products. At the time, Microsoft was way behind in the smartphone industry and it was not clear that it had an answer to the Apple iPhone. But to be fair, I clearly stated that this was a wild prediction and not necessarily one that I thought really could happen.
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HONEYCOMB READY From GOOGLE ON TABLETS

Finally Google unveiled the tablet-friendly version of the Android OS last night. Rubin showed off Android 3.0, aka "Honeycomb," on a prototype Motorola tablet—and promptly threw the nascent Android tablet market into further confusion.
HONEYCOMB READY From GOOGLE ON TABLETS

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GOOGLE and . AMAZON CLASH OF THE BOOKSELLERS

If you a fan of those 1960s Japanese monster movies like Mothra vs. Godzilla, where two enormous animals battle insanely while the tiny human onlookers scream in horror?


Well, if your favorite film isn't available on Netflix or Hulu, you can still enjoy a clash of the Titans this week, as Google pits its new e-reading application, Google eBooks -- and its new retail venture, the Google eBookstore -- against Amazon.com's huge inventory.
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GOOGLE LAUNCHES DEMOS CHROME OS PILOT PROGRAM

From now on GOOGLE LAUNCHES  DEMOS CHROME OS PILOT PROGRAM, During a press briefing today in San Francisco, Google launched the Chrome application store and demonstrated Chrome OS, its browser-centric netbook operating system.
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T-MOBILE COMET FIRST LOOK

T-MOBILE COMET FIRST LOOK
The T-Mobile Comet offers a compact and lightweight design. The smartphone features Android 2.2 and the full range of wireless options. Call quality is excellent.
The bad: The Comet has a small display and no multitouch support. The plastic piece covering the navigation array started to peel off. The smartphone can be sluggish.
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THE SAMSUNG MESSAGER III

THE SAMSUNG MESSAGER III
The good: The Samsung Messager III offers a comfortable, user-friendly design with a roomy keyboard. The feature set is functional.
The bad: The Samsung Messager III's camera has a lower resolution than does the Messager II. Also, we encountered a few performance hiccups.
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Apple iPad 2 to launch in February 2011

According to a new DigiTimes report, Foxconn Electronics will ship Apple's iPad 2 within the next 100 days or what the source notes as soon as the end of February. The intial shipments should reach 400,000 - 600,000 units.

The sources pointed out that the iPad 2 will ship as soon as the end of February in 2011. Apple originally planned to start mass production in January, but because the device’s firmware is currently still in testing, Apple has been postponing the schedule. Since Foxconn’s new plants in Chengdu are still in pilot production, iPad 2 will be mainly supplied by its Shenzhen plants, while the company’s upstream component partners have all been notified of the shipments schedule.
The 2nd generation iPad is also rumored to carry Facetime camera and be smaller in size (mini-iPad). Anyway, will you buy an iPad 2 next year? let us know in the comments section below.

Float To The Emergency Room


Saturday night was my turn to work in the emergency room because there were only a few patients on my home unit. I can’t remember the last time I worked there so it was with some apprehension that I showed up at the ER. The night started out slow as I only had to watch one patient who was rather quiet. By 10:30 p.m. others started to show up – a manic woman who talked and laughed loudly, and a doctor from another part of California. Let me just make clear that these were psych patients that I had to watch. I escorted the woman via hospital van to another building at about 1:30 a.m. On the way out of the parking lot after dropping off the patient, what do I see but 3 raccoons foraging for food near the gate! I don’t recall ever having seen a raccoon before in my life but this night more than made up for that by seeing three of them together. That seemed to make an already unusual night even more unusual. Upon returning to the ER, the doctor had been transferred to another unit and my next patient was just being wheeled in a guerney by paramedics. Speaking of mother natures’ creatures like the raccoons I saw just minutes before, this woman was drunk as a skunk. She was brought in the ER because she fell on her face after a bout of drinking. She had a bloody forehead and her nose was slightly swollen. With the x-ray technician, I escorted the patient for a CT scan of her head. She had a bump on her forehead and the scan confirmed a broken nose. This woman was very loud and complained incessantly of pain in her face, neck, back, legs. You name a body part and she probably would have complained on any of that too. Shortly after, a handcuffed man was brought in by 2 police officers. I don’t know the circumstances of his case. All I know was that the cops confiscated his guns. I didn’t ask the patient about what happened as I didn’t want him to be incensed. He was already in a bad situation as it was. Fortunately, he was pretty cooperative and quiet. He spent a few hours watching Law and Order on the TNT network. I could probably have given him a quiz on the show and he would have given me all correct answers. Poor guy had to report to work at 8 a.m. but couldn’t leave because the police put him on a 5150 hold.
Based on the patients I had to watch, the night in the ER wasn’t so bad at all except I didn’t get my 30 minute break until 6:15 in the morning. All I could do was walk to the corner doughnut shop to buy an apple fritter (one of my guilty pleasures that I rarely partake of any more), then return to the ER to wait out the end of my shift at 7:30. Except it didn’t turn out that way. The nursing supervisor called me at 7:05 to let me know that the person who would relieve me of my duties would be late because there was a staffing snafu. Well, I didn’t have too much choice but wait. Fortunately, he arrived at about 7:40 a.m. and soon I was on my way home. Which brings me to the last unusual sight of my day: a man running on the center stripe of a street I was driving on. I think that was even crazier than all the psych patients I had to watch all night.

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WikiLeaks founder Assange may surrender to British police


LONDON – Police say WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has surrendered to British police as part of a Swedish sex-crimes investigation, the latest blow to the secret-spilling website that faces legal, financial and security challenges.

Assange was arrested at 9:30 a.m. (930 GMT) Tuesday and was due to appear at Westminster Magistrate's Court later in the day.

Assange has been hiding out at an undisclosed location in Britain since WikiLeaks began publishing hundreds of U.S. diplomatic cables on the Internet last week.

The organization's room for maneuver is narrowing by the day. It has been battered by web attacks, cut off by Internet service providers and is the subject of a criminal investigation in the United States, where officials say the release jeopardized national security and diplomatic efforts around the world.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

LONDON (AP) — Police say WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been arrested on a Swedish warrant.

Assange was arrested at 9:30 a.m. (0930 GMT) Tuesday and was due to appear at Westminster Magistrate's Court later in the day.

WAKE N’ WATCH: MARK ZUCKERBERG’S “60 MINUTES”

WAKE N’ WATCH: MARK ZUCKERBERG’S “60 MINUTES” 
Facebook just changed its individual profile page layout. Again. The world’s biggest social network is quickly becoming the go-to destination for advertisers. It appears its mastermind, Mark Zuckerberg, wants to eventually have the entire Internet under his thumb. Kinda scary, but mostly awesome. This 60 Minutes interview covers the aforementioned theory and much more. Watch part one above and hit the jump for part two.

HOW TO TEST PASSWORD STRENGTH ONLINE

First i would like to try to define the term "Password" before moving on - How can you Check Password Strength Online. Well a Password is just a string of different characters which is necessarily required for obtaining access to a particular resource. It is recommended that password should be confidential from others, so they can't access your account information such like an email account details.visit technovisone
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GOOGLE NEXUS S GOES OFFICIAL

GOOGLE NEXUS S GOES OFFICIAL
The rumored Nexus S smartphone has finally been officially unveiled. True to the rumors, it is manufactured by Samsung and is based on the Galaxy S smartphone. It runs on the next version of Android 2.3, Gingerbread and has a 4.0-inch 800 x 480 Super AMOLED contour display, 1GHz Hummingbird processor, 512MB of ram, 5 megapixel camera with 720p video recording and 16GB flash memory. It will be available in the US from December 16th at $199 from T-Mobile and $529 unlocked, while the UK launch will be on 20th of December. Here are the full specs, images and videos of the new Nexus S.
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MAC APP STORE vs GOOGLE EBOOKS STORE

before Mac app store launched.Google has launched their ebook store today. This new ebook store sort of tries to be a unified playground for all the ebook needs for tablets, PCs and ebook readers alike. The Kindle is obviously not part of this ecosystem because Amazon has its own format (amz) and does not support epub format which is a standard in most other ebook readers. I am a proud owner of the Barnes and Nobles’ Nook and I love reading books on it whenever I have time.
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GOOGLE EBOOKS STORE IS NOW LIVE

before rumors MAC APP STORE LAUNCH DECEMBER 13TH, Google has just unveiled new eBooks Store that brings library of over 3 million eBooks readable using Web Reader, free Apps for Android as well as iOS and even on Nook as well as Sony Reader. Google eBooks is available only to US Citizens as of now and users can browse through over 3 million book titles. As of now, Google didn't announce any plans to make eBooks available outside US.
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Chrome 8 Offers Built-in PDF Tools, Security Fixes

Staying on track with its rapid-fire, six week release cycle for its web browser, Google has pushed out the final version of Chrome 8. The latest release packs in some 800 bug and security fixes, as well as a new inline PDF viewer.

If you’re using the stable, everyday version of Chrome, you should be automatically updated to Chrome 8. If you’re using another release, or would just like to give Chrome a try, head over the Google Chrome download page.

The new, built-in PDF viewer means that when you click on a link to a PDF now, Chrome will no longer download the file to your PC. Instead, Chrome will offer a preview in the browser where you can view and search the document. Also, thanks to the sandboxing model, this decreases the chance of malicious code, malware or anything else bad being delivered through the PDF. Of course, if you then decide to download the file, Chrome won’t protect you from anything that might be lurking inside.

The PDF reader joins Flash in the list of things that Chrome manages for you. That means Google can push out updates and security fixes as needed to these components of its browser, rather than relying on users to update plug-ins themselves. You can disable the PDF viewer (or any other plug-in) by navigating to about:plugins inside Chrome.

Chrome 8 is also the first version capable of connecting to the Chrome Web Store. Although there’s nothing to see at the moment, Google is planning to release a store similar to the Android Marketplace or Apple’s App Store, but with a focus on web applications, Chrome extensions, and Chrome themes.

Google Unveils Nexus S Smartphone, Gingerbread OS

By Ryan Paul

Google has revealed Android 2.3, codenamed Gingerbread, a new version of its popular mobile platform. It introduces a handful of modest user interface enhancements—such as a more refined touchscreen keyboard—and brings some noteworthy performance improvements that are largely intended to boost Android gaming.

Alongside the release of Android 2.3, Google has also announced plans to launch the Nexus S, a new smartphone that was developed in collaboration with Samsung. Much like Google’s Nexus One, the new phone in the Nexus series will be available unlocked with a pure Google experience. The unlocked version will be sold at Best Buy for $529 without subsidy, and T-Mobile will be selling it on contract for $199.

The aptly named Nexus S looks like the love child of the Nexus One and the Samsung Galaxy S. The touchscreen-only device has a four-inch curved “contour” Super AMOLED display, 1Ghz Hummingbird processor, 1GB of internal storage, and a 1500 mAH battery rated for 6.7 hours of talk time. The handset showcases some of the new hardware features of Android 2.3, such as support for near-field communication (NFC), which can be used for close-range contactless data exchange.

Sales of the original Nexus One fell far below Google’s expectations, leading the company to characterize the device as a failure and withdraw it from the general consumer market. Although it never achieved mainstream popularity, it attracted a loyal following among third-party developers and Android enthusiasts who valued its relative openness compared to other Android-powered handsets.

As a Nexus One owner myself, I think there is a very clear need for Google to continue offering its own handset that isn’t encumbered by carrier lockdown, crapware, and tacky user interface customizations. The latest addition to the Nexus line handily fulfills that need.
Android 2.3 features

Google has polished the Android user interface and developed a new visual theme with a simpler palette. The keys on the onscreen keyboard have been spaced out a bit in order to enable faster typing and better accuracy. Taking advantage of multitouch input, Google has made it possible to use the shift or number toggle keys as modifiers that can be pressed concurrently with other keys. The platform has gained native support for draggable text selection, similar to the implementations we have seen on certain Motorola and Samsung Android devices.

Google has finally conceded the need for manually quitting applications. In Android 2.3, the application manager tool has a “Running” tab that lets the user terminate individual applications and see how much system resources each running program is consuming. This feature will be conveniently accessible from a menu item on the home screen, largely obviating the need for users to install third-party task management tools.

Other significant new features include SIP support (which allows users to make voice calls to SIP addresses over WiFi), better support for devices with multiple cameras, support for more media formats (including WebM), and a built-in download manager. There are also a lot of improvements on the performance front. A new concurrent garbage collector in Android’s Dalvik virtual machine will be less invasive and help avoid stuttering, accelerated event handling will make input processing more responsive, and updated graphics drivers will improve 3D performance.

The new version of the Android SDK brings a lot of improvements for game developers. Google has exposed more sensors and input controls to native code, allowing games to receive and process input events more efficiently. Google has also introduced much-needed native audio APIs and has added support for managing the application lifecycle from native code. For games that run closer to the bare metal, all of these new native APIs are a major win. We will be looking more closely at these APIs in a follow-up article.

Although it’s an incremental upgrade rather than a full overhaul, the changes in Android 2.3 are compelling and bring some much-needed polish to the platform. For additional details, you can refer to Google’s official announcement.

White iPhone 4 will be Available Spring 2011


While it won't be a white (iPhone) Christmas this year, it looks like aesthetically conscious iPhone 4 holdouts will have their patience rewarded come next spring.

There’s more evidence that the long-awaited white iPhone 4 may actually see the light of day after all. The latest installment in the pale iPhone saga comes after holiday signs went up in Apple stores stating the white iPhone will be “available in spring 2011.” The signs in question, originally brought to the attention of 9to5mac, are reportedly promotional displays for the iPad that made mention of the white iPhone 4 only in small, lawyer-style print.

If Apple follows through with the release, it will be the end of a long and winding road. The cream-colored iPhone originally appeared in Apple promotions — and even once appeared on stage with Steve Jobs himself — prior to the iPhone’s launch in June. The day before the black iPhone would make its solo debut, Apple issued a statement citing manufacturing difficulties as the cause of the white iPhone 4′s immediate unavailability. Apple promised the phone would be on sale in July, but later adjusted the release date to “later in the year.”

It’s widely suspected that manufacturing troubles with the phone arose when Apple decided it did not like the ratio of opacity-to-paint thickness applied to the phone’s glass casing in order to achieve its white hue. An issue with opacity affecting the phone’s camera sensors has also been suggested as a possible reason for the delay.

The latest evidence of the white iPhone 4′s appearance is in step with the rumblings we heard back in October when the ghostly device briefly appeared in the iOS app version of the Apple Store with an attached release date of “spring 2011.”

Earlier in the year, a 17-year old aspiring entrepreneur worked to meet demand for the phone by offering white iPhone 4 conversion kits that used white cases reportedly purchased directly from a Chinese manufacturer. Apple eventually interceded, but not before the teenager reportedly raked in $130,000 in sales.

Now, the big question is what a white iPhone 4′s release means seeing as it’s likely to come so close to the date of Apple’s traditional announcement of a new iPhone model. Is Apple releasing the pasty phone in spite of an imminent release of an iPhone upgrade? If so, it’s hard to imagine anyone opting to purchase a white iPhone that’s soon to become “last year’s model.”

Google Launches Online Bookstore, Challenging Amazon

Google says its mission is to organize the world’s information, but that statement should be probably updated to include the verb “sell” now that Google is launching an e-bookstore on Monday.

Google’s long awaited e-book-only bookstore, Google eBooks, puts the company in competition with Amazon, Apple and Borders for the burgeoning electronic-book market. The move, limited at the start to U.S. customers only, also marks the first real retail venture for the search and online-advertising behemoth, if you don’t count the Android app market.

“The fundamental idea is buy anywhere and read anywhere,” said James Crawford, an engineer for Google eBooks, who emphasized that the system makes it easy to read the same book on multiple devices. “The fundamental architecture is cloud-based, and you never wonder where to put your books.”

The company claims that it will have more books in its catalog than any other online bookstore — more than 3 million titles, but only about 200,000 of those are books licensed from publishers. About 2.8 million of the books are books no longer under copyright in the United States that Google has scanned from university libraries as part of its controversial Google Books project. Started in 2004, Google Books has scanned millions of books, mostly without permission from copyright holders, making them searchable online.

The venture is yet another attempt by Google to diversify its money making. That’s key for the company’s long-term health since it derives nearly all its revenue (nearly $5.5 billion in the third quarter of 2010) from online ads, with the majority of that coming from text ads on its own properties.

Google is seeking to differentiate itself from Amazon and its popular Kindle reader by selling books that can be read on a wide range of devices, from iPhones, iPads and Android-based devices, along with computers running any browser that can use JavaScript. Books can also be read on Barnes and Noble’s Nook and Sony’s E Reader, but not on Amazon’s Kindle — because of compatibility issues with the Adobe copyright management DRM attached to the e-books, Google said.

Book buyers will have all their books tied to their Google account, and the service will use Google checkout for payment.

Google’s inclusion of scanned books (those in the public domain) from its Books project could rile Amazon. Amazon told a federal court looking into the project that allowing Google to scan and sell millions of out-of-print books whose copyright owners can’t be found gives Google an unfair advantage. That objection comes despite Google’s offer to let Amazon and other booksellers resell the orphans, as well.

The fate of these so-called orphan books remains in the hands of a federal court judge in Manhattan, and are not available in the bookstore launching Monday.

Google is also partnering with independent bookstores, including Powell’s, to let them sell e-books on their website and share in the revenue from the sale. Independent and local bookstores can drop technology from the American Booksellers Association onto their sites to enable them to sell e-books through Google.

Google also hopes to create book-selling widgets that will let books be purchased through its service on any site on the net. It’s starting one such partnership with Goodreads, a leading site for book clubs. Starting Monday, users of that site can click on a book for their reading group straight from Google.

“The idea is that you buy where you are and read on devices you already own,” Crawford said. “We are committed to open structure, and building up a wider and wider retailer network.”

The decentralization of book-selling venues is a clever way to take on Amazon.com, which for many is synonymous with online book sales, and iTunes, which is closely tied to Apple’s iPad/iPod/Mac ecosystem and fighting to become as powerful in digital print sales as it is in digital music.

However, Google eBooks does not yet have an open-affiliate program like Amazon’s, that lets reviewers and website owners insert custom code into a link so they get a small percentage of every purchase initiated from that link.

Book readers will be able to switch from reading in a browser (Chrome and Safari only), to their mobile devices (Android and iPhone) to an e-book reader, without losing their place. However, with copy-protected books, there is no cut-and-paste, no printing and no lending or giving a book away.

Readers who travel outside U.S. borders will be able to read books already in their account, unless those books are not out of copyright in the country the reader is visiting. Users can’t purchase books when visiting the store from a non-U.S. IP address, the company said.

All the nation’s top publishers have signed onto the venture, making the service’s debut far less rocky than Google TV, which was quickly blocked by the websites of the country’s top broadcasters, despite the fact that integrating meant more viewers of online TV episodes that come with unskippable commercials.

All of the largest publishers, except for Random House, are opting for a model where the publishers set the price and Google and other retailers are simply acting as their agents. In this model, publishers and Google/retailers roughly split the price.

Other publishers and Random House are opting for a model where they sell books to Google at a set price and on a schedule of discounts, leaving the retailers free to price the books as they like.

Book prices will range between $1 and $300, since the service will include technical and academic publications, such as books from O’Reilly and university publishers.

Publishers can choose whether to lock down their books with DRM. Google also says it will have a strict privacy policy that forbids it from using your book-buying habits to advertise to, or profile readers.

Google also seems cognizant that it is under scrutiny from government regulators. Currently, when books in print come up in Google and Google book-search results, Google includes links to places to buy them online, including Amazon.com. That behavior won’t change, the company said, but Google eBooks will now be one of the options.

Google hopes to layer social features into the service in the near future and says the infrastructure is in place to let people buy both a digital and paper copy of a book in a bundle.

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