Showing posts with label cheap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cheap. Show all posts

Monday, April 29, 2013

Cheap Verizon Cell Phones-Verizon Cloud app is the wireless carrier's answer to Dropbox

Verizon Cloud app is the wireless carrier's answer to Dropbox-Cheap Verizon Cell Phones- 

 


There’s no shortage of places to store your files online, but that isn’t stopping mobile carrier Verizon from jumping into the mix. Today, the company is announcing Verizon Cloud for smartphones and tablets, a storage and syncing service that lets people save 500MB worth of text messages, call logs, contacts, music, and other files for free. If that’s not enough, you can also get extra space for prices that range from $2.99 a month for a 25GB plan to $9.99 for 125GB. Comparatively, the biggest plan gives you more storage than Dropbox’s identically-priced 100GB offer, but is roughly twice the price of 100GB plans from Google Drive and Microsoft’s Sky Drive, although the ability to easily save phone-specific data like text messages offers some extra utility.

So far, the service is available on the web and a handful of Android devices from Motorola, HTC, and Samsung, as well as desktop apps for OS X, Windows, and Linux. But Verizon says more are on the way, including iOS devices, which it says will be "following soon." In the meantime, iPhone owners will have to resort to one of the other dozen cloud storage solutions out there.




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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Unlocked cell phones Chromebook Pixel announces Google's entry into high-end laptop market

Chromebook Pixel announces Google's entry into high-end laptop market-unlocked cellular phones cheap

Latest high-spec device features high resolution touchscreen and is aimed at developers, early adopters and businesses
 
 
  Friday 22               
Chromebook Pixel by Google
Google's Chromebook Pixel, which has a high resolution touchscreen, is expected to compete with Apple's MacBook Air. Photograph: Google
Google made an ambitious assault on the high-end laptop market on Thursday, confirming months of rumour by announcing the Chromebook Pixel, which features a large-format, high resolution touchscreen.

Demonstrating the new Pixel, Chrome head Sundar Pichai said Google's aim had been to make a device to satisfy developers and early adopters.

"This is about power users. Some of them buy Mac, some buy Windows 8. We wanted to make sure Chrome OS is in that segment," said Pichai. The high resolution touchscreen is designed to help developers build apps and services that work seamlessly across multiple devices. "This is the future - high resolution and touchscreen, and we're behind in the laptop world," he said. "We want to push the ecosystem and web development forward, so this can be thought of as a reference device, in the same way as the Nexus, that will inspire a whole new generation of devices."

Google has said that it does not think in terms of market share, but a high-end laptop puts it in direct competition with Apple, particularly with the Macbook Air. Pichai insisted the Pixel offered better specifications for its price.

Pichai said: "It will stand up well against a Macbook Air. Air doesn't have touchscreen or a high resolution screen, so with Pixel you get a lot for your money."

The Pixel's screen is higher than conventional laptop screens at a 3:2 ratio or 2560 x 1700, at 239 pixels per inch. A new Google Plus Photo app, launching in the Chrome store in three weeks, is designed to showcase the screen, and will allow users to browse and organise photos offline as well as share them.

Pichai also referred to a target business audience where companies are using cloud applications including Google Apps, and said Google's June 2012 acquisition of QuickOffice would mean Word and Excel documents can be integrated.

Google's first Chromebook, the low-end CR-48, was released with Google branding, but subsequent models featured branding from partners Samsung, Acer, Lenovo and HP. The first Pixel has also been designed and manufactured by Google, and is intended to be a 'reference device' for partners.

The laptop shell has been streamlined to hide cooling vents, screw fittings and speakers, part of a principle of making it as inconspicuous as possible, while the software is designed to make access to web content simple. Specifications include an Intel i5 processor, a 32GB or 64GB solid state drive and one terabyte of Google Drive storage for three years. Battery life, despite the energy-sapping high resolution screen, is claimed to be 5 hours.


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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Discount-cell-phones-HTC One takes display pixel density crown-Refurbished-Used-Cheap-mylancellular

HTC One takes display pixel density crown

The HTC One ups the ante on the iPhone 5, packing more pixels closer together than Apple's touted Retina technology.

The HTC One has one eye-popping display.
The HTC One has one eye-popping display.
(Credit: HTC)
The HTC One has taken the pixel density crown, leaving phones like Retina iPhone 5 in the dust.
First, to get a sense of the HTC One screen's density, a quick comparison to Microsoft's Surface Pro, which has also been praised for its display chops, puts this into perspective.
The Surface Pro packs a resolution of 1,920x1,080 into a 10.6-inch panel. One of the highest pixel densities (208 pixels per inch, to be exact) for a Windows 8 PC to date.
The HTC One packs that same resolution (1,920x1,080) into a 4.7-inch screen. That's more than 2 million pixels, yielding 468 pixels per inch (ppi).
"That makes it the current record holder for announced/shipping consumer products," Raymond Soneira, president of DisplayMate, Said to us.
Some products get close, though. Last summer, Sharp and LG announced a new class of very high-ppi displays with 440ppi, which is 1,920x1,080 in a 5-inch (phablet) size, Soneira added.
The first shipping product in the U.S. with this display is the HTC Droid DNA, which began shipping in December and it has a Sharp display, according to Soneira.
And other manufacturers including Samsung are working on this new format. And LG is now also shipping a 440 ppi display, which, though a slightly lower pixel density, is "visually indistinguishable" from HTC One's display, he said.
Close up of HTC One's icons.
Close up of HTC One's icons.
(Credit: HTC)

Sharp is making its 440+ ppi screens using a technology called Continuous Grain Silicon. "It has higher electron mobility than either IGZO or amorphous silicon, which allows for maximum aperture ratio/light transmission," according to Soneira.
Translation: More light can get through the closely packed pixels than conventional technology, leading to brighter very-high-resolution screens.
And what about the inevitable comparison to Apple's Retina display tech?
"Now 468 ppi is substantially higher than the iPhone 5's 326 ppi. What does that mean visually? In terms of what Apple calls a Retina Display (equivalent to 20/20 Vision), for 20/20 Vision, 10.5 inches is the viewing distance where the eye can just resolve the individual iPhone 326 ppi pixels for people with standard 20/20 Vision."

Soneira continues. "For 468 ppi, the 20/20 Vision pixel resolution distance is 7.4 inches -- much closer than a typical viewing distance for a 4.7 inch display. Watching further away from the minimum viewing distance means the eye can't resolve the pixels and so the high ppi is often wasted."
But not always. "The only place where [this]...level of sharpness is important is for computer generated text and graphics. Where 440 ppi [and above] will make a difference is when people are intently visually studying the display image for fine image details," he said.