Showing posts with label looks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label looks. Show all posts

Thursday, 14 July 2011

New Android Market looks great.. but you cannot find anything!

New Android Market looks great.. but you cannot find anything! -(wireless internet service,internet service providers,internet service,wireless service providers,verizon wireless internet,verizon internet,broadband internet providers,wireless broadband providers,broadband internet,broadband wireless)

13 July 2011New Android Market looks great.. but you cannot find anything! Google announced that it would begin rolling out the newly-redesigned Android Market for smartphones and tablets.
We haven't spent a lot of time with the new Market, but we do like the new design.
Google went with a "tile" theme, similar to what you'd see on a Windows Phone 7 device.
Apps, books, and movies are organized nicely, and swiping left and right gives you more options to sort your searches by category or subject.
The downside:
Searching for apps still stinks.
We couldn't even find the new videeo app that lets you rent movies from the Market!
Instead, we had to find the link from Google's blog post about the new Market.
Embarrassing.
Along with the new design, the Android Market now has access to Google's bookstore and video rental service.
It's rolling out the update to phones running Android 2.2 (codnamed Froyo) and higher over the next several days.
Warning: The download worked for us on our Nexus S, but try at your own risk.
If you have problems, you can revert back to the old version of the Market under Settings > Applications > Manage Applications > All.
Then select the Market app and tap "Uninstall Updates."
 
 


Saturday, 2 July 2011

Computerworld: Apple’s new iMac looks great, even faster; in a month of testing, it never crashed

Friday, July 1, 2011 · 12:25 pm · 31 Comments

“The new iMac still looks great, and it’s even faster,”Michael deAgonia reports for Computerworld. “Apple left unchanged the minimalist aluminum-and-glass design while switching to Intel’s Sandy Bridge processors, AMD graphics chips and adding the new Thunderbolt port for high-speed connections with peripherals.”

Advertisement: Students, parents and Faculty save up to $200 on a new Mac.

“All of the changes Apple made to the lineup match the company’s past practice of beefing up hardware while leaving prices intact, yielding a thoroughly modern all-in-one computer, with a sharp, bright screen that’s perfect for editing movies, organizing/editing photos, watching streaming video or making your own presentations,” deAgonia reports. “Best of all, the iMacs come with Apple’s iLife suite of apps — iMovie, iPhoto, GarageBand, iDVD and iWeb. I still haven’t found any software quite as intuitive — or as easy to use — on the Windows side that beats the iLife suite.”

“The best way to describe the benefits of Thunderbolt is to compare its theoretical speed with current standards: USB 2.0 tops out at 480Mbps, FireWire 800 tops out at 800Mbps, USB 3.0 hits 5Gbps and Thunderbolt maxxes out at a theoretical 10,240Mbps, or 10Gbps. For every connection, there are two bidirectional channels that carry data over a 10Gbps pipe — each way — which means you can transfer a lot of data fast,” deAgonia reports. “You can connect a wide variety of peripherals to a Thunderbolt port, from hard drives to displays, daisy-chaining up to six peripherals per port. In fact, it’s possible to take a 27-in. iMac and flank it with two 30-in. displays, streaming multiple 1080p hi-def videos from connected RAID enclosures, without hiccups in the data stream.”

deAgonia reports, “Thunderbolt performance aside, this iMac performs very well under everyday, and even extenuating, circumstances. In a month’s worth of use, the iMac I tested never crashed… Apple has delivered a solid update to what was already a popular and successful line. The Sandy Bridge chips add a speed boost, Thunderbolt offers the promise of peripheral heaven in a few months, and the iMac design itself remains current. It’s equally at home in the boardroom or the living room, and the range of sizes, prices and build-to-order options means it should be easy for most buyers to get exactly the machine they want.”

Much more in the full review – recommended – here.


View the original article here