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Tuesday, 10 April 2012
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Wednesday, 4 April 2012
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Sunday, 1 April 2012
Nigeria 247 LIGHT
It's just April fool...... Welcome to World Live Feeds
April Fools' Day is celebrated in different countries on April 1 every year. Sometimes referred to as All Fools' Day, April 1 is not a national holiday, but is widely recognized and celebrated as a day when people play practical jokes and hoaxes on each other.
In France and Italy, children and adults traditionally tack paper fish on each other's back as a trick and shout "april fish!" in their local language ("poisson d'avril!" and "pesce d'aprile!" in French and Italian respectively).
The earliest recorded association between April 1 and foolishness can be found in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales (1392). Many writers suggest that the restoration of January 1 as New Year's Day in the 16th century was responsible for the creation of the holiday.
April Fools' Day is celebrated in different countries on April 1 every year. Sometimes referred to as All Fools' Day, April 1 is not a national holiday, but is widely recognized and celebrated as a day when people play practical jokes and hoaxes on each other.
In France and Italy, children and adults traditionally tack paper fish on each other's back as a trick and shout "april fish!" in their local language ("poisson d'avril!" and "pesce d'aprile!" in French and Italian respectively).
The earliest recorded association between April 1 and foolishness can be found in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales (1392). Many writers suggest that the restoration of January 1 as New Year's Day in the 16th century was responsible for the creation of the holiday.
Monday, 19 March 2012
HOTTEST WORLD BLACKBERRY
BlackBerry Bold Touch 9900 and 9930 announced, run on BB OS7
02 May, 2011 | Comments (41) | Post your comment
Today RIM announced two new
BlackBerry QWERTY bars to join the Bold lineup - the Touch 9900 and
Touch 9930. Both smartphones feature 2.8-inch VGA touchscreens and run
on the newly announced BlackBerry OS 7
The BlackBerry Bold Touch 9900 (previously known as Dakota/Magnum) is a GSM device with quad-band GSM and tri-band HSPA+ support (up to 14.4Mbps HSDPA). The Bold Touch 9930 (previously known as Montana) is a dual-band CDMA phone with support for quad-band GSM and dual-band HSPA+ global roaming. Now that we've made clear the specs. Both phones are virtually the same inside and out. They are each powered by a 1.2GHz processor and 768MB RAM. According to some previous information the chipset we are talking about should be the Snapdragon MSM8255(GSM)/MSM8655(CDMA) with a Scorpion CPU and Adreno 205 GPU. But we guess we'll have to wait and see if that's accurate.
BlackBerry Bold Touch 9900/9930 The Bold Touch duo have 2.8-inch capacitive touchscreens with a VGA resolution (that's 287 ppi density), slightly redesigned QWERTY keyboards, 5 megapixel cameras with 720p video recording, 8GB of internal storage and microSD card slots. The connectivity package is impressive alright - there is dual-band Wi-Fi - 802.11 b/g/n at 2.4 GHz and 802.11 a/n at 5 GHz, NFC support, GPS with A-GPS and Bluetooth. Both Bold Touches are 10.5mm slim and run on the newly announced BlackBerry OS 7 - it separates personal from corporate data, comes with an upgraded browser and HTML5 video support. We've already covered that here. The BlackBerry Bold Touch 9900 and 9930 will become available this summer, but there is no info on the pricing yet. | ||||||||
Whats Blackberry future?
What About BlackBerry Mobile Device Management?
New products may help Research in Motion stay competitive
Research in Motion (RIM) has released a statement regarding
their mobile device management solutions and where the company is headed
in general. They seek to inform their consumers that they aren’t out of
the game, but adapting and providing new services that better suit the
needs of enterprise clients today.
In the following statement they address their current BlackBerry Enterprise Server and mobile device management (MDM) for the future:
“Organizations are under pressure to support a wide variety of devices from multiple manufacturers, as well as multiple form factors, with tablets gaining steam as business tools. As a longstanding pillar of MDM in the enterprise, we’ve worked to provide a clean, simple, and secure solution to help you manage whatever gets thrown your way. This is BlackBerry Mobile Fusion.”
So they’ve replaced their old service with the comprehensive new BlackBerry Fusion. RIM comments:
“It’s a huge leap forward for device management, and it’s built on the valued security model introduced with BlackBerry Enterprise Server. The evolution of BlackBerry Enterprise Server is BlackBerry Mobile Fusion.”
RIM has integrated all the Blackberry corporate data security features that users have enjoyed in the past with new technology and have added iOS and Android to their management system as well. They claim it will interface seamlessly with all of these devices and provide users with an enhanced experience that can be trusted to deliver by even the most discerning IT professionals.
RIM comments on the addition of other devices to their management systems:
“BlackBerry Mobile Fusion supports the latest MDM capabilities available in iOS and Android, and is designed to enable administrators to apply corporate policies and configurations to manage and secure these devices. Additionally, customers will be able to leverage the application management capabilities of BlackBerry Mobile Fusion to manage the distribution of mobile applications to employees on these platforms.”
So it seems they have plans to stick around despite the declining popularity of BlackBerry products and services. It could be their new platform could help revive their brand or at the very least entice existing clients to stick with them. It helps that they can interface with other devices now.
We’ll have to wait and see how this all pans out for RIM and their BlackBerry branded products. Apple seems like it is the new enterprise leader so it all depends on how they can compete with them and make their products more attractive. Right now, that’s a lofty challenge.
In the following statement they address their current BlackBerry Enterprise Server and mobile device management (MDM) for the future:
“Organizations are under pressure to support a wide variety of devices from multiple manufacturers, as well as multiple form factors, with tablets gaining steam as business tools. As a longstanding pillar of MDM in the enterprise, we’ve worked to provide a clean, simple, and secure solution to help you manage whatever gets thrown your way. This is BlackBerry Mobile Fusion.”
So they’ve replaced their old service with the comprehensive new BlackBerry Fusion. RIM comments:
“It’s a huge leap forward for device management, and it’s built on the valued security model introduced with BlackBerry Enterprise Server. The evolution of BlackBerry Enterprise Server is BlackBerry Mobile Fusion.”
RIM has integrated all the Blackberry corporate data security features that users have enjoyed in the past with new technology and have added iOS and Android to their management system as well. They claim it will interface seamlessly with all of these devices and provide users with an enhanced experience that can be trusted to deliver by even the most discerning IT professionals.
RIM comments on the addition of other devices to their management systems:
“BlackBerry Mobile Fusion supports the latest MDM capabilities available in iOS and Android, and is designed to enable administrators to apply corporate policies and configurations to manage and secure these devices. Additionally, customers will be able to leverage the application management capabilities of BlackBerry Mobile Fusion to manage the distribution of mobile applications to employees on these platforms.”
So it seems they have plans to stick around despite the declining popularity of BlackBerry products and services. It could be their new platform could help revive their brand or at the very least entice existing clients to stick with them. It helps that they can interface with other devices now.
We’ll have to wait and see how this all pans out for RIM and their BlackBerry branded products. Apple seems like it is the new enterprise leader so it all depends on how they can compete with them and make their products more attractive. Right now, that’s a lofty challenge.
What's I pad ?
The iPad effect
Do you know what else is important about this third iPad release? It's drawing more attention to and creating more pent-up demand for tablets than ever before. This is known as the iPad effect. Right now, there's only one real alternative-Android-but the event horizon for Windows 8 is only six months away.In fact, if the numbers IDC recently reforecast regarding worldwide tablet sales are to be believed, the iPad effect is very real. Android tablet market share is already approaching the 50 per cent mark.
Even if the Apple side of the equation is being underestimated, this is still a surprising figure.
Earlier this week, I experienced the iPad effect first hand. My friend John, who just opened a bike shop on downtown San Francisco's main drag, Market Street, called me on Tuesday to talk tablets. The new iPad release was creating a trickle-down opportunity for him and his small business.
"I have an opportunity to buy an old iPad for cheap," he told me. "Should I do it?"
I asked John what he would use a tablet for. Nothing fancy, but more work than play. At that point, I realised that because John already had an Android smartphone, it might make more sense for him to use an Android tablet. His familiarity and the fact that all the apps he'd already purchased would be immediately available made sense to me.
I ended up recommending as much. John got his hands on an Acer Iconia A500 and is now a happy guy. Chances are this tablet will lead to 2-3 others that will eventually be hard- and soft-mounted all over Market Street Cycles.
The point here is that all the attention the iPad is drawing will be more and more beneficial for Android tablet manufacturers. The big question is whether or not it will be too late for Windows 8 tablets to make any kind of splash.
Given the growth projections-IDC is talking about almost 200 million tablets being sold by 2016-it seems like there will be ample opportunity. And who knows? Maybe Microsoft will be able to create its very own Windows effect for tablets.
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