Monday, May 14, 2012

How to reset the iPhone, iPod touch or iPad to factory state


Easily wipe out all the data from your iOS device and set it up as good as new.

At times, the Apple iOS running based device might turn sluggish or become wee-bit slow. There are several possible reasons for that - loads of applications, multiple email accounts, and so on. Now you would be looking to wipe the phone clean if you wish to start afresh. Especially, cleaning the device helps if someone else had been using it or you have installed loads of software on it.

In case of non-responsive app or screen, one can simply press and hold the home button along with the power/sleep key together for 10 seconds. The device will then reboot. This method can be used with iPhone, iPod Touch and even on iPad.

In order to reset the iOS device in factory state, you need follow a simple processor right on the device but ensure you have a PC or Mac with iTunes installed on it. Before wiping all the data, you can take the backup of your contacts and other apps by connecting the iOS device to iTunes and sync it normally.

Here's the quick guide to reset your iOS device to factory state.

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Step One:

Open the Settings app and select the General option.

Step Two:

Scroll down and then select the Reset option.

Step Three:

From the available list of options, you can choose 'Erase All Content and Settings' to reset/format your iPhone, iPod Touch or iPad.

Do note that selecting the 'Erase All Content' option from settings will remove everything - your contacts, apps, and every setting. So the iOS device basically gets restored to factory state and will reboot with iTunes icon showing on the screen.

LG Optimus 2X to get Android 4.0 later this year


LG has apparently delayed the Android 4.0 ICS Update for its flagship device by couple of months.

LG Mobile will release the Android 4.0 ICS update for its Optimus 2X in third quarter of this year. This has been revealed by LG Singapore on its Facebook account.

LG had earlier promised to release the Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich update for its top of the line devices in second quarter of 2012.
LG Optimus L7, LG Optimus 2X, Android 4.0


So basically the users in Singapore can expect to receive it between July-September period. Most likely India based LG Optimux 2X users will get the Android 4.0 ICS update during same time if there is no delay.

It is to be noted that LG has already launched L-styled LG Optimus L7 smartphone which comes with Android 4.0 ICS running by default.

Like Sony, LG has been criticised for late roll out of operating system updates. Though LG is one the major players of the Android based smartphones, but timely delivery of updates will definitely affect the buying decisions of potential customers.


Sunday, May 13, 2012

Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review

Introduction:

Ladies and gentlemen, introducing the Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman! Yes, we now have another Android smartphone that carries the legendary brand name, the first one being the Sony Ericsson W8 Walkman. However, while the W8 was more or less a clone of the Sony Ericsson X8, the Live with Walkman is an entirely new device. It offers some decent specs as well, namely a 1GHz processor, 3.2-inch display, and both a rear and front-facing camera, which puts is right in the mid-range category of smartphones. But is it any good? Let us take it for a spin and find out...


Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review
The package contains:

  • Wired headset
  • Wall charger
  • microUSB cable
  • 2GB microSD card
  • Warranty and a getting started guide

Design:

First of all, kudos to Sony Ericsson for designing a smartphone that does not have the boring-slab-o-plastic appearance. Yes, plastic may be what it is made out of, yet still, we quite like the Live's fresh looks and colorful accents, and we believe that the youngerly crowd will do so too. A very practical addition is the dedicated Walkman key, located on the device's top side, which acts as a shortcut to the Walkman music player app.

Using the Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman with a single hand is as easy as pie since it fits nicely in your palm - Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review
Using the Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman with a single hand is as easy as pie since it fits nicely in your palm - Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review
Using the Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman with a single hand is as easy as pie since it fits nicely in your palm - Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review
Using the Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman with a single hand is as easy as pie since it fits nicely in your palm



Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review

You can compare the Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman with many other phones using our Size Visualization Tool.

Using the Sony Ericsson Live with a single hand is as easy as pie since it fits nicely in your palm and its dimensions allow for your thumb to effortlessly reach all of the display's edges. Its relatively low weight of 115 grams or 4.06 ounces is definitely nothing to complain about. However, the smartphone is quite thick with a waistline of 14.2 millimeters or 0.56 inches.

The Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman does not have the boring-slab-o-plastic appearance - Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review
The Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman does not have the boring-slab-o-plastic appearance - Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review
The Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman does not have the boring-slab-o-plastic appearance - Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review
The Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman does not have the boring-slab-o-plastic appearance

The handset's design has more than a few imperfections, some of which less tolerable than others. To start, when using it with a single hand, the buttons on its top are somewhat difficult to operate, especially when there is a pair of headphones plugged in. Speaking of buttons, the dedicated camera key is really tricky to use. Technically, it is a 2-stage shutter button, but the lack of feedback makes it very hard figuring out whether it has been pushed half-way, all the way down, or not pressed at all. Another flaw is that its front and back sides are prone to collecting finger smudge.

Charging port (left) - Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review
Camera and volume keys (right) - Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review
Power key and 3.5 mm jack (top) - Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review
Charging port (left)
Camera and volume keys (right)
Power key and 3.5 mm jack (top)
Back - Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review
Camera - Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review
Battery compartment - Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman Review
Back
Camera
Battery compartment


Display:

The front of the Sony Ericsson Live with Walkman is occupied by a bland-looking 3.2-inch display with a resolution of 320 by 480 pixels. Punching these numbers in a PPI calculator gives us the figure of 180 pixels per inch, which is not bad, but nothing impressive either. Its color reproduction leans a bit towards the warm side, while its contrast levels and viewing angles are average at best. Another problem that we notice is that its pixel response time is rather high, meaning that moving objects leave a faint blurry trail behind them. At least the display's brightness output is high enough to make using the smartphone on a sunny day comfortable.

Samsung Galaxy S III specs review

Samsung pulled a bit of an Apple with the delivery of the Galaxy S III, we heard from many opinions when the phone launched last week. It upgraded the Galaxy S II just enough where it counts, compared to the competition, and focused on what you actually can do with the phone, introducing a number of unique interface and functionality improvements.

Nothing wrong with this strategy actually - the company has already blown our collective Android minds, and now it’s in it for the long haul. Last quarter Samsung made the record $5 billion profit, 73% of which came from the mobile division. Its main competitor - Apple - also saw mobile devices making the lion’s share of its $11 billion profit, so now the stakes are so high that, make no mistake, every feature that the Galaxy S III has or doesn’t have, had been carefully planned.

Design

Let’s start with the chassis - granted, it’s again plastic, but why aren’t we seeing phones with 4.5”+ screens made of metal, ceramic, or anything more premium than the polycarbonate on the Galaxy S III? Even HTC, which is fond of having the chassis crafted out of aluminum, went with polycarb for the 4.7” One X. The only exception we can think of is the 4.8" Pantech Vega Racer 2, which is ceramic, but comes bulkier than the Galaxy S III. Have a look at the video below, if you want a taste of how the S III might have felt like with a glass ceramic chassis.

The reasons for the choice of material are simple - polycarbonate is light, durable, allows for superior wireless signal penetration, and is uniformly colored inside and out, so when you scratch it, the mark remains with the same color.

Now the rounded shape of the Galaxy S III and the “Hyper Glaze” coat on the blue version are acquired tastes, but when you pry off that paper-thin back cover, you’ll find a swappable 2100mAh battery, and a microSD card slot. That’s more than we can say for any other flagship, be it the HTC One X, iPhone 4S, or the Sony Xperia S, and it was something we used to take for granted with Android phones just a few months ago. The micro SIM we’d probably have to stomach from now on, since the mobile phone makers are moving even further, to the nano-SIM standard, that is about to be approved very soon. Just go ask your carrier for one with an adapter to replace your regular SIM, if you are getting the device off-contract.

What’s more important is that the Galaxy S III is only a tad wider and almost as thin as the Galaxy S II, making it about as comfortable to reach with your thumb across the screen for one-handed operation, but it will still be a stretch if you have smaller hands. The bulk of the screen size difference - 4.3” vs 4.8” - has gone into the elongated profile of the S III, which we found pretty smart first time with the Xperia arc, and manufacturers have been warming up to the idea ever since.

Still, we’d like to see less bezel, but the addition of the home key at the bottom, which allegedly was thrown in at the last minute, might have warranted the current design. Management probably rightfully deduced that the Galaxy Nexus is an Android enthusiast device, and a poster phone for Android ICS, while Samsung plans to sell millions of Galaxy S IIIs to all kinds of people, so issuing a device with buttonless front was probably deemed a pointless risk in the heated debates.

Processor


Recently it turned out that it’s not one of the usual suspects Qualcomm, NVIDIA or Texas Instruments that is in the most dual-core smartphones, but actually Samsung’s ARM-based processors. That’s due to the fact that it not only makes the homebrew Exynos silicon for its own phones, but also supplies the Ax-branded chippery in Apple’s mobile devices.

The Galaxy S III everyday grind will be pushed by either the quad-core Exynos 4412, or the dual-core Qualcomm Snapdragon S4. They are made with the brand new 28/32nm production generation for mobile chipsets, meaning a significant leap in performance vs power consumption compared to the 40/45nm Cortex-A9 chips we had until now.

Why didn’t Samsung use the 2GHz dual-core Cortex-A15 Exynos 5250? Because it didn’t need to. It’s made for tablets, as Samsung kindly demonstrated to us at CES this year, powering a 2560x1560 pixels screen with its ARM Mali T-604 GPU. There is no point of scaling to put it in a phone, where nothing over the current 1280x720 pixels makes sense.

Samsung, for that matter, overclocked the Mali-400 GPU to 400MHz+, which the 32nm chip allows easily, and now the Galaxy S III beats everything in the graphics benchies, save for the quad-core PowerVR GPU in the new iPad, which, however, has to power the “Resolutionary” 9.7” screen, and will most likely be scaled down for the new iPhone, since, again, it makes no sense there.

The earliest we can see Cortex-A15 chips in phones or even tablets will be for the holidays, when maybe NVIDIA will try to be first just for the taste again, while mass usage of A15 chips in our mobile devices won’t happen until early next year at least.

Samsung Galaxy S III specs review
Moreover, the power consumption advantage of Cortex-A15 vs A9 comes for a large part from the die shrink, and the Exynos 4412 is already shrunk to 32nm, plus it actually sports some A15 features like internal 128-bit instructions support, and has a proprietary ISP like HTC's ImageChip, for all those camera and motion sensing shenanigans of the Galaxy S III.

Both Exynos 4412 and Snapdragon S4 are now at the top of the Android benchmarking game, so your Galaxy S III won’t feel underpowered, no matter which one ends up in it. If your carrier has an LTE network up and running, you are likely to end up with Qualcomm’s MSM8960 chipset, which has the newest 28nm LTE radio integrated in it.</div>

10 unusual, silly, and plain crazy uses for the iPad

While most people use their iPads to surf the web, socialize on Facebook, or play a video game every once in a while, others come up with the most unusual uses for the tablet. Today, we bring you 10 such examples: 10 unusual uses for an iPad ranging from the clever and inventive to the plain pointless and crazy.

Have you ever come up with anything as creative as the ideas presented below? If so, do let us know by dropping a line in the comment section below. Of course, if you can think of a cool iPad hack or a modification that we should have included on our list, do not hesitate to let us know.

Friday, May 11, 2012

Karbonn A9 Price in India, Karbonn A9 Features 3.8 inch screen, 5MP primary camera


Karbonn A9 Price in India

Having 3.8 inch touchscreen and 5MP primary camera features, Karbonn A9 price in India is Rs. 9,199 at online stores like Flipkart. Karbonn A9 price is aimed to make it affordable to mid range price sensitive consumers. Karbonn A9 features 1GHz processor to ensure high performance and dual SIM which will enable users to save on their mobile bills. Karbonn A9 specifications are almost same as Karbonn A7 which is another upcoming mobile from Karbonn.


(Karbonn A9 Price image)

Karbonn A9 Features

Karbonn A9 price is well justified for its good quality features. Karbonn A9 features 5MP primary camera with dual LED flash which is rare to be seen in this price. Karbonn A9 camera will not only offer good quality images in day time but also equally efficient in night time. Karbonn A9 has 3.8 inch capacitive touch screen which will add new dimension to viewing experience. It is powered with 1GHz processor and built of Android 2.3.6 operating system which are quite fascinating to be seen on a mid range price mobile.
SIM: dual SIM
Network: GSM 2G, 3G
3G enabled
Screen size: 3.8 inch
Screen quality: capacitive touch screen
Screen resolution: NA
Form: bar
Design: Slider
Primary camera: 5MP
Video recording
Camera features: dual LED flash
OS: Android Gingerbread (v2.3.6)
Processor: 1GHz
RAM: NA
Inbuilt memory: NA
Expandable memory: 32GB with microSD card
Connectivity features
GPRS
EDGE
Wi-Fi
3G

Karbonn A9 Specifications

Karbonn A9 specifications include FM Radio for entertainment, inbuilt games like Siri type to keep users entertainment in their free time. It will have Facebook, Twitter and other popular sites for social networking. Karbonn A9 is going to be available in white color light weigh body with highly attractive design. Karbonn A9 features 1620 mAh battery with capacity to provide talk time up to 8 hours which is sufficient for a full working day.

Social networking: Facebook, Twitter
Games
FM Radio
Audio player
Music player
Audio jack 3.5mm
Light weight
Sleek design
Dimensions: NA
Battery type: 1620 mAh
Battery support: up to 8 hours
Battery stand by time: 3 weeks
Call recording
Call forwarding
Calendar
Document viewer
Push mail

Karbonn A9 Competitors

Karbonn A9 price at Rs. 9,199 will find good competition in Indian market from mid range price dual SIM mobiles like Black color model Micromax A73 at price of Rs. 7,550, iBall Andi 2 at price of Rs. 7,199 and Black &amp; Grey mobile Spice Mi-350n at price of Rs. 7,710.</div>