LG pracuje nad nowym modelem urządzenia, które łączy cechy smartfona i małego tabletu o nazwie Optimus G2. Jakimi parametrami technicznymi będzie się charakteryzować nowe urządzenie? Wynika z nich m.in., że phablet zaoferuje duży, 5,5-calwy ekran o rozdzielczości Full HD (1920 x 1080 pikseli) oraz bardzo szybki procesor.
Sercem smartfonu ma być czterordzeniowy procesor Qualcomm Snapdragon MSM8974 S4 Prime z zegrem 2 GHz. Urządzenie wyposażone ma być „wg. źródła zaznajomionego ze sprawą” w system Android 5.0 Key Lime Pie. Ponadto Optimus G2 ma być wyposażony w aparat o rozdzielczości 13 milionów pikseli i kamerkę wideo 1080p. Standardowo znajdziemy w nim również wcześniej komunikację opartą o 3G/LTE.
źródło: gadgets.ndtv.com
Kan
PHABLET ?? Co to jest ?!?! Buahhahaaahahahahha przesada !!! a moze tabphone ?!?!?hehehehe ?!?!?!
Phablet – ogolnie przyjęta nazwa grupy urządzeń mobilnych wyposażonych w ekran dotykowy o przekątnej ponad 5 cali. Rozmiary takich urządzeń zaczynają się na pięciu calach, ale są mniejsze niż siedem cali. Phablet to urządzenie łączące cechy smartfona i małego tabletu. Jest większy niż smartfon, ale nie na tyle duży by być uznawany za tablet lub minitablet. Warto czasem poczytać, a nie wyśmiewać redaktora. Andrzej
Jakieś mutanty telefoniczne wielkości patelni powstają. Może dla odmiany jakiś najmniejszy (jak karta kredytowa) telefon ? Jako drugi, taki by mi się właśnie przydał..
jeżeli i ray za duża to jest jeszcze mini z 2,8″ wyświetlaczem.
dzisiaj
Bigger vs. better
Seth Godin
dzisiaj, 11:27
It’s not always one or the other, but sometimes the trade-off is unavoidable. It’s clear that more is not always compatible with our other goals.
Like most choices, this one usually works better if you make it on purpose.
wczoraj
niedziela
Beggars can’t be choosers
Seth Godin
niedziela, 11:01
If you’d rather be a chooser, enter a market or a transaction where you have something to trade, something of value, something to offer that’s difficult to get everywhere else.
If all you have is the desire to get picked, that’s not sufficient.
sobota
Cold reading
Seth Godin
sobota, 12:51
Psychics, advertisers and coaches work hard to create interactions that feel direct. They’d like you to think that their work is about you, (lots of people thought that the song was actually about them) that they know what you’re thinking and what you want.
The tsunami of data available online makes this easier than ever. It’s not hard to buy data, not only about your demographics, but about how you spend your time on the web.
Which means that it seems as though that site or this ad is just for you. What could be better?
The important distinction is this: the content might be for you, but it’s not necessarily about you. Take what you need, but ignore the rest.
piątek
Too simple
Seth Godin
piątek, 11:45
If the explanations you’re demanding for what works aren’t working, perhaps it’s because you’re avoiding nuance in exchange for simplicity.
It would take Lee Clow far more than five minutes to explain how to design an ad that works. Clive Davis didn’t have the words to tell you what would make a hit record. Even the ostensibly simple food of Alice Waters can’t be easily copied by an amateur.
And yet your boss keeps asking you to explain your whole plan in three Powerpoint slides.
The VC who allocates one minute to understand why your business will work has done everyone no favors. The blog reader who clicks away after a paragraph wasted his time visiting at all.
Skip the complicated, time-consuming part at your own risk. The cycle of test and failure works largely because it exposes us to nuance.
If it were obvious, everyone would do it. Wait, that’s too simple. How about this: Nuance and subtlety aren’t the exception in changing human behavior. They’re the norm.
czwartek
When everyone has access to the same tools
Seth Godin
czwartek, 11:21
…then having a tool isn’t much of an advantage.
The industrial age, the age of scarcity, depended in part on the advantages that came with owning tools others didn’t own.
Time for a new advantage. It might be your network, the connections that trust you. And it might be your expertise. But most of all, I’m betting it’s your attitude.
środa
The Icarus Session in your town, plus live with me in New York
Seth Godin
środa, 18:01
I’m trying something new and I hope you’ll check it out.
At 7 pm (local time, wherever you are) on January 2nd, I’m inviting you and your peers, colleagues and friends to organize and attend an Icarus Session. You can find out the details at this link: Icarus Sessions. Read all the details to find the big picture and the link to sign up. Every city needs a volunteer organizer as well, and you can take the lead on the meetup site when you get there.
The short version: people volunteer to give a 140 second talk about what they’re working on, creating or building, to do it with vulnerability, passion and generosity. And then to sit down and cheer on the next person.
Hundreds of cities, thousands of people, all connecting at the same time, around the world.
These are free, self-organized exchanges of bravery. A chance to find fellow travelers, artists and those making a ruckus and hear what they’re passionate about. No pitching, no selling, but a 140-second confession of passion, fear and connection.
To kick it off, I’m hosting a live lecture, reading and session the afternoon of January 2nd in New York City. Details are right here.
I’ll be hosting future events in Boston, London and one or two other cities over the coming months. I’ll announce some soon.
I can promise it’ll be interesting, and it might just change your work.
Confusing lucky with good
Seth Godin
środa, 11:26
This is why internet successes fade. This is why amateur salespeople so often fail to become professionals. This is why one-off sports analogy stories make no sense. Successful at the beginning blinds us to the opportunity to get really good instead of merely coasting.
The only thing more sad than the self-limiting arrogance of the confusion between lucky and good is the pathos of the converse: confusing ungood with unlucky.
Most people with a big idea, great talent and/or something to say don’t get lucky at first. Or second. Or even third. It’s so easy to conclude that if you’re not lucky, you’re not good. So persistence becomes an essential element of good, because without persistence, you never get a chance to get lucky.
Islam vs. Europe
Paris: Muslim Ghetto Tourism
Cheradenine Zakalwe
sobota, 18:55
You’re fed up with the Dordogne, you’ve had enough of the Riviera and you’re bored with Parisian monuments.
Now you’re being invited to enliven your stay in France with a visit to one of its infamous suburbs — such as La Plaine Saint-Denis outside Paris.
Here, you can browse in boutiques such as the Bangla Store, which sells everything from peanuts to plungers, sample the local gastronomy in The Hot Chicken Shop, or take a leisurely stroll beside the A1 motorway.
The district is being promoted as a tourist destination by officials keen to develop economic activity in rundown urban zones while showing that there is more to French suburbs than riots, drugs and crime.
The local tourist office, for instance, has begun guided tours of attractions that include immigrant communities, building sites and an electricity station. It markets the package as “Sweet Suburb”. Similar initiatives are springing up throughout France, many driven by inhabitants who no longer wish to be depicted in the mainstream media as violent and lawless.
Rose Hubon, 66, is one of a growing number of “greeters” — the concept originated in New York –— who volunteer to show visitors around their towns, in her case Saint-Ouen north of Paris.
“People don’t only want to see the Eiffel Tower and Montmartre. Sometimes they want to see something different and I’m happy to show them where I live: the markets, the shops, the history,” she said.
Mrs Hubon speaks only French and Creole but says that other members of the greeter network are fluent in English and delighted to guide British holidaymakers around.
“I’m convinced that suburban tourism will develop in the coming years,” said Marie-Pierre Agnès, a member of Accueil Banlieues (Suburban Welcome), an association that offers bed and breakfast and tours in areas usually shunned by visitors.
“The centre of Paris is saturated and if officials want to keep developing tourism, they’re going to have to move out here,” she said. Her goal, however, is not so much to boost tourist revenue as to break down the barrier between the white population that monopolises city centres and rural areas, and the immigrant communities living in the suburbs. “We want to show that the suburbs are not only about bars, fights and burning cars,” she said.
In a country that has traditionally rejected multiculturalism, her promotion of ethnic diversity strikes a rebellious note. “My six-year-old son goes to a school that has 45 different nationalities and it’s great for him,” she said.
Yet there are signs that France is starting to question long-standing prejudices, with films such as Les Intouchables, which portrays the friendship between a black youth and a handicapped, wealthy white man, proving a notable success. Standing on the pavement outside O’Discount Store in La Plaine Saint-Denis, Daoma Mamadou, 28, whose parents arrived in France from the Ivory Coast, invited the British to visit his town.
“This is a place where you’ve got every possible culture — African, Asian everything — and where everyone will talk to you. We’re not like the Parisians, who never talk to anyone. We chat and we joke all the time. There is harmony here.”
That might be a slight exaggeration — the encounter down a nearby side street between three men dismantling a red Renault Clio and a police officer who suspected that the vehicle was stolen did not seem harmonious.
But Rabby Saidi, 22, who was having a bite to eat in The Chicken Shop (a rival to The Hot Chicken Shop), insisted that France’s suburbs were less violent than they were reputed to be. “Listen chief,” he said, adopting the form of address he uses for everyone, “people who talk to us respectfully will have no problems. Look at us. We’re talking together and I haven’t mugged you.”
Not everyone, however, is convinced that tourism will take off in places such as this. Laurent Paris, 29, who has a hamburger stall in La Plaine Saint-Denis, said: “I certainly wouldn’t advise anyone to visit this place. There’s nothing to see. You don’t go to New York and spend your time in Harlem.”
Source: Times (£)
France: „Islamophobic” Acts up 42% – Far-Right Attitudes Spreading like Wildfire
Cheradenine Zakalwe
wczoraj, 07:38
Islamophobic acts have increased by 42% compared to the first ten months of 2012, going from 123 to 175, according to a provisional report of the Observatoire contre l’islamophobie [Observatory of Islamophobia]. A minimum number because it only records actions about which a criminal complaint has been filed or that have appeared in a logbook.
In the front line: places of worship and cemeteries. In addition to insulting emails, tags and fire-raising attempts, several have been defiled with heads of pigs or excrement.
„There has been a multiplication and a banalisation of desecrations”, denounces Mohammed Moussaoui, president of the Conseil français du Culte musulman (CFCM) [French Council of the Muslim Religion]. The most striking action was the occupation, on 20 October, of the construction site of the Poitiers mosque by a far-right group. „For the first time, people sang warlike anti-Islam slogans openly,” stresses M. Moussaoui. We have reached a new level”.
Faced with these threats, at the beginning of October the CFCM demanded a „solemn declaration” from president François Hollande against the rise in Islamophobia. For now this has remained a dead letter.
Beyond actions that were clearly Islamophobic, „we have heard an uninhibited discourse, often negative towards Islam”, notes Franck Frégosi, director of research at CNRS and a specialist in Islam in Europe. For him, „what had been an attitude of the far right … is tending to spread like wildfire”. „Phobic sentiments” have been fed by various facts and a tense international context, he says, regretting that fact that some people make use of them „to say that Islam cannot be integrated into the Republic.”
Source: Libération
Chapel in French Military Base Desecrated
Cheradenine Zakalwe
wczoraj, 14:30
I’ve written many times about attacks on Christian religious symbols, churches and cemeteries in France. Increasingly, the French government is unable to protect its people and heritage from routine Muslim aggression. You would think, though, that if anywhere in France was still safe from this low-level jihad, it would be a military base. But no. It seems the effects of the Muslim presence are now being felt even there. To anyone who read my article about mutinous Muslims in the French military, this should come as no great surprise.
Attacks against Christianity are multiplying and reaching places one would have thought protected. On Saturday it was in the naval base in Toulon (photo), access to which is highly controlled, that a chapel was desecrated. Three major symbols of the Catholic faith were overturned and destroyed: the tabernacle, the baptistery, and the ambon (pulpit where the Bible, which was trampled on, is placed).
A sailor who came to pray in the chapel discovered the facts. An inquiry has been opened by the naval gendarmerie.
“The intolerance now penetrates into military precincts: there are reasons to be truly concerned” indicates Monseigneur Poinard, vicar-general of the diocese of the French military.
Source: Novopress
Miss France Slammed for Being „White as Snow”
Cheradenine Zakalwe
dzisiaj, 08:18
8 out of the 33 candidates were ethnics. Still not enough. Europeans must have nothing.
A black rights group on Monday slammed the latest Miss France competition for producing a „white as snow” winner from a field it claimed was unrepresentative of the country’s ethnic make-up.
Marine Lorphelin, 19, a brunette medical student from Burgundy, was on Saturday crowned Miss France 2013, having edged out Miss Tahiti, Hinarini de Longeaux, in the final round of judging.
Louis-Georges Tin, the president of the CRAN (Representative Council of Black Associations), on Monday lamented the lack of contestants from France’s African and north African communities.
„The failure to represent the contemporary French population in an event such as this is obviously serious,” Tin said in a statement issued jointly with Fred Royer, the creator of Miss Black France.
„It amounts to denying the very existence of French people of African origin.”
Of the 33 finalists in Saturday’s contest, eight were from ethnic minorities with six of those coming from France’s Pacific or Caribbean territories.
„In the antiquated world of Miss France, blacks apparently can only come from overseas departments,” the CRAN statement said.
„As for Frenchwomen of north African heritage, they were 'represented’ by only one candidate who was quickly eliminated (too Muslim perhaps?).”
France is home to around five million Muslims, most of them of north African origin.
The statement went on to express regret that „Miss France is as white as the end of year snow on the steeples of an eternal France.”
Source: The Local
Najmniejszy już powstał:
Sony Ericsson Xperia Ray lub jak ktoś woli prostote to Samsung X820
No wiec tak , mam telefon w naprawie i obecnie używam starego telefonu Samsunga c3050.
Podczas kiedy odrzucam połączenie to wysyła mi się wiadomość o treści : Oddzwonię później .
Nie wiem jak to wyłączyć , zabiera mi to kase z konta . Pomożecie ?