Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Presidential loser leaves Egypt amid investigation

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Nokia 808 PureView Review - Technology and Lifestyles

Excitement, a couple of Symbian phone? The Nokia 808 PureView has forced many to reconsider their platform loyalties by virtue of its big number boast: 41-megapixels of camera goodness. The surprise stand-out of Mobile World Congress, the 808 PureView is the primary public evidence of a five year labor of affection inspired by ultra-high-resolution satellite photography. There?s compromise galore involved, however, to hitch the early PureView train, so is it worth it? Read on for the total SlashGear review.

Hardware

Miniaturization can only get you to date: if you need 41-megapixels ? and Nokia really does ? then you definitely need to accept some heft with it. Because of the the 808 PureView is a corpulent phone, measuring in at 123.9 x 60.2 x 13.9 mm and 169 grams, though it?s biased toward the lens section with its oversized sensor. Inside the hand, though, it?s actually quite a delightful thing to carry: the textured plastic back cover feels high-quality and durable, and your forefinger butts naturally against the curve of the camera hump.

That?s to not say you do not notice it when it?s to your pocket. Unlike the slimline devices we?ve grown used to, the 808 PureView makes for a substantial bulge; lets fit it right into a jeans pocket, front or back, but it surely wasn?t the main comfortable we?ve ever been.

Controls include a 3-button strip along front, for call, menu and end/power, along side a volume rocker, lock switch and dedicated two-stage camera key at the right edge. Along the highest there is a micro HDMI port (to be used with Nokia?s CA0198 HDMI kit) under a flap, a microUSB port for charging, and a three.5mm headphone socket. Nokia encompasses a wired hands-free kit of decent audio quality, though we had no issues using third-party headsets with the telephone.

Up front there is a 4-inch AMOLED ClearBlack display clad in a sheet of Corning Gorilla Glass. As with every OLED-based phones it has great viewing angles, contrast and color saturation; however, additionally it is running at a trifling 360 x 640 resolution, and that implies individual pixels are inescapable. The grittiness is visible from the outset, once the beginning-up Nokia logo appears, and permeates during the phone experience. Considering the imaging focus of this phone, it is a disappointment.

Inside, the 808 PureView packs one of many fastest processors to grace a Symbian device, a single-core ARM 11 running at 1.3GHz. It?s paired with 512MB of RAM and 16GB of storage, expandable with as much as 32GB microSD cards. Connectivity includes pentaband HSPA (as much as 14.4Mbps down/5.76Mbps up, networking depending) that means support for both AT&T and T-Mobile 3G within the USA, besides Bluetooth 3.0, WiFi b/g/n, NFC and quadband GSM/EDGE. Fit in the optional microUSB to USB Host adapter and you?ll attach peripherals like USB drives, and there is a-GPS/GPS for navigation and photo geotagging.

Software and Performance

Software is the 808 PureView?s Achilles? heel. Symbian, rebranded Nokia Belle during this latest iteration, is old within the tooth and regarded outclassed by all however the staunchest of fans. With its UI borrowing some elements of Android ? consisting of the drop-down notifications bar and the differently sized homescreen widgets ? and sharing the squircle iconography of MeeGo at the N9 it?s certainly the correct looking iteration of Symbian to-date, but day-to-day usability remains to be a pain.

What?s arguably the deal-breaker for Nokia Belle here?s the performance. At the Nokia 700, which also runs Belle on a 1.3GHz single-core, we found ourselves conceding that it could actually make an inexpensive entry-level device for the fledgling smartphone audience. Somewhere along the road, however, the 808 lost whatever turn of speed the 700 managed to squeeze from the processor.

The homescreen within reason swift, however the 808 soon runs out of steam after you get into the apps. Within the messaging app we?d sometimes have hammered out a half-word or so before the on-screen keyboard caught up; scroll fast through an entire gallery and you may see nothing but placeholder thumbnails, turning navigating images into guesswork.

It?s the browser that is the big nightmare, however, able to paper of handling full sites but battling anything more complex than their mobile versions. Pinch zooming becomes trial and blunder, tedious since given the low resolution you?ll likely be doing a large number of it. Swipe across the page and you?ve got to attend a second or two for the screen to get closer you. Flip from portrait to landscape orientation, or back again, and the lag shows itself all over again. Most disturbing though is how vulnerable to crashing it?s, the app periodically shutting down altogether. We didn?t experience an entire phone lock-up, but altogether it was enough to make us save our web browsing until we were home.

Oddly, we didn?t experience the identical sluggishness at the 808 PureView units running non-final software on our trip to Carl Zeiss several weeks ago. Then, the Nokia seemed as responsive because the 700 have been. It?s possible that the overall software tweaks have erred toward scaling back performance in favor of battery life, and if this is the case we?re hoping Nokia sees sense and tips the balance back a bit toward usability with a firmware update.

Camera

Make no mistake, the Nokia 808 PureView is all about photography. Nokia?s imaging team spent five years developing PureView ? hence it being stuck with Symbian other than getting Windows Phone just like the Lumia series ? and took the foundations of mobile cameras back to basics so one can improve on quality.

We?ve covered the technology behind PureView at the 808 comprehensively here, however the brief version is that it is a rethink of ways lossless zooming is also supported on a phone. Traditionally that might demand an optical zoom lens, involving bulky moving parts; PureView does it instead with a surfeit of pixels. In PureView mode, the 808 uses its 41-megapixel sensor to capture more typical 2-, 5- or 8-megapixel shots, and actually Nokia expects most householders to adhere at 5-megapixel quality.

Nokia 808 PureView technology:

At 1x zoom, each pixel making up the overall frame has around seven pixels at the sensor to feed into it, reducing the chance of a glitch or noise making it into the picture. PureView can simply ignore any obvious outliers, making for more accurate shots. However, on the way to zoom in, the 808 can take a full-resolution (i.e. 2-, 5- or 8-megapixel) subset of the whole frame, similar to how a digital zoom magnifies a portion but with no loss in detail.

Exactly how much you can zoom depends on what PureView resolution you?re using ? the 808 won?t allow you to get past the point where it can save a full-resolution image ? so you get more range in 2-megapixel mode than you do at 8-megapixels. It averages at roughly 3x at 5-megapixels. The phone will also allow you to shoot at ?full? resolution, either 34-megapixel 16:9 aspect images taken across the full width of the sensor, or 38-megapixel 4:3 aspect images taken across the full height of the sensor, though in that case you don?t get any zoom option.

The 808?s camera app has obviously changed from the Nokia Belle norm to accommodate PureView, and there are three key modes to choose between. Automatic strips you of all manual control bar toggling the Xenon flash between on/off/auto/red-eye modes, defaulting to roughly 5-megapixel frames, though you still get touch-focus. Scenes mode offers a choice of auto, landscape, portrait, sports, night, night portrait, spotlight and snow configurations, again with flash options and touch-focus.

Finally, there?s Creative mode, where the guts of PureView are opened up to more avid tinkerers. The 808 can be toggled between PureView mode ? with the choice of three resolutions and both 4:3 and 16:9 aspect ratios ? and Full Resolution mode ? with either 16:9 or 4:3 settings ? and save in either Normal or Superfine JPEG quality modes. Color tones can be switched between normal, vivid, sepia or black & white, and there?s optional bracketing, interval or self-timer modes. With interval, the 808 becomes a time-lapse camera, capable of shooting up to 1,500 images every 30 minutes (or as low as every 5 seconds).

Then there are sliders for saturation, contrast and sharpness, while icons on the preview screen control flash, exposure, lighting type, ISO (from 50 ? 1600, with an Auto mode) and the ability to turn off the neutral density filter. Once you have a clutch of settings you prefer, you can save them to one of the three custom shortcuts for easier retrieval.

0

Is it worth taking the time to play? Oh yes, yes it really is. We reluctantly left Carl Zeiss and our last experience with the 808 PureView wowed by quite how capable the new Nokia is, and nothing from our review unit has convinced us to think otherwise. This isn?t just ?good for a phone-camera? either; the 808 is easily able to produce shots that put dedicated point-and-shoots to shame.

Noise is almost non-existent, colors are as accurate as we?ve ever seen from a phone, and ? as long as you take the time to tap the screen to set focus ? crisp detail. Low light performance is hugely impressive, even before you bother turning on the (excellent) Xenon flash, as PureView squeezes all the extra pixel data into the final image.

In full resolution mode, meanwhile, you lack zooming ability but you get images of a scale that would traditionally demand a dedicated camera. There?s something near-magical about being able to glance across an image, think ?what?s going on there?? and zoom in without facing a screenful of pixelated mush. At 34/38-megapixel resolution there?s no PureView finessing going on ? there aren?t the extra pixels to enable it ? but it does demonstrate just how capable the sensor and companion Zeiss optics are.

As for video, the 808 PureView will record in Automatic, Scenes (auto, low light, sports, spotlight and snow) or Creative modes, at 360p, 720p or 1080p resolution. A choice of 15, 24, 25 and 30fps frame rates are supported, plus the same color tone options as in stills mode, together with exposure and contrast. Since even 1920 x 1080 Full HD resolution doesn?t come close to what the 808?s sensor is capable of capturing, the same PureView oversampling is used to improve video quality, and just as with stills the evidence of that comes through inside the final frame.

Nokia 808 PureView 1080p HD video sample:

Our only complaint is the somewhat sluggish continuous autofocus, which has a tendency to wander and is occasionally slow to refix. You can, however, tap to manually set a focus point. While your fingers are near the screen, it?s worth playing with Nokia?s clever zoom control: you may pinch-zoom, of course, but we found it easier to use the single-finger zooming where sliding your thumb up and down adjusts the degree of magnification. It?s easy to keep both hands steadying the 808 and still zoom in, and when you?re zooming during video capture the actual magnification doesn?t happen until you lift your finger, allowing you to precisely frame without the hunting of regular systems. Alternatively you can use the zoom rocker, and unlike the stepped zoom levels of some devices, it?s a silky-smooth transition.

Nokia 808 PureView 1080p HD video sample:

Audio during video recording is often overlooked, but Nokia has saved a little magic for that, too. The PureView has twin microphones for capturing stereo sound, but it also includes Rich Recording, a way to capture high-volume audio without suffering from distortion or clipping. In fact, Nokia claims the 808 is capable of handling four-times louder sound than regular phone microphones, without having to introduce the sort of filters that can leave the audio track weedy.

Going by Nokia?s spec sheet, the 808 PureView should be able to capture the sound of a jet engine from 100-feet away without any stereo distortion. Topping out at 145dB, in fact, it?s beyond the purpose where human ears would likely suffer permanent damage even if they?re equipped with hearing protection. An average rock concert, meanwhile, at a more humble 115dB should be no problem at all for the 808 PureView, though we?ll need to schedule one on our jam-packed social calendar to actually test that out.

1

Getting photos and video off the 808 is reasonably straightforward. The phone can be set to show up as a Mass Storage device when plugged in via USB, appearing on your PC or Mac as an external drive (rather than demanding a management app as per Windows Phone). However we were surprised to find transfers very sluggish to our test Mac: shuttling just over 440MB of photos and video took around five minutes, in fact. There?s no native option to automatically upload images to an online gallery.

There are more 808 PureView camera samples here

The Future of PureView

Nokia has already confirmed that PureView technology won?t be limited to just the 808. However, that?s already prompted confusion around just what sort of resolution sensors we can expect in future Lumia Windows Phones. PureView does not necessarily mean 41-megapixels ? Nokia picked that number to satisfy headlines and deliver a 3x optical zoom equivalent for 5-megapixel frames ? but instead refers to the oversampling technology; a lower-resolution sensor would still deliver a lossless zoom, albeit with a smaller range, while allowing for a thinner device.

2

Phone and Battery

Nokia has a strong track record with phone radios, and the 808 PureView is no exception. We had no issues with keeping a signal, and the dual-microphones meant in-call audio was clear. The 808?s 1,400 mAh battery is rated for up to 6.5hrs of 3G talk time or 540hrs of 3G standby, though the actual sort of longevity you?ll see from it is very much dependent on how much you play with the camera. The Xenon flash in particular will chug through battery in short order. In practice, we managed a day of relatively eager use before we had to reach for the mains adapter.

3

Wrap-Up

Viewed as a modern phone, the 808 PureView is a recipe for frustration. It?s heavy and chunky, the screen lacks pixels, Nokia Belle is short on apps and long on aggravation, and even those apps that are onboard run with varying degrees of wretchedness on the wheezing processor. When the 808 starts to make more sense is when you flip it around, and consider it not so much a phone with an amazing camera, but an amazing camera with a 3G internet connection.

With such mundane matters as messaging, internet browsing, multimedia and apps left to a more flexible (but less photographically-capable) platform like iOS or Android, that frees up the 808 PureView to do what it undoubtedly does best: take awesome photos and video. If you can find space in your pocket or bag for two phones, and you?re a keen shutterbug, then there are huge advantages to using the 808 rather than your regular phone camera.

4

Therein lies the rub: at $699 unlocked and SIM-free in the US, it?s an expensive second device. That would get you a good Micro Four Thirds camera, though blind testing suggests the 808 can produce photos as good as, or better than, such compacts. It would also be enough for an entry-level DSLR, though you?d lose any semblance of pocket-friendliness in that case.

In the end, though, even the fact that we?re comparing the 808 PureView to DSLRs is testament to Nokia?s achievement. Few people will actually go out and buy it themselves, but then the 808 is really a test bench for PureView technology, a proof-of-concept. Now that it has convinced us of its merits, Nokia can leverage the branding to differentiate its Windows Phone range. Frankly, the sooner it would try this, the easier.

Check out the original source here.

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Obama Booed for Making Joke About Red Sox Trade (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Offer a Good Career in Computer Engineering | Computer News and ...

Computer engineering is in demand and at hype today. As we all are becoming the global citizens, there are many sectors that offer a good career in computer engineering.

Why is computer engineering becoming the favorite choice of any student? One of the most popular reason to opt for a career as a computer engineer is the salary for a computer engineer. Another aspect is the flair for technology. There are many challenging streams under computer engineering. Some of the streams are:

Programming

Networking

Banking

Ecommerce

Information Technology

Programming

Maintenance

Documentation

Animation

E- Learning

Instructional designing

The list mentioned above is sufficient enough to tell how computerization has become the integral part of our lifestyle as well as today?s economy. So the computer engineers are on high demand. Broadly the computer professionals are divided as hardware engineers, software engineers salary also differs with there proffession.

What ever may be the scope of work such as research and development, computer aided systems, maintenance or networking etc. hardware and software engineers contribute a lot.

The most popular sector in computer engineers is Information Technology. This sector includes various tasks such as processing the information, sorting and storing the information. So there is tremendous scope for all types of computer engineers. If you are not a computer engineer but have acquired the relevant skills and upgraded your knowledge that fulfills the job requirements, then you can get equal perks as that of a computer engineer. You will find many people in various fields mentioned above, who are not computer engineers. They might have done their graduation from pure science or commerce stream. Many people who have done engineering from the streams such as mechanical, instrumentation, telecommunication etc. can excel in the field of computers.

To conclude with, computerization has become the essence of fast track life today. So the computer learned professionals and computer engineers form the integral part of the society. So computer was a favorite field, it is a favorite field and it will be favorite and demanding field years ahead.

Career, Computer, Engineering, Good, offer

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3 Video Marketing Tips for Your Online Business | Internet and Email ...

Video marketing as a means for promoting anything, just about, has been streaking like a meteor in the past few years. In this article we will be looking into a few effective video marketing tips that give results.

Your video?s title plays an important role in the overall result of your marketing campaign. Searching for videos online is like using a search engine with different keywords. If you were to look for gardening videos on a video sharing site, you might use gardening hints, or gardening methods. So your aim should be to leverage this title to the fullest extent, so that you not only get ranked for your targeted keywords but also reach out to your target audience easily. You will do this by using relevant keywords, but keeping in mind that you want to keep the title simple. You must be sure that you are paying attention to the keywords, they must make sense and stay on topic of the video. You want to make the title eye catching, as this is the first thing people focus on when they find the video. You want to be able to grab peoples attention with a well worded title. If you have ever done any copywriting, you have learned about the importance of a good title. It is pretty much the same for video titles. You want to portray the purpose of the video clearly. The title of the video is the best place to do just that. Remember that when you?re creating your title, you have to make it short and snappy, and at the same time make it convey what the video is all about. It can take a bit to fully grasp the concept, but the end results are effective.

If viewers want to embed your videos on their sites, they only have to copy and paste the code, so make sure you let them do this. This is a way to get both more views for your videos and also quality backlinks from the websites that use your videos. This means there?s no reason you should want to prevent people from doing this, as it only helps you. Remember, every time someone embeds your video on their site, it gives their visitors a chance to see it, and some of them may do the same, which can cause your video to spread virally.

One thing that makes video marketing stand out from others is that people can give their views and feedback. More people will be interested in your videos when they see the number of comments and ideas posted as well.

In conclusion, video marketing can be seen as a simple and effective way to drive targeted traffic to your website, without actually paying for it.

One thing you need to realize concerning this discussion about affiliaterevolution is it can become as effective as you want; it depends on how you scale your promotions.

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Paws For Pets: Princess | WTVR.com ? Richmond News & Weather ...

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Writers' Center expands vocabulary and classes for new literary ...

Jennifer Shore | Staff Writer

Though the Writers? Center still offers regular workshops with its writers-in-residence, some of this summer?s selection of classes branch out across the Institution.

During Week Five, poet Jim Daniels will allow Chautauquans to explore the grounds and will then gather their responses to visual art. Clara Silverstein, Writers? Center program director, said she thinks attendees will enjoy it along with the other classes.

?It?s really a wonderful opportunity to study with an expert in poetry,? she said.

Week One

The 2012 Season begins with writers-in-residence David Lazar and Joan Murray.

Lazar, who has taught at Ohio University and Columbia College Chicago, will speak about prose writing during his lecture and workshops.

Murray, a poet, playwright and fiction writer, will discuss the emotions found in poetry. She is the editor of two collections, The Pushcart Book of Poetry and Poems to Live By In Uncertain Times.

Week Two

?From Trickle to Flow? is the theme of poet-in-residence James Armstrong?s workshop. He teaches at Winona State University and has published two poetry books, Monument in a Summer Hat and Blue Lash.

Ann Hood, bestselling and prize-winning author, is a writer-in-residence who will focus on writing personal essays in her workshop.

Week Three

Both writers-in-residence will focus on writing from inside the mind. Prose writer Josh Rolnick will tap into the subconscious mind, and poetry writer Marjorie Maddox will focus on writing from imagination.

Maddox is the director of creative writing and an English professor at Lock Haven University, whose eight collections of poetry have won numerous awards.

Rolnick, author of Pulp and Paper, a collection of short stories, publishes Sh?ma, a Jewish idea journal, and edits Unstuck, an annual independent literary publication.

Week Four

Poet-in-residence Patricia Jabbeh Wesley?s ?Writing as a Tool in Healing: A Living Experience? workshop will sift through vulnerability to explore memory. Wesley, a creative writing teacher at Pennsylvania State University at Altoona, is a Liberian Civil War survivor.

Joe Kita, prose writer-in-residence and author of six books, will help Chautauquans funnel memories into writing a memoir. He has appeared on ?Oprah,? launched magazines in foreign countries and faced his biggest fears.

Week Five

Jim Daniels, poet-in-residence and professor at Carnegie Mellon University, will look at ekphrastic writing ? response to visual art ? in his workshop. The Chautauqua grounds have art that will be examined to inspire writing. Daniels has published 13 books of poetry and four fiction books.

How life experiences change stories will be discussed during prose writer-in-residence Kashmira Sheth?s workshop. Sheth, an author of children and young adult books, teaches at the Solstice Low-Residency MFA in Creative Writing Program at Pine Manor College.

Week Six

With less than half the season left, the writers-in-residence will explore imagination and characters.

Regardless of writing interest, prose writer Jonathan Eig stresses the importance of character. Eig is a best-selling author and former Wall Street Journal writer. His work has appeared in several publications, and he has appeared on NPR?s ?Fresh Air? and ?The Daily Show? with Jon Stewart.

Poet Gregory Donovan will talk about the balance of memory and imagination. His poetry and fiction have appeared in a number of journals, and he is currently a faculty member of the graduate-level creative writing program at Virginia Commonwealth University.

Week Seven

Picasso once said, ?Art is the lie that tells the truth,? and it is the topic of poet-in-residence Julia Kasdorf?s workshop. She is a Pushcart Prize winner and teacher at The Pennsylvania State University.

Matthew Goodman, the prose writer-in-residence, will help Chautauquans develop their creative non-fiction techniques. He authored three books ? two narratives and a cookbook ? and has served as commentator and teacher for various organizations.

Week Eight

J. David Stevens is the prose writer-in-residence who will talk about revolutionary and radical writers. Stevens, a professor at the University of Richmond, is the author of Mexico is Missing and Other Stories.

Poet Gabriel Welsch will experiment with the fine line of poetry as Chautauquans read their works in the workshop. Welsch is vice president of advancement and marketing at Juniata College and has authored works that have appeared in several journals.

Week Nine

The final week at Chautauqua brings writers-in-residence Susan Choi and Rick Hilles to the Writers? Center.

Choi, a Pulitzer Prize finalist and prose writer, is the author of three novels. In the workshop, she will help hone the two ingredients of fiction: imitation and invention.

Poet Rick Hilles is assistant professor of English at Vanderbilt University, and he will wrap up the summer by discussing sonnets. He is the author of the award-winning poetry collection Brother Salvage.

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