Saturday, 17 December 2011

T-Mobile Galaxy S II Review

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T-Mobile has had a long relationship with Android and Google, but was the last carrier in the universe to bring out the Galaxy S II.   Long rumored as the Hercules, many a smartphone fan wanted and waited to see just what T-Mobile could do with Samsung's newest "game-changing" phone, and now we know.  Make it bigger.  Make it with more Gees.  Make it their own.
How does this new and improved different version of the hardware compare to the phone many around the globe already know and love?  There was a lot of worrying about things once people found out that Samsung had to change a few things to provide something that worked on T-Mobile's new 42 Mbps network.  Already impressed with the performance of the Galaxy S II based on reviews and time spent with the international version, these were valid concerns -- it was a lot to live up to.  Keep reading to see what I think.


The Good

The Super AMOLED screen is beautiful, and at 4.52-inches gives you plenty of real estate.  The phone is thin, light, and performs like a beast -- like a Galaxy S II is supposed to.  Network speeds are great in the right area, and the battery life is excellent.
The Bad

It's big.  4.52-inches may be too much for some people to deal with, no matter how thin it is.  The absence of Wifi calling is disappointing.  Because the hardware is different, Samsung and T-mobile may take a while to push out updates.  Front facing camera is not integrated into Google Talk.
Conclusion

The best screen technology combined with incredible battery life makes this one really stand out.  If you live, work, and play in a T-Mobile "4G" area, you'll
be impressed by the network speed.  The Galaxy S II is a future-proof phone that should appeal to many.
Source: androidcentral

T-Mobile Samsung Galaxy S II update adds Wi-Fi calling, battery fixes

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The Amaze 4G on T-Mobile isn't the only handset to gain Wi-Fi calling. Yesterday, T-Mobile released an update for the Samsung Galaxy S II that adds the feature along with bugfixes to improve battery life and Caller ID. It's available now as an over-the-air update but if you can't wait there's always Samsung's Kies desktop software. The update also bumps the version number up to Android 2.3.5, but obviously we'd like to believe that 4.0 is waiting in the wings.

Samsung Focus S sample 720p video

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Samsung Focus S (AT&T) Windows Phone 7.5 Smartphone Review

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LG Nitro HD (AT&T) Review

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Amazon Kindle Fire apps Comparison with Galaxy Tab, iPad 2, and PlayBook

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Amazon Kindle Fire Review - Part 1

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Nokia Lumia 800 Windows Phone Review - Part 2

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Nokia Lumia 800 Windows Phone Review - Part 1

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New Blackberry phones BBX appearance by Metal from Porsche Design

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RIM's first mobile phone based platform BBX may have seen from the pictures that have not been verified. Mobile phones are seen by Verge, taking inspiration BB Porsche metal design work. BBX phone design is reported to be thinner than the iPhone 4S and as thin as the Galaxy S II. In it there will be a faster 1.5GHz processor, dual-core processor TI OMAP, memory 1 GB of RAM, and 16GB storage capacity. 8 megapixel camera as the back and two-megapixel camera on the front there will be too, hp makes it no less in terms of the specifications of HTC and Samsung mobile phones. BBX himself may have had a palette swap, but most will resemble an optimized version of the Playbook UI.

The Powerfull phones Blackberry Colt "First" with RIM's Blackberry OS

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RIM has launched a mobile platform and tablet BBX to come. Well this time we found the phone code that will use the Blackberry BBX and Colt specs at a glance.
Blackberry Colt is a very nice dual core processor with 4-inch screen or more types of touch screen with a resolution of more than 900px and its two cameras, front and rear.
Later there is no physical keypad and will use the stainless steel unibody. Colt's plan will be rolled mid-2012.which certainly makes not wait for BB lovers, because the invasion Droid is so fast and powerful.

How to get Windows 8 Start Screen in Windows 7

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Windows 7


Windows 8

Steps to follow:

Step 1 : Initially, Download the Rainmeter Software and install it.
Step 2 : Now download a skin, say Omnimo 4.1 for Rainmeter.
Step 3 : Install the skin i.e., double click Omnimo.rmskin file.
Step 4 : Once the skin is installed, run the rainmeter and you can have the tile based view of Windows 8. Now, you can customize the start screen like adding panels, arranging them in the order you wish etc.
This is it and you have Windows 8 Start Screen on Windows 7.