Showing posts with label Technology News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology News. Show all posts

Sunday, 30 September 2012

Wenger wants more from Arsenal

Posted On 08:14 by Unknown 0 comments


The Gunners went into Saturday's showdown with the leaders at the Emirates Stadium unbeaten, and holding some genuine hope of making a real impact again at the business end of the table.
However, despite creating several good openings - with Blues keeper Petr Cech denying both Lukas Podolski and Olivier Giroud, who then missed a great chance in stoppage time - Arsenal were the architects of their own downfall against a well-drilled Chelsea outfit.
Goals from Fernando Torres and Juan Mata's free-kick secured a 2-1 victory for the visitors.
And Wenger said: "We can be much better. Technically we were average, and also so was our authority at the back.
"When you play at home and concede two goals from set-pieces, it is unacceptable.
"I think there is some psychological damage because we lost the game and the players are very disappointed, especially because we have lost a game we should not have lost and that is where we have some work to do, especially in some aspects of our defensive game."
Torres had got the better of Laurent Koscielny - who retained his place ahead of Per Mertesacker as captain Thomas Vermaelen returned to the defence - to fire the visitors ahead on 20 minutes after Arsenal failed to deal with Mata's free-kick into the penalty area.
Although Gervinho levelled with well-taken equaliser just before the break, another curling deadball delivery from Mata found its way into the bottom corner on 53 minutes as Koscielny's slight deflection only helped the ball past Vito Mannone.
While Cech's reactions - particularly from a deflected Giroud shot - certainly helped earn Chelsea their fifth win from six games, Arsenal's defensive shortcomings were again highlighted.
Wenger accepted the doom-mongers would soon latch on to that well-examined area of weakness.
"I can completely understand people's opinion," he said, "but what is important is the personality you show in a big game and that is where is some areas we were not at the [right] level."
Wenger passes 16 years at the helm this week but insists for him it has always been about meeting the next challenge head-on.
"I never look back, I always look forward," he said.
"I looked at the Chelsea game and look at the next game. It is not easy, it is never easy."
Arsenal midfielder Abou Diaby limped off on Saturday after less than 20 minutes.
Wenger said: "It is a thigh muscle strain. It is a minimum of three weeks."
Meanwhile, England international Jack Wilshere is expected to make his long-awaited return to action after 14 months out in an Under-21s match at West Brom on Monday afternoon.


US Gets Sony Tablet S Update

Posted On 01:43 by Unknown 0 comments

If you live in USA and you own a Sony Tablet S and keep in mind we said Tablet S not Xperia Tablet S it’s update time! You will get all the goodies of the Xperia Tablet S on the Tablet S, meaning that the new features will be available for the owners of the 2011 Sony tablet. Android 4.0.3 brings all the extras on your device, the ones listed below.


The device gets the cool Guest Mode available, the one that allows you to share the slate with your family members, even kids, by controlling beforehand the apps they can access. Aside from the Guest Mode you get new media player applications: Walkman, Album and Movies. They have been redesigned and got new features, including a beautiful visualizer for Walkman, a nice layout for Album and simplistic UI for Movies. There’s also Small Apps feature, that allows you overlay a small browser, IR remote, calculator, voice recorder and timer on top of another app.

There’s also the option of using a Macro function on the Remote Control app. This you can program your Blu Ray player or TV set using the macro features of your infrared-packing Sony Tablet S. The list of improvements goes on to include new widgets, including Topics, Socialife for socializing in pure Flipboard style and Watch Now, with an interactive visual program guide, based on personal preference and real time trends from your social networking feeds.






HP Debuts Open WebOS 1.0, Stable Version Ready for Consumption

Posted On 01:00 by Unknown 0 comments

HP’s TouchPad and Palm devices are now a thing of the past, but webOS is still alive and kicking, in spite of not actually having devices to run on. Open webOS, that’s the new name of the platform entered beta phase in August and a month later, now, the final stable build is ready for consumption, in version 1.0, that’s shown in action below.

This version provides some opportunities for developers and new capabilities. The team claims that over 75 Open webOS components have been delivered over the past 9 months, for a total of over 450,000 lines of code. This means that Open WebOS can be ported to new devices, thanks to 1.0 release from today. In the video below we see webOS architect Steve Winston doing a demo of the operating system on a HP TouchSmart all in one PC. He says that it took the team only “a couple of days” to port Open WebOS to the PC present in front of him.

The UI isn’t very smooth, but this is version 1.0 after all… Winston imagines various uses for this platform, like kiosk applications in hotels and apparently the OS is made to work on both phones and tablets, plus PCs, so it could become a future all in one solution for kiosk or customer service platforms.


Samsung Galaxy Tab Ban Reconsidered by Judges, Probably Lifted Soon

Posted On 00:26 by Unknown 0 comments

I’m sure you’re as puzzled as I am by the fact that it’s been a month since Apple won the trial against Samsung, but the Galaxy Tab 10.1 was found “innocent”, so to say. Even so, the tablet is still banned, which is not OK, considering the product doesn’t breach any intellectual property. It was only this week that a US appeals court ruled that a lower court should reconsider the ban.

The Galaxy Tab 10.1 has been banned for a while now, at Apple’s request. The injunction was started ahead of the trial between Apple and Samsung and although the Cupertino giant recorded a victory, they didn’t win on account of all devices they had listed. The jury found that Sammy doesn’t violate the patent for tablet design and the South Koreas instantly asked for the ban to be lifted. District Judge Lucy Koh said that she couldn’t do that, because Samsung had already appealed the final decision.

Koh can now reconsider the ban in question and honestly I think it’s a bit too late to worry about the Galaxy Tab 10.1. We’ve got the Galaxy Note 10.1 on the market, while older tablets are getting Android 4.0 ICS or even Jelly Bean, plus the Galaxy Note II is coming, so as long as they don’t ban those, Samsung has enough cash cows.


Apple CEO Tim Cook Officially Apologizes for Apple Maps

Posted On 00:14 by Unknown 0 comments

Everyone’s talking about the iPhone 5 and iOS 6.0 and not on nice terms… Apple Maps is very criticized by both users and experts and Google Maps is a regretted lack from the latest iOS. Tim Cook took the opportunity of the approaching weekend to address the issue and apologize for iOS Maps… Below you can read his full statement.

Among the issues people have found in Apple Maps are the flat points of interest, like the Eiffel Tower, completely flat, or the lack of POIs in some areas, lack of transit features, black/white areas that are uncharted and misplaced towns and POIs. Tom Tom already stated it’s not their fault, since they were working with Apple on this service, so it all fell on the Cupertino giant. What’s interesting is that Tim Cook’s online letter actually mentions alternatives to Apple Maps, stuff like Bing, Nokia’s solutions, Waze, even Google, so they’re fair at least.

The true accomplishments of Apple Maps are turn by turn directions and Flyover, those I agree with, but the rest feels unfinished. I wonder how long it will be till the first major update is rolled out for Maps… In the meantime here’s Cook’s letter:

“To our customers,

At Apple, we strive to make world-class products that deliver the best experience possible to our customers. With the launch of our new Maps last week, we fell short on this commitment. We are extremely sorry for the frustration this has caused our customers and we are doing everything we can to make Maps better.

We launched Maps initially with the first version of iOS. As time progressed, we wanted to provide our customers with even better Maps including features such as turn-by-turn directions, voice integration, Flyover and vector-based maps. In order to do this, we had to create a new version of Maps from the ground up.

There are already more than 100 million iOS devices using the new Apple Maps, with more and more joining us every day. In just over a week, iOS users with the new Maps have already searched for nearly half a billion locations. The more our customers use our Maps the better it will get and we greatly appreciate all of the feedback we have received from you.

While we’re improving Maps, you can try alternatives by downloading map apps from the App Store like Bing, MapQuest and Waze, or use Google or Nokia maps by going to their websites and creating an icon on your home screen to their web app.

Everything we do at Apple is aimed at making our products the best in the world. We know that you expect that from us, and we will keep working non-stop until Maps lives up to the same incredibly high standard.

Tim Cook
Apple’s CEO”


Saturday, 29 September 2012

HTC One X vs. Samsung Galaxy S III

Posted On 17:41 by Unknown 0 comments



Minecraft creator attacks Microsoft's Windows 8 plan

Posted On 17:14 by Unknown 0 comments



Minecraft creator Markus "Notch" Persson has become the latest developer to attack Microsoft's Windows 8 games strategy.

He claimed that the software firm risked ruining its gaming ecosystem.

His comments follow similar criticism from executives at the video games company Valve and publisher Activision Blizzard.
However, others in the industry said the new operating system could be beneficial.

Mr Persson revealed his views in two tweets.

"Got an email from Microsoft, wanting to help 'certify' minecraft for win 8. I told them to stop trying to ruin the PC as an open platform," he wrote.

"I'd rather have minecraft not run on win 8 at all than to play along. Maybe we can convince a few people not to switch to win 8 that way," he added in the second message.

The success of Minecraft - a game in which users use blocks to create their ennvironment - has made Mr Persson one of the sector's most closely watched players.

More than 7.5 million copies of the title have been sold, and earlier this year Mr Persson was singled out for a special award by Bafta (British Academy of Film and Television Arts), which described the 33-year-old as "an inspiration for all games developers".


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-19760977


Google’s Maps So Good. Thanks For The Citizens Corrections

Posted On 16:49 by Unknown 0 comments


 Google allows average citizens make corrections to Google’s maps as they find them.
Wow. Nothing makes you appreciate something like losing it.
Nobody ever raved about Google’s mapping app for phones until they saw how hard it was for Apple to come up with a rival. In my Times column today , I wrote about the challenges Apple has faced in replacing its iPhone GPS/mapping app, substituting its own data sources for Google’s. I noted that the new app is beautiful and will be really terrific someday — once it does a better job of incorporating all of its various data sources. 
In researching the story, I interviewed representatives from Apple and Google. At Google, I spoke with Manik Gupta, senior product manager for Google Maps, and Daniel Graf, director of Google Maps for Mobile.
What I realized is that mapping the world is a staggering, gigantic, vast, inconceivably huge and ambitious project. It represents years and years of hand-tuning and manual effort.
I was surprised to learn that, like Apple, Google began its efforts by licensing petabytes of data from outside geodata companies.
They include TomTom, the same company that Apple’s using. (The other big map vendor is NavTeq, which Nokia bought a few years ago; I guess that explains why Apple and Google aren’t using NavTeq’s data. Too bad — by all accounts, the map app on Nokia’s Windows Phone is pretty great; I’ll be trying it out shortly.)
But that’s just the basic data. “We start with licensed stuff, then expand and enhance it,” Mr. Gupta said. Google has supplemented it with years of additional data gathering, involving its Street View cars, satellite data and human labor.
And it shows. As of 2008, for example, onto those digital maps of the world Google had overlaid 13 million miles of turn-by-turn directions in 22 countries; today, it has 26 million miles of guidance in 187 countries.
“It’s fair to say that in the mapping world, you can’t just throw money at it and then you have it the next day. This takes time,” Mr. Gupta said. “It took a lot of time to get where we’re at.” He said that even now, Google is far from done; error reports still flow in by the thousands.
Many of them come from Google Map Maker , a Web site that is live in 200 countries (and just started in the United States) that lets average citizens make corrections to Google’s maps as they find them. You can, for example, draw a line to represent a new road.
Like Apple, Google also collects location and movement data (anonymously) from millions of smartphones as they’re driven around; from this information, Apple and Google can determine when, for example, a one-way street has been mislabeled in its data.
You may be familiar with Street View, a Google exclusive that lets you stand at a certain spot on the map and “look around.” You can see a photo of the address you seek, and use your mouse to turn right or left and actually move through the still photos. It’s an amazing way to see what it’s like to be at that spot.
Street View isn’t available for the entire world, but you’d be surprised at how many inhabited areas are covered: Google’s GPS- and camera-equipped Street View cars have, so far, driven five million miles through 3,000 cities in 40 countries.
What you may not realize, however, is that those photos are far more than just helpful references for you, the viewer. Google’s software analyzes what’s in those photos. Its image-recognition software can read the text on street signs, storefront signs, hotel names and so on. It can tell a major road from a minor one, a single-lane road from multilane and one-way streets from two-way streets. Street View, in other words, generates still more useful data for Google’s maps.
I asked Google why its satellite photos don’t seem to display the same jarring seams that are showing up on Apple’s — obvious borders between side-by-side tiles that were taken at different times of the year or in different weather.
“When you look at Google Earth,” I was told, “you can see that the globe is made from a mosaic of aerial and satellite photos, often taken in different lighting and weather. We license these photos from multiple providers, possibly the same ones that Apple uses; but we’ve had the time to come up with a smoothing algorithm. In January, we introduced a new way to render them, smooth them out, make them seamless. But by no means have we perfected this.”
On this call, Google pointed out a new feature that I hadn’t seen before: compass mode. On an Android phone, you can call up a location like Trafalgar Square in London. You hold the phone in front of you to see a Street View-like photo of the scene — and as you look left, right, up, down, or behind you, the view changes, as though you’re looking through a magic window at another place in the world. You can even use Compass mode to look around inside places — I tried Delfina, the San Francisco restaurant — to get a feel of the décor before you go there.
Can you imagine how powerful Compass mode will be once it covers most of the earth’s developed areas? It will give you a sort of instant teleportation, a way to travel without travel, a sense of a place without having to go there.
What I’ve learned from this deep dive into the making of map apps is that you can’t just license a bunch of data, bake at 350 degrees and come up with a useful tool. Gathering the data is only the starting point; from there, it takes years to reconcile it, correct it and make it useful. (This Atlantic article  offers a good look at the kind of hand-tuning that Google’s minions do constantly.)
By the way, let me be clear: I have no doubt that Apple’s Maps app will get there. We’ve seen this movie before — remember MobileMe? It, too, was very rough when it made its debut. Today, its successor, iCloud, is smooth and sensationally useful. Maps will be, too.
But I suspect that Apple has just realized the same thing I have: that we may live on a small blue planet, but digitally representing every road, building and point of interest is a task of almost unimaginable difficulty. Let’s be grateful that another major player has just joined the attempt.




http://pogue.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/09/27/what-makes-googles-maps-so-good/


Galaxy Note 2′s Multi-Window Feature is Impressive

Posted On 16:02 by Unknown 0 comments


The Galaxy Note 2 will arrive at a carrier near you by mid-November. We know this because Samsung announced that all of the major U.S. carriers will have it by then, plus they have a press event scheduled for October 24 to hopefully make dates official. As we inch closer to that date though, we are starting to learn more about the software customizations that have been made to make this possibly, Samsung’s most impressive smartphone to date.

The new version of Pop-up Play, and some of the added features in the gallery. was this new multi-window functionality.

You may recall a similar feature on the Galaxy Note 10.1, however, the multi-window feature on that tablet was incredibly limited. In fact, only 6 apps could take advantage of it. With this new version on the Note 2, it appears as if any app on your phone can work with it, but you can also resize the areas that you are using, and hot swap different apps between them.

To access this new feature, all you need to do is long press on the Back button and a semi-hidden menu will appear on the display. From there, you can use the S Pen to grab the menu, move it around until you find a preferred location, and then open it to decide which app you would like to use and in which space.

Samsung is quickly showing how far ahead of the competition they are when it comes to custom software that is actually useful.







Introducing GALAXY Note II Commercial Ad

Posted On 15:50 by Unknown 0 comments



iPhone 5 Unboxing

Posted On 14:12 by Unknown 0 comments

Wow. The iPhone 5 has left more than ripples in the smartphone's range.Here's an unboxing of iPhone 5.It looks majestic !!


Unreal Tournament bots appear more human than humans

Posted On 13:23 by Unknown 0 comments


Two programming teams have created intelligent virtual gamers—or "bots— that have not only beaten the Turing test, but managed to be appear more human than human gamers.

The UT^2 bot, programmed by a team from the University of Texas, and MirrorBot, programmed by Romanian computer scientist Mihai Polceanu, split a top prize of $7,000 (£4,300) at The 2K BotPrize—a contest that has been challenging programmers since 2008 to create game bots that appear to be as human as possible, playing like fallible human gamers rather than near-perfect computer AI.

In the competition, computer-controlled bots created by programming teams from all over the world face off alongside human players, who act as judges, in the virtual battle zone of Unreal Tournament 2004. Any combatant a judge meets which they believe to be human is tagged with a "judging gun." After several rounds of combat, the bot that has received the most human tags wins the contest.

While the human players managed to gain an average "humanness" rating of 40 per cent, the UT^2 Bot and Mirror Bot both achieved a rating of 52 percent. This is the first time since the contest has been run that a bot has achieved the target score of 50 percent "humanness."

"A great deal of the challenge is in defining what 'human-like' is, and then setting constraints upon the neural networks so that they evolve toward that behavior," University of Texas doctoral student Jacob Schrum told his department website.

"If we just set the goal as eliminating one's enemies, a bot will evolve toward having perfect aim, which is not very human-like. So we impose constraints on the bot's aim, such that rapid movements and long distances decrease accuracy. By evolving for good performance under such behavioural constraints, the bot's skill is optimised within human limitations, resulting in behaviour that is good but still human-like."

Fittingly, the completion of The 2K BotPrize's challenge comes 100 years after Alan Turing posited his Turning test. Now that two bots have successfully achieved a 50 percent humanness rating, the 2K BotPrize team hope to create a new challenge for bot programmers.


iOS6 Maps ‘the most beautiful, powerful mapping service ever’ What a joke

Posted On 12:51 by Unknown 0 comments

As noted by iDaily.de, Apple has not only begun recommending competing mapping services but it removed some superlatives from the Maps page.


Thursday, 27 September 2012

Google expands global reach with Nexus 7 launch in Japan

Posted On 23:54 by Unknown 0 comments

Eric Schmidt was present in Tokyo today to demo the Nexus 7 tablet to the Japanese audience, on the occasion of the local debut of the device. The slate is now available in the Play Store starting at 19,800 yen, which means about $254 for the 16 GB model. Google Play Books also launched in Japan with a decent collection of local content.

Schmidt is excited about the Japanese market, saying that it has the third highest number of Google Play installs in the world. Also, know that at 75% customers in Japan make more purchases on their devices than anyone else. Starting with October 2nd, the cheap quad core 7 inch slate will be available at big Japanese retailers like Bic Camera, Yodobashi Camera and Joshin. Google is expanding beyond its homeland and after the recent push in Europe, it’s now entering Asia.

This expansion is where Apple rules and Amazon doesn’t quite handle the situation, so Google has to match the Apple success this time. Japan is a very big market both for Play Books and the Google tablet. It has a large affluent population that’s difficult to conquer when it comes to ebooks. Amazon had plans to launch its Kindle products in Japan, but we’ve seen nothing so far. They may be fearing the local Kobo Touch, launched by Rakuten. However, you should know that Japan is not actually that fond of Google, since Yahoo Japan is the top spot search engine.


Disciplining the developer.

Posted On 21:28 by Unknown 0 comments

The popularity of Android development can be judged by the fact that it has even become any platform for airing one’s political views using the amusing launch of “Angry Imran” this coming year; this is a game inspired by the highly popular Angry Birds, through which players can use a electronic Imran Khan to knock down famous political leaders. The developer-friendly nature of Android ensures that both fresh graduates and encountered developers are quickly jumping about the bandwagon to develop for smartphones and tablets powered by the popular mobile OS. With over the hundred million Android devices available and thousands of Apps being launched daily, industry for such apps is certainly not going away anytime soon.

Search engines Pain

Android has both been lauded and criticized because of its App model, which allows programmers to quickly build and release new applications, in comparison for you to Apple’s extremely strict approval procedure. Yet at the same time this free-for-all has caused malicious applications to slip over the cracks and infect users’ smartphones, much to their misery. Just recently, Android smartphones got taken over and become a spam botnet which would logon to the users’ Yahoo accounts and deliver spam, unbeknownst to the consumer. Android users also contribute to the problem as they often attempt to download pirate version of apps (which are malicious in nature) to avoid paying for legitimate apps authorized by the developers. The long list of malicious applications which has plagued the Google Play iphone app store since its launch is definitely a major problem for Search engines. Although a service was introduced not too long ago by Google to scan industry place for malicious applications, the challenge still remains.

Recently, as one of the major steps towards cleaning up Google Play, Google has introduced a whole new set of rules for programmers, which it hopes will make a better environment for developing mobile apps and assistance in identifying and removing suspicious apps on the marketplace. Developers have a 30-day deadline to adhere to this policy, or else their app may become removed. So it’s clear that Google just isn't kidding around.

No more Backup Cats

One of the major issues in Google Play has been that of copycat apps, where apps bearing names/icons much like popular apps, like Angry Wild birds or Temple Runner, are downloaded by users unknowingly and end up infecting their devices. To halt this practice, Google has stated that developers should ensure that their app is not pretending being someone else’s, and not bear a name or icon which is identical to someone else’s. All the apps and icons that are currently available will be reviewed, and those obtained in violation will be swiftly taken out. This is a welcome step to clear out a problem caused by unethical developers who exploit gullible users. However it should be interesting to discover how Google decides which applications to keep regarding two very similar sounding apps produced by two developers trying to prove their legitimacy!

Spamming Apps any no-no

Excessive spam can drive even essentially the most patient of users over your edge, so Google has outlined several key policy changes on how Apps should behave:

No far more Apps sending ads disguised because system notifications. Google finally can make it clear that developers are to never use this tactic, which spoils the consumer experience with extremely irritating pop-ins. Moreover, users are to be informed when ads are going to make changes, to discourage those apps that love to make unwanted shortcuts, toolbars etc. The developer/company will be held to blame for apps which spam ads in violation on this policy.

No more attempting to improve an application’s ratings via duplicated ratings, and making users rate a credit application multiple times.

No more inaccurate product descriptions, which are built to make the app climb in the relevancy ladder in search effects.

No more apps whose sole purpose should be to advertise or drive traffic to some specific website.

No more apps sending SMS, emails or messages without explicitly informing the consumer of what content is becoming sent and who the receiver is. This is a welcome change to something which has been abused by malicious apps at users’ cost during the past.

Privacy and security friendly apps

It may seem like any no-brainer, but apps that decrease the security amount of the device, or introduce vulnerabilities will no longer be allowed. Included are “malicious scripts”, “phishing apps” or maybe apps that download information through outside Google Play. Developers thinking about launching apps that disclose user data with no their explicit permission may become banned as another welcome phase by Google towards enhancing the privacy facets of Google Play.

Payment Policies

Apps that accept process payment transactions will be required to use Google’s own payment program. This will apply to payments which can be carried out with in-app purchases instead of for goods outside the apps. Interestingly enough, developers are also instructed to never mislead users, so if a casino game requires a purchase for the consumer to finish it, this would have to be informed right from the start.

Google’s new policies are any welcome step towards making Google Play a mature marketplace and finally reducing the challenge of malicious and spam-heavy apps that unethical developers often overflow it with. With Google Play now boasting a nearly equal amount of apps as Apple’s App Retail store, this is an excellent time for Google to spell out exactly what is expected from developers if they really want their apps to remain available. Developers who took advantage of Google’s lax policies during the past should take heed of these changes and commence complying, before they find themselves getting booted out of the marketplace!


Wednesday, 26 September 2012

RIM stocks climb while surge throughout number of clients surprises.

Posted On 13:26 by Unknown 0 comments

Shares associated with Study Within Motions (TSX: RIM) ended up in advance 6-8 percent throughout evening buying and selling while traders reacted for the Cell phone maker's shock raise throughout client figures.

This Waterloo, Ont. -based business's investment increased 41 pence to help $6. 91 around the Toronto Stock exchange.

This shift better followed reviews via RIM's leader Thorsten Heins upon Mondy.

They explained to the particular crowd with a builder conference throughout Silicon Valley in which RIM is growing its individual starting to help concerning 80 zillion at the conclusion associated with its minute quarter.

Which is up via 81 zillion in the previous quarter.

RIM is usually planned to help record its second-quarter fiscal final results upon Thursday right after market near.



Silent Hunter Online previewed: Ubisoft goals to torpedo the F2P market place.

Posted On 02:19 by Unknown 0 comments

Whilst it may annoy some of you that Ubisoft are most often making ‘Online’ versions of a bunch of their major franchises (especially strategy-related ones), for Silent Hunter Online at the least it’s probably the smartest thing they can have done with that team. After the fourth title-that-shall-not-be-named, as well as an okay-but-not-as-good-as-three fifth instalment, there wasn’t really much Ubisoft could do using the series — but it’s a string oddly suited to the a lot more casual and ‘paced’ nature connected with free-to-play games.

That’s not to convey Silent Hunter Online is an informal game, not by any stretch on the imagination — it’s got every one of the core elements the original online games had, it’s just been stripped down and simplified for any fairly low-frills package. As usual, the setting is during World War II, and as usual (bar that random one time) you play because the Germans as you control your U-boats in an attempt to wrestle control of the high-seas from your Allies.

The main draw of SHO is the co-operative elements though – as being a solo player, you can command a ‘wolfpack’ of several submarines that will help you complete missions, but if you link up with other players, the wolfpack becomes a whole lot more dynamic and exciting since you work together in real-time that can help track down targets and torpedo them. When it comes to managing individual subs, you don’t have to are actually a closet Navy Officer either — use many of the tasks can be automated, including torpedo trajectories, or even simple such things as depth and movement. Most of these (bar one) may be accomplished by yourself as well though, if you want to get stuck in the realism of it all.
All of those other game is made up on the management elements — where you take care of the subs in your solo wolfpack, and the campaign itself. Your subs are a not at all hard affair – you need to ensure you’re fully supplied with ammunition and fuel, that all the actual compartments are repaired, that you have officers for the various stations, and so with. As you go long, you may also buy special ‘mods’ for certain aspects of the sub to improve the capabilities for the reason that area, and all of this is tied into the in-game economy (which includes micro transactions).

Employing a simple 2D interface, SHO presents a fully dynamic campaign that may represent the ebb and flow of warfare during this period period. There will be specific objectives for you to destroy, which will require one to go a certain area as well as hunt, and as you start racking up kills the Axis will gain dominance over a place, and then you can move on to another area. You ought to be careful though, as the Allies will progressively reclaim dominance over zones in the event players aren’t running missions inside them, and if you’re on a later mission but one of the earlier ones gets ‘recaptured’, it makes things in the later mission that much harder available for you.




Assassin’s Creed III PC specs revealed, DRM not included

Posted On 02:17 by Unknown 0 comments

The system requirements for Assassin’s Creed III have been revealed, over at Ubisoft’s Customer Support page. These are the minimum specs required to run the game properl, they claim, adding that laptop versions of these cards may work but are not supported — “These chipsets are the only ones that will run this game.”
And remember, Ubisoft doesn’t use always-on DRM anymore! Click through to check them out.
Supported OS: Windows Vista (SP2) / Windows 7 (SP1) / Windows 8
Processor: 2.66 GHz Intel Core2 Duo E6700 or 3.00 GHz AMD Athlon 64 X2 6000+ or better recommended
RAM: 2 GB (4 GB recommended)
Video Card: 512 MB DirectX 9.0c-compliant with Shader Model 4.0 or higher (see supported list)*
Sound Card: DirectX 9.0c-compliant (5.1 surround sound recommended)
DVD-ROM: Dual-layer drive
Hard Drive Space: 17 GB
Peripherals Supported: Windows-compatible keyboard, mouse, optional controller (Xbox 360 Controller for Windows recommended)
Multiplayer: 256 kbps or faster broadband connection
Supported Video Cards at Time of Release:
AMD Radeon HD 3870 / 4000 / 5000 / 6000 / 7000 series or better
NVIDIA GeForce 8600 GT / 9 / 100 / 200 / 300 / 400 / 500 / 600 series or better


What you have to know about BlackBerry 10.

Posted On 01:44 by Unknown 0 comments


Apple and Google have lengthy since muscled aside Research in Motion at the top of the smartphone market, but the company has hopes of remaining in the game—or at least not necessarily losing more ground to companies Microsoft and others—with its Blackberry 10 platform. On Tuesday, Research in Motion gave developers a in-depth look at its kept up to date OS. BlackBerry 10 is timetabled to roll out early following year, but RIM used its conference to show off a number of the features currently in development.

We can offer you a taste of what RIM revealed at BlackBerry Jam and gives a better idea of things to expect from BB10 (with the caveat that a lot could change between now and the operating system’s release date).

Is this the very first we’ve seen of BlackBerry 10?

No. RIM offered a sneak peak from the new platform back in May possibly. Of course, back then, the organization was planning on launching BlackBerry 10 smartphones through the end of 2012. Those options have changed.

So when is BB10 coming out exactly?

In early 2013, a delay announced by RIM in June. There’s no exact date with the 2013 release, but the nice thing about it is that CEO Thorsten Heins says the update is on the right track and “just a few brief months away. ”

So what’s diverse about BB10?

The QWERTY keyboard makes room for the touch interface with apps outlined in a grid in Blackberry 10.

RIM’s new operating process completely eliminates the physical QWERTY keyboard that made BlackBerry famous. (Remember usb cramps, anyone? ) BB10 has a touch-screen keyboard with apps outlined in a grid, as is standard with smartphones nowadays. There’s also an updated cell phone browser that promises more HTML5 adeptness.

What about apps?

You can also jump between the two between apps now—a feature that your company calls Flow—as you can easily in iOS. BB10 will feature an App World store with its own app ecosystem. Developers is able to easily port their Android apps in the BB10 store, or so RIM may be telling app makers.

BlackBerry will embrace social networking integration with Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare, and LinkedIn apps. A new Contacts app syncs with your social networks.

Will I need to buy a new BlackBerry for getting BB10?

It’s still unclear which devices will support the brand new operating system. RIM unveiled a whole new BlackBerry 10-enabled device on Tuesday—the catchily-named Blackberry Dev Alpha B—but that’s supposed solely for developers. The Dev Alpha B device features a 1280 x 768 display using a 4. 2-inch screen, for those looking for clues in regards to what a BB10-capable device might resemble.

From what we’ve heard with BlackBerry Jam this week, users with older BlackBerry gadgets might not be able to upgrade their BB7 units to BB10.

So what comes about to my BlackBerry 7 cell phone?

RIM said it won’t stop supporting BlackBerry 7 and this the company still has an extremely sizable team dedicated to preserving that OS. Even when BB10 roll-outs, BB7 devices will still be around.

BlackBerry 10 puts an App World store close to your device.

What carriers may have BB10?

Carrier testing begins next month. No word yet on which usually carriers will support BB10.

I use BlackBerry for business—what does BB10 have in my opinion?

BlackBerry rose to smartphone prominence by catering to enterprise clients, a market the company is constantly on the target with BB10. A element called BlackBerry Balance, for instance, keeps personal apps and information separate from work information. It’s a particular attempt to capitalize on the Bring Your own personal Device (BYOD) trend where people use their personal smartphone regarding work.

As we noted inside our preview of BlackBerry 10, BlackBerry’s messaging system gets a major upgrade with a universal email called the BlackBerry Hub. From the hub, you have access for you to e-mails, texts, BBMs and web 2 . 0 notifications in one centralized location.

The virtual keyboard supports auto-complete inside multiple languages, which means it is possible to type a sentence in English but will include a Japanese word, and the auto-complete function will finish the term just as it would inside English.

I’m not a businessperson—would My partner and i still want a BlackBerry with BB10?

The jury is even now out, but RIM did unveil some more fun features, like BlackBerry Video games. Like iOS’s Game Center, the gaming service may have leader boards and a close friends list, but is missing things such as achievements or random matchmaking.

All round, BlackBerry continues to be any business-centric smartphone, at least from what we’ve seen from BB10 up to now.

Is that it?

That’s all RIM is speaking about for now. But the company has assured “more surprises” between now and the launch of BlackBerry 10 beginning next year.




Operator says 4G will revolutionise mobile technologies.

Posted On 01:37 by Unknown 0 comments

The actual advent of 4G will revolutionise the way companies in Northern Ireland work with mobile communications, according to the operator which won the race to create the technology to these coast line.

Martin Stiven, vice president of Business-to-Business at EE, said rural businesses together with small and medium sized enterprises will benefit most on the superfast connections which 4G provides, particularly those with employees geographically divided or those using large data files.

"We are giving SMEs the tools to be more flexible, to stay close to their own customers and to do stuff will make them money, " he said within the interview with the Belfast Telegraph. "If you witness 4G it is going to blow your mind. "

The technology in 4G is claimed to supply internet browsing speeds on mobile phones which are five times more quickly and, at an average of 40 megabytes, will be more quickly than many broadband systems. It is equally expected to reach more rural areas than 3G.

Mr Stiven was speaking third , month's announcement that Belfast will probably be one of 16 cities where EE, formerly Everything Everywhere and online resources Orange and T-Mobile, will roll out 4G technology "before Christmas".

It really is already being trialled in Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff and Birmingham along with the company plans to roll this service out to 70% with the UK population by the stop of 2013 and 98% with the end of 2014. This involves upgrading telephone masts to be able to use the same frequency as currently utilised by terrestrial television.

EE's decision to get 4G gives it a headstart with other mobile companies who are likely to take at least six several weeks to implement similar technology, in accordance with Mr Stiven.

"We've earmarked £1. 2bn for network infrastructure as well as taken the strategic decisions to have on the front foot, " he said. "The others will have to wait until the next auction - a minimum of six months. "

The government holds spectrum auctions periodically to allow for companies to buy the proper rights to transmit signals over unique bands.

But because it doesn't would like to show its hand too shortly, EE won't reveal how much 4G will set you back.

£1. 2bn

Amount which EE has earmarked for its 4G network infrastructure