A blog about daily techfeeds and stunning facts

Saturday, 15 February 2014

Ternd of Curved TVs

                  Trend of Curved TVs



Gone are the days of flateern screens. These days the Curved TVs have attained a burning fame. Curved TV is one of the greatest gadget made by humanmind. A stiff competition is there among worldwide companies for the production of curved TVs. Some of the well known companies like Samsung, LG are going to launch thier curved TVs in market.
Here is the description of some of the paricular curved TVs of particular companies:


TV by SAMSUNG:                                      

 New Ultra High Definition (UHD) Curved Television, with unique features that give the consumer the best in quality, sound, sharpness and better images, has been introduced by Samsung Electronics at its 2014 Forum in Malaga, Spain.
It is part of Samsung's over 300 product portfolios and also part of its 20 new innovations being introduced to the consumer within the next three months.
The other products include refrigerators, washing machines, air conditioners, micro-wave ovens, printers and cameras.
The IT Business Manager for Samsung Electronics West Africa, Mr Charlie Lee, told the Daily Graphic in Malaga, Spain, that the new UHD Curved Television played a multi-functional role at the same time.
He said the product had been designed in such a way that one could watch various programmes at the same time and record others as well and get that real feeling as though one was at that programme they recorded.

Features :   

1. He said the television had that unique feature of depth enhancer, ultimate colour, detail and                   contrast, upscaling, true detail, brightness, sharper images and dimming.
2. The new television also supports vivid sound and pictures, quick screen capture and also has a           convinient power source usage for the African continent.
3. He noted that its newly designed refrigerator, which has the safety and comfort of children in mind,     as well as convenience and durability, had been designed to store foods neatly, orderly and nicely.   4. The arrangement is such that one can easily separate old food items from new ones and have their       food looking and tasting fresh.

According to Mr. Lee one of the fastest growing home appliance brands, the washing machine, had also been designed to suit the African culture, where we still like to hand-wash certain items.
He also introduced the new cameras and entertainment system, in which the cameras provide such sharp and clear images and the whole system provides the new and needed unique appliance for relaxation and comfort.





Friday, 14 February 2014

 U.S. Army could test its Iron Man Suit by June


It took Tony Stark decades and countless prototypes to get his Iron Man suit to its current level of awesomeness, and we're guessing the U.S. military's own effort to build super-suits for its soldiers will travel a similar path. That said, U.S. Navy Admiral William McRaven has just recently dropped a bit of a metaphorical bombshell: the U.S. will begin testing its Iron Man suits as early as June. That's a pretty good timeline, even by Tony Stark's standards.We first reported on the military's effort to create their own Iron Man suits last October. A June delivery would put the timeline for these "Mark I" suits at under a year. Now, to be fair, we really are talking about something akin to the very first Iron Man suit Tony Stark ever made here. In fact, the June delivery date is actually for a handful of non-powered units to be used for preliminary testing. That likely means durability and ease-of-movement type of stuff.One reason that these first few Iron Man suits, technically termed TALOS (short for Tactical Assault Light Operator Suit), is that the U.S. military has still got hordes of partners drafting up designs for the suits. In addition to having 56 corporations, 16 government agencies, 13 universities and 10 national laboratories signed on to help with the TALOS project, the U.S. Special Operations Command also plans to hold a sort of "Monster Garage" event where everyone from your local mechanic to that weirdo with his own weapons forge out in the hills will be invited to develop components for the suit. After all this collaboration, as well as numerous rounds of testing, TALOS will likely see its first battlefield by August of 2018. By then, you can rest assured that this Iron Man suit will be anything but a prototype.


For a video you can vissit the link below :


http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=bPjatYDHJKo

Paper Tablet

PAPER TABLET : A REVOLTION TO THE WORLD OF TECHNOLOGY

 


Looking into our crystal ball, we'd say the future of computing is looking bendy. Billed as the world's first "paper tablet PC," PaperTab looks to combine the tangibility of paper with the speed and convenience of digital.
PaperTab is the brainchild of Queen's University's Human Media Lab, Plastic Logic and Intel Labs. It's a flexible "high-resolution 10.7-inch" touchscreen display (no details on resolution) and is powered by an Intel Core i5 processor (not shown in any photos).
As we already alluded to earlier, the PaperTab is a new spin on working with multiple documents.
The key difference between the PaperTab and an iPad is that each display is essentially one app. By limiting a single app to each PaperTab, users can do things like share PDFs just by tapping two tablets together, fast-forward during a video by bending the display, and opening emails by touching two displays together.
Multiple PaperTabs can also be combined to create expanded displays and drag-and-drop functionality between tablets.
PaperTabs are also proximity-smart. According to Human Media Lab's website, each PaperTab knows its location relative to other PaperTabs. If a PaperTab is held, it will display a fullscreen app window. If it's placed on a table, but still within reach of the user, it'll show a thumbnail of a document. And if the PaperTab is placed outside of reaching distance, it'll only display icons.
The "tablet" isn't quite wireless yet, as it looks to require power from a computer that is presumably under the desk. However, as we move towards a future of "natural computing," the PaperTab could be a concept technology that'll finally the old timers to finally join the digital revolution.

Wednesday, 12 February 2014

Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 specs leaked

Samsung Galxy Tab 4 range's specifications leaked







Samsung is readying quite a few launches in February, not only at Unpacked 5, but it seems at Mobile World Congress too. It is widely expected that the company will unveil theGalaxy S5 at Unpacked 5, and it may follow up the big launch with the debut of its mid-range Galaxy Tab series at MWC 2014. And all the specifications of the upcoming tablets have already leaked online.
The information comes courtesy technology website MySamsungPhones, which says that all three tablets will be launched in Wi-Fi-only, Wi-Fi + 3G and Wi-Fi + 4G variants.
Galaxy Tab 4 8.0, codenamed Millet, will have an 8-inch screen with 1280x800p resolution. It will run on Android 4.4 (KitKat) and feature 16GB internal storage and 64GB microSD card. The model will have 1.2GHz quad-core processor; the 3G model will have 1GB RAM and 4G variant will have 1.5GB RAM. On the back, it will have a 3MP camera, and a 1.3MP camera will be present in front. Powered by a 6,800mAh battery, this tablet will have connectivity options like Bluetooth 4.0 and microUSB.
Samsung's Galaxy Tab 4 7.0 will have a 7-inch display (1280x800p), 1.2GHz quad-core processor and Android 4.4 (KitKat) operating system. Codenamed Degas, this tablet has 8GB internal storage, 64GB microSD card support, 1GB RAM, 3MP rear camera, 1.3MP front camera and 4,450mAh battery. Connectivity suite of the model includes Bluetooth 4.0 and microUSB.


                        


The biggest model in the series, Galaxy Tab 4 10.1 features a 10.1-inch screen with 1280x800p resolution. Codenamed Matisse, the tablet is powered by a 1.2GHz quad-core processor, 1.5GB RAM, Android 4.4 (KitKat) operating system and 8MP rear camera. Other specifications include 16GB onboard storage, 64GB microSD expansion, 2MP front camera, 6,800mAh battery, Bluetooth 4.0 and microUSB 3.0.
Samsung's Galaxy Tab 4 range of tablets will replace the currently available Galaxy Tab 4 series in the company's portfolio.
(The above information has been taken from Times Of India , we dont gurantee it for 100% correct)

OCULUS RIFT

Oculus Rift - The Next "MOST WANTED"?



There's been lot of buzz around the Oculus Rift, one of many exciting projects that Kickstarter brought to the world’s attention. It's a gaming virtual reality headset and there have been plenty of those in the past, so what makes the Oculus Rift so special? We are probably facing a revolution in gaming and gaming-like experiences. Oculus Rift is probably just the beginning. The question is whether you want the red or the blue pill, because once you've swallowed, there will be no going back.










The Oculus Rift doesn't just put a screen in front of your eyes like the Zeiss Cinemizer. That's good for watching movies, but it's only a little more immersive than a monitor and headset when you start playing games, even with motion tracking enabled. The Rift takes over your whole field of vision. Never before has there been such immersion in gaming worlds, not even using the biggest 4K TV and best surround sound system.
When we tried one of the first Oculus Rift prototypes we were initially impressed with the involvement, but the low-resolution of the screens dispelled the illusion somewhat, something the new version of the Rift attempts to solve with its full-HD specs.
I tried the HD version of the Oculus Rift with Half-Life 2 and Surgeon Simulator, a bonkers take on the multitude of uber-serious sims, up for a quick go of Garbage Truck Simulator anyone?
Surgeon Simulator puts you in a first person view where you control a pair of disembodied arms and hands and attempt to conduct ham-fisted transplants. It’s available on Steam for £6.99 and ensures plenty of hilarity.



Surgeon Simulator wasn't made for the Oculus Rift, but it might as well have been. The cartoonish graphics and first person mode is perfectly suited to it. Your arms move in front of you as you reach and grasp for life-saving tools. Turn to your left and your entire field of vision shifts so you can stare at your table of surgical implements while still keeping an eye on your victim, sorry patient, using your peripheral vision.
It’s all feels so natural and within seconds you’ll be looking left and right, up and down as if you’ve been using the Oculus Rift for years.

Importantly the quality of the all-encompassing image is great – bright, vivid and sharp.

The motion can be a little disorienting, particularly on the Zero-G space level of Surgeon I was playing. The good thing is that I didn’t feel queasy at any point, as some users have. Rather the biggest disorientation occurred when removing the headset and finding I had turned on my seat by about 180 degrees, while chasing a floating bone-saw, without realising it. It took a couple of seconds to readjust to the sights and sounds of the real world.

Half-life 2 was an altogether different proposition. It’s been a good fewyears since I played the classic first-person shooter and there was a further complication as I was hooked up not just to the Oculus Rift but also to the Virtuix Omni, a contraption that makes your legs power your in-game avatar.



It was by far the most absorbing gaming experiences I’ve ever had, much more so than even the best driving simulators. Looking left and right for the spider-like Antlions jumping out of the sand caused a sweaty brow and a feeling of anxiety much higher than playing behind the safety of a monitorand mouse/keyboard combo. Turning your head is much slower than flicking the mouse so you feel truly exposed from the sides, and even more so from behind. It took several minutes (and a few embarrasing deaths) before I got into the swing of things and was able to use the Oculus as an aiming tool. Once I had I was despatching the pesky aliens with ease.

The news isn’t all good for the Oculus Rift. It’s is a bulky product and, while as much weight as possible has been shaved off, it weighs close to 400g. The weight is well distributed using light straps and you won’t notice if you’re having a quick blast. Leave it on for half an hour or so and you’ll feel it though. Thankfully you won’t pay a blind bit of notice while playing. It’s so immersive that you won’t notice that your neck is getting tired or your brow is sweating until you’re finished and have taken it off.
It's unlikey you'll be able to put in the gaming hours with the Oculus Rift that you would in front of a conventional telly, it's just too much of a sensory overload. However it's not about quantity, it's about quality and the Rift provides an experience like no other and at $300 it's also not too expensive either.
Like the Wiimote before it the Oculus Rift is a truly exciting gaming innovation. However the Wiimote only helps provide the illusion of immersion, the Rift gathers you up and wraps you into the game-world like never before.

What also bodes well is the level of support it’s getting from game developers. A Rift that’s only compatible with a couple of games will be a passing fad, but with a constant stream of developers adding their support it looks like it will have a long life ahead of it.

It’s an understatement to say that we look forward to testing it the final product fully in the future.

Tuesday, 11 February 2014


Top PC Games of 2013




Tomb Raider




Vulnerability and survival are the watchwords for this reinvention of the Tomb Raider series, which finds a young and unworldly Lara Croft shipwrecked on an island - a far cry from the backflipping, dual-wielding daredevil treasure-seeker who murdered her way through polygonal archeological hoards during the mid-nineties. Crystal Dynamics are certainly brave in taking this iconic character in such a dark, mature direction - but will the cost to our heroine’s empowerment prove too great a price to pay?


Starforge



Minecraft with guns, realistic graphics, and both ground and low-orbit construction. Interested? Starforge is a ridiculously ambitious crowd-funded indie project that's already come a remarkably long way. You deform terrain and build a fortress to protect yourself from aliens, and when all else fails, use a shotgun to blast them into pieces. If the small team can make those weapons feel nice to fire, it'll be a winner.



Fortnite




Perhaps keen to prove that there’s more to Unreal Engine 4 than high-definition beefcakes gunning down space goblins in the destroyed beauty of a future city, Epic Games’ first proof of their new technology will be the cartoonish tower defence game, Fortnite. The clean, chirpy visuals belie technological innovation, however: UE4 will allow players huge freedom in the way they construct their anti-zombie fortifications, editing each wall with a 3x3 grid. The plan is that the game will have a long-tail, with many post-release updates, eventually allowing players to construct Rube Goldberg-style machines of death.



Remember Me


“We’ll always have Paris,” as the saying goes - not so much in the Neo-Paris of 2084, when memories can be erased or altered by Memory Hunters. You play as one such mnemonic saboteur, called Nilin, herself rendered amnesiac by agents of the oppressive Parisien regime. Third person acrobatics and assassinations ensue as you try to piece together the conspiracy, and featuring the world’s most complicated sounding combat system. You also get to wreck men’s minds by jumping into their memory and replaying events to reconfigure their recollection. Convince someone they killed their girlfriend during an argument, for instance, and you may just drive them to suicide. How lovely.



Lost Planet 3



Previous instalments in this thirdperson shooter series have been an intriguing but not always comfortable mix of Gears of War and Shadow of the Colossus, with players cooperatively slaying giant beasts and hordes of future-pirates on the world of EDN 3 - in the first instance a bleak ball of ice, thawing to a steaming jungle in its sequel. This game promises to be a prequel, so we can assume a few stiff breezes and frosty mornings. It also promises to be more narrative-led - which is worrying given the entirely charmless fiction of previous games. More worrisome still is the fact that the original developers aren’t on board, replaced by Spark Unlimited, responsible for crimping off the reeking digi-turd which was Turning Point: Fall of Liberty. Brr.


Dead Space 3



The sudden appearance of a co-op mode in this venerable space-horror franchise may sound like the marketing department got a little trigger happy with the back-of-box checklist, but there are reasons to be optimistic. Firstly, didn’t we all the say the same gloomy things about Mass Effect 3’s excellent multiplayer? Secondly, Dead Space already showed it could deliver terror to a twosome in its (actually terrific, sadly undersold) Wii light-gun game. What’s more, the game’s roots have hardly been forgotten: it's still perfectly possible to play the game on your tod. This one promises to add themes of insanity and perception to the traditional jump-scares and body-horror.



DmC: Devil May Cry


There were wails of anguish in console-land when this reboot of beloved demon-bashing combo-brawler Devil May Cry was first announced. But if the word from those with review code is good - and so far the mutterings are most auspicious indeed - then few complaints will survive the game’s release. It seems that British devs Ninja Theory may have the moves to make even Bayonetta blush. The one worry is how well it’ll port to PC, a duty outsourced to Polish team QLOC - but a promised 60 FPS, with no maximum limit, is a rather good start.

Retrovirus


A shooter with six-axes of freedom, Retrovirus matches the zippy pace of FPS games of yore with the stomach-spinning spatial freedom of disorienting shooter classic, Descent. As an agent of the resident anti-virus program, you must defend a computer system from an infectious onslaught with a slew of physics-enhanced weaponry like gravity wells and chain reactions.

Monday, 30 December 2013

NEW PHONES MIGHT RELEASE FOLLOWING YEAR



Apple iPhone 6



Apple iPhone 6 is a smartphone to be developed by Apple Inc. It will be successor of iPhone 5S and iPhone 5C. It will run on iOS 8.0 version. It is probably to release next year.



Specifications


CPU  :  Apple A8 quad core processor 
Internal Storage : 32/64/128 GB
OS : Apple iOS 8.0
Primary Camera : 12 Mp
Secondary Camera : Yes






Disclaimer : Data on this page is for reference only. We do not ensure that it is 100% correct.
Sources : behance.net





Samsung Galaxy SV




Samsung Galaxy SV the successor of Galaxy S IV and is rumored to come with 4 GB RAM. It is also rumored that it has 16 Mp camera. It would have 5.2 inch screen and in-built storage of 32/36/128 GB.





Specifications

CPU : 2 Ghz octa Core Processor
RAM : 4 Gb
Internal Storage : 32/36/128 GB
Screen Size : 5.2 Inch
Operating System : Android 4.4 KitKat
Battery Type : Li-Po 3200 mAh battery
Primary Camera : 16.0 Mp
Secondary Camera : 5.0 Mp
Available Colors : Black, White


Disclaimer : Data on this page is for reference only. We do not ensure that it is 100% correct.

post you may like

post you may like