Wednesday, 29 February 2012

BlockBerry 9500: cloning Blackberry Storm with Obama as a model

This is the cloning BlackBerry Storm (9500), which is quite impressive and even using President Obama as of the ad model (although we do not believe Obama has to give permission or not). phone cloning is the name given BlockBerry 9500 made by the Chinese company, Haff-Com. Even in the brochure there is a slogan, “Obama have a Blackberry, I have a BlockBerry”. For specifications BlockBerry 9500 using Windows Mobile 6.1 with 460 MHz processor, 3.2 inch touch screen, GPS and Wi-Fi.,

Saturday, 25 February 2012

The Biggest iPhone 4S Contenders


The iPhone 4S has rumbled the slightly complacent Android phone ascendency with its release and its huge number of innovations. So, who are the devices main challengers in the world of mobile phone deals?
Samsung Galaxy SII
Well the Samsung has had its own way for a while now .The device is a dual core one with all the latest modifications one could wish for a great operating system and a number of innovative tech leaps of its own to push the original iPhone 4S well into second place. Samsung will hope to be the main contender for the iPhone 4S for a while yet. However, the iPhone 4S’s number of innovations have placed it firmly to a silver position.

Monday, 20 February 2012

Outside all the walled gardens is the mobile web


Everyone with an iPhone knows what an app is. They know what the app store is, and they know how to get new apps onto their phone. The app store model has been a remarkable success, with over one billion app downloads per month as of October 2011. But despite this, there are echoes of the walled gardens of the Internet in the 1990s, with companies such as AOL controlling exactly what content users could access. These walled gardens eventually came down when faced with competition from a more open web, and companies that didn’t adapt their business model suffered. Parallels with the current app store model are glaring, and have led some to argue that the app store model is just a fad, a blip in the progress of the open web.
The mobile web, then and now
Most iPhone users, and indeed Android and other smartphone users, probably don’t know that the mobile web existed before the iPhone’s debut in 2007. But it did. WAP, WML and iMode were some of the buzzwords of the day. It didn’t look much the way it does today, but it’s been around since the late 1990s.
The fact that the mobile web has taken a back seat is a testament to what a great job Apple did with iOS and the app store. The arrival of the iPhone in 2007 redefined how people interacted with their phones. Today, however, the web has all but caught up again. We need only look to some examples of the kinds of web apps that already exist today to see the web is poised to make its comeback. Just compare the native (app) and web versions of the Google’s Map application. Not only is it possible for the web version to sport a similar UI to the native version, but they also offer very similar location-aware functionality.