Android phones wallpaper resolution Note

Android smartphone sales this year will reach 461 million units. Of these, one-third of the Android smartphone sales in China, which makes China become the world’s largest Android phone market. Data surprising, one would think that the United States is the largest market, but it is only ranked second, accounting for 11% of the sales of Android devices this year. This is a bad news for Apple, it is in China’s mobile phone market share of only 5%. Windows Phone in China, only 1% of the share.

However, Apple is still in China is successful. Last week Apple launched iPhone 5, three days to sell 200 million units. Looking to the future, Android’s share will continue to grow, although the future OS may share peaked. Most of our people are now using Android smartphone, but you will beautify your phone? Why can not Android phone with screen resolution size wallpaper? Android phone wallpaper best resolution is the number?

Android phone wallpaper resolution is not equal to the Android phone screen resolution, a lot of mobile phones, including the iPhone, Wallpaper resolution the = phone screen resolution (or the proportion of the resolution). Android phone has its own set of innovative wallpaper, cell phone wallpaper resolution phone screen’s resolution is not equal. Android phone wallpaper Unlike the iPhone, as, regardless of switching where a desktop are the same wallpaper. Android phone wallpaper display, allows you to switch to a different desktop, a desktop will display part of the wallpaper. When you switch to the far right of the desktop all the way from the leftmost desktop, complete a wallpaper can finish it.

Android phone with a 3.2-inch screen resolution of 320 × 240, corresponding wallpaper resolution: 480×320.
Android phone with a 3.2-inch screen resolution of 480 × 320, corresponding wallpaper resolution: 640×480.
Android phone with a 3.5-inch screen resolution of 800 × 480, corresponding wallpaper resolution: 960×800.

If you do not want to be too much trouble, the direct use of these standard resolution of Figure do Android phones wallpaper, do a simple cutting can. Android phone wallpaper function done very humane, users do not need to find a specific resolution of the wallpaper can be crop as part of a Wallpaper Android phone wallpaper.

A Shape-Shifting Smartphone Touch Screen

Tactus Technology, a startup in Fremont, California, is prototyping touch-screen hardware with buttons that emerge when you need the feel of a physical keyboard and disappear when you don’t. The approach, in which a fluid-filled plastic panel and cylindrical fluid reservoir replace the usual top layer of glass, is among a crop of emerging technologies aimed at adding tactile feedback to make screens feel like old-fashioned keyboards.

Touch screens are ubiquitous: in 2012, 1.2 billion were made for smartphones and 130 million for tablets, and they’re showing up in everything from game consoles to car navigation interfaces. But typing on them can be difficult. Tactus is trying to solve that problem. The company’s cofounder and chief technology officer, Micah Yairi, helped create a multi-layered panel that contains microchannels filled with a proprietary oil. When signaled by, say, a person launching a text-messaging app, an actuator pumps additional fluid into the channels, and buttons rise up from an elastomeric cover. The user then depresses the button slightly to trigger the touch screen and enter the letter or number. When typing is done, the panel reverts to a flat screen for finger-swiping within one second.

Tactus isn’t the only company recognizing a need for screens to offer tactile or so-called haptic feedback. Many phones already have rudimentary versions; tapping a certain button makes the whole phone buzz. Emerging designs include piezoelectric actuators that make the vibrations more localized. (Apple recently filed a patent on such technology.) And other companies, including Disney and a startup called Senseg, are using electrodes to issue minuscule shocks to your finger, simulating a rough texture.

Tactus’s approach, however, is the only one that allows users to orient their finger on the screen before actually depressing the key, or to rest their fingers on buttons without triggering them. Tactus is working to improve the panel’s appearance and create custom demonstrations for equipment manufacturers. One partner collaborating on prototypes is Touch Revolution, a division of the Taiwanese company TPK, one of the world’s largest touch-screen manufacturers.

Button geometries can be customized during the manufacturing process. In a? tablet or smartphone, software would probably change touch–sensitive areas of the display on the fly so that they’d align precisely with button shapes. This would prevent accidental keystrokes when fingers touch areas between raised buttons.

Tactus CEO and cofounder Craig Ciesla, who raised $6 million last year in venture investments, expects products to reach market in late 2013. “It’s really a design tool to give to manufacturers,” he says.

HTC 8S Windows Phone out now, far cheaper than Nokia 820

If you’re looking for a cheaper way to hook up with Windows Phone 8 and its cheery live-tile lifestyle than Nokia’s pricey Lumias, HTC is here to help.

The HTC 8S — or Windows Phone 8S by HTC to give its full perfume-inspired name — is out now for £180 (plus top-up) on pay as you go from Three, and on pre-order from Expansys at £240 SIM-free.

That’s at least £150 less than the most comparable Nokia, the £360 Lumia 820. We haven’t reviewed the 8S yet, so I can’t say exactly how they stack up, but let’s have a look at what you get on paper.

The 8S has a slightly smaller screen than the 820 — 4 inches versus 4.3 inches — but the resolution is exactly the same, 480×800 pixels. That’s not fantastic (the 4.7-inch Nexus 4, only £20 more, has 768×1,280 pixels) but it does mean the 8S has a few more pixels per inch than the 820, so in theory it’ll be slightly sharper. The 820 has 217 pixels per inch, whereas the 8S has 233 (the Nexus 4 has a staggering 317).

Leaving the Android-toting Nexus 4 to one side, the 8S lacks Nokia’s exclusive apps and services. These are Nokia Drive, a turn-by-turn sat-nav app; Nokia CityLens, which overlays useful local information on your camera display; and Nokia Music, which streams tunes for free. All are well made and valuable, and make up somewhat for the lack of great apps on Windows Marketplace, but none are indispensable.

The real difference between the two phones is invisible: the components inside. The 820 has significantly more powerful chips, such as a 1.5GHz dual-core processor and 1GB of RAM, compared to the 8S’s slower 1GHz chip and pathetic 512MB of RAM.

Whether you’ll notice any difference is hard to say without using the 8S extensively and running benchmarks. But Windows Phone’s transitions — the animations that move you from one screen to the next — run at a fixed pace. In theory, you’ll only notice performance on games and other testing apps, of which there are few in the Marketplace right now.

Elsewhere, both take microSD cards to expand your storage up to 64GB. The Nokia’s 8-megapixel camera trounces the HTC’s 5-megapixel effort on paper at least, and I wouldn’t be surprised for the difference to be marked in their photos. We found the 820′s camera very good for what you’re paying.adornos navidad

Nokia Lumia 620 reviews

Fans of the Android platform have long had access to more affordable handsets that are ideal for those on more of a budget, but many of these are still packed with some great specifications for the price. Nokia is currently pushing its presence on the new Windows smartphone 8 platform that it hopes will allow it to regain some market share it has lost in recent times, and we now have news of the colourful Nokia Lumia 620 WP8 budget priced handset.

The Finnish company has just announced its third Lumia Windows Phone 8 handset that will line up below the Lumia 920 and Lumia 820, and the new Lumia 620 is set to be released early next year. The handset continues the trend of previous Lumia offerings in colourful designs from seven removable rear panels, and according to Nokia the manufacturing process allows for more brightness along with a little texture.

So the handset will offer consumers a 3.8-inch display with a resolution of 400 x 800 that is powered by a dual core Snapdragon S4 Plus processor clocked at 1GHz, which is coupled with 512MB of RAM. What will please many potential customers is that the 8GB of built in storage can be expanded further via a microSD card up to 64GB, and owners will also get 7GB of SkyDrive cloud storage space as well.

Camera wise the handset has a five megapixel rear shooter with LED flash along with a front facing VGA unit, and Nokia has added Smart Shoot and Cinemagraph features with the latter allowing users to animate still photos. You also will get the Nokia Music, Nokia Drive, and Nokia Music pre-installed to the device.

Other features include 720 video capture, Bluetooth 3.0, NFC connectivity, and this is all powered by a 1,300 mAh battery. The handset will be released first in Asia before quickly arriving in Europe and the Middle East and will cost around $249 SIM free.

While no US release has been mentioned yet a cheaper WP8 handset is needed now especially as the HTC 8S is not arriving, so Nokia could be onto a winner if they get the handset out to US consumers in the coming months.

Do you like the look of the Nokia Lumia 620?

Phone Scams Sweep Chicopee

When Michele Taylor’s home phone rang early Sunday morning, she didn’t expect to hear this on the other line. “At about 9:35 in the morning I got a private call to my house phone and I answered it, and they said to me, ‘Your son’s been in an accident’, and I said, well, ‘None of my children drive’. They said, ‘Well, your brother did then.’ I said ‘really? Well what’s his name?’ and they said ‘You need to tell me to verify’. and I said, ‘I think I’m all set, I’m going to call the police,’” Taylor relayed.

Michele’s 12-year-old daughter Sarah got a similar call later that same day on her cellphone. “It was a call, it said restricted, I answered it, they said ‘Your son got into a car accident.’ I’m like, I don’t even have a son’ then they said ‘Your brother got into an accident’ and I said ‘they’re not old enough to drive’ then I hung up the phone,” Sarah stated.

Michele isn’t sure how the scammers got her home number since it’s unlisted. Sarah’s cell isn’t posted anywhere online it can be easily accessed.

Luckily, in the case of the Taylors, neither conversation went too far.

However, past experiences have made Michele leery. “It was an invasion of my privacy. Unfortunately I’ve been a victim of robberies at my home before, but I did have my guard up. I was a little nervous. I wanted to feed into it more, but I said no, you need to stop here,” she shared.

Michele isn’t alone.

After posting the incident on Facebook, she learned that people as far as Utah, and as near as some of her neighbors, were experiencing the same thing.

Chicopee police say they got several complaints about getting prank calls on Sunday alone. They say this has been going on for years, but should be easier to verify with modern technology. They advise that if you do get one of these calls saying one of your relatives has been hurt, simply hang up and call that person’s cell. They add that if your phone rings and the number is blocked, don’t pick up at all.

Police also say the elderly are more often the victim of these calls, looking to extort money from them.

Chicopee police are still investigating.

Teaching kids to use cell phone wisely

According to a study by Pew Internet Research, 75 percent of children ages 12 to 17 own a cell phone, and many of their phones are smartphones, which have Internet access, cameras with video capability, and unlimited access to applications.

During Realtor Safety Month in September, members of the Silicon Valley Association of Realtors share tips they learn from safety experts with consumers. Officer Holy Lawrence of the Sunnyvale Department of Public Safety recently discussed cell phone safety tips for children.

“Today’s children are publishers. Their audience is everywhere. They can reach for their phone in their pocket and connect globally,” said Lawrence, who visits schools and businesses teaching online safety to parents and children.

Lawrence noted the cell phone can be a wonderful tool, but it can also have very dangerous consequences for middle and high school children, who don’t always make the wisest decisions. She said that children in this age group do not fully realize the consequences of their actions, which may be far-reaching, lifelong and even life threatening.

Dangers include communicating with strangers and cyberbullying. Posting of inappropriate photos can damage a reputation in seconds and even lead to charges of child pornography.

Parents should consider whether it is really a necessity to provide their child a cell phone, the age of their child and features the cell phone should have. Lawrence cautioned

that location features on a phone can be worrisome because they let other people know where your child is at a certain point in time.

She said parents need to stay ahead of their tech savvy children. Below are tips for parents who decide to provide their children with a cell phone:

? Be clear that a cell phone is a privilege, not a right. Let your child know you will periodically check their cell phone. Make sure you have access to their password and can look at their pictures and text messages, and check apps they have downloaded.

? Establish rules. Much like leaving the computer in the living room, the cell phone should not accompany your child to bed.

? Talk to your kids. Tell your child not to be shy about reporting abuse. Lawrence said she advises children if something online makes them uncomfortable, they should tell their parents. When online, don’t accept friends on social media sites like Facebook unless you know them personally. Learn privacy settings and control who sees your information online. Remind your children they cannot take back what they post. Inappropriate posts and photos can damage their chances for employment, acceptance to colleges or even running for public office someday.

Perpetual Phone Frenzy

You’d think all that’s important in the world is the smartphone. Does anyone really care about the new Samsung Galaxy XIII S 10.1 M? (As you read that bogus model number, someone thought, “Wow, what’s that!?”)

How many phone models do there need to be? Are you going to buy every one of them? You’d think that is what is happening based on the headlines.

Every publication—PCMag included—is suffering from a severe case of phone mania. I want to see data proving that people actually care about Walmart testing smartphone payment systems. And what’s with all the leaked photos of new phones? Earth to editors: the phones all look the same! Oh, no, wait, the new HTC has a cool red line accenting the edge. STOP THE PRESSES!!

CNET is the worst. To promote the publication, the website lists the “Popular headlines.” As I write this, there are three stories about phones: one about the iPhone $199.99 at AT&T, one about the BlackBerry (with requisite leaked photos), and one about the Lumia 920 with the fabulous wireless induction charger. What will they think of next?

Then CNET pushes three articles under the banner “Latest Tech News.” One, two, three. Phone, phone, phone. The first story is about the Samsung Galaxy Stellar moving to Android 4.0. Holy crap, let’s call that breaking tech news! Send out the newsletter! Then there is a story about iPhone market share and finally one on streaming media. Streaming to phones, I suppose.

And, while on the topic of phones and streaming, whatever happened to all those TV receivers that were supposed to be in these phones? Maybe they need leaked photos to get any attention for that apparently dead technology.

The only funny and moderately interesting phone-related news is about a few Samsung PR folks that made a mess of some contest. The company shipped some bloggers to IFA, where they were expected to shill for the company, wear a Samsung uniform, and dance like monkeys in front of some exhibit. As you’d expect, things did not go as planned.

A couple of things about this story make zero sense, including why Samsung told the bloggers to walk home from Berlin to Mumbai if they did not perform. Generally speaking, on any such trip like this, you have your return ticket in hand. It’s generally not being held hostage like a passport at a Soviet hotel in Minsk.

Of course, few in the mainstream media covered this hilarious incident and instead opted out for more leaked photos.

Nokia may profit from Samsung–Windows Phone

Sure, Apple won big Friday when a federal-district court jury decided Samsung had infringed on some of Apple’s patents.

But two other potential winners weren’t even parties in the lawsuit: Microsoft and Nokia.

The thinking goes like this: Though Apple’s beef was with Samsung, many see the case as a proxy war between Apple and Android, the operating system for smartphones and tablets that Google created and gives away free.

Apple — as has Microsoft — contends Android violates some of its patents. Now that a federal jury in San Jose, Calif., has said as much — though how much is in dispute — some manufacturers building on Android may turn to Microsoft’s Windows Phone platform to avoid a similar legal battle with Apple.

Nokia, which has turned to Windows Phone as its primary smartphone operating system, may benefit if Apple wins an injunction preventing some of Samsung’s devices from reaching store shelves. That gives Nokia a window of opportunity as it prepares to launch its new Windows Phone 8 devices, presumably this fall.

That said, there’s a big caveat: It’s still unclear how all this will play out.

Samsung, which must pay $1.05 billion to Apple under the verdict, has said it would seek to overturn or appeal the decision. Google, in a statement, said the verdict reached Friday involved patent claims that “don’t relate to the core Android operating system, and several are being re-examined by the U.S. Patent Office.”

And it’s unknown whether the court will grant Apple’s request, filed Monday, for a preliminary injunction against the sales of eight Samsung smartphones.

Still, the unknowns did not prevent some Microsofties from cheering the news, either jubilantly or subtly.

“Windows Phone is looking gooooood right now,” Bill Cox, senior director of marketing communications for Windows Phone, tweeted Friday.

Horacio Gutierrez, Microsoft’s deputy counsel of intellectual property and licensing, has been tweeting links to articles about the verdict being “a shot across the bow of all Android device manufacturers” and about how Windows Phones have different looks and features than the iPhone and iPad.

An Apple lawyer had, during the course of the trial, pointed to Nokia’s Lumia Windows Phone devices as smartphones that look different from the iPhone.

Jorge Contreras, associate professor at American University’s Washington College of Law, said nearly half of the patent claims that went before the jury had to do with features related to Android software, including tap-to-zoom gestures and a “rubber band” snapback feature.

“My overall assessment of the case is that a workaround is not that difficult, now that we know what’s infringing,” he said.

Still, such workarounds for software, and changes — if needed — to the design of smartphones, could cost Samsung time — something that Microsoft and Nokia, which have struggled to gain more than a minuscule market share for Windows Phone, could use to their advantage.

“There would be a gap,” Contreras said. “It would give Microsoft a very good opportunity if it could present lower-priced tablets and smartphones. … Unfortunately, I don’t know if they’re geared up, production-wise, to fill that gap. And it’s a pretty small window. It won’t take long for Samsung to jump in with a design that’s a little bit different.”

Chetan Sharma, mobile strategist and co-founder of Issaquah-based Chetan Sharma Consulting, agreed that the verdict may push Samsung and other hardware manufacturers toward Microsoft.

Samsung, “being the most agile and biggest OEM [original equipment manufacturer] in the market, it’s great news for Microsoft that their ecosystem could become bigger because right now, it’s primarily Nokia, with some tepid support from HTC and Samsung.”

Manufacturers might also be weighing the cost-benefit of continuing to go with Android, even if Apple turns to licensing its patents, which it generally does not do.

“If [manufacturers] feel that Apple might come after them with a lawsuit or they might try to extract more royalties out of them, the margins will pretty well disappear,” Sharma said. “And they’re already razor thin.”

Though that might mean more competition for Nokia, the Finnish phone-maker could benefit in another big way from the Apple v. Samsung verdict.

“For Nokia, it’s great news in terms of uncertainty in the market,” Sharma said. “Carriers don’t know if there will be certain Samsung devices on the shelves for the holidays. They don’t want to be left with a set of devices that can’t be sold in the U.S. So they will probably revisit their decision on the volume of Nokia devices they’re planning to sell.”

With Nokia and Microsoft expected to announce new Windows Phone 8 devices Sept. 5, “the timing couldn’t be better,” Sharma said.

Still, not everyone agrees the verdict will turn into a win for Microsoft and Nokia.

Edward Snyder, an analyst with San Francisco-based Charter Equity Research, said in a Bloomberg News report that the judge ruled the infringements had more to do with imitating the iPhone’s design — a Samsung hardware issue — rather than Android software.

Phone services cut to counter terror threats

Talking to the media on Sunday, the minister said that Lahore, Multan and Karachi were the areas with the highest risk of terrorist activity. He said some other parts of Punjab, Sindh and Balochistan province were also under threat and the law enforcement agencies have been notified.
Malik said mobile services may be suspended in these areas during Eid prayers and for up to 2.5 hours in the evening due to the threats, but he said they cannot specify the exact time and place of such services suspensions. He apologised to the people for any inconvenience but said the decision has been made to for their security. He also clarified that cellular services would not be shut throughout the country.
On Sunday evening, one cellular company suspended its services in Quetta and there were reports that other companies would soon follow the suit. Subscribers of various companies in Lahore and Karachi also faced suspension of service. The only exception, at least in the early hours of the night, was a particular company that had government shares, as its subscribers had the facility to make intra-service (home) calls.
Earlier, during a high-level meeting the interior ministry and officials from the PTA (Pakistan Telecommunication Authority) decided that mobile services may be suspended for a few hours in certain areas to tackle the terrorist threats during Eid.
Malik has also directed the Inspector Generals of Police (IGPs) and the provincial chief secretaries as well as Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT) IGP to make foolproof security arrangements during Eid prayers and other important government installations and public places. No negligence would be tolerated by the law enforcement and security agencies, he said.
The minister said, “We should be ready to undermine any untoward incident.” He said the cellular service would be suspended in a surprise manner in the sensitive parts of the country. “My team is working round the clock for last 24 hours,” he added.
According to a letter issued by the ministry’s National Crisis Management Cell to the CEOs of the companies, the authority aims to cut off communication capabilities of miscreants and terrorists to foil their plans. The companies have been alerted beforehand so that action can be taken promptly, the letter stated.
Earlier, the Balochistan government had blocked cell phone services in Quetta and its surrounding areas on Independence Day in light of the security situation in the province. The US embassy in Islamabad had also issued a notice to its citizens in the country to be careful during Eidul Fitr as it senses potential attacks from militant and sectarian groups present in the country.

“free mobile phone plan”,india joke.

India’s finance ministry will oppose plans to provide a mobile phone to every family below the poverty line in the country, arguing the government does not have the financial resources to do so.

However, one unnamed ministry official said in the report that the government cannot afford the scheme. Assuming each handset costs INR 1,000 (US$18.09), the total cost of the program would come up to about INR 70 billion (US$1.3 billion), the official noted.

The Times of India added that other reports have suggested the government could tap the Universal Service Obligation Fund to pay for the program. But another finance ministry official pointed out the fund is meant to increase teledensity in rural areas whereas the free mobile phone scheme would straddle both urban and rural areas.

An unnamed official from the Department of Telecommunications said the free mobile handset scheme was not suggested by them, and the team was not consulted on it.

A Congress leader also criticized the plan, saying the government’s priority should be to address more serious issues such as power shortages in the country. India in late July experienced two massive power outages, after its power networks which serve over 680 million people went down for a time.

“What use is a mobile if there is no electricity to charge it? It would seem insensitive to go ahead with something like this, especially when the government says there is no money to fund its food security plans,” the leader said in the report.