Monday, December 3, 2007

Motorola S9 Stereo Bluetooth Headset

Stylish, comfortable and engineered with cutting-edge Bluetooth wireless technology, the Motorola S9 helps provide wireless access to music and voice calls – while on the go. Compatible with Bluetooth-enabled stereo music phones and with iPod players equipped with the TEN Technology naviPlay Bluetooth Stereo Adapter for iPod (sold separately), the Motorola S9 is perfect for delivering favorite tunes and connecting you to calls wirelessly with lightweight design.

Weightless FUN

When comfort is a priority, the Motorola S9 won’t weigh you down. Weighing barely an ounce, the Motorola S9 is lighter than an average pair of sunglasses! The behind-the-head form and small ear buds (1.3 centimeters) help provide true comfort – even during extended use.



Convenient music and calls controls



Calls, volume, and track controls, so you can play your music or answer a call by simply pressing the buttons on the headphones.



Work it Out

Combining ease-of-use with the latest Bluetooth wireless technology, the water and sweat resistant Motorola S9 is the ideal wireless headwear for the active music lover. Now, be connected and listen to favorite songs during those tough workouts, without getting tangled in wires!

SUMMARY OF FEATURES

• Lightweight, discreet design – weighs barely one ounce

• Sleek, behind-the-head style

• Compact 1.3 cm speakers help provide comfort and a snug fit in the ear

• Stream music from a compatible Bluetooth-enabled stereo music phone or from a compatible Bluetooth-enabled MP3 player. Bluetooth Stereo Adapter for iPod available (sold separately) to use with an iPod.

• Long play time – up to six hours of play from a single charge

• Music mutes or pauses when calls come in and resumes once the call has ended

• Control music and calls from the headphones

• Water and sweat resistant

• Supports Bluetooth Advanced Audio Distribution (A2DP), Audio Video Remote Control (AVRCP), Hands-free (HFP), and Headset profiles

Thursday, November 22, 2007

CyberLog-X Removal Guide

This guide intends to educate, fight, prevent, and help users remove CyberLog-X. No specialized knowledge is needed.

What is CyberLog-X?

This is a malicious trojan installed on your computer. This trojan was created by the developers or VirusBurst.

What is Virus Burst?

VirusBusrt is rogue spyware remover. Which means it's a fake program that fools people into thinking it is a real application for removing spyware. The developers of this program have a LONG history of un-ethical tactics to acquire their customers. They work hard to get their spyware installed on your pc. Then once infected, you're pounded with irritating false Virus alerts. These alerts are irritating by design. They hope to frustrate you into shelling out $50 for VirusBusrt just to stop their popups.

FAKE VIRUS ALERTS

VirusBurst / Cyberlog-X Symptoms

  • Excessive Popups
  • Slower PC
  • Slower Internet Surfing
  • Slower Boot Process
  • Errors
  • Personal Information Theft (bank accounts, passwords)



CyberLog-X Removal Instructions:

Removing CyberLog-x is extremely difficult. This virus hides itself in your system very well to avoid detection. So well, it can't be removed by most programs. To safely remove all CyberLog-X components causing your problems, we recommend using only a well-known spyware removal utility such as XoftspySe. XoftspySe is specially updated twice a week to fight the latest CyberLog-X infections and is specifically designed to remove tough trojans.



XoftspySe is completely safe and free of adware/spyware and can be trusted. Far to often many programs come bundled with a bug you don't want.


  1. Download XoftspySe
  2. Scan of your computer using XoftspySe removing all infections it uncovers.
  3. Restart your computer.
  4. Run another scan to pick up any lingering infections.

Your system is completely free of CyberLog-X!

Best regards,
techGUY

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

HTC Touch



HTC just made their "major" announcement. Are you ready for it... wait... it's the Elf now official with its "Touch" street name. Right, the Windows Mobile device we first saw six months ago and already formally announced by O2 Germany as the Xda nova. HTC's big surprise? Well, the Touch is the first device to feature TouchFLO touchscreen technology "developed by HTC" -- though we think Microsoft had a little something to do with it. It's not multi-touch like the iPhone, but it does offer a "new and unique" way to sweep a finger (or stylus) across the screen to control the 3D interface. To recap, the diminutive 99.9 x 58 x 13.9-mm Touch runs Windows Mobile 6 with TouchFLO UI on a 2.8-inch display and OMAP850 processor while packing tri-band 900/1800/1900 GSM with EDGE, 802.11b/g WiFi, Bluetooth 2.0, 1GB microSD expansion included, and a 2 megapixel cam. Best of all, it's available now in the UK, later this month around Europe and Asia, and then North and Latin America in the 2nd half of the year.



Specification

Processor

TI's OMAP™ 850, 201 MHz

Operating System

Windows Mobile® 6 Professional

Memory

ROM: 128 MB

SDRAM: 64 MB DDR

Dimension

99.9mm (L) X 58mm (W) X 13.9mm (T)

Weight

112g with battery

Display

2.8" LCD touch screen with backlight

240 X 320 dots resolution with 65,536 colors

Network

GSM/GPRS/EDGE Tri-band: 900, 1800, 1900 (The device will operate on frequencies available from the cellular network.)

Device Control

HTC TouchFLO™

5-Way navigation control

Connectivity

Bluetooth® 2.0

Wi-Fi® IEEE 802.11 b/g

HTC ExtUSB™ (11-pin mini-USB and audio jack in one)

Camera

2.0 megapixel CMOS color camera

Audio

Built-in microphone and 3-in-1 speaker

Windows Media Player supported formats: AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, MP3, WMA, WAV, QCELP, MPEG4, AMR-NB, AMR-WB

Battery

Rechargeable Li-lon battery

Capacity: 1100 mAh

Standby time: Up to 200 hours

Talk time: Up to 5 hours

Expansion Slot

microSD™ memory card (SD 2.0 compatible)

AC Adapter

Voltage range/frequency: 100 ~ 240V AC, 50/60Hz

DC output: 5V and 1A

Sunday, November 4, 2007

Hack: Play ripped PS1 games on PSP


Tired of waiting for Sony to release your favorite classic PlayStation game for PlayStation Portable playback through the PlayStation 3's PlayStation Store?* Well, if you don't mind hacking your firmware and breaking what is no doubt a bevy of Sony end-user licensing agreements, you can now play a ripped copy of any PlayStation disc on the PSP.

PSP users that upgrade to the Dark Alex's Open Edition firmware 3.02-B can play ISOs ripped off of PlayStation discs right from a MemoryStick. Commenters report that the emulation runs at full speed with perfect sound, but PAL games seem to have some graphical glitches. Still, a nice Christmas gift for the hacking/piracy community.

* - We tried to squeeze the word PlayStation into that sentence one more time, but we just couldn't manage it.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

The New Nokia Extends E-series with E51


Nokia has introduced it's all new dual-mode business device, the Nokia E51.

The dual-mode E51 is compatible both with GSM networks and Wi-Fi hotspots, enabling VoIP (voice over Internet Protocol) service in addition to traditional networks.

The slim E51 promises greater simplicity, faster access, and tighter integration with key applications, while maintaining the E-series design and capabilities.

Claimed to be an all-round device, the E51 offers mobility solutions such as telephony, email and messaging, plus office phone functionality, and the convenience that goes with one phone number, one voice mailbox, and one dial plan in a single device.

For ease-of-use, the E51 features a home screen where users can choose to have icons of frequently used applications.

The device comes with a dedicated email key on the front cover, an indicator light for new emails, and a preview window for the latest email on the home screen, as also other one-touch keys for one-click access to key functions like email, contacts, calendar, and home screen.

E51's set-up wizards offer step-by-step guidance for setting up email accounts, configuring Internet calling, and accessing wireless LAN.

The E51 offers integration with a wide range of business email solutions, including Nokia Intellisync Wireless Email and Mail for Exchange to communicate with Microsoft Exchange Server.

The device is capable of integrating with corporate telephony systems (PBX) through Nokia Mobile Unified Communications solutions such as Intellisync Call Connect for Cisco and Alcatel.

Besides business features, the E51 is equipped with personal applications such as FM radio, music and multimedia player, a 2-megapixel camera, and the Nokia browser interoperable with Windows Live.

The E51 will be globally available during the fourth quarter of 2007 for an unsubsidized retail price of approximately 350 EUR


FEATURES
Card slot microSD (TransFlash),130 MB user data memory
Phone Type Quadband
Networks GSM 850, 900, 1800 , 1900
HSCSD Yes
GPRS Yes
EDGE Yes
WLAN Yes
Wireless Internet Technology GPRS
Height (mm) 114.8
Width (mm) 46
Depth (mm) 12
Weight (g) 100
Battery Li-Ion 1070 mAh (Standard)
Standbytime (h) Up to 310 h
Talktime (m) Up to 4 h 20 min
IrDA Yes
SMS Yes
Email Yes
MMS Yes
Bluetooth Yes
Java Yes
Radio Yes
Camera Yes
Camera resolution 1600x1200 pixels
Colour display Yes
Number of colours 16M
Ringtones Polyphonic
MP3 Yes
Games Yes
WAP version WAP 2.0
WAP Yes
LCD Size (pixel) 240 x 320 pixels, 2 inches
Voicememo Yes
Handsfree Yes
Vibrate Yes
Phonebook Capacity Practically unlimited entries and fields, Photocall

Friday, October 19, 2007

3rd Party Apps on iPhone


Ok guys! We're going to have an SDK. My friends was talking about it , but we never thought that the announcement would be for today. Steve Jobs officially announced that an iPhone SDK (Software development kit) will be available now. With this SDK, the "approved" developers will be able to develop native iPhone applications.


Here's how the God of portable gadgets, Steve Jobs, announced the news: "Let me just say it: We want native third party applications on the iPhone, and we plan to have an SDK in developers' hands in February. We are excited about creating a vibrant third party developer community around the iPhone and enabling hundreds of new applications for our users. With our revolutionary multi-touch interface, powerful hardware and advanced software architecture, we believe we have created the best mobile platform ever for developers."

Besides the iPhone announcement itself last January, this is probably the most important iPhone news ever. A few weeks after the official iPhone release last June, hundreds of iPhone native applications were developed using the jailbreaking software released by the iPhone hacking community. You can bet, now that Apple will officially permit iPhone 3rd party apps, that many established companies will also jump on the iPhone application bandwagon and release powerful iPhone applications. Hopefully, tons of productivity tools will be coming our way...

There is so much more that can be done with this device. Until now, iPhone had a bright future. But with this announcement, iPhone has the brightest future of all mobile devices out there. Period.

One thing I wondering though, is how long it's going to take before an iPod Touch SDK is announced?

11 more reasons NOT to buy an iPhone (and that you haven’t thought of)


I know that some of you are undecided about whether you will order an iPhone. In this post, I will state 11 reasons why you shouldn’t buy one.

You may already have identified the high price, ($499-$599) as a good reason against doing so. Or, you may be on another carrier’s plan and don’t want to pay the um, substantial penalty for early withdrawal just to sign a two-year with iPhone’s exclusive carrier AT&T Mobility.

But after riffing through New York Times’ tech reviewer David Pogue’s terrific Often Asked iPhone Questions piece this morning, I’ve identified 11 more reasons you shouldn’t buy an iPhone.

Ready for a dose of tech-flavored conscience?


1. While iPhone will work with any SIM card from exclusive iPhone carrier AT&T Wireless No other carrier’s SIM phone will work with iPhone.
2. If you are wearing gloves, the iPhone’s virtual keypad won’t work. That’s a concern for wintertime phone calls in cold areas.
3. No memos.
4. No voice dialing.
5. No voice recording.
6. No games.
7. No capacity for video output to a tv (as iPod has).
8. No capacity for over-the-air calendar appointments.
9. No capacity for over-the-air software updates.
10. No IM. Gotta use text messaging.
11. No flash or zoom in the camera.