Thursday, 23 December 2010

Samsung Omnia 652 price in India specification


Samsung Omnia 652
Samsung Omnia 652 is a Bar phone weighing 111g. It′s dimensions are 116.5MM x 61.8MM x 11.5MM . The talk-time of the phone is Up to 730 minutes (2G) / 443 minutes (3G). The phone operates at frequencies of GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 / HSDPA 900 / 1900 / 2100 Mhz. The Phone has a Display of 2.4 inches LQVGA, TFT 65K colors. This model comes with Camera of , 2 Mega Pixels Camera with Geo-tagging with , 2x Digital Zoom
Price: Rs.8,999

Samsung Omnia 652Samsung Omnia 652
Samsung Omnia 652

General Information
BrandSamsung
ModelOmnia 652
Weight111 G
Form FactorBar
Dimensions116.5x61.8x11.5 MM
Operating FrequencyGSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 / HSDPA 900 / 1900 / 2100 Mhz
Key PadYes, Qwerty Keypad

Display Details
Display Color2.4 inches LQVGA, TFT 65K colors
Display SizeSamsung Omnia 652 has a display size of 320 x 240 px

Camera
CameraYes, 2 Mega Pixels Camera with Geo-tagging
Camera Res.1600 x 1200 Pixels 
ZoomYes, 2x Digital Zoom
VideoYes, Video streaming, telephony and messaging
Video ResolutionYes, QVGA@15fps
Video PlayerYes, Video Formats : MP4, WMV9, H.263, H.264, DivX
Camera FeaturesShot Modes, Photo Effects

Software
GamesYes
JavaYes, MIDP 2.0
BrowserYes, WAP 2.0 / xHTML, HTML
Operating SystemMicrosoft Windows Mobile 6.5 Standard

Call Records
Phone BookYes, Practically unlimited entries and fields, Photo call
Missed CallsPractically unlimited
Received CallsPractically unlimited
Dialed CallsPractically unlimited

Battery
Stand By TimeUp to 600 hours (2G) / 441 hours (3G)
Talk TimeUp to 730 minutes (2G) / 443 minutes (3G)
Li-ion1500 mAH

Memory
Internal MemoryYes, Internal Memory : 200MB
External MemoryYes, Up to 16 GB
Memory SlotYes, Micro SD Card

Message
SMSYes
MMSYes
EmailYes, Push Email
Instant MessagingYes, MSN Messenger, Palringo, Yahoo IM
Social Networking ServicesFacebook, Twitter

Music
Ring ToneVibration, WAV, MP3
FMYes, Stereo FM radio with RDS
MusicYes, Music Formats : MP3, WMA, WAV, eAAC+ with 3.5 mm audio jack
SpeakerYes
HeadsetYes

Data
GPRSYes, Class 10 (4+1/3+2 slots), 32 - 48 kbps
BluetoothYes, v2.1 with A2DP
Wirless ProtocolYes, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g
PortYes, microUSB v2.0
EdgeYes, Class 10, 236.8 kbps
Infra RedNo
3GHSDPA 3.6 Mbps
GPSYes, with A-GPS support
SalespackHandset, Battery, Charger, Earphone, USB Cable, User Manual, Warranty Card

Others
Colours :
Black

Also Known As :
Samsung GT-B6520

Thursday, 16 December 2010

Now Gmail lets you restore contacts for last 30 days

 In your hurried pace of work, it may so happen that you may delete a contact, only to later realize how important that contact was to you. Well now there is a solution to your problem. Google has added a new feature to Gmail to restore the contact list of the last 30 days time.

To enable the feature, go to the contacts option on Gmail, select "Restore contacts" from the "More actions" menu. Once there, you can choose the time you would like to revert back your contacts to.

The time chosen by you puts your contacts exactly the same way they were at that time. This means that any contacts which were not present then or were added since then will get deleted.

To meet an end for the problem of the new contacts getting deleted, Amanda Camp, Software Engineer, Google posted in a blog , "Don't worry, you can always undo this change by restoring again if you didn't get the time right." 



Facebook takes to facial recognition to identify friends

Facebook has gone on to enhance its face detection feature, launched in July, and has come up with a new feature called "tag suggestions". The new feature makes use of face recognition technology to suggest which friend is probably featured in which photo.

How it works is, say you have uploaded a huge number of photographs, Facebook will group together the faces that look similar, based on the premise that they are photos of the same person. Facebook also goes and looks into the past photo tags and suggests who in the picture.
Facebook believes the new feature will simplify the process of photo sharing. Also for users who want to maintain their privacy and not have their name suggested, they can use the privacy settings of the site and turn off the feature.

The earlier face detection feature allowed users to only tag the photos and not suggest the faces. The feature will start off in U.S. in the weeks to come.

Facebook named best U.S. employer

Social networking site Facebook is just as popular among its employees as it is among its users. The Silicon Valley start-up was named the best U.S. employer Wednesday by employment website Glassdoor.com, which conducted a survey among its users.

The company was so small last year that it did not even feature on the annual list, which was topped by Southwest Airlines in the past two years.
But Facebook has been growing rapidly by poaching employees from rivals like Apple and Google.

Besides offering handsome salaries and princely benefits, Facebook also offers employees the real prospect of becoming millionaires when the company, which is valued at $43 billion, goes public.

Many employees have already joined the elite millionaires' club by selling their shares in the company to private investors.



No wonder then that chief executive Mark Zuckerberg, who was named Wednesday as Time Magazine's Person of the Year, was almost universally liked by his company's employees, who gave him a 95 percent approval rating.

Facebook's overall satisfaction rating among employees signed on to Glassdoor was 4.6 out of 5. Just behind Facebook were Southwest Airlines, with 4.4 out of 5, and Bain & Company, with 4.3 out of 5.

The Glassdoor survey was based on eight criteria including work/life balance, recognition and, of course, compensation and benefits.

Tuesday, 14 December 2010

5 tips to maintain privacy online

In this information age, biggest challenge is how to manage privacy that too when you are online. Taking certain precautions one can maintain privacy.

Mark Milian of CNN provides 5 tips to maintain privacy:

1. Adjust social-network privacy settings

Facebook has made strides in simplifying its privacy settings, but their many options can still seem like a labyrinth. Still, it's worth going in there every once in a while and familiarizing yourself with how much of your information is shared with the world.
To get there, log in to Facebook, and type "privacy settings" into the search box. Facebook recently shrunk that feature to be accessible from a smartphone.

The settings page now offers quick toggles to decide whether your profile is shared just with approved friends, with their friends, too, or publicly. Because many people draw privacy lines differently, you can also fine-tune individual switches.

Taking a leap further, you can give the "super-logoff" trick a try. It's especially popular among young people.

Twitter, another popular social network, also lets you lock your account from public view. In settings, there's a feature called "protect my tweets."

2. Ensure personal data is sent over a secure connection

When sending credit card numbers, banking information and passwords, verify that there's an image of a padlock on the address bar of the browser. This denotes a secure connection to the site. This technology encrypts the data you send and receive, so it's difficult for anyone snooping on the line to access your info.


3. Consider opting out of ad tracking

Online ad networks often install a small file on the computers of people who visit certain websites. These so-called cookies can log your surfing habits, allowing advertisers to tailor ads to your interests.

But what if we don't want to be tracked?

For starters, many Web browsers have a feature in their settings panel that lets you disable cookies from third-party websites. This will stop many ad networks from gaining a fast track into your computing activities.

A couple of organizations offer systems for opting out of popular ad networks. The Network Advertising Initiative and PrivacyChoice.org let you opt out of ad networks with a few clicks. You'll need to activate this on every computer you use. But be warned: Some ad companies may continue to track you even though you've elected to opt out.

Like commercials on TV, advertising provides the cash to keep many websites running. Opting out of tracking won't make ads go away, but tracking advocates say it makes them more annoying because they're less relevant to the user.

4. Use private Web browsing features or install a VPN

Most modern Web browsers provide an extra layer of protection. Called either "private" or "stealth browsing," these sessions keep out cookies and don't log site history.

For stronger protection, you can install what's called a Virtual Private Network. This encrypts practically everything you do on the Web while the VPN is enabled. Many companies offer this feature to their employees, which sends the data back to corporate-owned servers. There are a number of free VPNs available for download.

Another handy program, Little Snitch, will report whenever software may be doing something fishy. Anytime an app on your computer tries to send information over the internet without your permission, an alert will pop up.

5. Think before you post

This may sound obvious to some, but if you're posting information to a company's server, you have little guarantee that it won't find itself elsewhere.

Even if all of your privacy settings are in order, a social network might change its policies later. The system might spring a hole vulnerable to search bots or hackers. A trusted friend might see one of your party photos and decide to pass it on.

Google Earth integrates Street View's 3D maps

By combining two services, Google has now made it possible to pick points on the globe, look at them from outer space, and then zoom all the way in for a street-level view.

Google has done this by pulling its Street View out of browsers and integrating it with Google Earth. The combination will be available with the new version 6 of Google Earth, reported the company in its blog.



Until now, Earth's global perspective allowed people to view continents and countries with satellite imagery, while Street View allows detailed views of cities, streets and residential areas. The images for View were obtained by cars that travelled around the world with special round-view cameras mounted on top.

Unlike Street View, which can be accessed via a browser, Google Earth has to be installed as a separate programme. But now, once that's done, people can head from a virtual outer space view all the way down to the front door of a house. Google says the transition will be seamless.

Of course, Street View isn't available for every house on Earth. For cities that haven't been catalogued yet, the new Google Earth can only zoom in to an aerial city view.

The new Google Earth also includes historical maps - a bombed-out post-war London, for example. Additionally, it has integrated 3D models of trees, meaning people touring virtual cities can also check out the foliage and take a walk around it.

Google says it has "dozens" of kinds of trees it can recreate digitally and that more than 80 million of them have already been added to Google Earth. Images from Street View are used to help decide where to put the trees and what kind of trees to install.

The new version of Earth is available for PCs using at least the XP system. Mac users need to have at least the Leopard 10.5.0 operating system installed. It is also available in Linux. The standard version of Earth remains free.

Google has been trying for years to create an ever more detailed image of the world, digitalising the Earth with a combination of satellite images, pictures, geodata, user entries, webcams, municipal documents and more.

But this collection of data for its own ends has put Google in the cross hairs of data privacy experts. The company earns most of its money from online advertising.