- Wi-Fi,
- QWERTY klavye,
- ekran 320 x 240,
- iztopu (trackball navigation),
- ses ve data işlevselliği,
- yerleşik GPS,
- en son medya oynatıcı iyileştirmeleri,
- genişletilebilir microSD/microSDHC bellek yuvası (32GB'a kadar).
techtree.com
Bilgisayar ve elektronik dünyasından haberler.
News about computers and electronics.
http://www.teknikhaberler.com
Most people found it funny, out-there, or at least entertaining (agreed). Many accused me of not being the greatest singer in the world and being a ham (agreed). And a few people were appalled. (One blogger, evidently born without the satire gene, called it “an entertainment bit that belongs on a comedy show, not from the New York Times” and that it “devalues the Times as a news outlet.” Wow—the New York Times criticized for having a sense of humor? Isn’t it usually just the opposite?)
Anyway, with the flood of feedback came a torrent of questions, and there were some interesting tech challenges along the way. So here’s my “making of” story, as driven by reader questions.
Sony Ericsson K850i, 40 MB Phone Memory, Memory Stick Micro™ (M2™) desteği, SanDisk microSD™ support özelliklerinin yanı sıra 102 x 48 x 17 mm ölçüleriyle ürün dikkat çekiyor. Uçuş modu (uçak ve bunun gibi telefon kullanılması yasak yerlerde müzik dinleyebilme özelliği), otomatik odaklanma, kırmızı göz düzeltme, xenon flaş, trackID, bluetooth ve usb bağlantısı ile sıradan cep telefonlarını geçmiş durumda.
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has revealed a raft of new patent applications submitted by Apple's lawyers, covering new technologies for iPods, Web pages and mice.
Macsimum News spotted several patent applications that were filed months ago but just revealed this week on the PTO's Web site. The most intriguing example appears to involve a method for allowing an iPod or iPhone to talk to a neighboring device through a wireless network. The application assumes that mobile devices already are capable of downloading data from the Internet over cellular or Wi-Fi networks, "however, as portable electronic devices become more versatile and more interactive, it is advantageous to exchange (send and/or receive) media or other types of data with other electronic devices in a wireless manner."
By Macworld Staff
You can do a lot with the iPhone—make a phone call, surf the Web, watch a movie—just with the touch of a virtual button. But dig a little deeper, and you can do a lot more. After three weeks of putting the iPhone through its paces, here are 21 tips for getting the most out of the iPhone’s advertised features… or finding a couple of features you might not know were part of the phone’s repertoire.
A complex remote-control work around has achieved what every geek wants: running Skype on an iPhone.
While some are working to unlock the iPhone, to use on other networks, others are working to give its users cheap calls using the popular Skype VOIP software.
The breakthrough comes from Tom Keating of TMC Labs, and is likely to be more of a proof of concept, as it uses a complex remote control application, and doesn't actually deliver free calls, though they may be cheaper.