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Nokia unveils E6, X7 smartphones

Posted by Abhishek Tuesday, 12 April 2011 0 comments

With a pair of new smartphones, Nokia is showing no immediate signs of letting up on its Symbian operating system.
The Nokia E6 is for business users.

The E6 and the X7, both announced today, will be the first smartphones to ship with Symbian Anna, the latest update to the mobile operating system, which is used primarily by Nokia. Earlier this year, however, Nokia signed a deal with Microsoft that will make Windows Phone 7 the principal operating system on its smartphones, with the shift the Microsoft OS starting as early as next year.
The Nokia E6 is designed with business customers in mind. It boasts a 2.46-inch touch screen and full QWERTY keyboard. Nokia said that the smartphone can maintain its battery life for 681 hours on standby and boasts more than 14 hours of talk time over GSM. Users can listen to music in offline mode for up to 75 hours.
To appeal to business customers, the Nokia E6 comes with access to Microsoft Exchange, Microsoft Communicator Mobile, and Microsoft SharePoint.
The Nokia X7 , meanwhile, ditches a physical keyboard in favor of a large 4-inch AMOLED touch screen and virtual keyboard. It boasts an 8-megapixel camera and fully integrated social networking functions, allowing users to check in on their Facebook and Twitter accounts out of the box. It also comes with the Galaxy on Fire HD and Asphalt 5 HD video games.
The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment on when the E6 and X7 will launch and how much they will cost.

The Nokia X7.
(Credit: Nokia)
Nokia is committed to bringing Symbian Anna to as many of its latest releases as possible. The company said today that in addition to the E6 and X7 smartphones, it plans to make the operating system "standard" on the Nokia N8, Nokia E7, Nokia C7, and Nokia C6-01 in the coming months. Other models will receive the update via download in the near future, as well.
Anna delivers several enhancements, including better security and hardware-accelerated encryption. Its improved e-mail support has "full meeting request support," Nokia says. In addition, it delivers faster Web browsing and an improved Ovi Maps application, according to Nokia.
"With these new products and more Symbian devices and user enhancements coming in the near future, we are confident we can keep existing Nokia smartphone customers engaged, as well as attract new first-time and competitor smartphone users," Jo Harlow, head of Nokia's Smart Devices business, said in a statement today
The Nokia X7.
But actually attracting new smartphone users might be Nokia's biggest challenge.
Speaking to CNET in an interview late last month, ABI Research senior analyst Michael Morgan said that Nokia is bound to see its smartphone market share decline this year.
"In 2011, Symbian is going to start to deflate rapidly," Morgan said. "I believe that a lot of Nokia users will convert to a new OS platform and stay there--they won't go back."
So, where will they be going? Android, Morgan says. He believes that by 2016, Android will own 45 percent of the smartphone market.


With a pair of new smartphones, Nokia is showing no immediate signs of letting up on its Symbian operating system.
The Nokia E6 is for business users.

The E6 and the X7, both announced today, will be the first smartphones to ship with Symbian Anna, the latest update to the mobile operating system, which is used primarily by Nokia. Earlier this year, however, Nokia signed a deal with Microsoft that will make Windows Phone 7 the principal operating system on its smartphones, with the shift the Microsoft OS starting as early as next year.
The Nokia E6 is designed with business customers in mind. It boasts a 2.46-inch touch screen and full QWERTY keyboard. Nokia said that the smartphone can maintain its battery life for 681 hours on standby and boasts more than 14 hours of talk time over GSM. Users can listen to music in offline mode for up to 75 hours.
To appeal to business customers, the Nokia E6 comes with access to Microsoft Exchange, Microsoft Communicator Mobile, and Microsoft SharePoint.
The Nokia X7 , meanwhile, ditches a physical keyboard in favor of a large 4-inch AMOLED touch screen and virtual keyboard. It boasts an 8-megapixel camera and fully integrated social networking functions, allowing users to check in on their Facebook and Twitter accounts out of the box. It also comes with the Galaxy on Fire HD and Asphalt 5 HD video games.
The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment on when the E6 and X7 will launch and how much they will cost.

The Nokia X7.
(Credit: Nokia)
Nokia is committed to bringing Symbian Anna to as many of its latest releases as possible. The company said today that in addition to the E6 and X7 smartphones, it plans to make the operating system "standard" on the Nokia N8, Nokia E7, Nokia C7, and Nokia C6-01 in the coming months. Other models will receive the update via download in the near future, as well.
Anna delivers several enhancements, including better security and hardware-accelerated encryption. Its improved e-mail support has "full meeting request support," Nokia says. In addition, it delivers faster Web browsing and an improved Ovi Maps application, according to Nokia.
"With these new products and more Symbian devices and user enhancements coming in the near future, we are confident we can keep existing Nokia smartphone customers engaged, as well as attract new first-time and competitor smartphone users," Jo Harlow, head of Nokia's Smart Devices business, said in a statement today
The Nokia X7.
But actually attracting new smartphone users might be Nokia's biggest challenge.
Speaking to CNET in an interview late last month, ABI Research senior analyst Michael Morgan said that Nokia is bound to see its smartphone market share decline this year.
"In 2011, Symbian is going to start to deflate rapidly," Morgan said. "I believe that a lot of Nokia users will convert to a new OS platform and stay there--they won't go back."
So, where will they be going? Android, Morgan says. He believes that by 2016, Android will own 45 percent of the smartphone market.


MUMBAI: Intel, the world leader in computing innovation today announced the launch of Intel Xeon processor E7 family. 

Enabling IT departments to better manage data-intensive environments through new security and reliability features and record-breaking performance, a new family of server processors that accelerate mission-critical computing have been announced by Intel, a company statement said here. 

The record-setting Intel Xeon processor E7-8800/4800/2800 product families build on Intel's previous generation of server processors to set a new standard for high-end computing applications, including business intelligence, real-time data analytics and virtualization. Strengthening the line of defence for data centers, the new processors also provide advanced security features that ensure greater data integrity, the release said. 

IT managers seeking to achieve greater economic efficiencies can replace 18 dual-core servers with a single Xeon processor E7-based server. 

"Intel has been changing the economics for mission-critical computing server deployments for more than a decade, and today we are raising the bar yet again," Intel Corporation's Senior Vice President and General Manager of Sales & Marketing Group, Tom Kilroy said. 

The days of IT organisations being forced to deploy expensive, closed RISC architectures for mission-critical applications are rapidly nearing an end, Kilroy said. 

Beginning today, more than 35 systems based on the Intel Xeon processor E7 family are expected to ship from manufacturers around the world, Kilroy said. 

Intel India has also significantly contributed to developing Intel Xeon processor E7 family, which is Intel's first 10-core processor with 30MB of L3 cache memory and 2.9 billion transistors. 

The Intel India team based in Bangalore jointly led the design of the Intel Xeon processor E7 family, which is a global program performed in collaboration with other teams in the US. 

The Intel India team planned and executed design activities including designing, pre and post silicon logic validation to get the Intel Xeon processor E7 family productised. 

"This product demanded a significant amount of innovation and cross-geo teamwork, and the team in India has once again proven its exceptional engineering capability and showed us its focus on execution and innovation," Intel South Asia's Managing Director, Sales & Marketing Group, said R Sivakumar said.

MUMBAI: Intel, the world leader in computing innovation today announced the launch of Intel Xeon processor E7 family. 

Enabling IT departments to better manage data-intensive environments through new security and reliability features and record-breaking performance, a new family of server processors that accelerate mission-critical computing have been announced by Intel, a company statement said here. 

The record-setting Intel Xeon processor E7-8800/4800/2800 product families build on Intel's previous generation of server processors to set a new standard for high-end computing applications, including business intelligence, real-time data analytics and virtualization. Strengthening the line of defence for data centers, the new processors also provide advanced security features that ensure greater data integrity, the release said. 

IT managers seeking to achieve greater economic efficiencies can replace 18 dual-core servers with a single Xeon processor E7-based server. 

"Intel has been changing the economics for mission-critical computing server deployments for more than a decade, and today we are raising the bar yet again," Intel Corporation's Senior Vice President and General Manager of Sales & Marketing Group, Tom Kilroy said. 

The days of IT organisations being forced to deploy expensive, closed RISC architectures for mission-critical applications are rapidly nearing an end, Kilroy said. 

Beginning today, more than 35 systems based on the Intel Xeon processor E7 family are expected to ship from manufacturers around the world, Kilroy said. 

Intel India has also significantly contributed to developing Intel Xeon processor E7 family, which is Intel's first 10-core processor with 30MB of L3 cache memory and 2.9 billion transistors. 

The Intel India team based in Bangalore jointly led the design of the Intel Xeon processor E7 family, which is a global program performed in collaboration with other teams in the US. 

The Intel India team planned and executed design activities including designing, pre and post silicon logic validation to get the Intel Xeon processor E7 family productised. 

"This product demanded a significant amount of innovation and cross-geo teamwork, and the team in India has once again proven its exceptional engineering capability and showed us its focus on execution and innovation," Intel South Asia's Managing Director, Sales & Marketing Group, said R Sivakumar said.


Wondering what the trip was like for Yuri Gagarin, who became the first man in space exactly 50 years ago? Look no further than YouTube.
On April 12, 1961, the Russian cosmonaut became the first person in space, ushering in the era of human spaceflight. The rocket carrying Gagarin's Vostok 1 spacecraft blasted off from Baikonur Cosmodrome in the Soviet Union, reaching unprecedented speeds for human travel at the time before it broke free of the Earth's gravitational pull and entered orbit around the planet, circling once before re-entering the atmosphere and landing back on Soviet soil.
And a new movie shot entirely from the International Space Station and released to YouTube seeks to recreate exactly the experience of Gagarin's groundbreaking 108-minute orbit around the planet, combining the historic audio tapes of the event with brand new footage. 
The film, shot in collaboration with the European Space Agency and the astronauts onboard the International Space Station, captures the magnificence of Gagarin’s original orbit with breath-taking high-definition views of the Earth from above. It matches the orbital path of the International Space Station as closely as possible to that of Gagarin's original route, allowing viewers to see incredible vistas of the Earth through the Space Station’s new giant cupola window.
“We have woven historic Vostok I mission recordings of Gagarin (subtitled in English) with new shots captured by Paolo Nespoli, and edited them to an original score by composer Philip Sheppard," explained director Chris Riley. 

As he edited together the film, Riley made an unusual discovery: Gagarin's short bursts of communication from the cockpit were very much akin to modern Twitter chatter. In addition to being the first man in space, Riley called him the first man on Twitter.
“It’s clear Yuri spoke in 'tweets’ -- as communications to the mission controllers were always brief and to the point," he said. " Today a text-based tweet is composed of up to no more than 140 characters, so in essence Yuri was the first perfect tweeter."
Gagarin's 108-minute mission on April 12, 1961, remains a source of great national pride, and Russia marked the day with fanfare resembling Soviet-era celebrations. Schools had special lessons dedicated to Gagarin, billboards carried his smiling face and national television channels broadcast a flow of movies and documentaries about the flight.
"We were the first to fly to space and have had a great number of achievements, and we mustn't lose our advantage," Medvedev said during a visit to Mission Control outside Moscow.
Gagarin's accomplishment shocked the United States, prompting it to declare the goal of putting a man on the moon.
"Without Yuri Alexeyevich's flight, I wouldn't have flown to the moon," said Thomas Stafford, commander of the Apollo 10 mission that approached within eight miles (13 kilometers) of the moon in May 1969, the last U.S. mission before the U.S. moon landing three months later.
"He was a great hero for the Soviet Union and the entire world," Stafford said in Russian after receiving a medal from Medvedev at a Kremlin award ceremony that honored cosmonauts and astronauts.
Sergei Krikalyov, who holds the world record for total time spent in space -- 803 days on six space missions -- said the main unknown before Gagarin's flight was how a human body would respond to the conditions in outer space.
"The main tasks were to make sure that a cosmonaut could breathe and swallow in zero gravity," Krikalyov, who now heads Russia's Star City cosmonaut training center, told the AP. "It was not even certain that a man could eat and drink during weightlessness."
Gagarin, who later crisscrossed the world as a living symbol of Soviet talent, craved more space trips. Cosmonaut Vladimir Shatalov told the AP that Gagarin was dreaming about going to the moon and was among those selected to train for the mission in a race against the U.S. "He hoped to take part in that, he hoped to fly to the moon," Shatalov during an interview at Star City, where Gagarin trained.
Gagarin was a backup for his friend Vladimir Komarov, who died when his space capsule crashed on re-entry in April 1967. Fearing any injuries to their space star, Soviet authorities decided to bar Gagarin from flying into space again.
Gagarin's own death in a training jet crash on March 27, 1968, is shrouded in conspiracy theories to this day. Shatalov, who had planned to follow Gagarin on another training flight that day, told the AP that the most likely reason for Gagarin's crash was a sonic wave from another military jet flying too close.
The Associated Press contributed to this report. 


Wondering what the trip was like for Yuri Gagarin, who became the first man in space exactly 50 years ago? Look no further than YouTube.
On April 12, 1961, the Russian cosmonaut became the first person in space, ushering in the era of human spaceflight. The rocket carrying Gagarin's Vostok 1 spacecraft blasted off from Baikonur Cosmodrome in the Soviet Union, reaching unprecedented speeds for human travel at the time before it broke free of the Earth's gravitational pull and entered orbit around the planet, circling once before re-entering the atmosphere and landing back on Soviet soil.
And a new movie shot entirely from the International Space Station and released to YouTube seeks to recreate exactly the experience of Gagarin's groundbreaking 108-minute orbit around the planet, combining the historic audio tapes of the event with brand new footage. 
The film, shot in collaboration with the European Space Agency and the astronauts onboard the International Space Station, captures the magnificence of Gagarin’s original orbit with breath-taking high-definition views of the Earth from above. It matches the orbital path of the International Space Station as closely as possible to that of Gagarin's original route, allowing viewers to see incredible vistas of the Earth through the Space Station’s new giant cupola window.
“We have woven historic Vostok I mission recordings of Gagarin (subtitled in English) with new shots captured by Paolo Nespoli, and edited them to an original score by composer Philip Sheppard," explained director Chris Riley. 

As he edited together the film, Riley made an unusual discovery: Gagarin's short bursts of communication from the cockpit were very much akin to modern Twitter chatter. In addition to being the first man in space, Riley called him the first man on Twitter.
“It’s clear Yuri spoke in 'tweets’ -- as communications to the mission controllers were always brief and to the point," he said. " Today a text-based tweet is composed of up to no more than 140 characters, so in essence Yuri was the first perfect tweeter."
Gagarin's 108-minute mission on April 12, 1961, remains a source of great national pride, and Russia marked the day with fanfare resembling Soviet-era celebrations. Schools had special lessons dedicated to Gagarin, billboards carried his smiling face and national television channels broadcast a flow of movies and documentaries about the flight.
"We were the first to fly to space and have had a great number of achievements, and we mustn't lose our advantage," Medvedev said during a visit to Mission Control outside Moscow.
Gagarin's accomplishment shocked the United States, prompting it to declare the goal of putting a man on the moon.
"Without Yuri Alexeyevich's flight, I wouldn't have flown to the moon," said Thomas Stafford, commander of the Apollo 10 mission that approached within eight miles (13 kilometers) of the moon in May 1969, the last U.S. mission before the U.S. moon landing three months later.
"He was a great hero for the Soviet Union and the entire world," Stafford said in Russian after receiving a medal from Medvedev at a Kremlin award ceremony that honored cosmonauts and astronauts.
Sergei Krikalyov, who holds the world record for total time spent in space -- 803 days on six space missions -- said the main unknown before Gagarin's flight was how a human body would respond to the conditions in outer space.
"The main tasks were to make sure that a cosmonaut could breathe and swallow in zero gravity," Krikalyov, who now heads Russia's Star City cosmonaut training center, told the AP. "It was not even certain that a man could eat and drink during weightlessness."
Gagarin, who later crisscrossed the world as a living symbol of Soviet talent, craved more space trips. Cosmonaut Vladimir Shatalov told the AP that Gagarin was dreaming about going to the moon and was among those selected to train for the mission in a race against the U.S. "He hoped to take part in that, he hoped to fly to the moon," Shatalov during an interview at Star City, where Gagarin trained.
Gagarin was a backup for his friend Vladimir Komarov, who died when his space capsule crashed on re-entry in April 1967. Fearing any injuries to their space star, Soviet authorities decided to bar Gagarin from flying into space again.
Gagarin's own death in a training jet crash on March 27, 1968, is shrouded in conspiracy theories to this day. Shatalov, who had planned to follow Gagarin on another training flight that day, told the AP that the most likely reason for Gagarin's crash was a sonic wave from another military jet flying too close.
The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

Life in Color: Yellow

Posted by Abhishek 0 comments

Malian Woman

Photograph by Michael S. Lewis
Yellow evokes the shine of the sun and is found throughout nature and the man-made world as a color that commands attention. This highly visible hue is found on everything from bumblebees to school buses, traffic signs to highlighters. Misbehaving soccer players are shown yellow as a warning, and Tour de France racers know the man in yellow is the rider to beat.
Here, a woman in Diafarabe, Mali, holds her brilliant yellow scarf against a blue African sky. Her landlocked country is a desert land that was once a hub for ancient Saharan caravan routes.Photo: Woman with yellow scarf

Yellow Boat Hull

Photograph by Michael Melford
A yellow boat hull is reflected at the waterline in Quebec’s Forillon National Park. This oceanside park is located at the farthest tip of Gaspe Peninsula in Canada
Photo: Yellow boat hull

Staircase Silhouette

Photograph by David Evans
A staircase stands in sharp relief against a wall of yellow stained glass at the University of Colorado in Boulder.
Photo: Yellow stained glass

Paper Mill

Photograph by Raymond Gehman
A time-lapse photo captures the wispy steam and yellow glow of the Georgia-Pacific paper mill in Brunswick, Georgia, at night. The mill is surrounded by the wetlands of poet Sidney Lanier's "Marshes of Glynn."
Photo: Night view of a paper mill