Friday, March 14, 2014

The super awesome ipad?




ihaveknowi


Ok i really want a mac but they are alot of money i am wondering if it would be pretty much the same to get a ipad like i could do school work on it and stuff let me know.


Answer
Don't listen to people who dont know a thing about how operating system works and what is computer programing.

iPad is perfect for students.

Student needs

1.Good organizer
2.Aler/Alarm
3.Social network
4.Edit/create/share document
5.Edit/Create Spreadsheet
6.Powerpoint Presentation
7.Photo Editing/Music composing

And of course some fun like gaming,chatting,photo sharing, online movies,music,free online TV shows etc.

iPad has top notch organizer which runs at the background so even iPad is in sleep mode , it will alert you give info about remaining tasks.

FaceBook, Twitter, other social network runs smoothly and all of them have push notification which means , whenever you get any message even if you not using the iPad, you will get the message.

iWork on iPad is much better than MS-Office on any laptop as long as your work is not super high profile for which you need software solution like SAP Business Object Xcelsius and Crystal Reports.
Even if you have never put complicated formulas using Excel, you can do it easily on iPad because its so simple and amazingly user friendly. Creating powerpoint presentation is piece of cake on it.

There are app for photo editing that professionals will using.

Seton Hill University has announced, every students will be getting iPad from next session.
University of Harvard,Stanford have already made apps for this platform. So dont listen to those who could not even pass elementary school. Those people are happy at laughing at ever new technology.

Many universities and schools will be uploading text books into iBooks store where student can read and then using iWork , do the homework or assignment then upload to dropbox or iwork.com to submit the project.
iPad will revolutionize the way student study. Think about it you will always be powered by Hundred of books with internet power and built in dictionary and a top of line MS office editor.

Hundreds of websites have recoded their video content into HTML 5 so you can watch thousands of videos online for free including latest full length movies and TV shows. You still can watch TV shows and movies on iPhone.

a few questions about the samsung/tmobile behold?




Soundwave


hey guys ive got a few questions on the samsung/tmobile behold...

1. can it store video and play them back? and if so what format?

2. can you watch videos on youtube? and if so, what type of format is it? such as the itouch/iphone format of watching videos.

3. how many contacts can you have on the aim instant messenger.

4. is it easy to type and get use to on aim instant messenger?

i think that is it for now. and all help is appreciated thanks.
edit: also, does the camera have a macro feature?



Answer
The Price: $150 after the standard rebate and two-year contract

The Verdict: The Behold fills the hole in T-Mobile's lineup for a not-quite-smart feature phone: It does a lot of the stuff a smartphone will do, like web browsing and email, just you know, not quite as capably as a real smartphone, or even as well as its cousin, the Instinct (even before it got better with its most recent round of updates). The web browser is bleh for anything but mobile sites since T-Mobile does you the favor of translating pages, which tends to butcher more complicated ones, and the email client won't do standard IMAP or POP. The IM client is slow, though not terrible, but either way, you can't really install your own apps to rectify the situation.

So what's good? The touchscreen is one more of the responsive ones that Samsung has put out, a hair better than the Instinct, and the keyboard layout is pretty good too, though I wish the space bar was bigger. The TouchWiz UI is attractive and easy to use, even if it's only skin deepâonce you go past the widget-y "desktop," you're dumped into a more generic, though not exactly ugly, cellphone UI.

The 5MP camera, though not miraculous, is better than most of the ones in these kinds of phones by a long shot, with satisfactory noise levels and a decent suite of basic photo editing that'll let you adjust fundamentals like contrast and color, crop or add crazy effects. I wish the flash were a little stronger and the autofocus were a little faster, though.

Overall, it's what you'd expect out of a feature phoneâit'll do a lot of things, just none of them amazingly. If you're a T-Mobile customer, for the money, I'd go with a G1âit lacks polish in some places, and the hardware isn't nearly as tight as the Behold's, but you'll get more out of it.

For T-Mobile

General 2G Network GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
3G Network UMTS 1700
Announced 2008, November
Status Coming soon
Size Dimensions 98 x 55 x 11.4 mm
Weight 100 g
Display Type TFT touchscreen, 256K colors
Size 240 x 320 pixels, 3.0 inches
- Accelerometer sensor for auto-rotate
Ringtones Type Polyphonic (64 channels), MP3
Customization Download
Vibration Yes
Memory Phonebook 1000 entries, Photocall
Call records 30 dialed, 30 received, 30 missed calls
Card slot microSD (TransFlash), up to 8GB
Data GPRS Class 10 (4+1/3+2 slots), 32 - 48 kbps
HSCSD Yes
EDGE Class 10, 236.8 kbps
3G HSDPA, 3.6 Mbps
WLAN No
Bluetooth Yes, v2.0 with A2DP
Infrared port No
USB Yes, v2.0
Features Messaging SMS, EMS, MMS, Email
Browser WAP 2.0/xHTML, HTML
Games Yes
Colors Light rose, Black
Camera 5 MP, 2592Ñ1944 pixels, autofocus, video(QVGA), flash
- Built-in GPS
- Java MIDP 2.0
- H.264/H.263/MPEG4 player
- MP3/AAC+/WAV player
- FM radio with RDS
- Organiser
- Document viewer
- Built-in handsfree
- T9
Battery Standard battery, Li-Ion
Stand-by -
Talk time -

The Samsung Behold reminds us quite a bit of the Samsung Instinct. It's not quite smart enough to be an iPhone clone, but it's still a good phone in its own right. In fact, in terms of call quality and calling features, it's a great phone. But Samsung still hasn't nailed the touchscreen interface. In some areas, like the QWERTY keyboard, they've done a great job, and it works well. In others, like the home page widgets and the problems we had with scrolling and moving through lists, the problems make using the phone a real chore. The phone has a very nice music player, but lacks a standard headphone jack, which seriously hobbles its potential. It uses fast networking on T-Mobile's new 3G network, but the Web browser lacks the deeper options needed to unleash its full potential. It's a flawed device, but not fatally flawed, and hopefully Samsung will work out most of these TouchWiz UI kinks as more of these phones come to market. Release: November 2008. Price: $200.
Pros: Responsive screen. Great call quality and calling features. Fine music player.
Cons: Scrolling issues hurt using the interface. Widgets might not work at this size. Web browsing and video player both mediocre

Design - Good

The Samsung Behold is the first phone on the U.S. market to follow up on Samsung's promise for more TouchWiz phones. We saw a version of this UI on the Samsung Omnia that we previewed back in July, though that phone ran Windows Mobile, while this is a more of a standard multimedia not-as-smartphone. It's an all-touch phone, with only Send, End and Back buttons on the face. A lock button on the side locks the screen and keeps the phone from making calls in your pocket. We like the hardware lock button, it's a bit more convenient than a finger swipe (though not as chic).

The most important thing we ask for on an all-touch phone is a responsive interface, and for the most part the Samsung Behold delivers. We had some trouble with the way TouchWiz is designed, but no trouble with the screen registering our taps and s




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Title Post: The super awesome ipad?
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