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We Look At The Largest Aircraft in The World

Saturday, 8 March 2014

There are a lot of aircraft in the world – commercial planes, military planes, helicopters, and the list goes on and on. Depending on the type of plane you’re looking at, most aircraft look and act very similar. There’s small aircraft, middle-sized aircraft, large aircraft, and then our favorite category: the what-in-the-world-is-that-thing aircraft.
If you’ve ever found yourself wondering what the biggest “plane” in the sky was, I have the answer for you. And if you study the makeup of it, it sounds as if its designers (Hybrid Air Vehicles, Ltd.) wanted to find out what would happen when they put a plane, helicopter, and blimp all together in the same prototype. What they got from the mashup happens to be the largest aircraft currently known to man. Have a look for yourself at the behemoth.
Take A Look At The Largest Aircraft In The World

Storing That Thing At The Airport
What you see in part in the image above is an unprecedented event in the history of aviation. This monster of an airship measures approximately 300 feet long and can reach a top speed around 100 MPH. Not impressed yet? She can also stay in the air for 3 weeks at a time. This aircraft is being heralded as part of the future of greener/hybrid air vehicles, and its designers hope one day there will be just as many of these in the sky as helicopters today. As these ships use mostly helium to travel, their impact on the environment would be less severe than other aircraft.
These ships will primarily be used to transport people and goods all over the world, though there is also the possibility of using them for surveillance use. Each one could carry up to 50 tons of cargo, and would cost just over $50 million to manufacture.
Could you imagine taking a trip in one of these things? I hope they’ll have a lot of movies on demand and seats with plenty of leg room. What do you think?

Skype Is Now Integrated Into Outlook Globally

Friday, 7 March 2014

Microsoft Webmail users can finally use Skype on Outlook.com as the feature is fully rolled out globally to all users, after a year of preview testing.  A senior product-marketing manager for Skype, Karen Tong, stated in a 4 February blog post that Skype for Outlook.com was live worldwide, following a staggered rollout of the service which started last year. The new feature enables Microsoft’s Webmail users to make Skype video and voice calls and start chats directly from within the browser window.
Tong said, “Just download the plug-in, link your Skype account to find your friends and start a video call or send an instant message without having to leave your inbox,”  There is an updated version of the browser plug-in, which now offers support for Safari under Mac OS X. Windows OS users can download a plug-in that can enable HD video calling.  Tong also said that some users “experienced issues with calls continuing to ring after pick-up when you were running the Outlook.com plugin and Skype on your desktop at the same time…We’re happy to share that in the new version now available we’ve resolved this issue.”
General manager for Skype and Lync, Giovanni Mezgec, revealed last month, that over 10,000 Lync customers have signed up to connect both platforms. By integrating Skype and rolling out new Lync apps and capabilities, Microsoft’s aim is to “enable anybody in an organisation to talk to anyone else, in and out of said organisation,” he added.
Outlook SkypeThe huge popularity foe Skype has made it a prime target for hackers. On 01January 2014, the Syrian Electronic Army (SEA) took control of Skype’s Facebook and Twitter accounts, along with its service blog. No user data was compromised, but the incident did result in a few negative anti-Microsoft digs!  The Windows team acquired Skype back in 2011 for an $8.5 billion (£5.1bn) price tag. Since then, Microsoft has been running non-stop on integrating the pioneering voice-over-IP (VoIP) and video communications technology into almost every part of the company’s portfolio. Skype now ships with Windows 8.1 and the Xbox One games console.  
If you have any comments regarding this story, please leave your comments in the section below.

Follow The Google’s Project Loon

Google announced its Project Loon last year. Its aim is to bring the internet to the most remote parts of the world, where it is near impossible to currently get access.
The project is now well under way and you can track the helium ballons as they journey around the Earth in real time using the service from Flightradar24. You could see their departure from near Timaru, New Zealand and track them as they rose 162 feet from the ground, drifting out to sea
According to Google, the balloons are now heading east towards South America so that internet connections can be established along the 40th Southern Parallel.
Project LoonThe Project Loon balloons have been designed to last for over 100 days, so with a previous balloon travelling past South America in twelve days, this next set have got plenty of time and a long way to drift before their work is done.

Galaxy S4, S3, Note 2 kitkat update

Thursday, 6 March 2014

We have been seeing a number of Samsung handsets being treated to new Android firmware updates over the last few weeks, and now we have some Samsung Galaxy S3 and Galaxy Note 2 Android 4.4.2 KitKat US update news.
Last month Samsung provided some information about a number of handsets in the US regarding the Android 4.4.2 KitKat update. Now US carrier Sprint has moved to clarify this a little by confirming a number of upcoming updates.
These included the Galaxy Note 3 and Galaxy S4 updates that the carrier has already begun pushing out, but also included the Galaxy S3 and Galaxy Note 2, but unfortunately Sprint didn’t provide exact dates for them to start being pushed out.
They did promise news soon while providing the features the update will bring to the handsets that include a more intuitive user interface.


Here’s a promising indicator for some users of the Samsung Galaxy S4 as the Android 4.4 update is now being pushed out to more regions in the form of Android 4.4.2 KitKat. A week or so ago we heard the update had reached India, and now it’s reaching further to include some owners of the device in Europe and other parts of Asia.
The rollout of the update for both the Galaxy S4 GT-I9500 and GT-I9505 models now seems to be well and truly underway and it’s reported that Malaysia is another region of Asia where the 4.4.2 update is now being received as an OTA (over-the-air) update, as well as the Phliippines.
In Europe, owners of the Galaxy S4 in Poland also started to receive the update earlier today. According to carrier the update is between 350 and 400 MB in size. If you’re in Europe or another region and haven’t yet received the update this is a very good sign that indicates it will be spreading to more countries and carriers soon.
Remember these updates can take a while to roll out but if you want to check manually you can head to Settings followed by More, then About Device, and finally Software to see if the update is ready.
Earlier today Android 4.4.2 started to arrive for T-Mobile’s version of the Galaxy Note 3 as well, so it’s good to hear that Samsung is finally getting on top of this update. If you’re in Europe or elsewhere, let us know if the update has arrived for your Galaxy S4 yet by dropping us a comment.

Mobile World Congress on Smartphone wars

Thursday, 27 February 2014

The mobile phone industry is now looking to the fast-growing demand for smartphones priced at $100 or below as the market for fancier high-end devices has become saturated, but not all handset makers are able or willing to trade down.
Much of the talk this week at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, the industry's biggest annual trade fair, has turned from the latest big screen, premium-priced devices to the new, entry-level smartphones that analysts say now overwhelmingly represent the industry's best hope for growth.
"All the phones now look the same," said industry analyst Ben Wood of CCS Insight after surveying the eight vast halls of phones and other mobile gadgets on show.

"The ability of top brands like Samsung, Apple and Nokia to differentiate themselves is getting harder," he said.
Growth in global smartphone shipments will fall sharply this year and keep slowing through 2018, with average prices dropping significantly as the demand shifts to China and other developing countries, market research firm IDC said earlier on Wednesday.
So now phone makers are touting new, low-cost devices which are intended to retail at near $100 or below. This class of device has some but not all the features of the current top end smartphones, which sell for several hundreds of dollars and until this year drew nearly all the media attention and marketing spend at Barcelona.
jonesarena.blogspot.com Reporting from the MWC
Early leaders in this new market are Chinese players, some with global brand names and others who remain virtually unknown outside China, who have made huge strides in acquiring the technical and design expertise that enables them to now drive down the costs without necessarily sacrificing quality.
The biggest winners so far look to be Huawei , Lenovo, TCL Communications and still unfamiliar upstarts like Gionee, Oppo and CorePad that are poised to become big international names in the coming years
All benefit from having a home field advantage in China, the world's largest phone market.
NOKIA X
Nokia X Dual SIM FastlaneThis shifting landscape has already forced Nokia, the former mobile world-beater now struggling to stay relevant, to adopt Google's Android software to gain entry to the low-end smartphone market, despite Android being an arch rival of Nokia's new-owner-to-be Microsoft.
Launching the 89-euro ($120) Nokia X, Stephen Elop, chief executive of the Finnish group, called the sub-$100 range, "a massive opportunity" with that segment of the smartphone market now growing four times faster than the rest of the market.
Wood said Nokia's move spoke volumes about the pressures the whole industry was feeling.
"The cheaper end of the smartphone market has become such a big opportunity that, eventually, Nokia had to go to a rival software system -- Google's Android," he said, describing the move as "hugely controversial, but necessary".
The cheap stripped-down smartphones, which often sacrifice big screens, memory, and camera quality and have fewer novelty features such as fingerprint recognition, are designed to reach potentially billions of new consumers in emerging markets.
Smartphone sales last year overtook for the first time sales of so-called basic 'feature' phones, which focus on just calls and texts with a pared down Internet access, according to market tracking firm Strategy Analytics.
And IDC analyst Francisco Jeronimo said smartphone sales in the sub-$100 category alone more than tripled to hit 159 million last year from 45.4 million in 2012. Sub-$50 smartphones grew even faster, up from just 900,000 in 2012 to 19.5 million last year.
THE SUPPLIES COMPONENT
However, this growth in demand is pushing up the cost of components, a surprising twist in an industry more familiar with falling material prices as technology evolves.
China's ZTE Corp, whose mobile business is aiming for 50 percent growth in shipments to 60 million phones this year, has seen the component supply crunch.
"All vendors face the challenge of the cost of key hardware components such as screen displays, memory and keyboards," said Qian Hao Lv, head of ZTE's device strategy. "These are crucial to differentiate one model from the next."
Nonetheless, Kan Yulun, another ZTE executive, said that the company was working on new technologies to drive the cost of smartphones down to $50 or below without compromising on quality.
"We will find tech solutions to reach the $50 price target by the end of this year," Yulun said.
He said he often hears from telecom operators in Africa, who still sell lots of feature phones, that they were now hungry for smartphones but need prices to come down to below $50.
The head of the pack in the sub-$100 race is the Alcatel Onetouch brand owned by TCL. Its brightly-colored Idol family of phones have already proven a hit in Latin America and Europe and the firm launched two new phones for under $100 at the Mobile World Congress this week that can run on 4G mobile networks being rolled out in China, Brazil, and elsewhere.
But while many players are now chasing the lower end of the market not all are, fearing that stripped-down hardware features can only lead to a commoditized market where no one can differentiate and maintain a worthwhile profit margin.
Huawei, the world's third-biggest phone maker, prefers to aim higher by increasing the proportion of its phones that sell for 300 euros ($400) or more as opposed to the low-end it defines as under 150 euros.
"We are not interested in the sale volume of those low-end, low-priced phones," said Chief Executive Eric Xu.

Is this the end of hardware‏

At the launch of the Samsung Galaxy S5 in Barcelona the audience – and not just Samsung employees – applauded the water resistant design, the heart rate monitor, the pay by fingerprint and the much-improved camera. But these are all incremental improvements, just as the iPhone 5S was an incremental improvement over the 5.
That’s not to diminish the remarkable feats of engineering involved in both, but from the consumer’s perspective, they are solving known problems and improving in predictable ways.
Where there’s innovation it’s to some extent in new devices, such as smartwatches and the superb new Fit fitness band, with its gorgeous curved screen. But to a much greater extent it is in software: Samsung’s had S Health for ages, but it’s only now that it looks lovely that people are interested, and think their phone may actually help make them healthier.
It’s hard to get away from the fact that for all the designer collaborations and incremental improvements, screens are now better than the naked eye can perceive, form factors are now as various as your tastes, and even cameras and video capture are approaching as good as they need to get.
Improvements will continue, of course, but technology enthusiasts increasingly feel one thing: interest in products has plateaued as we ready ourselves for a new phase of innovation around a few new devices and a mass of new ways to integrate the web into the entire world around us. It means that every company you’ve ever heard of needs to get good at software. Very few are already.

WhatsApp to launch audio services

Monday, 24 February 2014

LIVE FROM MOBILE WORLD CONGRESS 2014:  WhatsApp has sent shockwaves through the mobile industry by announcing it will soon launch a voice service in addition to its widely used messaging application.
Speaking during a Monday-morning keynote session at the Mobile World Congress, Jan Koum, the internet player’s chief executive, said WhatsApp plans to introduce the voice service in the second quarter of the year, and will initially cater to Android devices and iPhones before turning its attention to Windows and Nokia handsets.
“We think we’ll have the best voice product out there,” said Koum. “It’ll use the least amount of bandwidth and we’re going to optimise the hell out of it.”
WhatsApp has already shaken up the mobile industry with its free messaging application, currently used by some 450 million subscribers worldwide, and its latest move will pose a threat to operators that still generate most of their revenues from providing traditional voice services.
It also raises the prospect of Facebook becoming a major player in voice: last week, the social-networking giant announced a $19 billion takeover of WhatsApp as it looks to expand its presence in emerging markets.
Asked for his reaction to the WhatsApp announcement, Hans-Holger Albrecht, the chief executive of emerging-markets operator Millicom, gave a lighthearted reply but made no attempt to hide his concern.
“Around 70 percent of our revenue is from voice, so I hear that you’re coming but I say take it easy,” he told Koum on a panel session that followed the keynote presentations.
However, eager to present the internet player as a prospective partner for operators – rather than a strictly disruptive force – Koum also revealed that WhatsApp is planning a tie-up with Germany’s E-Plus, without providing further details, and is keen to work with other operators on generating value for consumers.
While WhatsApp has so far shirked advertising and complexity, news of the Facebook takeover has triggered speculation it will have to change its approach in future. Yet Koum insisted the messaging provider’s values would remain the same when it comes to launching the voice service.
“Marc Zuckerberg [Facebook’s chief executive] agrees that WhatsApp needs to remain independent,” he said. “We can only achieve our goal of getting to a billion users if we continue down the path we started on.”
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jonesarena.blogspot.com