Tuesday, October 16, 2012

India's first 4G LTE phone : Huawei Ascend P1 LTE launched in India by Airtel

At Qualcomm's IQ conference in New Delhi, Airtel and Huawei launched the first LTE-based smartphone in India - Meet the Huawei Ascend P1 LTE.
The smartphone will run on Bharti Airtel's 4G LTE network which is already rolled out in Kolkata and Bangalore; as well as in Pune, where 4G is expected to launch very soon. Huawei Ascend P1 runs Android Ice cream sandwich 4.0.4 with Huawei's custom UI on top, dual-core Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 processor, 1 GB RAM, 4 GB user memory, a microSD slot, 4.3" AMOLED display with a screen resolution of 960x540 pixels with scratch-resistent Corning Gorilla glass, 8 MP camera and a good 1800 mAh battery.
Huawei Acsend P1 can only use 4G network in India, because of the 2300 MHz radio allotted to 4G spectrum by the Indian government.  Bharti Airtel is going to offer seamless Roaming between 4G LTE and 3G /GSM network across India. The device can handles high speed data on the LTE network (4G) and voice calls on the underlying 3G network using Circuit Switched Voice Fall Back (CSFB voice) technology.
Neither price of the handset nor availability is announced today.

Source : Telecom TalkUnleashThePhones

Saturday, October 13, 2012

How To : Partition your computer's hard drive without formatting


Many a times, the new laptops which come with Windows 7 pre-installed, offer no partition. There is a huge C drive which houses Windows system files. So it becomes a little difficult to partition the hard drive. It is recommended to store your important data such as documents and pictures on a different partition, so they can be safe even if the OS needs to be re-installed due to some failure or virus attack.

Luckily, Windows 7 sports a feature called as Disk Management, which lets you modify the hard drives. It is, although, hidden deep into the settings and not directly accessible through Control Panel. Let us see how to split the hard disk to a new partition.

Step 1 : Firstly, press Start on your Windows 7 machine, and type "Computer Management" in the search bar at the bottom. In the list that appears in Search Results, click on the program "Computer Management". A new window will open.

Step 2 : Click on the option "Disk Management" (highlighted in the above image).

Step 3: Right-click on the drive that you wish to split. Select "Shrink Volume". A dialog box will appear which asks the amount of megabytes by which to shrink the drive.

Step 4 : Select a size you wish, which should be less than the free space left in that drive.

Step 5: After the drive is shrunk, there appears an "Un-allocated Space". Right click on it and select "New simple volume". Fill up the dialog box appropriately and a new partition will be created.

Mapify your Facebook : Add a map as cover image of your Facebook profile

 Since Facebook has introduced the option to add large cover images to the timeline, it has become an extremely popular feature. Now there is a web-app to use a map of a place as the cover image of your timeline. Created by Technologies Evangelist, Simon Madine, Covermap.me gives your Facebook timeline a very distinctive and a very personal look.
 When asked about how he got the idea for this innovative website, Simon answers to a blog :
 A little while ago, Facebook introduced timeline cover images where you could upload a large image to appear at the top of your Facebook profile page. Naturally, my first thought was “Maps!” so I uploaded a Nokia Map centered on Berlin (where my office is based). After a couple of people comment that they like it, I realized I could make it into a fun little web service where people could do this automatically.

 When you sign in to covermap.me with your Facebook account, it shows you a map the same size and shape as the Facebook cover image with your profile picture in the bottom left. It tries to centre on your current location but you can search for anywhere. Once you’re happy with the map position, the next step allows you to choose between different map tile styles – standard, terrain, public transport networks, etc. When you’ve picked a style you like, another button press will upload the image to Facebook and ask you to confirm that you want to set it as your profile image. Cool, isn't it?