Posts Tagged ‘phones’
To allow you control your household electronics with your handset, a new technology has just been introduced by Nokia. This new technology has been named as the Home Control Centre (HCC).
With the help of this technology you will be able to switch electronic goods on and off, control your room temperature and check your oven temperature through you phones.
Teppo Paavola, who is head of Nokia business development, says about this new technology that it has been developed to provide an easier solution for controlling various home appliances just with your mobile phone.
It has not yet been revealed how does this new technology work and it is expected that further information will be provided next month at Nokia World Conference in Barcelona where this home-domination plan will be unveiled. Read the rest of this entry
The 4th generation of iPod Nano has just been unveiled by Apple that offers 16GB capacity and a wide range of colors to fashion savvy teens.
This Slimmest iPod Nano has been uncovered in San Francisco in a ‘Let’s Rock’ event and it will be available from today in almost every part of the Apple-loving world.
The length of the new model is the same as in 1st and 2nd generation versions, but it’s the slimmest ever from Steve Jobs’ lot. A stubbier version of the iPod Nano, which is available with hi-res display, has the same wide screen.
With that screen, you can see more info on while watching movies and browsing albums. Read the rest of this entry
WASHINGTON – Researchers furtively followed the settings of 100,000 citizens outside the United States through their mobile phone employ and concluded that nearly everyone hardly ever wanders away more than a few miles from home.
The first-of-its-kind study by Northeastern University lifts up seclusion and moral questions for its scrutinizing manners, which would be illegitimate in the United States.
It also goes along with somewhat astonishing consequences that disclose how modest people budge more or less in their daily lives. Almost three-quarters of those researches for the most part hanged about within a 20-mile-wide circle for half a year.

