So ... We all know that Angry Bird's was the game of 2011 .
But now a more awesome game just came out .!!! It's called Bouncy Mouse and you can get the free version on your Android and iDevice's . It's super cute and verry nice to play it .
Electric Chapel Official Blog
vineri, 16 martie 2012
Do you love Angry Bird's ?
joi, 15 martie 2012
Bigger Screen's on Smartphone's !?!
Almost 90 percent of existing smartphone owners surveyed chose a prototype smartphone with a display larger than their current device,” commented Paul Brown, a Director in the Strategy Analytics User Experience Practice. “This trend is driven by increased mobile web browsing capability, as well as engaging video and gaming experiences.
Test the iPad 3 before buying it . Cool !!!
MANHATTAN BEACH, Calif., March 15, 2012 /PRNewswire/ – Have you been thinking about purchasing Apple’s new iPad, but not quite sure you are ready to make the investment? Wouldn’t it be nice if you had a little extra time, in the comfort of your own home, to test drive the new state-of-the-art mobile device before fully committing to buy it? YBUY, the new try-before-you-buy online subscription service, announced today that it will be carrying Apple’s third generation iPad, starting today at www.ybuy.com.
marți, 13 martie 2012
iPad 3 it's comeing .
New York Times
The biggest new feature is what Apple calls the Retina display: like the one on the iPhone 4S, it’s a very, very sharp screen. It’s four times as sharp as the iPad 2 — in fact, it’s the sharpest ever on a mobile device. This screen has 3.1 million pixels, which is 1 million pixels more than on a high-definition TV set. (At least Apple says that that’s how many pixels it has; I quit counting after three days.)
The new iPad doesn’t introduce anything that we haven’t seen before, either in the iPhone or in rival tablets. There’s no Steve Jobs “one more thing” moment here; Apple just took its white-hot iPad and added the latest screen, battery and cellular technologies. If you’re in the market for a tablet, here’s the bright side: For the same price as before, you can now get an updated iPad that’s still better-looking, better integrated and more consistently designed than any of its rivals.
TechCrunch
If you have the original iPad, I say this is a no-brainer. If you have an iPad 2, it’s a tougher call since it still seems nearly as fast as the new iPad. But if you choose not to upgrade (or to spend $399 for the 16 GB iPad 2 now), again, treat the new iPad as if it were Medusa when you’re in an Apple Store. Do. Not. Look. At. It. If you don’t yet have an iPad, get the new iPad.
The Verge
Let’s be clear: the new iPad is in a class by itself, just as its predecessor was. As the latest product in a lineage of devices that defined this category, the iPad continues to stand head and shoulders above the competition. With the addition of the Retina display, LTE, more memory, and a more powerful CPU, Apple has absolutely held onto the iPad’s market position as the dominant player and product to beat.
But should you buy it? I would imagine that the vast majority of people considering the new iPad fall into one of two categories: upgraders (people who already own a previous model or Android tablet), and new buyers.
USA Today
If you purchased the original iPad all of two years ago and have money to spare, I’d say go for it. Though a tad bigger than the iPad 2, the new iPad is smaller and lighter than the original iPad. You’ll appreciate the increased speed, the lovely screen and the presence of cameras. If you have an iPad 2, it’s a little harder to justify springing for the latest model now, much as you might want to. Yes, the new screen is spectacular, and 4G and the improved cameras are welcome upgrades. But you would have purchased that iPad 2 much more recently and it may be difficult to plunk down extra cash this soon, unless you have a family member who can inherit your current model.
Slashgear
At the start, we mentioned those voices calling out for revolutionary change to the iPad. It’s hard to see where it would actually be necessary. A good metaphor is, perhaps oddly, buying new tires: you don’t want them to reinvent the wheel, but you do look at the materials to see how they hold up to the competition. Apple has perfected its tablet form, and with the A5X it has tacitly acknowledged that throwing faster processors or extra cores at a device doesn’t necessarily improve it. Specs are done. The question now is, if I have my iPad, can I go for two days with ample use and without recharging? The answer, with the new iPad, is yes. Rivals running Android have chased Apple on specifications, but the overall user experience lacks the refinement and polish of the iPad. That will take more to address than a beefier processor or a higher resolution screen.
All Things Digital
It’s not as if people are complaining about the screens on their iPads, a device so attractive and useful that Apple sold about 55 million of them in two years. But this display is a big leap forward. It’s hard to illustrate on a Web page or in print how brilliant this new display is. You have to see it. Apple calls it a “retina” display because, at normal viewing distance, there are so many pixels per inch, the human eye can’t pick them out individually. This display packs 264 pixels into every inch, twice as many as on iPad 2. Overall, the resolution is 2048 x 1536, versus 1024 x 768 for the iPad 2.
Since it launched in 2010, the iPad has been the best tablet on the planet. With the new, third-generation model, it still holds that crown.
Macworld
The new iPad is just that: The iPad, updated for a new year and millions of new iPad users. It’s not smaller or lighter, but it’s got a remarkable screen, a much better rear camera, and support for cellular networking that can run at Wi-Fi speeds. It’s the iPad that millions of people have embraced, only one year better.
Users of the iPad 2 shouldn’t fret: Their iPad investment is certainly good for another year. But they might not want to look too closely at the new iPad’s screen. Once you get a load of that Retina display, it’s hard to go back to anything else.
Giorgio Armani
After more than 30 years of extraordinary success, Giorgio Armani will go down in history as the man who defined the working wardrobe of the late 20th century and taught Hollywood how to dress. As president, chief executive and sole shareholder of his company, he is considered by many to be the world’s wealthiest fashion designer, with a fortune estimated by Forbes in March 2008 at $5 billion.
Mr. Armani was born in 1934 in Piacenza, an industrial city in northern Italy. He did well at school and won a place to study medicine at university. After serving in the military for two years, he abandoned his studies and in 1957 found a job as a display assistant and buyer at La Rinascente in Milan, then one of Europe’s chicest department stores. Shortly afterward, he fell in love with the architect Sergio Galeotti.
After seven years at La Rinascente, Mr. Armani joined the men’s-wear designer Nino Cerruti, where he was drilled in tailoring and production. In 1975 Mr. Galeotti persuaded Mr. Armani, then 40, to start his own label for both men and women. He would run the business, while Mr. Armani designed.
Jimmy Choo names shoe after Iris Apfel
Geriatric starlet Iris Apfel is no ordinary nonagenarian. Her chaotic personal style has been lauded in the pages of Vogue and The New York Times of late, her encyclopaedic knowledge of fashion has won her a professorship at the University of Texas at Austin, and her exuberant make-up (she favours bombastically bright lips) has inspired a collection with MAC cosmetics.
In pictures: celebrities who have fashion accessories named after them
Her collaboration with glasses brand Eye-Bobs was another obvious partnership; Apfel is famed for her enormous peepers, which lend her eyes the appearance of gobstoppers. Less palpable a connection, however, was announced today, when Jimmy Choo launched a new shoe in "ultimate homage to the grand dame of idiosyncratic fashion".
The Iris shoe, "inspired by the inimitable style of fashion innovator and doyenne of ethnic embellishment, Iris Apfel," is a hand-woven leather sandal with a five inch killer heel, embellished with a cascade of resin chip ornaments, retailing at £895. Other items in the range include the Holly, a flat version of the sandal, and the Xara, a fringed bag. Creative Directors Sandra Choi and Simon Holloway referenced Apfel's "maximalist style and bold layering of tribal and ethnic jewellery" as keynotes in their design process.
What would the grand dame of New York style have to say about this latest homage, we wonder? Judging by a comment she made in an interview with WWD last month, it seems she won't be hot-footing it down to her local Choo store any time soon.
When asked for her views on the worst trend in current footwear, she responded: "Those big platforms and insanely high heels. They look like an orthopedist's delight. I don't see anything beautiful about them."
The heart attack-inducing height of the Choos isn't the only problem that Apfel might encounter with the eponymous sandals, however; she also exclaimed that she likes "clean-looking shoes. I don't mind if a shoe is embellished, but it has to be well designed. Manolo's shoes seem perfectly designed. He knows what he's doing. And there's nothing that beats a classic pump."
Perhaps Jimmy Choo should consider a re-christening. These have got J-Lo written all over them.
Siri sing's a funny song !!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tj4B3OolW5A&feature=youtube_gdata_player Tim Cook and his executive team had been toying with creative ways to tighten Apple’s stranglehold on the world music market — but the light bulb went on the moment Tim learned that Siri could carry a tune. The plan is simple: cut out the music companies and re-record the songs — all 12 million of them — with Siri on vocals. “We have every intention of paying for the music rights,” explained Cook. “We just don’t see the need to pay the performers and middle men.”
In a series of intensive tests, Apple engineers discovered that Siri has extraordinary range. Says one coder on the Siri team, “We knew she’d be a natural for classic rock and country, but she kills in hip-hop and gospel.” Cook also believes that with Siri, people will love their music collection even more. “Honestly, can you understand what Hendrix is saying? Siri nails the words every time, clear as a bell.” In an industry where contracts can typically run over a hundred pages, Apple’s contract with Siri is refreshingly simple. Siri will sing as directed for only “a daily battery charge and regular screen wipes with a microfiber cloth.”
Music industry experts estimate that Apple’s new approach to music will save hundreds of millions of dollars annually. But will consumers buy it? Producer Tom Corwin is a believer. “I just came from a recording session of Siri singing Mr. Tambourine Man, and I couldn’t hold back the tears. She not only put more emotion into it than Bob [Dylan], she could direct me to the nearest Starbucks without missing a beat.”