Saturday, June 30, 2012

Samsung Galaxy S 2 won't be getting Jelly Bean 4.1 Update

 Samsung Galaxy S 2 won't be getting Jelly Bean 4.1 Update due to Hardware limitations


Galaxy S II Jelly Bean

While the Galaxy S3 has been confirmed to get the Jelly Bean Update, We don't like to deliver Bad News for Galaxy S II users, but we have to forward the info we got. According to the latest Reports we received, The Samsung Galaxy S II I9100/I9100G won't be getting the Android 4.1 Jelly Bean Update which has been announced on the Google I/O 2012.

The Galaxy S II won't taste the latest Android 4.1 Jelly Bean due to Hardware limitations, Taking in account the following reasons :


  • Low screen resolution 800 x 480 - 1280 x 720p recommended resolution.
  • Dual-core Processor - Quad-core recommended.
  • Device won't be Smooth with Jelly Bean and TocuhWiz running together.


These reasons may prevent Samsung from Updating the Galaxy S II to Jelly Bean, the same thing happened with the Galaxy S I9000 when samsung announced it won't be able to Update the device to ICS 4.0.3 because of hardware limitations and the users won't be able to run ICS smoothly on their devices.


Galaxy S 3 Confirmed

We are Still Waiting for Samsung to announce the list of Jelly Bean 4.1 Updatable devices,
source

Samsung Galaxy S 2 won't be getting Jelly Bean 4.1 Update

 Samsung Galaxy S 2 won't be getting Jelly Bean 4.1 Update due to Hardware limitations


Galaxy S II Jelly Bean

While the Galaxy S3 has been confirmed to get the Jelly Bean Update, We don't like to deliver Bad News for Galaxy S II users, but we have to forward the info we got. According to the latest Reports we received, The Samsung Galaxy S II I9100/I9100G won't be getting the Android 4.1 Jelly Bean Update which has been announced on the Google I/O 2012.

The Galaxy S II won't taste the latest Android 4.1 Jelly Bean due to Hardware limitations, Taking in account the following reasons :


  • Low screen resolution 800 x 480 - 1280 x 720p recommended resolution.
  • Dual-core Processor - Quad-core recommended.
  • Device won't be Smooth with Jelly Bean and TocuhWiz running together.


These reasons may prevent Samsung from Updating the Galaxy S II to Jelly Bean, the same thing happened with the Galaxy S I9000 when samsung announced it won't be able to Update the device to ICS 4.0.3 because of hardware limitations and the users won't be able to run ICS smoothly on their devices.


Galaxy S 3 Confirmed

We are Still Waiting for Samsung to announce the list of Jelly Bean 4.1 Updatable devices,
source

Samsung Galaxy Nexus banned in the US

Samsung Galaxy Nexus banned in the US, Due to infringes 4 Apple patents

Galaxy Nexus ban

After targeting the Galaxy Nexus, first Smartphone to get the Android 4.1 Jelly Bean with the New Google Smart Voice search which looks more like Siri, Apple has just been granted a temporary injunction to ban Galaxy Nexus sales in the United States. US Court ruled against Samsung in the patent case, which was initiated in February, but gets its first ruling just now.

Google Smart voice search

U.S. Judge Lucy Koh decided that Samsung has infringed 4 patents belong to Apple, although one specific patent weighs in towards this decision which basically refers to a device being able to search multiple sources through a single interface (Apple's Siri).


The rest of the patents Apple accuses Samsung (and Google) of infringing are patent 5,946,647 (actionable linking), patent 8,046,721 (slide-to-unlock) and patent 8,074,172 (touch screen word suggestion).

source

Samsung Galaxy Nexus banned in the US

Samsung Galaxy Nexus banned in the US, Due to infringes 4 Apple patents

Galaxy Nexus ban

After targeting the Galaxy Nexus, first Smartphone to get the Android 4.1 Jelly Bean with the New Google Smart Voice search which looks more like Siri, Apple has just been granted a temporary injunction to ban Galaxy Nexus sales in the United States. US Court ruled against Samsung in the patent case, which was initiated in February, but gets its first ruling just now.

Google Smart voice search

U.S. Judge Lucy Koh decided that Samsung has infringed 4 patents belong to Apple, although one specific patent weighs in towards this decision which basically refers to a device being able to search multiple sources through a single interface (Apple's Siri).


The rest of the patents Apple accuses Samsung (and Google) of infringing are patent 5,946,647 (actionable linking), patent 8,046,721 (slide-to-unlock) and patent 8,074,172 (touch screen word suggestion).

source

Friday, June 29, 2012

Update Samsung Galaxy Nexus to Android 4.1 Jelly Bean

 How to Update your Samsung Galaxy Nexus to Android 4.1 Jelly Bean

 

Galaxy Nexus 4.1 JB

Do you want to Update your Galaxy Nexus to Android 4.1 Jelly Bean ? If YES, This tutorial help you to update Samsung Galaxy Nexus with Android 4.1 Jelly Bean.


Note: This tutorial will Work only on GSM Galaxy Nexus ONLY, Don't try on different models.


GNexus 4.1


Requirements [Updated] :

  • Backup your phone and current ROM


GNexus 4.1


Instructions to Update Galaxy Nexus with Android 4.1 Jelly Bean:

  • Your phone must be Rooted and CWM installed
  • Download the package to your computer
  • Connect your phone to computer with USB Cable and transfer the downloaded package to root of your SDcard
  • Now open ROM Manager and Tap on "Install ROM from SD Card" and select the ROM package you put it into the root folder of the SD card.
  • Select "Wipe Data & Cache"
  • Follow the rest prompts and you did it.
  • Kudos You've successfully Updated your Galaxy Nexus with Android 4.1 Jelly Bean. Thank you Koush for the package.




DONE! Your Nexus is Updated to JB 4.1

Update Samsung Galaxy Nexus to Android 4.1 Jelly Bean

 How to Update your Samsung Galaxy Nexus to Android 4.1 Jelly Bean

 

Galaxy Nexus 4.1 JB

Do you want to Update your Galaxy Nexus to Android 4.1 Jelly Bean ? If YES, This tutorial help you to update Samsung Galaxy Nexus with Android 4.1 Jelly Bean.


Note: This tutorial will Work only on GSM Galaxy Nexus ONLY, Don't try on different models.


GNexus 4.1


Requirements [Updated] :

  • Backup your phone and current ROM


GNexus 4.1


Instructions to Update Galaxy Nexus with Android 4.1 Jelly Bean:

  • Your phone must be Rooted and CWM installed
  • Download the package to your computer
  • Connect your phone to computer with USB Cable and transfer the downloaded package to root of your SDcard
  • Now open ROM Manager and Tap on "Install ROM from SD Card" and select the ROM package you put it into the root folder of the SD card.
  • Select "Wipe Data & Cache"
  • Follow the rest prompts and you did it.
  • Kudos You've successfully Updated your Galaxy Nexus with Android 4.1 Jelly Bean. Thank you Koush for the package.




DONE! Your Nexus is Updated to JB 4.1

All about Google Nexus 10 Tablet


Google is Preparing a 10-inch Nexus 10 Tablet, OGS Supply Chain Confirms

Nexus 10

After Google released the Nexus 7 tablet with 7-inch displays, Supply chain "Wintek" is reportedly shipping 500,000 One-glass (OGS) panels for the Google Nexus 7 Now, with the rest of the shipments coming from TPK Holding.

N7

Also, Sources casually mentioning that Wintek will also be supplying 10" panels for another Nexus tablet rumored to be the "Nexus 10", making it the largest Google supplier of slate displays. The rest of the 10-inchers are said to come from AU Optronics. Wintek apparently has a 3 Million capacity for those medium size 10" OGS panels, so we are wondering if Google is just playing around with a Nexus 10 idea

source

 

All about Google Nexus 10 Tablet


Google is Preparing a 10-inch Nexus 10 Tablet, OGS Supply Chain Confirms

Nexus 10

After Google released the Nexus 7 tablet with 7-inch displays, Supply chain "Wintek" is reportedly shipping 500,000 One-glass (OGS) panels for the Google Nexus 7 Now, with the rest of the shipments coming from TPK Holding.

N7

Also, Sources casually mentioning that Wintek will also be supplying 10" panels for another Nexus tablet rumored to be the "Nexus 10", making it the largest Google supplier of slate displays. The rest of the 10-inchers are said to come from AU Optronics. Wintek apparently has a 3 Million capacity for those medium size 10" OGS panels, so we are wondering if Google is just playing around with a Nexus 10 idea

source

 

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Google Nexus 7 on eBay

Google Nexus 7 on eBay

 When is a $200 tablet not a $200 tablet? When it is priced at $400 on eBay for purchase by impatient and wealthy status seekers.The tablet in question is the just announced Google Nexus 7 which will be launched next month at $199.99. Because this tablet is powered by Jelly Bean, there is demand from those who want to be the first on their block with an Android 4.1 device.
Since the tablet isn't expected out until the middle of July, where are these
Google Nexus 7 already on eBay
tablets coming from? Simple answer really. 6,000 attendees of Google I/O will be receiving the Google Nexus 7 and it will be no surprise to see quite a few put the tablet up on eBay. One unit being
Google Nexus 7 on eBayauctioned has had no bidders yet and carries a "Buy it Now" price of $400.00.One seller wants $1,500.00 for his device. Not a bad profit for a tablet that will be priced at $199.99 in a few weeks. Of course, a buyer does need to be found first. You might see more goodies from Google I/O 2012 hit eBay as developers also will receive a Nexus phone and the Nexus Q Social Strreamer.

source

Google Nexus 7 on eBay

Google Nexus 7 on eBay

 When is a $200 tablet not a $200 tablet? When it is priced at $400 on eBay for purchase by impatient and wealthy status seekers.The tablet in question is the just announced Google Nexus 7 which will be launched next month at $199.99. Because this tablet is powered by Jelly Bean, there is demand from those who want to be the first on their block with an Android 4.1 device.
Since the tablet isn't expected out until the middle of July, where are these
Google Nexus 7 already on eBay
tablets coming from? Simple answer really. 6,000 attendees of Google I/O will be receiving the Google Nexus 7 and it will be no surprise to see quite a few put the tablet up on eBay. One unit being
Google Nexus 7 on eBayauctioned has had no bidders yet and carries a "Buy it Now" price of $400.00.One seller wants $1,500.00 for his device. Not a bad profit for a tablet that will be priced at $199.99 in a few weeks. Of course, a buyer does need to be found first. You might see more goodies from Google I/O 2012 hit eBay as developers also will receive a Nexus phone and the Nexus Q Social Strreamer.

source

HTC One V Now Available on Virgin Mobile

 HTC One V Now Available on Virgin Mobile

HTC One V Now Available on Virgin Mobile
The sleek looking HTC One V is now available on Virgin Mobile in the US. It may be an entry level phone, but it’s packing the beautiful Ice Cream Sandwich firmware with HTC’s Sense UI. The build quality looks superb and has that wonderful design that reminds me of the HTC Legend. The One V is available for a contract-free price of $199 which is not too bad at all for the quality of a phone you’re getting. Any Virgin Mobile users out there thinking of picking this up? You can also check hands on video of the One V at CTIA to help you make your decision.
source: Virgin Mobile

HTC One V Now Available on Virgin Mobile

 HTC One V Now Available on Virgin Mobile

HTC One V Now Available on Virgin Mobile
The sleek looking HTC One V is now available on Virgin Mobile in the US. It may be an entry level phone, but it’s packing the beautiful Ice Cream Sandwich firmware with HTC’s Sense UI. The build quality looks superb and has that wonderful design that reminds me of the HTC Legend. The One V is available for a contract-free price of $199 which is not too bad at all for the quality of a phone you’re getting. Any Virgin Mobile users out there thinking of picking this up? You can also check hands on video of the One V at CTIA to help you make your decision.
source: Virgin Mobile

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

i will Offera beautiful collection of photos New   Google Nexus
a beautiful collection of photos Google Nexus 7 New
Photos Photo Nexus 7 Tablet
I hope to like you

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images




Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images
Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images
http://gigaom2.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/nexus-7-store.jpg
Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 imagesNexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

 

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

i will Offera beautiful collection of photos New   Google Nexus
a beautiful collection of photos Google Nexus 7 New
Photos Photo Nexus 7 Tablet
I hope to like you

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images




Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images
Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images
http://gigaom2.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/nexus-7-store.jpg
Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 imagesNexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

Nexus 7 photos,Nexus 7 images

 

Nexus 7 review: the best $200 tablet you can buy

 Nexus 7 review:

DNP Nexus 7 review
In 2008, when the Eee PC was revolutionizing the computing world and driving every manufacturer to make cheaper and smaller laptops, Sony washed its hands of the whole thing. The "race to the bottom," the company said, would profoundly impact the industry, killing profit margins and flooding the market with cheap, terrible machines. Sony was wrong, its stance lasting about a year before joining the competition with its own VAIO W.
Four years on we're buying better laptops than ever before and, with the netbook class now more or less dead, that downward competition seems to have shifted to the tablet front. A flood of cheap, truly awful slates preceded Amazon's Kindle Fire, the $200 tablet from a major brand that looks to have been the proper catalyst in plunging prices. The latest challenger to enter the competition is ASUS, partnering with Google to create the first Nexus tablet, a device that not only will amaze with its MSRP, but with its quality. It's called the Nexus 7, it too is $200, and it's better than Amazon's offering in every way but one.
Move further down toward the bottom of the back and you'll find the device's single speaker. It's a slit that runs roughly two-thirds of the way across the back, centered and sitting about a half-inch above the bottom -- which is, by the way, where you'll find the tablet's only ports. Centered down there is a micro-USB connector and, to the far right side when looking at the display, the 3.5mm headphone jack. That's it. Thankfully, ASUS's proprietary connector found on the Transformer tablets doesn't make an appearance here, but neither do we get a dedicated HDMI output, which is a bit of a bummer. (You can, of course, use an MHL adapter if you like.)
Nexus 7 review
On the left edge of the device, the same four contacts present on the Galaxy Nexus can be found, presumably waiting to be tickled by some future accessory, while up top you'll find ... nothing. Just the silvery ring that runs around the full device. It looks like brushed metal, but feels more like plastic. Even so, the tablet has a very sturdy, strong feel to it -- but that's partly thanks to it being just a little bit chunky.
It measures 10.45mm (0.41 inches) thick, which is just half a millimeter thinner than the Kindle Fire -- itself no slender belle. But, crucially, it weighs much less: 340g (12 ounces) versus 413g (14.6 ounces) for the Fire. That's a very noticeable difference and it makes the Nexus 7 much nicer to carry around. Its curved edges, too, make it far more comfortable.
On the inside is an NVIDIA Tegra 3 quad-core processor running at 1.2GHz (though it can step up to 1.3GHz when it wants to) and paired with 1GB of RAM with either eight or 16 gigs of flash storage (doubling the capacity will cost you a $50 premium). As there's no microSD expansion here, you'll probably want to pay the extra cash. WiFi (802.11b/g/n) is your only option for data connectivity, though there's naturally Bluetooth and NFC, not to mention GPS, an accelerometer, a digital compass and a gyroscope, too.
Display and sound
Nexus 7 review
Budget tablets typically make the biggest sacrifices on the display front, and certainly the 1,024 x 600 resolution on the Kindle Fire feels a bit constricting at this point. Not so with the Nexus 7, which is fronted by a very nice 1,280 x 800 IPS panel rated at 400 nits of brightness. While more pixels is always better -- the new iPad and its Retina display having made us yearn for ridiculously high resolutions in all our devices -- WXGA feels perfectly adequate here. Text is rendered very well and 720p videos look great.
Much of that, though, is thanks to the other, less quantifiable aspects of the screen. Viewing angles are top-notch, with contrast staying strong regardless of which side you're coming from. And, it's plenty bright, too, a properly nice screen that, like everything else here, is just a little nicer than you'd expect given the cost.
Audio, however, isn't exactly fighting above its class. The speakers integrated in the back and peeking out through a slender slit toward the bottom deliver a decent amount of sound that isn't too unpleasant to listen to. It passes the "loud enough to fill a hotel room" test but the quality at those levels will leave you reaching for your earbuds.
Performance and battery life
Nexus 7 review
When Jen-Hsun Huang teased Tegra 3-powered tablets would drop under $200 this summer he obviously knew what was coming, but what we didn't know was just how far back those tablets would have to be scaled to make that price point. If you've been reading all the way through to here (and we love you for it) you'll know we haven't yet found a real compromise made to achieve that price. Compromises will not be found in this section, either.
Okay, so a 35-second boot time does leave a little bit to be desired, but once you're inside the OS, applications load quickly and respond briskly, even graphics-heavy ones like the Google Play magazine app. Webpages are rendered promptly and swiping through them is snappy. Sure, there are the occasional stutters and hiccups here that even a coating of Butter doesn't completely eliminate, but we've experienced those with even the top-shelf tablets, like the recent Transformer Pad Infinity TF700 with its 1.7GHz version of the Tegra 3 processor.
 source

Nexus 7 review: the best $200 tablet you can buy

 Nexus 7 review:

DNP Nexus 7 review
In 2008, when the Eee PC was revolutionizing the computing world and driving every manufacturer to make cheaper and smaller laptops, Sony washed its hands of the whole thing. The "race to the bottom," the company said, would profoundly impact the industry, killing profit margins and flooding the market with cheap, terrible machines. Sony was wrong, its stance lasting about a year before joining the competition with its own VAIO W.
Four years on we're buying better laptops than ever before and, with the netbook class now more or less dead, that downward competition seems to have shifted to the tablet front. A flood of cheap, truly awful slates preceded Amazon's Kindle Fire, the $200 tablet from a major brand that looks to have been the proper catalyst in plunging prices. The latest challenger to enter the competition is ASUS, partnering with Google to create the first Nexus tablet, a device that not only will amaze with its MSRP, but with its quality. It's called the Nexus 7, it too is $200, and it's better than Amazon's offering in every way but one.
Move further down toward the bottom of the back and you'll find the device's single speaker. It's a slit that runs roughly two-thirds of the way across the back, centered and sitting about a half-inch above the bottom -- which is, by the way, where you'll find the tablet's only ports. Centered down there is a micro-USB connector and, to the far right side when looking at the display, the 3.5mm headphone jack. That's it. Thankfully, ASUS's proprietary connector found on the Transformer tablets doesn't make an appearance here, but neither do we get a dedicated HDMI output, which is a bit of a bummer. (You can, of course, use an MHL adapter if you like.)
Nexus 7 review
On the left edge of the device, the same four contacts present on the Galaxy Nexus can be found, presumably waiting to be tickled by some future accessory, while up top you'll find ... nothing. Just the silvery ring that runs around the full device. It looks like brushed metal, but feels more like plastic. Even so, the tablet has a very sturdy, strong feel to it -- but that's partly thanks to it being just a little bit chunky.
It measures 10.45mm (0.41 inches) thick, which is just half a millimeter thinner than the Kindle Fire -- itself no slender belle. But, crucially, it weighs much less: 340g (12 ounces) versus 413g (14.6 ounces) for the Fire. That's a very noticeable difference and it makes the Nexus 7 much nicer to carry around. Its curved edges, too, make it far more comfortable.
On the inside is an NVIDIA Tegra 3 quad-core processor running at 1.2GHz (though it can step up to 1.3GHz when it wants to) and paired with 1GB of RAM with either eight or 16 gigs of flash storage (doubling the capacity will cost you a $50 premium). As there's no microSD expansion here, you'll probably want to pay the extra cash. WiFi (802.11b/g/n) is your only option for data connectivity, though there's naturally Bluetooth and NFC, not to mention GPS, an accelerometer, a digital compass and a gyroscope, too.
Display and sound
Nexus 7 review
Budget tablets typically make the biggest sacrifices on the display front, and certainly the 1,024 x 600 resolution on the Kindle Fire feels a bit constricting at this point. Not so with the Nexus 7, which is fronted by a very nice 1,280 x 800 IPS panel rated at 400 nits of brightness. While more pixels is always better -- the new iPad and its Retina display having made us yearn for ridiculously high resolutions in all our devices -- WXGA feels perfectly adequate here. Text is rendered very well and 720p videos look great.
Much of that, though, is thanks to the other, less quantifiable aspects of the screen. Viewing angles are top-notch, with contrast staying strong regardless of which side you're coming from. And, it's plenty bright, too, a properly nice screen that, like everything else here, is just a little nicer than you'd expect given the cost.
Audio, however, isn't exactly fighting above its class. The speakers integrated in the back and peeking out through a slender slit toward the bottom deliver a decent amount of sound that isn't too unpleasant to listen to. It passes the "loud enough to fill a hotel room" test but the quality at those levels will leave you reaching for your earbuds.
Performance and battery life
Nexus 7 review
When Jen-Hsun Huang teased Tegra 3-powered tablets would drop under $200 this summer he obviously knew what was coming, but what we didn't know was just how far back those tablets would have to be scaled to make that price point. If you've been reading all the way through to here (and we love you for it) you'll know we haven't yet found a real compromise made to achieve that price. Compromises will not be found in this section, either.
Okay, so a 35-second boot time does leave a little bit to be desired, but once you're inside the OS, applications load quickly and respond briskly, even graphics-heavy ones like the Google Play magazine app. Webpages are rendered promptly and swiping through them is snappy. Sure, there are the occasional stutters and hiccups here that even a coating of Butter doesn't completely eliminate, but we've experienced those with even the top-shelf tablets, like the recent Transformer Pad Infinity TF700 with its 1.7GHz version of the Tegra 3 processor.
 source