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Friday, August 31, 2012
Understanding the Voice in Your Head
Thursday, August 30, 2012
Wall Paneling - A Great Option For Home Interiors
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LG Optimus L9 hands-on (video)
Though LG didn't have any more to add to the L-Style series to offer the world? Behold the L9. Announced yesterday, the device made an appearance on the IFA show room floor this week, boasting a big and bright 4.7-inch IPS display that makes the its brethren looking downright shrimpy by comparison. In spite of the display size, the phone feels light, with a 8.9-millimeter profile.
It's important to note here that, in spite of being the king of the L-Series, it's still part of a budget lineup, and as such, the phone's body feels a bit plastickey, and the textured rear had a bit of trouble staying snapped in place in the two models (black and white) that we played with. Specwise, we're talking a 1GHz dual-core processor,1GB of RAM inside, 4GB of storage (expandable via a microSD slot and a 2,150mAh battery. The handset's rocking Ice Cream Sandwich (4.0.4, to be precise).
The handset's got a fairly nice bezel, with the front-facing camera on the top and a home button on the bottom, flanked by illuminating back and menu touch buttons. A larger, 5MP camera is located on the rear of the device, above the flash. Vodafone has the handset priced at €50.90 subsidized and €340 unsubsidized. Peep a video of the handset, after the break.
Continue reading LG Optimus L9 hands-on (video)
Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile
LG Optimus L9 hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 30 Aug 2012 09:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | | Email this | CommentsGoogle Now update brings public safety alerts, lets sports fans manually pick teams and adds movie listings
If you're sporting Android 4.1 Jelly Bean then one of its most notable features just got better, as an update for the Google Search update is enhancing Google Now (still getting adjusted? check the guide book for a list of commands) functionality in a few key ways. The new version brings public alerts to your Now page, with emergency messages like storm warnings or earthquake alerts, so if you're in range of Hurricane Isaac, it may be worth grabbing sooner rather than later. A more trivial change lets sports fans manually select their favorite teams from 140 pro soccer, baseball, basketball and hockey clubs -- we tried to find our college favorites and were denied, for now. While trying to automatically decipher our preferred squads from searches is nice, it might not be practical when we're just looking up information on our fantasy football players so this should be a help.
It has also added support for movie listings as seen above. Search for a flick that's in theaters and you will not only receive relevant information, but also when and where it's playing in your area. If that's not enough, it can be set to pop up on your "movie days" or when you just happen to be loitering outside a theater. Finally, in a move that should please many prospective Galaxy Note II owners it is ready to work in Korea -- grab the new version of the app at the link below.
Filed under: Cellphones, Tablets, Software, Mobile
Google Now update brings public safety alerts, lets sports fans manually pick teams and adds movie listings originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Aug 2012 19:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | | Email this | Commentstop schools in abu dhabi ac repair az solano community college online
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Here Comes Honey Boo Boo Recap: June's "Forklift Foot" Comes Out to Play
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An Introduction To Landscape Gardening
These are the Samsung phones Apple wants banned in the U.S...
Looks like Apple isn't wasting any time listing the Samsung Android phones they'd like to have banned in the U.S. following their $1 billion win last week. And that's a good thing, because a lot of these phones look so old they're probably not being sold much if at all anymore, so the faster they're not sold, the better... right? Both The Verge and FOSS Patents snagged the list:
- Galaxy S 4G
- Galaxy S2 (AT&T)
- Galaxy S2 (Skyrocket)
- Galaxy S2 (T-Mobile)
- Galaxy S2 Epic 4G
- Galaxy S Showcase
- Droid Charge
- Galaxy Prevail
While it's possible a regional carrier might have been planning to announce some of those as part of their 2012 lineup, given that the Galaxy S3 is the new hotness, I'm not sure how many, if any, actual consumers will suffer from a ban on the old broken.
However, this is just the beginning and Apple will no doubt try to have the ban set up in such a way that it catches any additional, past, present, and future devices that look to be infringing on the same patents. For example, Apple has also asked to have the ban extended on the Galaxy Tab 10.1 cellular variant.
Apple vs Samsung continues...
Source: The Verge, FOSS Patents
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
There Is Not Any Such Thing As Sterling Perfection, But There Is A Solution To All Problems
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What retailers can learn from Apple?s secret employee training manual
Apple's tight ship has a small leak that other retailers may be able to drink from. Gizmodo uncovered a training manual for Apple Geniuses that shows the tactics Apple employees use to make the customer feel empowered to buy.
Where Is Your Mind? Five Suggestions for Coaching Your Mind for Success
The Best Water Heaters on the Market
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Monday, August 27, 2012
How to set up two-step verification for Dropbox
Popular cloud storage solution, Dropbox has begun enabling two-step verification for their accounts, which means in addition to your password (something you know), they send an additional access code to your phone, or let you generate a time-based code with a mobile app like Google Authenticator (something you own). Although no security scheme is unbreakable, two-factor authentication is absolutely better than one. And if you keep personal data in Dropbox, you're absolutely going to want to use it.
How to enable Dropbox two-step verification on your Mac or Windows PC
Dropbox is currently providing two-factor verification as a beta but will be rolling it out to all accounts over the next few days. If you're reading this during the beta period, you'll have to manually enable it by downloading the Dropbox beta from their forum.
- Download Dropbox 1.5.12.
- Install Dropbox 1.5.12.
How to enable Dropbox two-step verification on your account
Once you're sure you're running the latest, greatest, proper version of Dropbox software, you need to turn on two-factor authentication on your account.
- Go to http://www.dropbox.com/try_twofactor on your desktop web browser.
- Login to your Dropbox account if you aren't already.
- If everything is good to go, you'll see a green banner at the top of the web page that reads: "Success! You can now try enabling two-step verification. Look under the "Account sign in" section of this page."
- Scroll down to Account sign in.
- Two-step verification will be set to disabled, click on (change).
- Click on Get started at the bottom right of the Enable two-step verification pop-up.
- Enter your Dropbox password.
- Choose whether you want your verification code sent to your phone over SMS, or if you want to generate a time-based code using a mobile app like Google Authenticator.
- For this example, I'm using SMS, and entering my country code, area code, and iPhone number.
- Enter the code you received via SMS, or generated via the mobile authenticator app. (Note: The first two codes they sent me were rejected as invalid, the third one worked, so you may need to try several times.)
- Record your emergency backup code in case you ever lose your phone and need to temporarily disable two-step verification. (They suggest writing it on paper but I hate that so I put it in 1Password.)
- Click **Enable two-step verification" on the bottom right.
That's it, you're done! From now on, whenever you log in to dropbox.com or enable a new computer or mobile device, you'll have to enter the SMS or generator code to make sure everything in nice and secure.
How to login to Dropbox two-step verification on your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad
The next time you need to add a device to your Dropbox account, for example, in a couple of months when a shiny new iPhone 5 or iPad mini follows you home from the Apple Store, you'll need to use that fancy new authentication code to do it.
- Download the Dropbox for iOS app if you haven't already.
- Launch the Dropbox app for the Home screen.
- Tap I'm already a Dropbox user.
- Enter your Dropbox account Email address and Password.
- Tap Log into Dropbox.
- Dropbox will SMS you a security code or you'll go create one using Google Authenticator. (If you're using SMS, and you're quick enough, you can watch for the Notification Center banner and type the code without ever leaving the Dropbox app.)
- Enter the Code.
- Tap Submit Code. (It only took two tries to get a valid code this time...)
That's it! Well, Dropbox will ask you if you want to enable automatic uploads (I don't, I use Photo Stream, but that's pretty much it.
Additional help and resources
If you need more help setting up Dropbox two-step verification, or if you want to setup additional two-step verifications for Gmail, hit the links below. And if you try it out, let me know how it works for you.
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Kred Tells The Story Of Social Media Influence
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