Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Harry Potter novels available in ebook format

British author JK Rowling, creator of the Harry Potter series of books, poses with 12 year olds Kent children Ivy Aris (R) of Marden and Simran Sethi from Maidstone during the launch of new online website Pottermore in London.

LONDON (Reuters) - J.K. Rowling's best-selling "Harry Potter" novels are available for the first time in ebook format on the new website dedicated to the boy wizard adventures.

The seven stories, which have sold an estimated 450 million copies worldwide and spawned a successful eight-film movie franchise, went on sale on Tuesday at the Pottermore site set up by Rowling.

The website's online store (shop.pottermore.com) is the exclusive retailer of Harry Potter ebooks and digital audio books, which have been launched in English only.

French, Italian, German and Spanish editions are expected in the coming weeks with further languages to follow.

The main Pottermore website is expected to be up and running in early April, several months later than initially anticipated owing to technical problems.

Designers hope to allow readers to explore elements of the Harry Potter world that have not appeared in the books and to interact with the stories and characters.

The free-to-use website, partnered by Sony, is one of several ventures launched by Rowling and her commercial partners to keep the magic of Harry Potter alive and the revenues rolling in.

Rowling, who recently announced she was turning to adult fiction, long resisted allowing the Harry Potter stories to be turned into digital format, but eventually decided that technological progress could not be stopped.

The ebook launch raises questions over copyright infringement for the jealously guarded Potter property, although organizers are using a combination of watermarking techniques to protect against illegal copying.

-Reuters

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Man shoots at iPad to test durability


A man carried out a durability test on the new iPad by shooting at it, a media report said.

The video of the Apple gadget being destroyed has become an online hit, The Sun reported.

It shows Richard Ryan using different guns, including an assault rifle, on a range to shoot at the new iPad.

"It didn't do as much as I'd hoped to it," said Ryan after the first test.

He then switched over to a higher powered gun that blew up a large hole through the centre of the Apple gadget.

It's not just an iPad that Ryan has tested. He has shot at an iPhone, Xbox 360, iPad 2 and other gadgets.

Another test that Ryan carries out is called 'will it blend' in which the latest gadgets are placed in a blender to see if they survive.

The test was not taken kindly by one online user who lamented: "Why would you ruin a good ipad. I've wanted one for ever and couldn't afford one."

Another, however, described it as 'awesome'.

-IANS

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Laser 'unprinter' vapourizes photocopied ink from paper

Note: This is not the actual laser unprinter.

London Researchers have developed a new laser powered device to “unphotocopy” toner ink from paper. The process, developed by engineers at the University of Cambridge, involves using short laser pulses to erase words and images by heating the printed material to the point that they vaporise, the BBC reported.

The researchers have insisted that it works with commonly used papers and toner inks and is more eco-friendly than recycling. “When you fire the laser, it hits the thin toner layer and heats it up until the point that you vaporise it,” the team’s lead author, David Leal-Ayala said. “Toner is mostly composed of carbon and a plastic polymer. It’s the polymer in the toner that is vaporised.”

The engineers acknowledge that they are not the first ones to have thought about this idea. But they asserted that others who have attempted to solve the problem have found that they damaged and/or discoloured the paper in the process, or needed specially formulated toner.

After several tests Leal-Ayala and his colleagues discovered that the best setting was green laser pulses, lasting just four billionths of a second in duration, which removed all but a hint of the print.

The engineers now plan to develop a prototype device suitable for an office.

-ANI

Watch out Facebook, Twitter. Here comes Pinterest


Texas: Christina Gomez has carefully displayed her dream cribs, rockers and mobiles on Pinterest, the increasingly popular online bulletin board. Never mind that she doesn't have a baby.

"Ah, Pinterest - where I dress my unborn children and decorate my imaginary mansion," the San Antonio political consultant said - on Twitter - when asked about the website.

Gomez is addicted. And she's not alone. The social site where users can "pin" images and follow others' collections has surged in recent months to become the 16th most-visited site in the United States, according to the Web information company Alexa. That's a higher rank than CNN.com.

Pinterest CEO Ben Silbermann, who grew up in Iowa collecting bugs and stamps, said on Tuesday that his goal is to help people discover things that they didn't know they wanted. He said there are plenty of people trying to tell you what you want via billboards, catalogs or Internet ads.

"But no one has really made a lot of progress toward building a place you want to go every day to discover things that feel like they were hand-picked just for you, and that's what I can hope we can do," Silbermann told a packed ballroom at the South by Southwest (SXSW) Interactive conference in Austin.

The self-deprecating Silbermann, who has rarely spoken publicly about the site he co-founded in fall 2009, described having "catastrophically small numbers" at first. Nine months in, there were fewer than 10,000 people on it, he said. He sought feedback from early users, giving some his cell phone number. And he didn't quit.

Silbermann, who spoke repeatedly of wanting his site to be beautiful and display beautiful collections, said one goal of his was to create a service that offered timelessness in an era when people were obsessed with real-time sites like Twitter.

"If something is your favorite book, it's no less your favorite book 72 hours from now or a year from now or five years from now or 10 years from now," he said. "It still says something about who you were then and who you want other people to know you as."

Learning from pinning
For Gomez, who lives in a 900-square-foot home in Texas and is about to move to smaller digs in Washington, D.C., Pinterest allows her to collect things - like USB drives shaped like teddy bears - without taking up precious physical space.

Like other users, she has organized her pictures into boards with titles like "Sewing Projects," "Gift Ideas" and "For the new house. She has used it to post pictures of clothes she already owns and to learn to cook with a crock pot.

The growth of Pinterest has been fueled primarily by women, including those planning their weddings, said Robert Quigley, who teaches new media and multimedia at the University of Texas. The draw is the site's simplicity, he said.

"The rise of Pinterest has been absolutely incredible - it just came out of nowhere," Quigley said. "It's so visual, it's easy to use and simple - yet complex enough to allow you to organize the way you want."

Pinterest isn't only for women.

Guillaume Driscoll, 30, a design student at the California College of the Arts in San Francisco, said he and his girlfriend both use the site. Before he joined a few months ago, he was interested in clothes, but "not on a level of some of my lady friends." He's seen that change as he's pinned more clothes, like colorful socks and a grey cashmere sport coat from J. Crew.

"Now, I'm starting to think about it more. What is my style? What does my style say about me?" said Driscoll, who was visiting Austin for SXSW.

Silbermann said it makes sense for people to use Pinterest to explore topics that lifestyle magazines focus on - design, home decorating, cooking and fitness - but he's also seeing new uses like political satire (say, Mitt Romney's fake yacht collection). Museums are using Pinterest to post art collections. Some users are posting travel guides to cities.

"Every day, literally, we see at least one board where we just couldn't have imagined how people would use it and to me, that's really exciting," Silbermann said.

-Reuters

Job seekers getting asked for Facebook passwords


SEATTLE — When Justin Bassett interviewed for a new job, he expected the usual questions about experience and references. So he was astonished when the interviewer asked for something else: his Facebook username and password.

Bassett, a New York City statistician, had just finished answering a few character questions when the interviewer turned to her computer to search for his Facebook page. But she couldn't see his private profile. She turned back and asked him to hand over his login information.

Bassett refused and withdrew his application, saying he didn't want to work for a company that would seek such personal information. But as the job market steadily improves, other job candidates are confronting the same question from prospective employers, and some of them cannot afford to say no.

In their efforts to vet applicants, some companies and government agencies are going beyond merely glancing at a person's social networking profiles and instead asking to log in as the user to have a look around.

"It's akin to requiring someone's house keys," said Orin Kerr, a George Washington University law professor and former federal prosecutor who calls it "an egregious privacy violation."

Questions have been raised about the legality of the practice, which is also the focus of proposed legislation in Illinois and Maryland that would forbid public agencies from asking for access to social networks.

Since the rise of social networking, it has become common for managers to review publically available Facebook profiles, Twitter accounts and other sites to learn more about job candidates. But many users, especially on Facebook, have their profiles set to private, making them available only to selected people or certain networks.

Companies that don't ask for passwords have taken other steps — such as asking applicants to friend human resource managers or to log in to a company computer during an interview. Once employed, some workers have been required to sign nondisparagement agreements that ban them from talking negatively about an employer on social media.

Asking for a candidate's password is more prevalent among public agencies, especially those seeking to fill law enforcement positions such as police officers or 911 dispatchers.

Back in 2010, Robert Collins was returning to his job as a security guard at the Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services after taking a leave following his mother's death. During a reinstatement interview, he was asked for his login and password, purportedly so the agency could check for any gang affiliations. He was stunned by the request but complied.

"I needed my job to feed my family. I had to," he recalled,

After the ACLU complained about the practice, the agency amended its policy, asking instead for job applicants to log in during interviews.

"To me, that's still invasive. I can appreciate the desire to learn more about the applicant, but it's still a violation of people's personal privacy," said Collins, whose case inspired Maryland's legislation.

Until last year, the city of Bozeman, Mont., had a long-standing policy of asking job applicants for passwords to their email addresses, social-networking websites and other online accounts.

And since 2006, the McLean County, Ill., sheriff's office has been one of several Illinois sheriff's departments that ask applicants to sign into social media sites to be screened.

Chief Deputy Rusty Thomas defended the practice, saying applicants have a right to refuse. But no one has ever done so. Thomas said that "speaks well of the people we have apply."

When asked what sort of material would jeopardize job prospects, Thomas said "it depends on the situation" but could include "inappropriate pictures or relationships with people who are underage, illegal behavior."

In Spotsylvania County, Va., the sheriff's department asks applicants to friend background investigators for jobs at the 911 dispatch center and for law enforcement positions.

"In the past, we've talked to friends and neighbors, but a lot of times we found that applicants interact more through social media sites than they do with real friends," said Capt. Mike Harvey. "Their virtual friends will know more about them than a person living 30 yards away from them."

Harvey said investigators look for any "derogatory" behavior that could damage the agency's reputation.

E. Chandlee Bryan, a career coach and co-author of the book "The Twitter Job Search Guide," said job seekers should always be aware of what's on their social media sites and assume someone is going to look at it.

Bryan said she is troubled by companies asking for logins, but she feels it's not violation if an employer asks to see a Facebook profile through a friend request. And she's not troubled by non-disparagement agreements.

"I think that when you work for a company, they are essentially supporting you in exchange for your work. I think if you're dissatisfied, you should go to them and not on a social media site," she said.

More companies are also using third-party applications to scour Facebook profiles, Bryan said. One app called BeKnown can sometimes access personal profiles, short of wall messages, if a job seeker allows it.

Sears is one of the companies using apps. An applicant has the option of logging into the Sears job site through Facebook by allowing a third-party application to draw information from the profile, such as friend lists.

Sears Holdings Inc. spokeswoman Kim Freely said using a Facebook profile to apply allows Sears to be updated on the applicant's work history.

The company assumes "that people keep their social profiles updated to the minute, which allows us to consider them for other jobs in the future or for ones that they may not realize are available currently," she said.

Giving out Facebook login information violates the social network's terms of service. But those terms have no real legal weight, and experts say the legality of asking for such information remains murky.

The Department of Justice regards it as a federal crime to enter a social networking site in violation of the terms of service, but during recent congressional testimony, the agency said such violations would not be prosecuted.

But Lori Andrews, law professor at IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law specializing in Internet privacy, is concerned about the pressure placed on applicants, even if they voluntarily provide access to social sites.

"Volunteering is coercion if you need a job," Andrews said.

Neither Facebook nor Twitter responded to repeated requests for comment.

In New York, Bassett considered himself lucky that he was able to turn down the consulting gig at a lobbying firm.

"I think asking for account login credentials is regressive," he said. "If you need to put food on the table for your three kids, you can't afford to stand up for your belief."

-AP

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Encyclopaedia Britannica ends print, goes digital

New York: In yet another sign of the growing dominance of the digital publishing market, the oldest English-language encyclopedia still in print is moving solely into the digital age.

The Encyclopaedia Britannica, which has been in continuous print since it was first published in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1768, said on Wednesday it will end publication of its printed editions and continue with digital versions available online.

The flagship, 32-volume printed edition, available every two years, was sold for $1400. An online subscription costs around $70 per year and the company recently launched a set of apps ranging between $1.99 and $4.99 per month.


The company said it will keep selling print editions until the current stock of around 4000 sets ran out.

It is the latest move Encyclopaedia Britannica has made to expand its Internet reference services and move farther into educational products. It first flirted with digital publishing in the 1970s, published a version for computers in 1981 for LexisNexis subscribers and first posted to the Internet in 1994.

"The print edition became more difficult to maintain and wasn't the best physical element to deliver the quality of our database and the quality of our editorial," Jorge Cauz, president of Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc., told Reuters.

Yet even as publishing industry has created more digital products, it has struggled with financial losses, and Cauz admitted to a "long road to profitability" for many publishers.

"Britannica was one of the first company's to really feel the full impact of technology, maybe twenty years ago, and we have been adapting to it, though it is very difficult at times," he said.

While Encyclopaedia Britannica has continued to operate, he expected "many trade publishers will not survive -- and any content development company will have to be thinking about how they are going to fill the gap."

As to whether print editions of books will be viable products in the future, Cauz predicted, "print may not completely vanish from the market, but I think it is going to be increasingly less important. Many publications will never have a print analog and will only be printed on digital formats."

With its scholarly, reliable reputation, Encyclopaedia Britannica had not been affected by the popularity of free online website Wikipedia, he said.

-IBN LIVE

Tag Heuer launches the luxury handset Racer at $3700

New Delhi: Tag Heuer, a Swiss luxury watchmaker known for its sports watches and chronographs, has doffed the silk off its new smartphone - the Tag Heuer Racer.

The Racer, an Android-based smartphone, is said to be inspired by GT and Formula 1 racing cars, and has been engineered without compromise. "TAG Heuer RACER achieves an unparalleled torsion and strength to weight ratio. The result is a fusion of luxury and performance inspired by TAG Heuer heritage in GT cars and Formula 1," said the company in its press release.

It is claimed to have a high speed processor, and a new customisable 3D user interface to fit the individual needs of each owner.


The company has not revealed much information about the phone's tech specs. However, those who are willing to pay a hefty amount for a phone won't be too bothered about its specs.

The new TAG Heuer Racer collection is priced at 2800€ (US $3,700), and will be available in TAG Heuer boutiques, luxury mobile boutiques and selected watch and jewellery retailers in July.


-IBN LIVE

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

For Impatient Web Users, an Eye Blink Is Just Too Long to Wait

Arvind Jain, a Google engineer, pointed out the loading speed of individual elements of a website on a test application used to check efficiency, at Google offices in Mountain View, Calif. 

Wait a second. 
No, that’s too long.

Remember when you were willing to wait a few seconds for a computer to respond to a click on a Web site or a tap on a keyboard? These days, even 400 milliseconds — literally the blink of an eye — is too long, as Google engineers have discovered. That barely perceptible delay causes people to search less.

“Subconsciously, you don’t like to wait,” said Arvind Jain, a Google engineer who is the company’s resident speed maestro. “Every millisecond matters.”

Google and other tech companies are on a new quest for speed, challenging the likes of Mr. Jain to make fast go faster. The reason is that data-hungry smartphones and tablets are creating frustrating digital traffic jams, as people download maps, video clips of sports highlights, news updates or recommendations for nearby restaurants. The competition to be the quickest is fierce.

People will visit a Web site less often if it is slower than a close competitor by more than 250 milliseconds (a millisecond is a thousandth of a second).

“Two hundred fifty milliseconds, either slower or faster, is close to the magic number now for competitive advantage on the Web,” said Harry Shum, a computer scientist and speed specialist at Microsoft.

The performance of Web sites varies, and so do user expectations. A person will be more patient waiting for a video clip to load than for a search result. And Web sites constantly face trade-offs between visual richness and snappy response times. As entertainment and news sites, like The New York Times Web site, offer more video clips and interactive graphics, that can slow things down.

But speed matters in every context, research shows. Four out of five online users will click away if a video stalls while loading.

On a mobile phone, a Web page takes a leisurely nine seconds to load, according to Google, which tracks a huge range of sites from the homes of large companies to the legions of one-person bloggers. Download times on personal computers average about six seconds worldwide, and about 3.5 seconds on average in the United States. The major search engines, Google and Microsoft’s Bing, are the speed demons of the Web, analysts say, typically delivering results in less than a second.

The hunger for speed on smartphones is a new business opportunity for companies like Akamai Technologies, which specializes in helping Web sites deliver services quicker. Later this month, Akamai plans to introduce mobile accelerator software to help speed up the loading of a Web site or app.

The government too recognizes the importance of speed in mobile computing. In February, Congress opened the door to an increase in network capacity for mobile devices, proposing legislation that permits the auction of public airwaves now used for television broadcasts to wireless Internet suppliers.

Overcoming speed bumps is part of the history of the Internet. In the 1990s, as the World Wide Web became popular, and crowded, it was called the World Wide Wait. Invention and investment answered the call.

Laying a lot of fiber optic cable for high-speed transmission was the first solution. But beyond bandwidth, the Web got faster because of innovations in software algorithms for routing traffic, and in distributing computer servers around the world, nearer to users, as a way to increase speed.

Akamai, which grew out of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Laboratory for Computer Science, built its sizable business doing just that. Most major Web sites use Akamai’s technology today.

The company sees the mobile Internet as the next big challenge. “Users’ expectations are getting shorter and shorter, and the mobile infrastructure is not built for that kind of speed,” said Tom Leighton, co-founder and chief scientist at Akamai, who is also an M.I.T. professor. “And that’s an opportunity for us.”

The need for speed itself seems to be accelerating. In the early 1960s, the two professors at Dartmouth College who invented the BASIC programming language, John Kemeny and Thomas Kurtz, set up a network in which many students could tap into a single, large computer from keyboard terminals. 

“We found,” they observed, “that any response time that averages more than 10 seconds destroys the illusion of having one’s own computer.”

In 2009, a study by Forrester Research found that online shoppers expected pages to load in two seconds or fewer — and at three seconds, a large share abandon the site. Only three years earlier a similar Forrester study found the average expectations for page load times were four seconds or fewer.

The two-second rule is still often cited as a standard for Web commerce sites. Yet experts in human-computer interaction say that rule is outdated. “The old two-second guideline has long been surpassed on the racetrack of Web expectations,” said Eric Horvitz, a scientist at Microsoft’s research labs.

Google, which harvests more Internet ad revenue than any other company, stands to benefit more than most if the Internet speeds up. Mr. Jain, who worked at Microsoft and Akamai before joining Google in 2003, is an evangelist for speed both inside and outside the company. He leads a “Make the Web Faster” program, begun in 2009. He also holds senior positions in industry standards groups.

Speed, Mr. Jain said, is a critical element in all of Google’s products. There is even a companywide speed budget; new offerings and product tweaks must not slow down Google services. But there have been lapses.

In 2007, for example, after the company added popular new offerings like Gmail, things slowed down enough that Google’s leaders issued a “Code Yellow” and handed out plastic stopwatches to its engineers to emphasize that speed matters.

Still, not everyone is in line with today’s race to be faster. Mr. Kurtz, the Dartmouth computer scientist who is the co-inventor of BASIC, is now 84, and marvels at how things have changed.

Computers and networks these days, Mr. Kurtz said, “are fast enough for me.”

-NyTimes

Moser Baer launches credit-card style USB drive


Not a long time time ago money was mostly in alloy and paper. Let’s say an amount of Rs.5 lacs could only fit in a suitcase. A rectangular piece of plastic changed it all. The credit card became the new face of money. Rs. 5 lacs or even Rs.10 lacs or even more fit in that little piece of plastic less than weighing less than 10 gms that fits in the wallet. Technological innovations are fascinating. Somehow they head for the wallet! The latest to head for the wallet is memory.
Memory that started from the good old days of tape drives. Many innovations later came the hard disc. Suddenly someone decided he wanted to carry the load of memories wherever he went, without the burden of course! Out came a Flash Drive. Man always wants the best of both worlds i.e. memory without the burden of carrying it. A Flash Drive also meant a load, even if it was just maybe 100 gms. Now out comes India’s first ‘credit card-shaped’ USB Flash Drive by Moser Baer, weighing more of less the same as a credit card.

The Specifics
Launched last week, Moser Baer Zap pocket flash drive comes with 4 GB memory, measures 84.15 X 52.83 sq. mm and weighs just 10.25 gms. It fits in the wallet easily and can easily be mistaken for a credit card. With USB 2.0 interface (direct plug-n-play), it is compatible with Win 2000/XP/ME/Vista/7, Mac OS 9.0 or later versions and Linux Kernel 2.4.0 and higher versions.


The Good and the Bad
Price - Priced at MRP Rs. 1,100 the price is super high. In comparison an ordinary pen drive like Transcend JetFlash 500 4 GB comes for just Rs.255 at Flipkart.com and San Disk at around the same price of under Rs.300. Moser Baer may argue it has size on its side but even that argument goes void when you already have Transcend Jet Flash V90C 4 GB Pen Drive priced at Rs. 397 or a PNY Lovely Attache 4 GB Pen Drive (Blue) that comes at Rs.233 on Flipkart.com. 

Ofcourse Moser Baer Zap has looks, aesthetics and convenience but even then Rs.1,100 is very high even if it is being charged for the novelty of being like a credit card. Having said that Apple charges a bomb for its aesthetics. So its a personal decision for the buyer on what he chooses, the functionality or aesthetics or a combination of both. However the good news is the product is available athttp://shop.moserbaer.in (at a special introductory price of INR 399/. At Rs.399/- it maybe worth it. 

Convenience - Convenience wise Moser Baer Zap is super good. It fits it easily in the wallet. Even the USB interface is made in a way that it is as thick as a credit card
Storage - At 4 GB, its a decent option. It means suppose you have pictures taken from a 5 mega pixel camera you can carry around 3000 pictures in this credit card pocket drive.

Aesthetics
The aesthetics are good. It looks like a credit card. Interestingly the credit card shape gives the much needed safety feature to the USB interface and keeps it safe when folded. Moser Baer says Zap is rugged in design, design wise yes but insertion wise it needs to be handled with care .

Warranty - It has been introduced with a warranty of 2 years. However what needs more clarification is the safety of data. For example when you buy a San Disk pen drive there is a certain reliability you get with the brand. Moser Baer capabilities so far lie in optical storage media like CDs and DVDs . Hopefully the same reliability will come in its new line of products.

The Last Word
Google used scarcity to create demand (remember Gmail only by invitation) and it was a success. However the same strategy didn’t work for its newer launches. Same is with dual pricing. This system of dual pricing Rs.1,100 as printed price and “introductory” at Rs.399/- I wonder if it is taken seriously by customers. Anyways these days it matters less what is printed on the pack. The Flipkarts and Infibeams of the world will anyway level the pricing right. Overall a convenient product. Moser Baer Zap at Rs.399 maybe worth it, at Rs.1,100 it is not.

-HT

Monday, March 12, 2012

HTC Rhyme Review


The HTC Rhyme is a device aimed primarily at women, even if HTC may try to tell you otherwise. From the choice of colors available for the phone, such as plum, light green and beige to the fact that it comes with an accessory called Charm, which is meant to be clipped to your bag or purse and inform you of pending notifications by glowing softly, it’s easy to tell that the phone was designed primarily with women in mind. And while some of you may dismiss it because of this or because on paper it seems to have fairly run of the mill hardware, that would be a grave mistake on your part, as I shall explain below.

Design
The Rhyme has a simple yet elegant design that is unmistakably HTC. There are two main design elements here. The first is the metal chassis, which can be seen around the display on the front and as a thick band in the middle on the back. It bisects the two plastic portions, that form the other major part of the design. Each of these plastic portions have a slightly different color than the metal, giving the rear a nice three-tone finish.


The metal portion has a lovely smooth matte finish to it but the plastic portions don’t nearly feel as good to look at or touch. The build quality all around, though, is top-notch. I especially liked the size of the phone, which thanks to the 3.8-inch display, was quite manageable and fit perfectly in my hands. If you too are tired of seeing gigantic Android smartphones then you should give this one a try.



The design of the Rhyme has one flaw, however: the battery is non-removable. You access the SIM card and the microSD card by sliding open the plastic portion at the bottom of the phone but those are the only things you will be able to access. 



The Rhyme in India, unfortunately, only comes in one color called Clearwater, as seen in these pictures. Also, it lacks the desktop dock that is part of the phone sold elsewhere in the world. You still get the Charm accessory, though. The Charm is basically a sugar cube sized object at the end of a cable that plugs into the headphone jack. It has a clip for attaching to your bag and glows when you have a missed call or message. While this will definitely be convenient for women who put their phones in their bags it does have a couple of issues. First of all, the Charm is useless under the Sun, where you won’t be able to see it glowing. Secondly, when it’s indicating a missed notification, the blinks a bit too quickly, so it’s easy to miss. It would have been better if it had a slower, breathing pattern to the glow, which would have made it more noticeable. The Charm also uses the headphone jack, which means you can’t have both this and a pair of headphones connected at once.

Display
The HTC Rhyme has a 3.7-inch 800 x 480 resolution TFT LCD. The display is protected by Corning’s Gorilla Glass on top, which gives it added protection from scratches. The quality of display is commendable; it looks fairly sharp, the colors look vibrant and the white balance is spot-on. The display is also sufficiently bright so it remains visible under sunlight. Only problem with it are the viewing angles, which aren’t quite as good as AMOLED or IPS displays. 

Hardware and Software
The HTC Rhyme has a 1 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon MSM8255 processor and 768MB of RAM, which is quite sufficient from everything from your run of the mill applications to 3D games. I tested the phone with a variety of apps and games and I didn’t find the phone lacking in any of them. Sure, things like ‘1.5GHZ Processor!!!’ and ‘Dual Corezz!!’ sound very impressive on paper but most of the time you don’t really need all that power. So even though on-paper the Rhyme might not seem all that impressive in real-world usage it performs just fine. 

On the software side the Rhyme is running HTC Sense 3.5 on top of Android 2.3.5 Gingerbread. The OS is outdated now but the Sense skin does a commendable job of hiding that fact. Compared to the previous versions of Sense UI, HTC has trimmed down some fat, which makes it look less gaudy and pretentious. It now sports a simpler and more sophisticated look, that actually goes really well with the hardware. HTC has also smoothened out the frame rate, which looks less jerky while scrolling through the menus although it’s still not as smooth as I’d like.


Among the list of changes include a new homescreen, that has two fixed buttons below for the dialler and the application drawer. The default clock widget has been changed in favour of a new digital clock with sliding drawers on the side, although the old clocks still exist in the widgets drawer. The menus have a new grey background that looks better than the plain black in the previous versions. But what I like most about the Sense UI is the lock screen, which makes quickly launching applications from the lockscreen a cinch. 


Some frivolities still exist, however, such as the way the homescreens spin if you flick them too hard or the way the Gallery app launches the icons with a flourish instead of simply displaying them and saving a second. 

Multimedia
The HTC Rhyme has a 5 megapixel camera with auto-focus, LED flash and 720p video recording. The camera applications is simple and easy to use and has all the basic features including continuous auto-focus and touch-to-focus. The quality of camera is quite good with daylight shots in particular coming out well. The level of details was quite astonishing but the images also had a healthy amount of noise in them but not enough to ruin them. 


Videos, however, are a different matter altogether. The videos were jerky and terribly pixellated. Dropping the resolution to 480p improved the quality a bit but they were still pretty horrible. Initially I assumed that it was just a problem with the device I received but checking out a few videos online confirmed that it was indeed a problem with this phone in general. 


Moving on to music playback, the phone fared quite well here. The default music player looks nice and also comes with the option of multiple audio presets but I was disappointed to see a lack of FLAC support. HTC provides a pair of in-ear earphones that also have controls on it to adjust the volume and switch tracks. The cables feature a flat, pasta-like cables that are designed to be tangle free. As for the audio quality, it wasn’t exactly to my taste because it was too bass heavy and had little in terms of high-end clarity but I’m assuming most people these days prefer such sound. The loudspeaker on the other hand was the exact opposite, with clean and clear sound but lacked any semblance of bass. 


The video player on the Rhyme is built-into the Gallery app. It will play your AVI files just fine but throw in some MKVs and the phone refuses to even acknowledge their presence. For that you will need a third party video player that you can download from the Android Market. I used DicePlayer and it played all the 720p files flawlessly. 

Battery Life
The HTC Rhyme has a 1,600 mAh internal battery. With a fixed battery like that one would hope that it at least lasts long enough. Fortunately, it does. I would easily get around one and a half day of battery life, even with Wi-Fi on all day on a 2G network. This included using the browser and all the social networking app, along with the music and video player. Thanks to a less powerful hardware, the phone is easily able to pull long hours on a single charge. If you don’t use your phone a lot, the Rhyme would easily last you a couple of days at a stertch. 

Verdict
The HTC Rhyme is currently priced at Rs. 25,950. I enjoyed my time with the Rhyme, with it’s attractive hardware and user friendly software. But despite that I do think that HTC has priced it a bit too high. It would have been better if it had been priced at around Rs. 20,000. It’s only the pricing that is holding me back right now from wholeheartedly recommending this phone. But if you don’t mind spending that much then you should go ahead with it. Other than the issue with the video recording, this is one hell of a phone.

Pros
  • Great design
  • User friendly software
  • Good audio quality
  • Smooth
  • Good camera quality
Cons
  • Expensive
  • Poor video recording quality
  • Non-removable battery
-Review by HT

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Twitter now available in Urdu, 3 more languages

13000 volunteers helped Twitter to be translated. DESIGN: GIBRAN ASHRAF

Microblogging social media website, Twitter.com, will allow users to access in four additional languages, including Urdu, Arabic, Farsi and Hebrew, the site officially announced on Tuesday.

The move, though planned, is unique, since Twitter relied on a crowd-sourced format to help with translations.

“Thirteen thousand volunteers around the globe immediately got to work, translating and localizing Twitter.com into these languages in record time. Thanks to their contributions, Twitter is now available in right-to-left languages,” the official announcement on Twitter read.

It added that these volunteers were from countries like Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iran and Pakistan, and included scholars, IT professionals, bloggers, even school teachers.

“ Among those who donated their time and translation skills to make right-to-left languages a reality on Twitter: a Saudi blogger, Egyptian college students, a journalist at the BBC, IT professionals in Iran and Pakistan, an Israeli schoolteacher, the co-founders of the grassroots #LetsTweetInArabic campaign, academics specializing in linguistics, and teenagers in Lebanon.”

A point to note is that some of the people working on this project, lived in countries where Twitter is officially banned.

Through this move, Twitter will now be available in 28 languages, in right to left formats, as well as the traditional left to right formats. The engineers at Twitter, said the announcement, had worked out how to properly display bilingual tweets which already had both right to left and left to right format.

-Express Tribune