Saturday
Jun212014

Specs of HTC’s Nexus tablet leaked

Rumours about an HTC-made Nexus tablet have been making its rounds for a while. Now, Android Police has been able to obtain a leaked screenshot of the 8.9-inch tablet named Volantis. Some of the specs include a 2048x1440 resolution display with a 4:3 aspect ratio; aluminum zero-gap construction;  64-bit NVIDIA Logan processor; 2GB RAM; 16/32GB storage; front-facing stero speakers; and 8-megapixel rear camera with OIS and 3MP front camera.

The price will reportedly be around $399 for the 16GB Wi-Fi model and $499 for the 32GB Wi-Fi model. There is no word how much the LTE would cost. They are estimating it to be around $600 though.

Saturday
Jun212014

Review: Apple 13-inch MacBook Air (2014)

By Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla

The MacBook Air Is an established product and both the 11-inch and 13-inch versions have become Apple’s most popular notebooks as well as their ‘entry-level’ notebook models.

For 2014, not much has changed physically. A testament to how refined this product line is. Newer processors improve battery life while maintaining more than enough processing power for day-to-day rigours of modern computing.

Click to read more ...

Saturday
Jun212014

Microsoft to retire older versions of Skype for Mac and Windows

Microsoft wants to make sure your Skype use isn’t disrupted. The tech company announced that it will “retire” older versions of Skype for Mac (versions 6.14 and under) and Windows (6.13 and under) pretty soon. They did not specify what they meant by retiring but they just want to emphasize that updating now will prevent any disruption for the users in the future.

If that isn’t enough to make you want to upgrade, the new versions of Skype have features like free group video calls and cross-platform messaging. It might be best you listen to Microsoft and update your desktop app now.

Saturday
Jun212014

Facebook improves efficiency of Android app to support low-end devices

A recent visit to Africa by some Facebook engineers prompted them to tweak their Android app. Why you ask? Well, they experienced what it’s like to use Facebook on low-end phones with slow internet connection. They saw how low-end devices crashed trying to load the app and how they managed to consume a month’s worth of data with 40 minutes of trying to use Facebook.

What Facebook did with its Android app was to make it so that it didn’t load everything at once when you opened it. The News Feed entries are loaded much earlier and Facebook images are being transmitted using Google’s WebP format. This means the app loads images in resolutions and sizes based on the device’s screen size. It will only load the full-size photo if you select the photo. The app size has also been reduced by 65 percent to accommodate devices with limited storage and small RAM.

Source: Facebook Code