Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Voxer for Android


Voxer for android finally comes now on android market. Voxer is a walkie talkie app for smartphone like android, iPhone, etc. By using voxer, user can send instant text, audio, photo, location to one friend or group. Voxer is like sending a text message with your voice. So there is an option to listening incoming message. To using this features, user must press Hold and Talk button to record and recipient of the message can hear the recorded message.

So for the simple definition of voxer for android is an app which the function is like walkie talkie and can streams message live. It’s like your friend can listening your message. User now can make a group chats after using voxer for android. And that’s all services is free.
voxer for android

For the appearance, you can find 3 main menu. That is “send image -Photo”, “hold the record-Hold and Talk”, and “Send SMS -Text”. Also with using voxer for android, users can search their friends positions through the map for free. On new features of Voxer, user can login to facebook account and sync their contacts. You can see the video below here to know more detail information about Voxer.
Click to play this video
Voxer on Android: First Look

Here are several features of Voxer for android:

Walkie Talkie features
Create group chats
Works over Wifi, Edge, 3G, and 4G
Create message on offline mode
Streaming text message
Connect and sync with facebook accounts
Read More: http://www.newandroidphonereview.com/android-apps/2283/voxer-for-android-1.html

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Prototype 2 : amazing games


Version tested: Xbox 360
If you can't be original, at least be excessive. This seems to be the design principle guiding Activision's wonderfully schlocky Prototype series, and while it holds the entire enterprise back from true greatness, perhaps, it at least means your thumbs are in for a decent workout as blood, brain, and all manner of unidentifiable viscera are smeared across New York in the name of - what? Justice? Revenge? Who cares, frankly. I just punched a helicopter into the Chrysler Building.
In Prototype games, you can do that sort of thing all the time, just as you can run up skyscrapers, swallow people in order to assume their form, and turn your body into a kind of fleshy penknife, producing everything from huge blades to rocky hammers (penknives come with hammers, right?). It's a series in which your powers define the fun, and in which both story and setting take a backseat as a result. This is handy, because - even though Prototype 2 has improved things somewhat - the story and the setting still aren't particularly brilliant.


Radical's sequel takes the action back to New York City, which is now known as New York Zero - presumably because it doesn't have any calories in it anymore. There's a new virus turning the place into puddles of squelchy gristle and there's a new main character, too, in the shapeshifting form of James Heller. Heller's objective is to stop this latest toxic outbreak in its tracks and hunt down a heavily infected weirdo named Alex Mercer.


Collectables are significantly improved - you can spend ages hunting for Black boxes alone.
That's a turn up for the books, as he's the guy you played in the first game. It's current protagonist against previous protagonist! This is either a brilliant narratological twist that should have us all writing term papers on the subject or an admission that, after 20 hours of eating pedestrians and sprouting offal from every orifice, Mercer was no longer somebody who we wanted to have round to watch Poirot with on a Sunday evening.
Heller, for what it's worth, feels like an improvement. Due to a swift goring during the opening credits, he has most of Mercer's best powers from the start - such as the ability to glide across reasonably long distances - and, after a slow first hour, he'll be well on his way to becoming a crazy, tooled-up superhero in his own right, packed full of skewers and nasty shivs. The game's rambling prologue fills you in on his years of military service, along with his private life as a good, honest family man, and he's only tipped over the edge when that miserable virus kills his wife and kid, leaving him with nothing to live for except revenge.
He's a touch more engaging than Mercer, in other words, yet your ability to identify with him on a moral or emotional level may be compromised the first time you step outside during a boss fight in order to eat random strangers and top your health back up. Humanising Prototype was always going to be a bit of a struggle, if you ask me; at least the new boy's a better dresser than the last one was (just about), and he's also the world's best swearer. Seriously, you should hear this man drop an F-bomb. Denis Farina can now retire.
Heller's mission sees him unravelling a global conspiracy by racing across New York consuming everyone who might have been involved so as to read their minds and feast on their handy DNA. It all feels a bit like the X-Files for a few giddy missions, and then you start to realise that, once again, the game isn't really presenting a narrative so much as a tasting menu: go here and eat this guy so you can take his identity and get into this room over here, where you can eat this guy, too (maybe after a boss fight, which will generally end with you eating the boss, by the way).
Prototype doesn't feel like a sandbox series in its own right so much as the mad, babbling id of the entire open-world genre.

Play in standard definition
Play in high definition
Weaponry still feels feeble compared to your own crazy abilities, but now you can rip rocket launchers off tanks.
The backdrop for all this pathological dining, meanwhile, is similarly underwhelming. New York, even when it's been ravaged by various stages of a biohazard outbreak and split into three different parts, is so well-travelled by modern games that it doesn't really make that much of an impact anymore, regardless of whether you can move around it by dashing up walls and wafting through the sky. Two of Prototype 2's trio of self-contained zones are anonymous and rather poky boroughs, while the third, which covers a heavily infected area of Manhattan ranging from Battery Park up to around Columbus Circle, is just a bit too familiar.
The game engine's much better at handling the bigger locations on this outing, however, with a fairly steady frame-rate and a greatly improved draw distance. That second point in particular makes an incredible difference when developers are stringing missions across an open world, and it means that Prototype now feels a lot more comfortable dropping you into the kind of rolling street-to-street set-pieces that already help define InFamous, Assassin's Creed, Crackdown and all those other big hitters that Activision's game has to measure up to.
From the perspective of plot and geography, this sequel is a bit disappointing - but this is Prototype, remember, and it's hard to be disappointed for too long when you can punch a tank until it explodes. When it comes to powers and missions, Radical's on far more stable ground.
Many of Heller's abilities will be familiar to anybody who's spent serious time with Mercer, but they're handled a little more intelligently on this outing. The claws feel a lot less wimpy, the blade's more clearly defined as a slow, heavy option, and treats like the massive Hulk hands and whipfist (the former's my own term, and the latter's basically a nasty hookshot that can slice people in two and yank choppers out of the sky) are delivered nice and late in the day when the enemies are starting to get really tough and you can afford to pack on some overpowered tricks. Prototype 2 chucks in tendrils, as well, allowing you to string people - and certain objects - up and tear them apart, and soon every battlefield's marked with strands of gloopy black webbing for you to navigate.

Play in standard definition
Play in high definition
Each mission comes with a bonus objective - a neat little lift from the Assassin's Creed series.
It's easy to remap powers, meaning that it's painless to experiment with new load-outs, and there are fresh touches everywhere you look: the ability to turn enemies into wonderfully disgusting bio-bombs; a new skill that lets you summon two giant brawlers to fight alongside you; a brilliant hunt mode that has you sending out sonar pulses to track down targets; and a nifty move in which you can tear the gun off a tank and then shoot the tank with its own gun. The world has been waiting for this game for a long time.
The missions turn out to be surprisingly good, too. They're not particularly complex - most of them offer a simple mixture of infiltration sequences in which you have to consume specific targets, street brawling, and the odd moment when you're in control of a helicopter or a tank - but they're all relentless and explosive and gnarly and sweetly ridiculous. The checkpoint placement has been improved and the stealth mechanics are more forgiving now, meaning that theoretically entertaining objectives don't slip into a grind quite as easily as they did in the first game. There's a lovely sense of growing chaos as you fight your way further into the heart of the infection, upgrading your powers and piling on mutation perks while facing off against bigger and bigger nasties.


Where's it all heading? Towards a final sequence that actually comes close to the insane excess of Asura's Wrath, thankfully - while beyond that lurk three islands' worth of decent side quests to complete, lairs (these are very simple dungeons) to clean up, collectables to hunt down and further upgrades to earn. There's even Radnet, if you bought the game brand new. (OK, so Radnet sounds like the kind of name a group of 12-year-old kids would have given to their interlinked walkie-talkie set-up back in the 1980s, but it's actually a selection of weekly challenges and events that allow you to fight your pals for top spot on the leaderboards.)
Radical's refined Prototype, in other words, but it hasn't tamed it. This is still an explosive, exhilarating and sometimes rather exhausting game in which the heroes have sharp hands and bottomless appetites for innocent bystanders and the villains expire in floods of gore and take whole city blocks with them as they go. By this point, Prototype doesn't feel like a sandbox series in its own right so much as the mad, babbling id of the entire open-world genre - with all the inconsistencies and extravagances that implies.
Read More :http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2012-04-25-prototype-2-review

PicMonkey : The Best Photo Editing


Have you tried PicMonkey yet?  Take your product and blog photos and make them awesome!  Picmonkey is ready to take the place of Picnik for all of your free photo editing needs.  I’ve tried it…and I like it!
I’m a serious photo taker even if I can’t take my digital camera off of auto.  I take most of the photos for Everything Etsy and lots and lots of product photos for my shops.  Great photos can really help you sell and it’s not as hard as you might think to crop, brighten and add a few words to your photos.

ScreenHunter_03 Apr. 16 11.59
Fun, fun, fun…I’m telling you, you are gonna love it!
You can easily drag a photo from your desktop and start getting creative with it in seconds.  There’re lots of features available beyond your basic editing and I’m sure you could spend an hour or so over there playing around with a few photos to try them all.

ScreenHunter_01 Mar. 30 08.26

It’s super easy to ad text to a photo!  This is perfect for watermarks on your photography and all your Etsy item photos.  I love to use it for graphics for blog posts.  The way Pinterest works it always helps to have a graphic that can be shared.

Don’t forget to check out the Paper Scraps and all the cool textures!  I can imagine it would be a dream come true for some scrapbooking fans. The possibilities are endless and all it takes is a photo and an idea to get started.
Read More: http://www.everythingetsy.com/2012/04/picmonkey-for-photo-editing/

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Camera Trend 2012 : Canon Powershot S100, simple and sophisticated.



Canon Powershot S100, simple design. Available in two colors, black and titanium. Hmm .. but do not be fooled by its outward forms. This camera uses advanced technology. The resulting image is equivalent to a DSLR camera, but did not elaborate set. Has a new design with F2.0 lens, 12.1 megapixel CMOS sensor, and the High Speed ​​Shooting ability is able to capture light so well that produces a sharp image. Picture DGIC 5 new processor allows us to edit photos with interesting effects are provided. Prices range between $ 384 - $ 394.



Canon Powershot S100

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Tips to Save data on Blackberry


Is the first time you normally do when you use blackberry to store the data lost? Whether these data can be saved? Can the blackberry is in-suspend?
There is a possibility of communication devices disappear, but in it there are a lot of data that must be saved. There is still a chance to save the data even Blackberry is lost.

To save data, please download the App. World free application called Blackberry Protect. On Blackberry  Protect feature, you can perform the following steps:

1.) Find the position of the Blackberry is through the official website of Blackberry.

2.) Perform backup and restore data, memo, calendar, SMS, database password storage.

3.) Ping the remote (a voice in the Blackberry, although Blackberry is set to silent).

4.) To remove (delete data) remotely. If you want to delay, can be done in the following ways:
 You can ask the operator simcard blackberrynya service you use. Including loss statements, safe-deposit box and invoice.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

2012's coolest gadget-Samsung Galaxy Note


Return of the touch screen smartphone trend with a stylus carried by the latest series of Samsung. Shown with a high resolution screen, equipped with Super AMOLED technology HD 1280 x 800. In this Gingerbread dalamponsel PCatau tablet as good as the specification provided. Stylusnya can be used to record or draw.

Dell Vostro V130 - 2012`s Best Notebook Design


Dell Vostro V130
Looking for advanced notebook but if you have a beautiful design, the Dell Vostro V130 is the answer. The specifications can be customized according to user needs. Weighing no more than 1.5 kg, light enough for carry everywhere. This series is based on Intel Core i5. Equipped with multimedia facilities, convenient way to watch high definition video. Even for that, you need optcal carrying additional drives. Month of March yesterday, Dell Vostro notebook was named the best-designed by one of science and technology magazine in Germany.