Avyaya - Tech Rants

Driving the Tech BandWagon

Nokia’s TUBE: Answer to iPhone!!!

iPhone buzz isnt yet dead and Nokia is on an edge to release its new Symbian based competitor over iPhone. Named TUBE(TBD) whose design and working has been leaked in a developer conference and which was confirmed by Nokia official stating that the ‘Tube” will run on Nokia’s Symbian S60 flavored operating system.

The Tube boasts about consisting of 3G, Wi-Fi, and GPS chip with a screen dimension between 3 to 3.5 inches. Thats surely a feast to an eye.No matter what, the size of the Tube is supposed to be wider than Nokia’s N73. A feature called GeoTagging is added to the feature list which would enable the user to tag the photos taken by using the camera of the Tube.

Nokia officials, as told to the freaks of Symbian stated that the Tube wouldnt be using the same as iPhone’s “multi-touch” but a feature called “tactibility feedback”. Sounds kewl,huh? By the time Nokia comes around with the release date of Tube which would probably be the second half of this year, iPhone would have relased its 3G version.

Love to lay hands over this piece of beauty to have a look at its UI. Hmmm, does it beat Mac OS X?

April 10, 2008 Posted by avyaya | Cameras, Computers, Education, Entertainment, Family, Mac OS, Mobiles, OS, Software, Style, Technology, iPhone, internet | , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments

MAC OS X Shortcuts

An extensive list of  common Mac OS X keyboard shortcuts.

Startup
Keystroke Description
Press X during startup Force Mac OS X startup
Press Option-Command-Shift-Delete
during startup
Bypass primary startup volume and seek a different startup volume (such as a CD or external disk)
Press C during startup Start up from a CD that has a system folder
Press N during startup Attempt to start up from a compatible network server (NetBoot)
Press T during startup Start up in FireWire Target Disk mode
Press Shift during startup start up in Safe Boot mode and temporarily disable login items and non-essential kernel extension files (Mac OS X 10.2 and later)
Press Command-V during startup Start up in Verbose mode.
Press Command-S during startup Start up in Single-User mode
Finder window
Keyboard shortcut Description
Command-W Close Window
Option-Command-W Close all Windows
Command-Right Arrow Expand folder (list view)
Option-Command-Right Arrow Expand folder and nested subfolders (list view)
Command-Left Arrow Collapse Folder (list view)
Option-Command-Up Arrow Open parent folder and close current window
(Assigned in Keyboard & Mouse preferences) Show Package Contents (of selected file in Mac OS X 10.5 or later only). To create this contextual menu shortcut, open Keyboard & Mouse preferences in Mac OS X 10.5, click Keyboard Shortcuts, click the “+” button, choose Finder.app as the Application, and type “Show Package Contents” (exactly), and set whichever shortcut you want, such as Command-Control-S.
Menu commands
Keyboard shortcut Description
Shift-Command-Q Apple Menu
Log out
Shift-Option-Command-Q Apple Menu
Log out immediately
Shift-Command-Delete Finder Menu
Empty Trash
Option-Shift-Command-Delete Finder Menu
Empty Trash without dialog
Command-H Finder Menu
Hide Finder
Option-Command-H Finder Menu
Hide Others
Command-N File Menu
New Finder window
Shift-Command-N File Menu
New Folder
Command-O File Menu
Open
Command-S File Menu
Save
Shift-Command-S File Menu
Save as
Command-P File Menu
Print
Command-W File Menu
Close Window
Option-Command-W File Menu
Close all Windows
Command-I File Menu
Get Info
Option-Command-I File Menu
Show Attributes Inspector
Command-D File Menu
Duplicate
Command-L File Menu
Make Alias
Command-R File Menu
Show original
Command-T File Menu
Add to Favorites (Mac OS X 10.2.8 or earlier), Add to Sidebar (Mac OS X 10.3 or later—use Shift-Command-T for Add to Favorites)
Command-Delete File Menu
Move to Trash
Command-E File Menu
Eject
Command-F File Menu
Find
Command-Z Edit Menu
Undo
Command-X Edit Menu
Cut
Command-C Edit Menu
Copy
Command-V Edit Menu
Paste
Command-A Edit Menu
Select All
Command-1 View Menu
View as Icons
Command-2 View Menu
View as List
Command-3 View Menu
View as Columns
Command-B View Menu
Hide Toolbar
Command-J View Menu
Show View Options
Command - [ Go Menu
Back
Command - ] Go Menu
Forward
Shift-Command-C Go Menu
Computer
Shift-Command-H Go Menu
Home
Shift-Command-I Go Menu
iDisk
Shift-Command-A Go Menu
Applications
Shift-Command-F Go Menu
Favorites
Shift-Command-G Go Menu
Goto Folder
Command-K Go Menu
Connect to Server
Command-M Window Menu
Minimize Window
Option-Command-M Window Menu
Minimize All Windows
Command-? Help Menu
Open Mac Help
Command-Space Open Spotlight (Mac OS X 10.4 or later)
Command-esc Front Row
Activates Front Row for certain Apple computers

For more: Apple Docs

March 18, 2008 Posted by avyaya | Computers, Education, Entertainment, Laptops, OS, Software, Technology, internet | , , , | No Comments

Dual-Boot support in iPhone

20080314-094836_wwwbloglinescom.jpgIf you are the kind of person who always chooses between two things and who expects a fallback method even on his PC, then this is for you. Apple iPhone is found to be in support a feature which would support to set up a dual-boot system, with a couple of different firmware versions at a time. Its astounding to know that the Apple iPhone Dev Team had this idea for the past few months and this kind of hack in is released now because they are assured that there are a lot of other advanced features wich have been developed for the iPhone firmware crack.

As you can expect, there would be lots of careful gawking and hacking to achieve the partition-making and a lot of command line work to be done to achieve the feat. Be prepared with lots of caffeine as your headaches are sure to be back over this.But, once you’ve got everything set up, its a cake walk to switch between different OS Versions just by changing your root-device with a simple command.

Now that the iPhone SDK is released, the iPhone Atlas opines are that this option would be come more attractive. As always your ideas are most welcome and you can find more details down below.

For more: iPhone Atlas

March 14, 2008 Posted by avyaya | Computers, Entertainment, OS, Software, Technology, iPhone | , , , , , , | No Comments

MacBook Air:Enemy of AirPort Security

20080311-092813_i187photobucketcom.jpg

Airport Security officers are taking aback over the new MacBook Air and wouldn’t allow passengers to pass the gate without a thorough examination.

Their Questions:

1. Is this really a laptop?

2. If so, Where are the Ports on the back?

3. If so, How could it be so thin?

4. If so, Where would the Hard Disk be?

Only after explaining about the SSDs in layman terms would the Security Officials let go the passengers. The only concern of the security was, It could have been faked and it could contain explosives. Hmm, A reasonable explanation indeed.

If you have a MacBook Air, and are going to the airport, be there quite earlier than you are supposed to be or take a plain old laptop with you, rather than the swanky new MackBook Air.

March 11, 2008 Posted by avyaya | Computers, Entertainment, Mac OS, Technology, internet | , , , , | 1 Comment

Reviews: New Mac Book Pro - An Efficient Tool

Efficiency: The Foreword of Mac Book Pro

20080229-190614_wwwbloglinescom.jpgThe new Macbook Pro is not much of a bump up from its predecessors, but it is a step in the right direction. The addition of Multi-Touch is a great new feature, even on a touchpad that’s smaller than the one on the Air. However, the Penryn-powered processor in this MBP is running at roughly the same speed as the last generation’s chips, GHz to GHz, and give no good reason to upgrade from machines that are less than a year old. The most interesting point here is the boost in efficiency the now-pervasive LED backlighting and 45nm Penryn chips bring to the MacBook Pro, which together give an hour extra battery life over older models with CCFL screens and 65nm CPU technology. That makes this the most efficient Macbook Pro yet. Here’s more on the 2.6GHz 4GB 15-inch MacBook we got to play with.

Multi-Touch Trackpad
After a month of getting used to the Multi-Touch touchpad on the MacBook Air, I have to say that the Pro’s touchpad is not quite as good in comparison. Comparatively, the Pro’s touchpad is slightly narrower in width and a whole half of an inch shorter in height. (It’s identical to the touchpad on the last Gen MBP’s pad.) My initial thoughts were that the smaller touchpad would make using Multi-Touch more difficult, but that wasn’t exactly the case.

Initially, in iPhoto, Multi-Touch on the smaller pad was more difficult, but after a few minutes we realized we were trying to use fingers in the same fashion as we did on the Air, where we had more room to gesture. For example, on the Air we skipped through photos with our fingers vertically but because of the Pro’s size it’s not comfortable to do this. So we placed our three fingers horizontally and it worked perfectly.

We came to the same conclusion with the rotate function. Instead of trying to move our rotate finger from the top of the touchpad to the bottom, we realized that by simply doing the rotate movement with more of a flick, iPhoto and Preview correctly rotated our photo to the next layout.

For testing zoom, we did a side-by-side comparison with the Air and found that the Pro’s smaller touchpad actually zoomed into the same position as it did using the Air.

Screen
One thing to note though is that the LED matte screen on the version we got was less bright than the glossy screen on the MacBook Air. This might be the matte vs. glossy difference, or it might be that the MacBook Air’s screen is just brighter.

Keyboard
The updated keyboard now has the F-key functions, same as the MacBook Air, and we think the additional Dashboard and Expose buttons use the F-keys nicely. We might not actually use buttons for these features but we think it’s cool that the buttons are now clearly labeled.

Benchmark
The Penryn MacBook Pro has already been benched and compared to the previous generation MBP, and its clear it’s about the same performance, per GHz. With that in mind we tested the new Penryn MBP agaisnt a year old Merom MBP and found a slight increase in speed. Also not surprising.

In a video encoding test, the Penryn MBP exported a 2.5min HD trailer in 11 minutes, where as the older Merom MBP took 13 min. (The basic config on the older machine included a 2.33GHz processor and 2GB of RAM; the Penryn had a 2.6GHz processor and 4GB of RAM, so this test is just a rough guide.) As noted in the temperature section, the Penryn did use much more of its power to accomplish the encoding which produced more heat. If you would like to see the Xbench results and compare it to your own machine you can check them out here.

For more: Click Here…..

February 29, 2008 Posted by avyaya | Computers, Laptops, Technology | , , , , | No Comments