Tuesday, 8 October 2013

Nokia Lumia 1020 Review..

Nokia Lumia 1020 review
this is the culmination of the recent spate of cameraphones which have sought to replace dedicated compact cameras. The HTC One brought us a big sensor with larger-than-normal pixels (they’re the biggest on the market) for more accurate light measurement. The Samsung Galaxy S4 Zoom built a whopping 10x optical zoom on to the back of the phone: great for shooting pictures but a little bit galumphing to hold to your head. The Sony Xperia Z1 packed an oversized 20.7-megapixel sensor into a surprisingly svelte frame. And now the Nokia Lumia 1020 puts the biggest sensor yet into a phone.
At 41 megapixels, the 1020’s sensor is remarkable. We’ll get to its photographic chops in a minute but the first surprise is that the phone is so thin. Though there are slimmer blowers on the market, the 1020 is entirely manageable in the hand, unlike the Nokia 808 Pureview which preceded it by a year or two which was a hefty beast. The 1020 has a noticeable bulge on the back where the lens and flash sit. Both are big and dominate the phone’s styling, especially on the matte yellow finish version as the lens element is black.
The phone is also available in white and black, but it’s the lemon yellow version which catches the eye. Because it’s matte, it doesn’t feel like it’ll slip out of your hands too easily, either. The 1020 is very much in the same design language as the other Lumia phones, and it looks good. The snazziest in the range is the 925, but this ain’t bad. Even so, it’s big and not the lightest handset around.
Nokia Lumia 1020: Camera
But it’s the camera you want to hear about, right? After all, this is a phone that is specifically designed to appeal to those with a strong photographic interest. Without that, you’ll probably pick the 925 with its skinnier profile and still-more-than-competent 8.7-megapixel camera.
Like the Sony Xperia Z1, the idea of the high-resolution sensor is that it makes up for the lack of an optical zoom. Digital zoom just crops the centre of a frame so you lose resolution as you zoom in. But with this many pixels available, the Lumia 1020 allows you to do this and still maintain decent resolution. Lossless zoom, they call it, and though we don’t think that’s a great name, the results are strong.
There are several ways to use the camera. The default option is the Nokia Pro Cam app which launches with a long press on the hardware shutter button. This is a capable app which sorts everything for you in its auto mode or lets you take over a lot of control manually, including white balance, flash and more.
Then there are the filters in the Nokia Smart Cam. This includes several features that take multiple shots in quick succession. With these in the can, you have several special effects available, including Cinemagraph which lets part of the still shot show all the multiple images, so a busy street can be frozen but for one person sauntering happily along in the corner, or a fountain can splash merrily in an otherwise still shot of a city square. You can use Smart Cam to remove someone who’s photo bombed you by combining the multiple images to brush them out of your final pic.
All very good, but the more shots you take, the more it’s apparent that the Lumia 1020 isn’t perfect. You won’t find a cameraphone with better resolution images, but the phone is let down by shutter lag which blights some images. For a posed portrait this may not matter, but sporty pictures for instance may miss the moment.
And the time it takes between shots isn’t great, either. To be fair, there’s a lot of data to be written from the sensor to the phone’s memory, but you may find you’re waiting too long between shots. The camera shoots two images at the same time, one at 5-megapixel and one at full resolution. The 5-megapixel one is easier to share. So no wonder it takes time.
Video recording is very strong, though, and looks tremendous. For many, the shutter lag and wait between shots just won’t matter, and the results will be enough to justify these downsides to many more. But it means the camera though remarkable, lacks some versatility.
Nokia 1020 (© Getty)
Getty
Nokia Lumia 1020: Performance
Beyond the camera, the 1020 is a capable and effective smartphone. Windows Phone is an elegant and fresh interface that is great to use, even if it takes some getting used to. And though the number of apps available is growing like weed, there are still some crucial apps missing from the marketplace.
This is a shame because there are great things on offer on this phone. Like Nokia’s excellent mapping which work without a data connection – ideal in the very place you want a data-free map: when you’re abroad. Or Nokia Music, which is a decent, free-to-use app that deserves attention.
And the phone’s processor, that shutter lag apart, is fast enough to keep the whole enterprise shuffling along happily enough. Battery life is decent, unless you’re snapping all the time in which case the optional battery pack and camera grip is a worthwhile extra.
Lumia 1020 (© Reuters)
Reuters
Nokia Lumia 1020: Verdict
The Nokia Lumia 1020 is a remarkable cameraphone that only misses out on a fifth star because of annoyances like shutter lag and the time the phone takes between shots to get ready. But even so, the results are so impressive, with stupendous amounts of detail, good colour balance, strong contrast and excellent sharpness, that many users will forgive those faults. It’s better than many standalone cameras and is simple to use, even if you don’t set it to auto. The filters and effects are fun and enjoyable, too.
Beyond the snapper, this is an eye-catching and highly usable phone. Windows Phone 8 may lack some apps but the ones it has look great and the operating system is fun and effective. Nokia’s specialities like the exemplary maps app and the splendid Nokia Music are strong enough to be central parts of the phone. 

Android Tablets..

Android tablets set to upgrade Dubai hospitals
The Dubai health sector will soon be equipped with android tablets, according to a top DHA official.
Hospital beds and waiting areas of Dubai Health Authority (DHA) hospitals, primary health centres and specialty health centres are among the list of places to be upgraded to this government initiative.
Engineer Essa Al Maidoor, director general of the DHA says: “The deployment of android tablets across DHA healthcare entities is the first step in our plan to build ‘smart hospitals’ that will be integrated with the latest IT technology to enhance customer experience. Customer care is at the heart of the Dubai Health Strategy [2013-2025] and these initiatives are aimed to improve the user experience of patients.”
Al Maidoor explained that the initiatives of electronic medical records, health information systems and ‘smart hospitals’ are all part of a two- to three-year plan for complete IT solutions that enhance both the present and future needs of the health sector.
Three thousand Android tablets will be provided for waiting areas of all 14 DHA primary healthcare centres, its specialty centres and its hospitals. The apps on the tablets will allow patients to view appointment details and give feedback to improve the health sector, as well as enabling them to check medical test results, health card details, BMI scores, facilities and all DHA news and events.
Parents will also be able to view their children’s vaccination details and receive alerts for every scheduled appointment.
The apps, inspired by Windows 8, are compatible with Apple iOS, Google Android, Blackberry and Windows Mobile, among others.
The DHA is also planning to introduce new apps at GITEX this year, which will enable patients to do a multitude of tasks on their smartphones, such as check for health packages, view prescriptions and even request for health packages.

Mustang is most desired classic car in Europe…maybe

Mustang is most desired classic car in Europe…maybe
1964 World’s Fair Mustang introduction
The Ford Mustang is the most desirable classic car, in Europe at least, according to a survey of more than 75,000 users of online car portal AutoScout24.
A total of 37 per cent of Europeans named the Ford Mustang as the classic car they would most like to own. The Mustang was the clear winner, ahead of the BMW M1 (20 per cent) and the Volkswagen Beetle (11 per cent) which tends to suggest something of a German bias in the survey - AutoScout is in fact a German-based website which does most of its business in that country.
The UK, Europe’s second-largest car market, was not included in the survey and as Mustangs have never been built in right hand drive form responses from Britons may have altered the outcome. That doesn't seem to have stopped Ford from making the most of the survey findings given that Mustang has now been confirmed as coming to Europe - and the UK - for the first time.
'Ford Mustang is more than a car, it’s the freedom of the open road and the spirit of performance driving,' said Roelant de Waard, vice president, Marketing, Sales and Service, Ford of Europe. 'Mustang has been a fundamental part of global automotive culture for almost half a century and is one of the world’s most recognisable vehicles.'
748990 73121 f for 592x610 Mustang is most desired classic car in Europe...maybe
1968 Ford Mustang GT
Ford also said the Mustang Customizer - a downloadable and online app – has already attracted more than 500,000 visits from Europe.  Available for iOS and Android phones and tablets, the app enables Mustang fans to build their dream cars and pit them against other fans, earn points and badges for each car they build, save pictures for use as desktop wallpaper, and compete in a drift challenge.
Mustang celebrates its 50th anniversary in 2014 and Ford has launched a new 'Mustang Countdown' series of videos to throw the spotlight on the iconic sports car and its fans from across the globe. https://media.ford.com/content/fordmedia/fna/us/en/asset.html/content/dam/fordmedia/North America/US/2013/08/02/mustang50_1024.jpg.html
The first video – Where It All Started:  The Mustang 1 Concept – revisits the concept car’s 1962 debut. Further videos will illustrate Ford’s exhaustive Mustang archives, the Ford Mustang club scene and fans, with rare footage, exclusive interviews and expert insight. A collection of Mustang news, information and archive materials also can be found at Ford of Europe’s dedicated Mustang web portal.
Launched in 1964, Mustang became an instant sensation and inspired millions of people. With nearly 3,000 movie and TV appearances around the world, countless song references, parade appearances, toys and more, a passion for Mustang is common to car fans around the world.
748964 73121 c for 610x520 Mustang is most desired classic car in Europe...maybe
2014 Shelby GT500

3G spectrum: Government targets to complete auction by February 2014

Government has made it mandatory for existing cellular operators to share infrastructure on a cost-sharing basis with new entrants. DESIGN: CREATIVE COMMONS
ISLAMABAD: After formal approval by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif the government has forwarded the policy directive for auction of next-generation technology spectrum to the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) while instructing the regulator to remain vigilant on collusive bidding. The IT Ministry believes the auction process can be concluded by February 2014.
To encourage new entrants in the market and ensure level playing field, the government has made it mandatory for existing cellular operators to share infrastructure on a cost-sharing basis with new entrants as well as among themselves. The PTA will prepare guidelines in this regard.
The policy directive was approved by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on the recommendation of the advisory committee, constituted to review the previous policy directive issued in 2011.
With handing over of policy directives, the PTA is expected to immediately start the process of hiring a consultant of international repute. The PTA will advertise the requirements in the press under the Public Procurement Regulatory Authority (PPRA) Rules aimed at ensuring transparency in the process.
“Since the previous policy directive, the market situation has changed and requires empirical study which the PTA will commission,” said Anusha Rahman, Minister of State for Information Technology while talking to The Express Tribune.
On Monday, the Ministry of Information Technology forwarded the policy directive to the PTA. The minister of state Rahman said the auction will be conducted by the PTA in the least-possible time after the issuance of the policy directives. Though no specific deadline was given to the PTA for completing the process, the regulator informed the government that it could complete the process by February 2014.
The government had also finalised the terms of reference for the internationally-reputed consultant. According to the policy directives, the consultant will identify the number and size of the block to be auctioned considering the market situation. The Frequency Allocation Board has identified 30 megahertz (MHz) paired spectrum in 1.9GHz/2.1GHz band for auction.
However, the market expected that the PTA will offer three spectrums for auction this time again. Warid is already up for sale and if that happens, there will be only four telecom companies left that will likely bid for the spectrums.
But according to the policy directives, all existing cellular mobile operators as well as new entrants are eligible to participate in the auction. The new licence will be technology neutral and useable for technologies standardised for third-generation (3G) and advanced generation mobile services. The licence will be offered for a period of 15 years.
For optimal rollout of next generation mobile services, cost-based sharing of infrastructure will be considered as the first priority by the cellular operators at the time of the rollout.
However, the authority to finalise the reserve price rests with the government. Market expectation was that that government will get at least $400 million against every spectrum auctioned.

Anyone who is interested.. its good opportunity,,

Reducing burden: Rs500b is the expected decline in state losses after privatisation and restructuring process. CREATIVE COMMONS
ISLAMABAD: 
As part of its privatisation plan, the government will sell half a dozen enterprises including two hotels in New York and Paris, offload shares in 10 companies in international and domestic capital markets and hand over management control of a dozen enterprises to the private sector.
The shares in state-owned units that the previous government gave away to the employees under the Benazir Employees Stock Option Scheme will also be offered to private investors, according to documents.
Overall, 31 enterprises, worth billions of dollars and belonging to sectors such as oil and gas, banking and finance, power, industries and real estate, will be privatised and restructured. Last week, the Cabinet Committee on Privatization (CCOP) approved the privatisation and restructuring strategy for these enterprises.
The government approved giving Pakistan Steel Mills under the control of private sector and reducing its shareholding. It is among five firms that will be first offered for privatisation. In case of Pakistan International Airlines, more money will be injected into the carrier before selling 26% stake to a strategic partner along with management control.
“From the date of privatisation, liabilities of the enterprises will be the responsibility of buyers,” said Muhammad Zubair, Chairman Board of Investment. Financial condition of an enterprise would determine its market price, he said.
The government approved sale of Roosevelt Hotel New York, Scribe Hotel Paris and Islamabad Convention Centre. Pakistan Engineering Company Limited (25% government shareholding) and National Power Construction Company (100% government stake) will be sold.
Heavy Electrical Complex (100% state-owned) and National Investment Trust (also 100% state-owned) will also be privatised while Small and Medium Enterprise Bank (94% government shares) will either be privatised or offered for merger with a second or third-tier bank.
“The government wants to complete the process in the next one to one and a half years,” said Zubair, adding the privatisation and restructuring process was expected to reduce annual losses by Rs500 billion.
There are 10 enterprises whose shares will be offloaded in capital markets, either domestic or international, according to the strategy approved by the CCOP.
The government will preferably sell shares in Oil and Gas Development Company (85% government stake) in international capital markets. Shares in Pakistan Petroleum Limited (78% government stake) will be offloaded both in international and domestic markets.
Shares in Mari Petroleum (20% government stake) will be sold in the capital market through a secondary public offering or offered as block sale to joint venture partners.
Government Holdings Private Limited (100% state-owned) will either be listed on the stock market or working interests in its specific blocks will be sold. Pak-Arab Refinery Company’s shares (60% owned by government) will be offered in the stock market subject to consent of the joint venture partner.
Approval has been given to a plan to segregate different operations of Pakistan State Oil and privatise some of those.
According to the strategy for Sui Northern Gas Pipelines and Sui Southern Gas Company, the government will first segregate various operations and some of these will be offered for privatisation.
Shares in Habib Bank Limited (42% government stake), United Bank Limited (20% government shares) and Allied Bank Limited (10% government stake) will be offloaded in the stock market through a secondary public offering. In case of National Bank of Pakistan (76% shareholding), the government will reduce its shareholding and give away management control or offer the bank as block sale to qualified investors.
State Life Insurance Corporation (100% state-owned) will be listed on the stock market while shares in National Insurance Company Limited (100% state unit) will be divested along with management control. Government shareholding (51%) in Pakistan Reinsurance Company will be reduced including giving away management control.
In case of profitable companies like banks and oil and gas firms, the government would not sell all of its shares, Zubair said.

Finally Govt is trying its best..

Expansion plan: $928m is the estimated cast of the extension project, $840 million of which will be finance to World Bank loan. PHOTO: FILE
ISLAMABAD: Tarbela Dam’s power generation capacity will increase to 4,888 megawatts (MW) with the completion of the fourth extension hydropower project, which will add 1,410MW to the existing capacity.
Official sources say that Tarbela will become the largest water reservoir in the country in terms of hydropower generation after the completion of the extension project, while Mangla will stay the largest water storage reservoir of the country.
The Water and Development Authority (Wapda) had already awarded civil works contract worth Rs26.053 billion to Chinese company, Sinohydro for the fourth extension project.
According to sources, the World Bank had also agreed to provide a loan of $840 million for the project. The extension project will take three and half years to complete at an estimated cost of $928 million.
After the installation of three units of 1,410MW, the generation capacity of the dam will touch 4,888MW.
On completion, the project will add 3.84 billion units per annum to the national grid. Annual benefits to be derived from the project had been estimated at Rs30.7 billion. The sources said that the project will pay back its cost in three years. The project will also be instrumental in saving foreign exchange on import of almost one million ton of furnace oil annually, required to generating equal amount of power from thermal sources.
The project will also provide a cushion to undertake rehabilitation and up-gradation of the existing Tarbela powerhouse after the completion of extension projects.
Tarbela fourth extension hydropower project is part of the government’s plan to focus on cheaper sources of power production, which is being implemented by Wapda on priority. This strategy aims at adding a sizeable amount of power to the system, while also improving the country’s energy mix

IMF

IMF warns the outlook for global economy could get bleaker if the US political standoff over finances drags on. PHOTO: REUTERS
WASHINGTON: The International Monetary Fund on Tuesday lowered its growth forecast for Pakistan and the global economy and warned the outlook could get bleaker if the US political standoff over finances drags on.
The Pakistani economy is expected grow 2.3 per cent year-over-year in 2013 and 3.6 per cent in 2014, the IMF said, revising July estimates down by 0.7 and 0.1 percentage points per year, respectively.
The global economy’s growth percentages were also revised downwards with estimates being brought down by 0.3 and 0.2 percentage points.
Four years after the Great Recession ended, “global growth remains in low gear,” the IMF said in its World Economic Outlook report.
Advanced economies, in particular the United States, are showing signs of pick-up, while emerging-market (EM) economies, although still accounting for most global growth, are losing more momentum than previously thought, the IMF said.
“Global growth is still weak, its underlying dynamics are changing, and the risks to the forecast remain to the downside,” the IMF said.
Two risks were a particular worry, it pointed out the US Federal Reserve’s plan to exit the exceptionally easy-money policy it has pursued to pull away from the brink of depression, and China’s slowing growth.
IMF said that financial markets were growing convinced that loose US monetary policy was reaching a “turning point” after Fed officials started talking in May about tapering their program of $85 billion a month on asset purchases, known as quantitative easing.
Though the Fed has yet to begin to taper, the mere talk of tapering QE led to an unexpectedly large increase in long-term yields in the United States and many other economies, slowing capital inflows to emerging-market economies, it said.
As for China, it appears increasingly likely that the world’s second-largest economy will grow more slowly over the medium term than in the recent past, a prospect especially affecting the commodity exporters among the emerging and developing economies.
Overall, the IMF left unchanged its gross domestic product (GDP) growth forecasts for the advanced economies, at 1.2 per cent in 2013 and 2.0 per cent in 2014.
In the US, growth in the world’s largest economy would tick along at 1.6 per cent in 2013, picking up to a 2.6 per cent pace next year, slightly less activity than the IMF projected in July.
“At the time of writing, a political standoff in the United States has led to a shutdown of its federal government. The projections assume that the shutdown is short, discretionary public spending is approved and executed as assumed in the forecast, and the debt ceiling – which may be reached by mid-October – is raised promptly,” the IMF said.
“While the damage to the US economy from a short shutdown is likely to be limited, a longer shutdown could be quite harmful. And, even more importantly, a failure to promptly raise the debt ceiling, leading to a US selective default, could seriously damage the global economy.”
The IMF said the eurozone’s recession this year would not be quite so deep, a 0.4 per cent contraction, a 0.1 percentage point improvement from its July forecast. The European single-currency bloc is expected to return to growth next year, albeit at a tepid 1.0 per cent annual rate.
Japan, battling years of deflation and stagnation, is showing an “impressive pickup” in growth thanks to the Bank of Japan’s easing policies and the government’s stimulus, the IMF said.
It estimates the new policies may have boosted GDP by about 1.0 per cent. In minor revisions, the Fund predicts the world’s third-largest economy will grow 2.0 per cent in 2013, but slow to 1.2 per cent in 2014 under pressure from tightening fiscal policy.
Growth forecasts for China were lowered a few tenths of a point for both years, to 7.6 percent in 2013 and 7.3 percent in 2014.
Estimates for India and Mexico growth were slashed the most, down by 1.8 points and 1.7 points for 2013, to 3.8 per cent and 1.2 per cent, respectively.
Growth in Brazil was projected at 2.5 per cent for both years, but the 2014 number was lowered by 0.7 point.
Slowdowns in China, India and Brazil have been largely responsible for the downgrade on growth in emerging market and developing economies. The IMF cut about half a point off its July update for that group of economies, to 4.5 per cent in 2013 and 5.1 per cent in 2014.
Russia took a one-point hit, with GDP expected to expand only 1.5 percent this year, before picking up to 3.0 per cent.
Growth for the group combining the Middle East, North Africa, Afghanistan and Pakistan was lowered to 2.3 per cent this year, while Sub-Saharan Africa would see it slip to 5.0 per cent.
The IMF cautioned that the end of US quantitative easing could result in a greater and longer-lasting tightening of global financial conditions than currently expected, putting brakes on growth.
“What is more worrisome, monetary policy in the advanced economies could be stuck at the zero-interest bound for many years.
Over time, worrisomely high public debt in all major advanced economies and persistent financial fragmentation in the euro area could then trigger new crises.”