Showing posts with label Tips and Tricks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tips and Tricks. Show all posts

Friday, 28 December 2012

Monday, 3 December 2012

How Lenovo Is Resurrecting the PC


How Lenovo Is Resurrecting the PC


 Lenovo wins because it invests in marketing, it gets quality marketing people, and it executes strong demand-focused campaigns -- using both traditional and social mechanisms -- that drive people to its products. There is something refreshing about watching a company execute with excellence.








spent much of last week hanging out with Lenovo. Although much of what we chat about in those meetings can't be repeated, one thing I can talk about is how Lenovo almost stands alone in defending the PC. While there seems to be a consensus that the PC is dead and being stomped into its grave by wave after wave of smartphones and tablets, Lenovo missed that meeting. In a market defined by decline, it has demonstrated double digit growth.
It has done this by offering attractive, well-built products; by staying focused; and by executing some of the strongest marketing programs I've ever seen. Even its strategy against Apple is uniquely successful: It competes on PCs where Apple is relatively weak worldwide, and it focuses on smartphones outside the U.S. and predominantly in China, where Apple is geographically far weaker.
In short, Lenovo picks its fights to ensure that it is moving where the opportunities are strongest, where its skills are the most competitive, and where its competitors are the weakest.
I'll delve into why Lenovo is winning in a market that many seemed to think was failing and close with my product of the week: the Nokia Lumia 920, which is my new favorite phone.


Avoiding IBM's Mistake

The interesting thing about Lenovo is that at its core it has the old IBM PC company and the ThinkPad line of products. What makes this interesting is that the last time we had the industry decide something was dead in the computer space, it was the mainframe. IBM agreed and chased the client-server market. During that time, Sun Microsystems -- the equivalent of Apple in that segment -- seemed unbeatable, and IBM almost went under.
Eventually IBM reinvested in the mainframe and established a new brand -- System Z. It is now the company's most profitable line, and Sun has gone out of business as a separate company. In hindsight, had IBM fought the perception that its platform was dead rather than embracing it, it would have been billions ahead of where it is now.
Taking a page from IBM's book, Lenovo realized that PCs were what it knew best. Rather than sacrifice its strength to chase vendors like Apple and Samsung, it focused on doing what it does best even better -- and it paid off. It effectively institutionalized the IBM mistake instead of remaking it.

Beating Apple

What's fascinating about watching how others have competed with Apple goes back to how Apple succeeded in the last decade. Its success wasn't in becoming a better Dell or IBM. In fact, its one big failure was in servers, where it failed catastrophically trying to compete against entrenched vendors. Among Apple's other products, PCs have been the weakest -- largely due to competition from established vendors and an entrenched Windows operating system.
Apple's successes have been in the MP3 player segment, where the main competitors were smaller than Apple; in smartphones, where the market initially was focused on business and not consumers; and in tablets -- but only after Microsoft's efforts had largely failed in-market. At no instant did Apple ever attack a market where a strong vendor was strongest. Contrast this with Microsoft's Zune effort: Microsoft chose a market where a strong vendor, Apple, was strongest, and it failed catastrophically.
Apple is weakest on business PCs, and Lenovo is strongest with its ThinkPad, a business PC line. Apple is weakest in Asia geographically, while Lenovo is strongest in Asia, and that is where it entered the market with smartphones. This is strategic thinking, and strategic thinking works -- for Lenovo, it is working very well.

Marketing Magic

The technology market is awash with engineering-driven companies that believe that if they build lots of very different products and throw them into the market, most of them will sell. The expectation is that customers will gravitate to the products they want.
Most companies don't seem to understand the power of marketing and that it is this power that has driven Apple's bottom line so strongly. Marketing allows a firm to drive people to a smaller selection of products, which, if done correctly, results in fewer mistakes and much higher sales success.
Lenovo has taken a page from Apple's book, largely by using an Apple trained CMO, David Roman, to drive its marketing efforts and by leveraging social media. For instance, this videowas created by some of the folks who do the James Bond films, and it went viral. The product it showcases -- the Lenovo Yoga Windows 8 tablets -- has been the showcase OEM tablet for Windows 8 as a result.
Lenovo wins because it invests in marketing, it gets quality marketing people, and it executes strong demand-focused campaigns -- using both traditional and social mechanisms -- that drive people to its products.

Wrapping Up: Winning

I'm in a room with a ton of technology analysts. Of the 25 people in my section, three of us are on tablets, while the rest are on notebooks. Of the three tablet users, two of us are using keyboards, so our tablets are effectively notebook surrogates. The one guy who is using his tablet as a tablet has his notebook computer right next to it so he can do real work. Ironically, I'm the only person who left my notebook at home and brought only a tablet.
Lenovo has realized that the PC market isn't dead and that Apple isn't invulnerable, and it is investing accordingly. As a result, Lenovo is growing the fastest among its peers and doing the best against Apple in the most segments.
There is something refreshing about watching a company execute with excellence. Whether it is Apple or Lenovo, it is great to see firms think strategically to out-execute their peers. I just wish other executive teams would watch more closely so more could be as successful.

Product of the Week: Nokia 920

Product of the Week
I finally got a Nokia 920, and it was worth the wait. What makes the Nokia different from the Windows 8 HTC phone I covered earlier is that it has a much better camera. Also, you can use an inductive charger. It is aggressively priced at AT&T at just under US$100 with a two-year contract.
I use my phone camera as my primary camera, and the combination of active stability control, a good flash, and an excellent imager easily makes this the best phone camera in the market and one of my best cameras, period.
Nokia 920
Nokia 920
The inductive charging is wonderful. I often find I'm struggling to get the damn charging plug into a device late at night and often don't seat the plug properly and end up with a dead phone. With inductive charging, you just put the phone on the charge. Even half asleep, I can do that.
Nokia ships with one of the best GPS apps in the market, and it is free with the phone. Some Windows phones require a monthly charge to enable GPS. This is one of the few4G phones that has all-day battery life -- most run out of power in about six to eight hours, leaving you on fumes or dead by the end of the day.
My only real complaint is the phone doesn't come in blue. Apparently folks love this phone, because record sales had Nokia stock up about 30 percent last week. Since this is the best phone I've ever tested, the Nokia 920 is my product of the week.

By Rob Enderle
TechNewsWorld 

source:www.technewsworld.com

Return of the King GNOME 2 Is Making Its Way Back


Return of the King: GNOME 2 Is Making Its Way Back


"GNOME is a big boy and was the preferred DE for many experienced users, as well as classical GNU/Linux distributions' default DE," said Google+ blogger Gonzalo Velasco C. "So, there must be acompromise between the developers' avant-gardeideas and what power users need and want to use.







With all the drama and pathos that plays out each and every day here in the Linux blogosphere, the temptation to equate the stories of today with classic tales from the world of literature can sometimes be overwhelming.
Take the world of Linux desktops, for example. For years the users lived happily under the reign of GNOME 2; suddenly, Unity and GNOME 3 appeared on the horizon, and that simple world changed forever.
GNOME 2 was banished from the castle grounds, and loyal subjects across the land fell into a deep state of mourning. Unity and GNOME 3 earned followers of their own, to be sure, but the older generations lamented the loss of their longtime favorite.
A dark cloud hung over the land; bitterness and despair became the status quo.

An Announcement Is Made

Just when many desktop Linux users were about to give up hope, however -- not to mention turn to Xfce -- hope bloomed once againwith the arrival of MATE, Cinnamon and SolusOS.
Then, just last week, countless users' prayers were answered when it was announced that GNOME 2 was coming back.
The practical result? Standing room only down at the blogosphere's rowdy Punchy Penguin Saloon.

'Irreparable Harm'

"This will be great news to those who miss the classic user interface and who still have not found an alternative," Robin Lim, a lawyer and blogger on Mobile Raptor, told Linux Girl over a fresh round of Tequila Tux cocktails.
As for Lim himself, however, "I will still be using GNOME 3," he added. "It is my favorite desktop interface, but I pretty much get along with everything. I really don't spend much time on the desktop, with 99 percent of my time spent looking at the interface of an app."
It took the GNOME project "way too long, and they may have done irreparable harm to their future prospects," Google+ blogger Kevin O'Brien opined. "But in one way it illustrates the strength of Free Software: if users do not like what you are doing, they can fork the project, and do it the way *they* want.
"When you saw distros dropping GNOME and picking up MATE and Cinnamon, you saw this in action," O'Brien explained. "In the final analysis, it is the users who determine where the technology goes because they vote with their feet."

'It's About Usability'

Google+ blogger Gonzalo Velasco C. had a similar take.
"Besides the aesthetic and modernizing point of view, the usability factor must be taken into account by developers," he told Linux Girl. "Users want to keep the 'computer-like' control of our desktop; not everything is a touch-screen, smartphone piece of hardware!
"GNOME is a big boy and was the preferred DE for many experienced users, as well as classical GNU/Linux distributions' default DE," Gonzalo Velasco C. added. "So, there must be acompromise between the developers' avant-garde ideas and what power users need and want to use.
"It's not about inertia and fear of change, it's about usability!" he concluded.

'A Household Name'

"GNOME was never my favorite desktop," Google + blogger Alessandro Ebersol began. "It was just ugly, I always preferred KDE."
However, "when KDE made the change to version 4, I could not go on with it," Ebersol added. "Of course, the early days of KDE 4 were terrible, but then, I moved on to other DE and life went smooth."
GNOME, on the other hand, "was a household name," he noted. "It worked. And desktops are not rocket science. GNOME devs tried to emulate what KDE devs had done, but it worked way better for KDE than for GNOME.
"Long story short: Don't fix if ain't broken," Ebersol concluded. "GNOME devs took too much time to realize it."

'Too Little, Too Late?'

Is the latest move enough? Consultant and Slashdot blogger Gerhard Mack wasn't so sure.
"This is a halfhearted attempt at bringing the old desktop back if you are willing to go through the trouble, and it still seems that they don't understand that people hate the new desktop," Mack asserted.
Similarly, "I'll believe it when I see it," agreed Slashdot blogger hairyfeet. "From the way they phrased it, frankly, it sounds more like the GIMPed Win 8 'desktop mode' than a full-fledged GNOME 2."
Not only that, but "is it too little, too late?" hairyfeet wondered. "After all, there is MATE and Unity and LXDE -- does GNOME have enough people that haven't moved on yet to make this a big deal?"

'They Have to Leave Us the Option'

Blogger Robert Pogson hasn't used GNOME much for years "because it and KDE are both resource-hogs," he told Linux Girl. "I have PCs to get my work done, not to make some GUIdevelopers' wet dreams."
A useful user interface "does not have to be heavy and bloated, with a dozen services scurrying underneath to make it all happen," Pogson explained. "I use Xfce 4, which runs like a rocket and does not have dreams of retraining me."
In fact, "I have used the rectangular regions with widgets things for two decades," he said. "I see no reason to change at this stage."
Looking ahead, "GNOME and KDE should both realize no solution suits everyone," Pogson concluded. "We don't all drive Cadillacs, for instance. If either GUI's developers want to take over the world, they have to leave us the option to go GNOME 2ish -- it could be a choice made by the user on first execution or an easily found configuration option."

'I Like Having Choices'

Last but not least, "I love this, as I always like to have more options," Google+ blogger Linux Rants opined.
"I actually really like the current GNOME 3 interface, and I'm a fan of Unity as well," Linux Rants told Linux Girl. "Despite that, I still load up KDE or E sometimes."
In general, "I like having choices, and Linux means that I don't have to stick to just one," he concluded. "We're not talking Windows or OS X here. I just hope that this doesn't stagnate development on UIs that don't resemble the classic GNOME interface."

source:www.technewsworld.com

All Things Appy Top 5 Android Shopping Tools


All Things Appy: Top 5 Android Shopping Tools


Scan barcodes from your groceries and pantry items. Fivefly's Shopping List app then provides a master list with check boxes, and you simply check a box when you've replenished supplies. Simple. TechNewsWorld thinks this checkmark system is superior to apps that make you scan or enter the product label text each time.







Welcome to All Things Appy -- infoa2z.net  analysis of the best apps proliferating on our devices today.
Indicative of the superiority of portable geo-friendly apps over Web search and Web browsing is the Shopping genre.
Here are infoa2z.net's suggestions for the top five store-agnostic free killer tools on the Android platform.

About the Platform
Google's Android OS is a mobile environment geared toward multitouch. Apps can be downloaded from the Google Play store.
From the device's app drawer, click on the Play icon. Then perform a search for the desired app.



No. 1: Barcode Scanner



The Zxing Team's Barcode Scanner boasts 50,000,000 to 100,000,000 installs, according to Google Play. It has an average rating of 4.2 out of a possible five from 305,129 reviewers.
Keep things simple with Barcode Scanner.
Scan the product barcode wandering the aisles and read up on the product via a Google Web search or Google's shopping Web pages.
That's it.
It's super useful when showrooming, in-store browsing, price-matching, or looking for independent reviews and specifications.
Barcode Scanner is No. 1 on our list because it's the fastest way to gather product intelligence, and it provides something previously unattainable.

No. 2: Shopping List

Shopping List from Fivefly is a shopping list manager with 500,000 to 1,000,000 installs, according to the Google Play store. It has a 4.3 average rating out of a possible five from 7,448 reviewers.
Scan barcodes from your groceries and pantry items. Fivefly's Shopping List app then provides a master list with check boxes, and you simply check a box when you've replenished supplies. Simple.
TechNewsWorld thinks this checkmark system is superior to shopping list apps that make you scan or enter the product label text each time.
Shopping List also features sharing and syncing, so family members don't duplicate purchases.
It's No. 2 on our list because it provides syncing and paperless efficiency.

No. 3: Coupons & Shopping -- GeoQponsShopping List


Coupons & Shopping -- GeoQpons is a coupon aggregator from publisher Most Useful Shopping App with 1,000,000 to 5,000,000 installs, according to the Google Play store. It has an average 4.4 rating out of a possible five from 6,655 reviewers.

GeoQpons is a highly comprehensive selection of retail and restaurant coupon links, as well as weekend newspaper-style specials ads. Don't go pounding the sidewalk locally without checking this app.
It contains many of the classic ads and coupons that clutter up our snail mail boxes and newspapers -- but with the advantage of app-driven favorite store alerts, search and geo-functions.
It's No. 3 on our list because this app saves you cash. However, be aware that some of the ads may need printing out.

No. 4: ShopSavvy Barcode Scanner

ShopSavvy Barcode Scanner from publisher ShopSavvy boasts 10,000,000 to 50,000,000 installs according to Google Play. It has an average rating of 4.2 out of a possible five from 89,590 reviewers.
This app provides super-fast scanning of product barcodes with instant online prices. It's not so great on local store price comparisons, but it's a superior barcode look-up nonetheless.
It earned a runner-up position, because unlike Barcode Scanner, its product descriptions and specifications are poor.

No. 5: GasBuddy - Find Cheap Gas

GasBuddy - Find Cheap Gas from GasBuddy boasts 10,000,000 to 50,000,000 installs and has an average rating of 4.6 from 387,245 reviewers.

With gas prices varying wildly, even around the block, GasBuddy provides geo-tagged gasoline prices graphically represented on a map.
Press one button and the app shows you the nearest gas prices. Sort by price and you can save money by picking the nearest cheap gas. It's crowd-sourced data and a killer app for traveling.
It's a runner-up because TechNewsWorld thinks cheapskates already know where their local discounted gas stations are.

source:www.technewsworld.com


Friday, 30 November 2012

Android secret codes

Android secret codes

Android is going to be very popular now these days.Android market provides wide range of applications for fullfill all your needs.As a Android user all you need to know about Android OS. So here I am sharing with you some of the secret code's. This code helps you to access some hidden option which are generally not given as default.Please use this code carefully because if you are unaware of these advanced settings then it may be harmful for your phone.

                                   



*#*#7780#*#*   - This code is used for factory restore setting.This will remove google account setting and System and application data and settings.

*2767*3855#   -  This code is used for factory format, and will remove all files and settings including the internal memory storage. It will also reinstall the firmware.

*#*#4636#*#*   - This code show information about your phone and battery.

*#*#273283*255*663282*#*#*    - This code opens a File copy screen where you can backup your media files e.g. Images, Sound, Video and Voice memo.

*#*#197328640#*#*    -  This code can be used to enter into Service mode. You can run various tests and change settings in the service mode.

*#*#7594#*#*   -  This code enable your "End call / Power" button into direct poweroff button without asking for selecting any option(silent mode, aeroplane and poweroff).

*#*#8255#*#*  -  This code can be used to launch GTalk Service Monitor.

*#*#34971539#*#*    -  This code is used to get camera information.Plz avoid update camera firmware option.


WLAN, GPS and Bluetooth Test Codes:

*#*#232339#*#* OR *#*#526#*#* OR *#*#528#*#*   -  WLAN test (Use “Menu” button to start various tests).

*#*#232338#*#*    -  Shows WiFi MAC address.

*#*#1472365#*#*    -  GPS test.

*#*#1575#*#*    -  Another GPS test.

*#*#232331#*#*   -  Bluetooth test.

*#*#232337#*#    -  Shows Bluetooth device address.


Codes to launch various Factory Tests:

*#*#0842#*#*   - Device test (Vibration test and BackLight test)

*#*#0588#*#*    - Proximity sensor test

*#*#0*#*#*    -  LCD test

*#*#2664#*#*   -  Touch screen test

*#*#2663#*#*    -  Touch screen version

*#*#0283#*#*   -  Packet Loopback

*#*#0673#*#* OR *#*#0289#*#*    -  Melody test

*#*#3264#*#*    -  RAM version


Code for firmware version information:

 *#*#1111#*#*   -  FTA SW Version

*#*#2222#*#*   - FTA HW Version

*#*#44336#*#* - PDA, Phone, CSC, Build Time, Changelist number

*#*#4986*2650468#*#*   - PDA, Phone, H/W, RFCallDate

*#*#1234#*#*  - PDA and Phone.

These are some of the codes which I know You can also share whatever you know  through the comment box .






Thursday, 29 November 2012

Internet marketing guide book


Internet marketing guide book
when I was just surfing in the web I came across an awesome book which actually deals with the Internet marketing .It gives all the tips regarding the Marketing technology.
I guess it would surely help you guys.

                        




Link s here :

Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites More