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martes, 16 de mayo de 2017
viernes, 12 de mayo de 2017
Samsung edge 8 Oscar Rodriguez
17:38
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SAMSUNG EDGE 8
The revolutionary design of the Galaxy S8 and S8 starts from the inside. We redesign every part of the design of the phone to revolutionize the smartphone screen limits. So what you see is content pure and no edges. It is the largest screen and brighter view in a Galaxy smartphone of this size. And it is easy to hold with one hand.
The Samsung Galaxy is a phone that's unlike anything you'll have seen on the market. It's just stunning.
It's incredibly expensive in a world where mid-range phones are more than good enough to handle most tasks people like... but the second you pick it up it's easy to see why.
The screen is just brilliant - the clearest, sharpest and offers lovely color reproduction to make movie watching a dream, and that's before you've even got to the fact it's wrapped into the chassis so hugely that it has a screen larger than the iPhone 7 Plus in a chassis that feels more like the iPhone 7.
The Galaxy S8 isn't perfect - in the search to squeeze the screen in so completely, other factors were overlooked: namely, the placement of the fingerprint reader. If you want this phone, you'll need to answer this question: are you OK using an iris scanner?
And if you're looking for something even bigger, and with a much-improved battery life to boot, then the Galaxy S8 Edge is easily the way to go.
Samsung Galaxy S8: features and specifications
the Samsung Galaxy S8 is the new flagship of Samsung to bet strong on a front edge of screen. Characteristics include Infinity Super AMOLED screen dual-edge of 5.8 inches and resolution QHD, processor Snapdragon 835 or Exynos 8895, 4GB RAM, 64GB of internal storage, camera, Wireless charging, IP68 water resistant Dual Pixel of 12 megapixels, 8 megapixels, fingerprint reader, front-facing camera reader of iris and Android 7.0 Nougat.
Made by : :OSCAR TOMAS RODRIGUEZ BARAJAS
Apple inc evolution Victor Grajeda
16:51
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Apple is
currently one of most valued companies in the world, worth more than $700
billion. It’s also one of the top 15 best companies to work for. As of
September 2015, it employs 110,000 people — half of which work in its retail
Apple Stores.
Every success
story is also a story of great failure, though. Apple’s last 40 years have also
been filled with disappointing product releases, a constant change in
leadership and a few run-ins with the law.
1971: The
Beginning
Co-founders
Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak first met when they were 20 years old through a
mutual friend, Bill Fernandez — who became Apple's first employee.
1976:
Launch
Jobs and
Wozniak officially founded Apple Computers, Inc. and unveiled the Apple I. They
hand-build 50 Apple I’s and decided to sell them for $666.66. The vintage
computer only had 4KB of RAM, which is 2,000,000 times less than a standard
computer today.
1978:
Floppy Disks
The tech
giant took a break from releasing computers and released the Apple Disk II,
which was an external floppy-disk drive. The floppy disk was more expensive
than what a gaming console costs in 2016. The Apple Disk had an introductory
price of $495, but it was then raised to $595.
1980: The
Third Generation
After a
two-year hiatus from releasing products, Apple unveiled the Apple III computer
in May. Then in December, the company went public by offering 4.6 million
shares at $22 each — now a valuation of approximately $1.8 billion.
1998: The
iMac Says "Hello"
Apple
changed its OS strategy and introduced OS X in May. Then in August, it launched
the first “all-in-one” Macintosh, the iMac. The iMac was well-known for its
colorful, transparent backs and for its slogan which was "Hello."
1999: Going
Portable
Apple was
successful with the release of the colorful iMac that it decided to make a
laptop version and call it the iBook.
2000:
Officially CEO
Jobs
officially became the CEO of Apple. This is when the co-founder decided to
start delving into music.
2001:
Tunes, OS X and the iPod
It was the
new millennium and the start of Apple’s huge success. In 2001, the company
introduced iTunes, OS X (the software we still use) and the iPod, which is
considered one of the company’s biggest accomplishments.
2007: Apple
Makes a Phone
The iPod
was a great innovation, but the iPhone is what really changed the company. In
2007, Jobs introduced the smartphone to the world and decided to change the
company’s name to just Apple, Inc.
2008:
Thinner Products
Smaller
products weren't enough for Apple, so it started making them thinner. The
MacBook Air was introduced in January and was considered the thinnest laptop at
the time.
2010:
Tablets
Because a
computer is too big, and a smartphone is too small, Apple decided to develop a
tablet that would serve as the perfect in-between. The iPad quickly became a
fan favorite because it was a portable theatre, book library, game console and
a web browser all in one.
Jobs
officially became the CEO of Apple. This is when the co-founder decided to
start delving into music.
Made by victor grajeda
Made by victor grajeda
martes, 9 de mayo de 2017
Toshiba and Western Digital wrangle over chip unit's sale - Edgar Barrera " Pedrito"
20:26
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Money-losing Japanese electronics company Toshiba is sparring with its U.S. joint venture partner Western Digital over the planned sale of Toshiba's computer-chip business. Tokyo-based Toshiba Corp. needs cash from such a sale to shore up its finances after it suffered massive losses in its nuclear
Toshiba warned Western Digital to stop interfering, according to letters seen Tuesday by The Associated Press. The letters from the company's lawyers, dated May 3, accused Western Digital of "improper" interference.
Japanese electronics maker Toshiba is facing resistance from its U.S. joint venture partner Western Digital over Toshiba's plans to sell its computer-chip business to anyone else, and Toshiba is fighting back.
Tokyo-based Toshiba Corp. needs cash from such a sale to shore up its finances after it suffered massive losses in its nuclear power division.
Toshiba warned Western Digital to stop interfering, according to letters obtained Tuesday by The Associated Press. The letters from the company's lawyers, dated May 3, accused Western Digital of "improper" interference.
Western Digital bought SanDisk, Toshiba's longtime partner in making flash memory chips, last year. It has argued the sale might violate terms of the joint venture with Toshiba, according to the letters.
Such sales can be sensitive because they involve the transfer of technology.
Several companies are reportedly interested in acquiring Toshiba's prized chip-making business. One is Hon Hai of Taiwan, also known as Foxconn, a major supplier to Apple, which has acquired Japanese electronics company Sharp Corp. South Korea's SK Hynix is also reportedly a bidder.
The possibility that the flash memory technology Toshiba invented might be acquired by a foreign buyer has raised some concern in Japan.
A Japanese consortium including government-affiliates like the Development Bank of Japan and the public-private Innovation Network Corp. of Japan are said to be preparing a bid with U.S. private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts.
The financial newspaper Nikkei reported last month that Western Digital might join that effort. But Western Digital's chief executive, Steve Milligan, said in an interview with the Japanese broadcaster NHK shown Tuesday that the company was not satisfied with the minority stake it could obtain if it joined with the consortium in buying the chip business.
"We're very committed to not only investing here in Japan but making sure that we maintain this critical technology here in Japan, advancing our interest, in the interest of the Japanese people, and ensuring that it doesn't fall into, if you want to call it, inappropriate hands," he said.
Toshiba has threatened to restrict the entry of Western Digital to the joint venture facilities from May 15, if Western Digital doesn't change its position by then.
Toshiba is projecting a trillion yen ($9 billion) in losses for the fiscal year that ended in March, although auditors have refused to sign off on its earnings report. The company is also embroiled in an accounting scandal.
Further raising doubts over its future viability, Toshiba's U.S. nuclear unit Westinghouse Electric Co. filed for bankruptcy protection in March.
Four nuclear reactors that Westinghouse is helping to build in South Carolina and Georgia are behind schedule and billions of dollars over budget, as costs soar after the nuclear disaster in Fukushima, northeastern Japan, six years ago.
Japanese electronics maker Toshiba is facing resistance from its U.S. joint venture partner Western Digital over Toshiba's plans to sell its computer-chip business to anyone else, and Toshiba is fighting back.
Tokyo-based Toshiba Corp. needs cash from such a sale to shore up its finances after it suffered massive losses in its nuclear power division.
Toshiba warned Western Digital to stop interfering, according to letters obtained Tuesday by The Associated Press. The letters from the company's lawyers, dated May 3, accused Western Digital of "improper" interference.
Western Digital bought SanDisk, Toshiba's longtime partner in making flash memory chips, last year. It has argued the sale might violate terms of the joint venture with Toshiba, according to the letters.
Such sales can be sensitive because they involve the transfer of technology.
Several companies are reportedly interested in acquiring Toshiba's prized chip-making business. One is Hon Hai of Taiwan, also known as Foxconn, a major supplier to Apple, which has acquired Japanese electronics company Sharp Corp. South Korea's SK Hynix is also reportedly a bidder.
The possibility that the flash memory technology Toshiba invented might be acquired by a foreign buyer has raised some concern in Japan.
A Japanese consortium including government-affiliates like the Development Bank of Japan and the public-private Innovation Network Corp. of Japan are said to be preparing a bid with U.S. private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts.
The financial newspaper Nikkei reported last month that Western Digital might join that effort. But Western Digital's chief executive, Steve Milligan, said in an interview with the Japanese broadcaster NHK shown Tuesday that the company was not satisfied with the minority stake it could obtain if it joined with the consortium in buying the chip business.
"We're very committed to not only investing here in Japan but making sure that we maintain this critical technology here in Japan, advancing our interest, in the interest of the Japanese people, and ensuring that it doesn't fall into, if you want to call it, inappropriate hands," he said.
Toshiba has threatened to restrict the entry of Western Digital to the joint venture facilities from May 15, if Western Digital doesn't change its position by then.
Toshiba is projecting a trillion yen ($9 billion) in losses for the fiscal year that ended in March, although auditors have refused to sign off on its earnings report. The company is also embroiled in an accounting scandal.
Further raising doubts over its future viability, Toshiba's U.S. nuclear unit Westinghouse Electric Co. filed for bankruptcy protection in March.
Four nuclear reactors that Westinghouse is helping to build in South Carolina and Georgia are behind schedule and billions of dollars over budget, as costs soar after the nuclear disaster in Fukushima, northeastern Japan, six years ago.