Thursday, December 27, 2012

Apple’s Siri and

Apple’s Siri and

Welcome to a laptop battery specialist of the Dell Ac Adapter

What does this mean for end-users? Well, with USB 3.0 likely to be included on the growing number of Windows 8 tablets coming to market in 2013, expect faster saving and sharing of tablet data.

Near-field communication establishes radio communication between close-by mobile devices, and already is a feature on Samsung Nexus phones.

Although commonly referred to as just for mobile contactless payments, Google’s Android Beam shows that there is so much more potential to this technology. One feature on Beam, for example, is the chance to bump phones together to share a photo.

Voice dictationThe way you search information on your with battery like Dell G555N Ac Adapter, Dell J399N Ac Adapter, Dell J415N Ac Adapter, Dell K450N Ac Adapter, Dell Inspiron 1440 Ac Adapter, Dell Inspiron 1750 Ac Adapter, Dell Inspiron 1440N Ac Adapter, Dell Inspiron 1750N Ac Adapter, Dell Inspiron 17 Ac Adapter, Dell Inspiron 14 Ac Adapter, Dell Latitude E6400 Ac Adapter, Dell Latitude E6500 Ac Adapter tablet could be transformed over the next year or so with the rise of voice dictation.

Apple’s Siri and Google’s Google Now are the innovators in this space, promising to offer up web search results, map directions and even conduct messages on your behalf using your voice. And while Siri is restricted just to iOS devices, Google Now is coming to an increasing number of Android smartphones and tablets.

These two – as well as Nuance – may be the big players in the market, but there are a lot of other voice dictation specialists trying to get into this space and to establish partnerships with mobile manufacturers.

This last year has seen the introduction of Intel’s latest Ivy Bridge processor and the emergence of the quad-core Tegra 3 chipset on an array of Android tablets.

But 2013 could well see increasing competition between ARM, Intel and now AMD in the Android and Windows 8 space. Intel is rumored to be negotiating with Apple over a contract to make chips for the iPad, currently powered by Apple's own homegrown ARM-based processors.

Such rivalry seems to be having an effect already, with Intel reportedly ready to release the next set of Ivy Bridge processors clocked from 1.1GHz Premium to 1.5GHz Core i7 which demand much less power than before (from 17W on the previous generation models to as low as 7W, say sources).

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