Posts Tagged ‘speed’

iMac 27 32GB Speed (Velocidad) (Baby Mac) 8GB, Mac Book Pro, Windows PC

Fast payday loans For Every One

Les traigo las comparaciones de Baby Mac, 8GB, 32GB, y mi Mac Book Pro, tambien mi vieja computadora Windows PRONTO VIENE EL REVIEW DE BABY MAC! Pagina para …

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BlueRigger High Speed HDMI Cable with Ethernet 6.6 Feet (2m) – Supports 3D and Audio Return [Latest Version]

BlueRigger High Speed HDMI Cable with Ethernet 6.6 Feet (2m) – Supports 3D and Audio Return [Latest Version]

BlueRigger High Speed HDMI Cable with Ethernet 6.6 Feet (2m) - Supports 3D and Audio Return [Latest Version]

  • Category 2 Certified – High-Speed 10.2 gbps / 340 MHz (Supports up to 240hz Refresh Rates and 48-Bit Deep Color)
  • Supports all new HDMI advanced features such as 3D, Audio Return Channel, Ethernet, Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master AudioTM
  • Supports 1080p FullHD Resolution and fully compatible with PS3, Xbox360, blue ray players and other hdmi equipment.
  • Fully Shielded Heavy Duty Premium Grade Cable with Soft PVC Jacket.
  • 1 year 100% money-back satisfaction guarantee.

BlueRigger High Speed HDMI Cables are premium quality cables that help you extract the maximum performance from your gaming or home theater setup.

Rugged Build
BlueRigger cables are completely certified to support advanced HDMI features such as 3D, Ethernet and Audio Return
– The cable is made of a PVC outer layer that protects from physical strain, external interference & maintains efficiency of the digital signal
– It has gold plated connectors that help resist corrosion
– These cables are ATC (Authorized Testing Center) certified to support all resolutions up to 1440p

Quality Picture and Sound
– Latest version HDMI cable supports 3D content, Ethernet and Audio Return Channel
– Guaranteed 4K, 1440p, 1080p, 1080i, 720p, 480p, and 480i Resolutions
– Supports Refresh Rates of up to 240hz and 48-Bit Deep Color
– Supports Transfer Rates of Up to 340Mhz or 10.2gbps
– Works with all HDTVs, Blu-ray players, Xbox 360, PS3 and other HDMI devices
– Supports True HD Dolby 7.1 and DTS-HD Master Audio
– HDCP Compliant
- Full metal jacket connector provides strength, durability and prevents interference as compared to other cables

Backwards Compatible with Previous HDMI Standards
The cable is backwards compatible with all previous HDMI standards, so you’ll be able to use the BlueRigger cable with all your HDMI devices.

Warranty
All BlueRigger HDMI cables are backed by a Limited Lifetime warranty. Please contact us via email if you have any questions.

List Price: $ 5.99

Price: $ 5.99

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Photoshop Speedpaint: Robot Flame Unit Speed Paint Comentary

Photoshop Speedpaint: Robot Flame Unit Speed Paint Comentary

Like, comment, subscribe for more if you like em :D .
Video Rating: 5 / 5

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Acorn 4 flies through image editing with new filter UI, improved speed, and curves

Acorn_large

Adobe Photoshop, the gold standard in image editing for print and the web, retails for $ 699. If you’ve ever needed to edit images on OS X only to balk at Adobe’s industry-leading price tag, chances are good that you’ve bumped into Flying Meat’s Acorn, “the image editor for humans” according to creator Gus Mueller. Today, Flying Meat is releasing Acorn 4, the first major update for the product since 2011, and even if you’ve given the $ 49.99 editor a good look in the past, you’d be well advised to pull up a chair, grab some images, and check out what’s taken Mueller — the sole developer behind Acorn — the past two years to build.

Acorn 4 is faster, and by a lot

First things first: Acorn 4 is faster, and by a lot. Many…

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Need For Speed: Most Wanted IOS Android Walkthrough – Gameplay Part 1 – Welcome To Fairhaven

Need For Speed Most Wanted (IOS Android) Electronic Arts Firemonkey Studios Driving Release: Oct 30, 2012 (US) Walkthrough – Part 1 Downtown: Welcome To Fair…

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KALQ Is A New Split-Screen Keyboard Layout Designed To Speed Up Thumb Typing On Tablets & Big Phones

KALQ keyboard by University of St Andrews

After the success of gesture-based keyboards such as Swype, the next obvious disruption to keyboard technology is optimisation of the legacy Qwerty layout that’s persisted since the typewriter era. Not that people haven’t tried alternatives to Qwerty already (e.g. Dvorak et al.) – and generally failed to make them stick. But that’s not stopping a group of academic researchers — including the co-inventor of the gesture IP behind Swype — from devising a new touchscreen keyboard layout in the hope that people can finally be persuaded to shift their typing habits.

KALQ, which is named, like Qwerty, after a string of its keys, is designed to speed up thumb typing on tablets and phablets (aka big phones). Its creators, who are from the University of St Andrews, the Max Planck Institute for Informatics and Montana Tech, claim that once users have accustomed themselves to the non-Qwerty layout — with about eight hours practice required to be as fast as Qwerty and 13-19 hours to surpass your Qwerty typing speed — typing performance can be about a third (34 percent) more efficient than thumb typing on split-screen Qwerty layouts.

They are planning to release KALQ as a free Android app for tablets and phablets, which will also work on smaller screen smartphones but stress their research and performance claims relate specifically to larger devices, rather than phones. They are also not directly comparing the performance of the new layout against any of the gesture keyboard input methods (Swype, SwiftKey’s Flow etc) — their performance data is based on a direct comparison with thumb typing on a split Qwerty.

Dr Per Ola Kristensson, Lecturer in Human Computer Interaction in the School of Computer Science at the University of St Andrews, who is one of the academics involved in the research, told TechCrunch they tested KALQ on a Galaxy Tab 7.7, adding that while the keyboard may also offer speed improvements on smartphones it’s not a claim they have tested. Kristensson is no stranger to keyboard disruption, being the man who wrote the pattern recognition algorithm underlying Swype, and co-founder of ShapeWriter, the startup that commercialised the gesture keyboard system in 2007 — before being acquired by Nuance in 2010 (the company that now owns Swype).

Kristensson said the KALQ researchers used a subset of publicly available emails from the Enron trial that were tagged ‘Sent from my BlackBerry’ as their data pool, analysing the mobile users’ use of language to figure out the best positions for the keys. As well as using computational optimisation techniques and looking at how devices behave when users are touch typing, they also modelled thumb movements with the aim of making a fast yet comfortable keyboard. KALQ is an English-language optimised letter layout, but the process that came up with its layout is “general,” said Kristensson: “You can feed it whatever language you want. So the layout may change, depending on your country.”

There’s been lots of crazy text input technologies proposed… The problem with a lot of them is they are not fast enough.

For English speakers, KALQ’s split-screen layout repositions the alphabet into two unequal blocks of letters, with consonants in the left block (plus Y which can be classed as either) and vowels plus the remaining consonants (including K, L and Q) in the right. A space key is included towards the edge of each block for easy reach with either thumb. The letter order is specifically designed to minimise typing long sentences with just one thumb — which is cumbersome and slows touchscreen typists down — and also places frequently used letter keys centrally close to each other to minimise thumb movements. In addition, the layout generally aims to encourage typing on alternating sides of the keyboard — which Kristensson said is a more ergonomic and comfortable way to type.

As well as learning the new letter layout, KALQ typists need to learn to move both thumbs at once to get the fastest speeds. “Experienced typists move their thumbs simultaneously: while one thumb is selecting a particular key, the other thumb is approaching its next target. From these insights we derived a predictive behavioural model we could use to optimise the keyboard,” noted Dr Antti Oulasvirta, Senior Researcher at the Max Planck Institute, in a statement.

The researchers said trained KALQ users were able to reach speeds of 37 words per minute — which they said is the highest ever reported entry rate for two-thumb typing on touchscreen devices, and “significantly higher” than the approximately 20 words per minute entry rate users can normally reach on a regular split Qwerty layout. The group will  be presenting its research next month at the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems in Paris. The Android KALQ app will be available for download in due course.

Persuading users to adopt a new keyboard layout is likely to be a tough ask but Kristensson said the problem with most of the Qwerty layout challengers to-date has been that they are not disruptive enough — in terms of the performance bump they offer users who have to go through the pain of learning how to type quickly again.

“If you want to get people to change their layout you basically have to get people to invest, you have to get them to give up the assigned cost, their previous investment in Qwerty typing. And then we have to invest new time in learning KALQ,” he said. “There’s been lots of crazy text input technologies proposed. Actually hundreds of them. Most of them have failed. I would say probably 99% of them have filed but the problem with a lot of them is actually they are not fast enough so why would people reinvest in learning a new text entry method if it doesn’t provide a substantial performance advantage so I think [KALQ] is one of the few keyboards that can provide that. So I’m hopeful.”

Asked whether the group might look to commercialise the research, he said the priority is to try to encourage people to adjust their typing behaviour and accept a Qwerty alternative but added that the group may look to monetise their algorithms in other ways — by, for example, using them to optimise other menu-based user interfaces.

“What I’m hoping here is that we will have impact,” he told TechCrunch. “I wanted to get people away from thinking about the Qwerty keyboard. And I think impact here may mean that we will release [KALQ] for free — but remember we are the ones who have all the algorithms to come up with optimal keyboards so we learn a lot about how to optimise user interfaces in general. My co-investigator, Antti Oulasvirta, he’s completely passionate about optimising any sort of user interface. So the process we use here can also be used to optimise other user interfaces like menu structures for example so there is lots of potential for the underlying technology. This is just one instantiation of that. But I think trying to sell a new keyboard — that’s a risky proposition. I’m not sure a venture capitalist would go for it.”

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IRL: IOGEAR GearPower GMP10K, SteelSeries Free Mobile Gaming Controller and the Metabones Speed Booster

Welcome to IRL, a continuous attribute where we discuss the gadgets, apps and toys we’re making use of in genuine life and take a 2nd look at product and services that currently got the formal review treatment.

IRL: Timbuk2 Commute bag, SteelSeries Free Mobile Gaming Controller and the Metabones Speed Booster
Anyone out there a follower of Sony’s mirrorless cameras? How about Canon’s premium glass? Good. We understood there ‘d be some of you. In any case, with this week’s IRL, we’ll be sharing every little thing you ever wished to know about the Metabones Rate Booster, which secures your full-frame EF lenses onto Sony’s E-mount NEX cameras. And, of course, what would an IRL column lack an external battery pack? (Seriously, we cannot live without ‘em.)

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Vavuud Wind Meter For Smartphones Contains No Electronics, Delivers Accurate Ground Wind Speed Readings

Vaavud-wireless_indoor

Smartphones have a lot of on-board sensors, but do they really have enough? No way, say a slew of recent hardware startups, of which Danish Vavuud is only the most recent. Vavuud is turning to Kickstarter to help build a smartphone-compatible wind meter, one that miraculously contains no electronics and yet still can communicate accurate wind speed measurements wirelessly to iPhones and Galaxy devices.

The Vavuud wind meter provides an easy way to measure wind speed exactly where you are, with a device that’s remarkably inexpensive and deceptively simple. It plugs into the headphone jack of your device, but that’s to give it a stable base; it actually uses two magnets in the rotor, which generate a magnetic field that the smartphone can pick up and process using algorithms normally used for sound processing to translate it to wind speed data. Vavuud co-founder Thomas P. Helms says it’s been tested with iPhone 4, 4S, and 5, as well as Galaxy SII and SIII so far, and it has been calibrated in a wind tunnel at the University of Denmark to ensure accuracy.

“To our knowledge we are the first to use the magnetometer in smartphones in this way, so we of course think the technology itself is kind of cool,” Helms explained via email. “It’s also cool because on a mechanical level it appears quite simple, but there is some relatively complex math behind it .”

It’s likely that Vavuud will be able to work with any modern advanced smartphone with built-in magnetic field sensors (which is pretty much all of them), so the limited existing test pool shouldn’t frighten away potential backers. The Vavuud is designed to be used by anyone who might find accurate current windspeed readings useful – a potential group of users that includes windsurfers, sailors, paragliders, model plane pilots and more.

“Surfers, sailors, paragliders etc. have needed an online anemometer for ages to be able to create and share crowd-sourced wind information,” Helms explained. “Because conditions at your favorite spots may depend on very local factors like mountains, could be affected by thermal conditions, and on and on.”

Vavuud is looking to ship the Wind Meter by June of this year, with pre-orders beginning at the £15 level. iOS and Android apps from Vavuud itself are expected to become available at the same time, but it’s easy to imagine how, as with the Thermodo, the developer community might embrace another means of collecting information about the world around you and integrate Vavuud into their own apps.

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Nikon announces the D7100 DSLR: $1,200, 24MP DX sensor, improved speed and focusing

Nikon announces D7100, a $  1,200 DXformat DSLR with improved speed and focusing

Not excited to shell out 2 splendid for Nikon’s full-frame D600? You may take interest with the business’s new D7100, a lightweight DSLR with a brand name brand-new DX-format (APS-C) sensor and a handful of various other goodies to boot. The 24.1-megapixel cam’s imaging innovation follows a now-commonplace sector trend by dropping the optical low-pass filter in favor of superior resolution. Naturally, the D7000 successor consists of a sensitiveness array of ISO 100 to 25,600 (Hi there 2), in addition to improved sound reduction for much better outcomes in low-light. There’s a D4-like EXPEED 3 processor with support for 6 frames-per-second shooting in any mode, even when capturing 12 – or 14-bit RAW images. An unique 1.3 x DX plant feature boost that rate to 7 fps, nonetheless, while catching a max of 15.4-megapixel stills and 1080/60i or 50i video, compared with 1080 30/25 / 24p in the regular mode. There’s a 3.2-inch 1.229M-dot LCD, an OLED display inside the viewfinder for crisper data readout, and plenty more if you continue reading!

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Chrome 24 fixes two dozen bugs, promises to speed things up

Chrome 24 fixes two dozen bugs, promises to speed things up

Google’s latest browser update landed today with little fanfare from Mountain View — just a tiny blog post proclaiming a faster, more stable Chrome. Diving into the build’s change notes, however, reveal Flash updates, bug fixes and support for MathML. Not a lot in the way of consumer facing features — though Bookmarks are now searchable, via the Chrome omnibox. Not as fancy as the last release, but we never to scoff at stability and speed. Check it out at the source link below.

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Via: The Next Web

Source: Google (1), (2), (3)

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