Tuesday, 23 December 2014




This goes for $ 56.74 in Nigeria  (Convert to naira) . See features below:
2G Network
GSM 900 / 1800
3G Network
HSDPA 2100
4G Network
No
SIM
Dual mini SIM
Status
Available October 2014

Body
Dimensions
113 x 62.2 x 11.7mm
Keyboard
Touchscreen
Colors
White, Black, Yellow, Gray, Pink
Cover
Plastic

Display
Type
TFT capacitive touchscreen with 256,000 colors
Size
320 x 480 pixels, 3.5 inches, 165 pixels per inch (PPI)

Memory And OS
Card slot
MicroSD, up to 32 GB
Internal
4GB
OS
Android 4.4 KitKat
Processors
1.0GHz dual-core Mediatek MT6575M CPU
RAM
512 MB

Audio
Alert types
Vibration, MP3 ringtones
Loudspeaker
Yes
Audio port
3.5mm jack

Connectivity
2G
GPRS – up to 85.6 kbps; EDGE – up to 236.8 kbps
3G
Up to 7.2 mbps uplink; Up to 5.76 mbps downlink
4G
No
WIFI
Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, WIFI hotspot, Wi-Fi direct
Bluetooth
Version 3.0
GPS
A-GPS
NFC
No
USB
MicroUSB v2.0

Camera
Primary
5MP, up to 2592 x 1944-pixel pictures camera with LED flash
Video
720p@30fps
Secondary
0.3MP up to 640 x 480-pixel pictures

Battery
Capacity
2000mAh Li-Po battery
Stand-by
Up to 250 hours
Talk time
Up to 8 hours
Music play


Other Features
Sensors
Accelerometer, Proximity
Messaging
SMS, MMS, Email, Push Mail, IM
Browser
HTML5
Java
No

- SNS integration
– MP4/MPEG4/H.263/H.264 player
– MP3/WAV/eAAC+/AC3/FLAC player
– Document viewer
– FM radio
– Image viewer
– Voice memo/dial/command
– Predictive text input
– Google Search, Facebook, Gmail,YouTube, Calendar, Google Talk

Price : $56.74

Wednesday, 17 December 2014



On the hardware front, the Galaxy S5 provides an arguably smaller upgrade than we’ve seen with past releases. The Super AMOLED display has seen a slight bump to 5.1-inches, and still packs the same 1080p resolution we’re used to. The Snapdragon 600 SoC of the Galaxy S4 is swapped out for the newer Snapdragon 801. A 16-megapixel camera is seen on the back, complete with 4K video recording. Nothing major, just continual improvements in all the key areas.
  • 5.1”, 1920 x 1080 Super AMOLED display (432 ppi)
  • Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 SoC
  • 2.5 GHz quad-core CPU, Adreno 330 GPU, 2GB RAM
  • 16/32 GB internal storage, microSD card slot
  • 16 MP camera, 1/2.6” sensor, f/2.2 lens, 4K video
  • IP67 water resistant
  • Fingerprint scanner, heart rate monitor
  • 2,800 mAh, 10.78 Wh battery
  • LTE, Wi-Fi a/b/g/n/ac, Bluetooth 4.0, NFC
  • Android 4.4 ‘KitKat’
  • 145 grams, 8.1mm thick
Design
Not much has changed, design-wise, between the Galaxy S III of 2012 and the Galaxy S5 of 2014. The plastic remains, the imitation metal remains, and typical Samsung elements like the protruding camera, physical home button and prominent sensor array, also remain. The back panel is removable and the display gets slightly larger with each release.
Where changes have been made, the changes are for the better. Samsung has finally listened to the complaints and has opted for a plastic rear housing that doesn’t feel cheap, slippery and awful. The new Band-Aid-style texturing feels surprisingly nice, and gives the phone a touch of class where it hasn’t had any in the past.

But it’s still plastic, which up against the aluminium HTC One M8 and Apple iPhone 5s, or the glass Sony Xperia Z2, seems a little lacklustre. The fake metal rim around the Galaxy S5 does it no favors either, as it’s blatantly plastic. With that said, I do like the all-glass front panel which looks reasonably good, especially when you power up the brilliant Super AMOLED display.
While it’s not the best smartphone build going around, it’s easily the best Galaxy S design so far. The Galaxy S5’s body is very ergonomic, with the curves seemingly sculpted to match the human hand. It’s not the slimmest phone ever released at 8.1mm thick, but it doesn’t feel chunky to hold, nor heavy at 145 grams. The shift away from the smooth, glossy back panel also makes the handset easier to keep in your hands as it’s considerably less slippery.
Next to the physical home button, which thanks to the fingerprint scanner has less travel than you’d expect, are the two capacitive soft buttons. Finally, the menu button has been canned after it was made a legacy feature in Android 4.0 way back in 2011. It's been replaced with the far more useful recent apps button, allowing quick multitasking and switching of apps.



If you are using laptop to browse,To minimize bandwith usage add this "?m=1" at the end of your url.
For example : Instead of typing www.wikipedia.com , you type like this:
www.wikipedia.com?m=1
====================
Reason : This will load the page as a mobile site.
*Enjoy*

[You can experiment it on this website]

©2014 D-KONCEPT TECH ZONE

For updates you can like this face book page




In a move that highlights the country’s worsening economic conditions, Apple has stopped online sales in Russia citing "extreme fluctuations" in the local currency, the ruble.
This is a significant move considering that the company doesn’t have any Apple stores in Russia. Although Apple has tie-ups with some Russian carriers and retailers, Apple's online store remains its main interface with consumers in the country.
“Our online store in Russia is currently unavailable while we review pricing,” said a company spokesperson. “We apologize to customers for any inconvenience.”
Apple’s decision to pull the plug on sales comes just weeks after the company increased Russian prices for iPhones by about 25 percent. This resulted in, for example, a 16GB iPhone 6 costing 39,990 rubles, which was equivalent to $859 then, but just $575 now.
That price hike came in the wake of the sharp devaluation of the ruble against the US dollar. Just to give you an idea, Russia’s currency weakened nearly 25 percent against the dollar since September 1, and in the past one year, it has plunged over 50 percent.
Some of the major factors that have attributed to Russia’s freefalling economy include the drop in oil prices, economic sanctions applied by the US and the European Union in the wake of its invasion of Crimea, the dispute over Eastern Ukraine, and others

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